Charming the Shrew (23 page)

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Authors: Laurin Wittig

Tags: #Adult, #Fantasy, #Literature & Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #Medieval, #Scottish

BOOK: Charming the Shrew
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“We must act the part, lass. The horse is tired, as are you. We have no food, no hope for as comfortable or as warm a shelter for the night, and I confess I am quite sore still from your brothers’ attentions to my ribs. We must stay, and we must play the part you have laid out for us.”

She chewed on her bottom lip for a moment. “What must I do?”

A lazy smile stole across his face. “You bade me not to touch you, not to kiss you again. I fear I shall have to ask your leave to do so, for ’twill be expected.”

He watched as the meaning behind his words sank in. She squared her shoulders, pushed her chin up another notch, and nodded. “Very well, you may do those things, but—” she pointed a finger at him “—only as is necessary to convince our hosts.”

“And can you act the newlywed lass in love with her husband?” he asked, pitching his voice low but lacing it with just enough sarcasm to anger her.

“I can. I can be the perfect wife.”

Tayg snorted. She had no idea what she was suggesting, what it would mean to act like lovers. The image of the two of them tangled together in his bed crashed through his mind. Frustration boiled up in him. He took a step closer to her, wanting her to feel all the pent-up desire and need he felt, wanting her to struggle as hard with it as he did.

She stood her ground as he knew she would. Slowly he moved closer still until his mouth was next to her ear and her breath, shallow and quick now, warmed his cheek.


Can
you act the perfect wife?” he whispered, his lips almost brushing the shell of her ear.

“Can you let me touch you?” He ran a hand up her arm then trailed his fingertips across her chest and down the valley between her breasts.

“Can you touch me, pretend to be anxious to be alone with me?”

She leaned her head away from him as he feathered kisses down her gently arched neck.

“Can you share a bed with me and not wish me to bring you pleasure?” he said, staring now into her hooded eyes as he brushed the backs of his fingers over the slope of her breasts.

Her eyes went dark and hot and her breath came faster as he lifted the weight of her breasts in his hands, flicking his thumbs over the erect nipples that pushed against the fabric of her gown.

She kissed him then, fast and hard, her fingers threaded through his hair, her lips hungry on his. He groaned and reached to pull her against him just as she stepped backward into the dark.

“I can,” she said, her voice quiet and sure, but her body, the need in her kiss, gave her away, and Tayg knew she wanted him.

God help him.

He had no doubt they could act the part of lovers now. The question was could they bear the heat between them? Would they be able to deny the inferno when they were alone again? Would they survive its ashes when they parted?

Tayg shook his head and turned to finish caring for the horse, ignoring the singing in his blood and the pounding of his heart.

C
ATRIONA HEARD MORE
than saw Tayg tending to the horse. The stable was completely dark now, the last glow of the sun gone from the snow outside the door. She stood perfectly still, unwilling to move until she got her jumbled emotions and traitorous body under control. Her heart felt ready to burst, and she could not catch her breath. Need so strong it hurt pulsed through her until she could barely think, could only feel. Never had she experienced such desire. The man made her skin so sensitive that every touch, every breath, every look burned over her, through her. With a word he fanned the smoldering ember in the pit of her belly into a roaring fire that threatened to burn away all that she knew, all that she thought she wanted, all that she was.

“Mistress? Master Bard?” a lad, a young man really, called from just outside the stable as if he hesitated to enter. “Mum says yer supper is ready and ye should come and warm yerselves by the fire.”

Tayg turned toward the voice. “I am nearly done with the horse. We shall be there in a moment.”

Catriona was amazed at how calm his voice sounded, how sure, how Tayg, as if nothing unusual had happened. And perhaps it hadn’t, at least for him.

He had been testing her, she realized. He had been trying to see if she could manage her emotions enough to play the part of loving wife and not get swept up in it.

Anger fanned the flames to a bright new color. How dare he play with her feelings that way, with her body? But now she knew what he was up to. She could play his game as deftly as he did. She would prove to him that she could act the perfect wife
and
keep herself, her emotions, her desires, under control. ’Twould be up to him to meet the challenge.

She took a deep breath and left the stable. She needed a moment to compose herself, set her own plan, then she would show him who was in control.

C
ATRIONA SAT AT
one end of a bench at the family’s table. Tayg sat to her left, too close, and Friar John filled the seat at the head of the table on her right, his back to the warming fire. The family, Gair, Lina, and their five children who ranged in age from six or seven to nearly grown, sat around the rest of the well-worn table. A large wooden bowl at the near end held a thick, savory stew filled with chunks of succulent beef and vegetables. A long tray sat at the far end of the table, laden with perfectly roasted pigeons. Each person at the table had a wooden trencher, a horn spoon, and an ale-filled cup. Two tallow candles fixed in simple holders sat amid the food and illuminated the feast. Catriona was impressed with the quantity of food and the tableware. But part of her tensed. Family meals had never been an easy part of life in Assynt.

A stack of bowls sat beside Lina, who ladled the stew into them and passed them down the table. The four lads all seemed to reach at once for the pigeons. Lina cuffed the oldest one on the back of his head between passing bowls.

“Mind yer manners, Niall,” she said. “We have guests this night and they shall choose first.” Lina smiled at Catriona. “Would ye be liking a pigeon?”

“Thank you, I would, but I would not take it from your weans,” Catriona said. She was aware of Tayg’s startled look, but she ignored it. She would surprise him in more ways than one this night.

“My weans get plenty to eat,” Lina said as she motioned for the tray to be passed to her.

“’Tis plain they do,” the friar said, spearing a pigeon with his knife as Lina held the tray in front of him. “Niall there has grown near a foot since last I saw him, and ’twas only a year past. Even wee Cecilia has grown…though she seems to have misplaced her teeth,” he added, grinning at the little girl with the long brown braid who sat between two of her brothers. Cecilia smiled, and Catriona saw that she was indeed missing two teeth. She felt a bit concerned for the lass, but no one else, even the girl, seemed to notice her dangerous position.

Lina filled Catriona and Tayg’s trenchers with a perfectly roasted bird each.

“Ceci misplaces many things,” another brother said, “like my hornpipe.”

“I did not!” the lass said, then stuck her tongue out at the lad. “You gave it to Annag at the gathering. I saw you. Sim wants to marry Annag. I saw him kissing her.”

Sim went scarlet, nearly matching his brilliant red hair, but instead of reaching across the table and yanking Ceci’s braid or some other painful action as Catriona’s brothers would have done, the family broke into loud laughter and Sim took his sister’s jibe good-naturedly. Or so it seemed. Catriona would make a point of sticking close to the lass after dinner to make sure Sim didn’t come back to exact his revenge later.

“He can have Annag,” another brother said. Catriona turned to look at the new speaker and realized he was Sim’s exact copy—twins—and by the look of them just coming into manhood. Those two must surely cause trouble for Lina and Gair. “Annag is sweet enough, but I’ll take her cousin Maggie.”

Loud laughter followed this, and Niall said, “As if she would have you, Kennon.”

“Neither of you will be taking anyone yet,” Lina said. “Not till I say ’tis time for you to take a wife. I’ve not tamed ye enough to turn ye over to another woman’s keeping. I would not do that to either of those lasses.” She winked at Catriona. “It takes a lot of training of you lads before ye are fit to live with.”

“I shall never want to marry,” the last brother piped up. He could not be more than ten or eleven and shared the twins’ bright hair and copper freckles. “Why would anyone want to kiss a lass?” He screwed up his face in disgust, then dug into his dinner with all the abandon of a hungry young boy.

Gair laughed. “Perhaps our guest would like to explain that to you, Pol.”

All eyes, including Catriona’s, turned to Tayg. He looked flustered for a moment, then she watched as his familiar cocky grin broke out. He turned to her and raised his eyebrows as if to challenge her.

She was up to the challenge. She grinned back at him and was gratified to see concern fill his eyes, though his grin remained in place.

“Ah, Pol,” she said, snuggling close to Tayg and resting her head on his shoulder, “’tis very nice to kiss, especially when ’tis someone you love you are kissing.” She stretched up and kissed Tayg’s mouth chastely.

’Twas Pol’s turn to blush. “Oy, I hate that kissy stuff!”

“That hardly counts as
kissy stuff
,” Niall said, grinning at Tayg and Catriona. “Show him how a proper kiss is done, Tayg.”

“Aye, ’twas not a proper kiss for a new bride,” Gair added.

The table erupted in a chant of “kiss her, kiss her,” and Catriona felt her heart kick as she realized he was indeed going to kiss her, here, in front of everyone. ’Twas only right to convince their hosts that they were who, and what, they said they were. ’Twas part of pretending, and she would show him that she could do this and keep her wits about her. She would show him that he had no effect upon her, body, mind, or heart.

The family added the stomping of their feet to their chant. Tayg leaned close, taking her face in his hands. “You brought this on yourself,” he said just loud enough for her to hear.

He kissed her then, soft and gently as if she were the most delicate of China porcelain. Catriona grasped his forearms, but she wasn’t sure if she did it to hold him away or to pull him closer. The family whooped, and Tayg deepened the kiss. Catriona closed her eyes and was swept away by the passion pouring into her, the need and desire that sang through him and into her—the burning want.

“A-hem! There are weans present, lad.”

Catriona wasn’t sure who spoke. She opened her eyes and became vaguely aware of the raucous whoops and the odd jerky movement of Tayg’s body where the older brother was slapping him on the back.

“I think we’d best get supper out of the way and done and let these two have some privacy,” Lina said, her eyes twinkling. “’Tis clear we should not keep them longer from their bridal bed.”

More laughter, but Catriona could not take her eyes from Tayg’s, where desire was plain, but something else, some deeper emotion, also reigned. Whatever that emotion was it reached out and wrapped itself about her heart, making her wish that this evening were true and not an accidental fabrication.

Pain wrenched her at the thought, for this moment was just what she yearned for: a happy family, a loving husband, a simple life where she felt cherished and desired. She broke Tayg’s hold on her gaze and looked about the table. She sat here in the circle of a loving husband’s arms, surrounded by people who accepted her, celebrated her supposed good fortune, and wished her happiness. Perhaps, just for tonight, she could imagine it was true.

She could.

Just for tonight.

She snuggled closer to Tayg, his arms around her still, and happily played her part.

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