MC BIKER ROMANCE: Bad Boy Romance: BETRAYED: (New Adult Motorcycle Club Navy SEAL Romance) (Contemporary Military Romance Thriller) (42 page)

BOOK: MC BIKER ROMANCE: Bad Boy Romance: BETRAYED: (New Adult Motorcycle Club Navy SEAL Romance) (Contemporary Military Romance Thriller)
3.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Chapter Two

When Agnes woke up, it was because she was being lifted out of her bed by a pair of strong arms that could carry her weight like she was nothing but a small rucksack. At first, she didn't know what to do, or how to react. It took a moment for what was happening to process in her mind, because she had never experienced what it was to be fearful, or to be in danger. Her instincts kicked in within moments, though, and she began screaming for help.

Her screaming couldn't be allowed to continue, however. A hand soon covered her mouth and nose, making it nearly impossible to breathe, let alone scream. The strong man who was carrying her didn't even break stride, and before he reached the door of the hotel, Agnes felt her consciousness slowly ebb away again.

When she did awake, it was to the dingy lighting of some unfinished dirt basement with only one oil lamp on a table in front of her. She hadn't even adjusted her sight to the dingy and inadequate lighting before a deep and gravelly voice addressed her.

"Did you think you could spy on us? Try and obtain information for the English scum?" the manly voice demanded. Agnes felt a cold sweat break out all over her body, and she was rendered speechless. "Well, Levin?" he asked, the volume of his voice steadily rising in anger.

"N-no, no. I am not here to meet the ends of the English--" Agnes quickly said, trying to assuage the man of those fears.

"Don't lie to me, Levin scum," he said, growling slightly.

"How do you know my family name?" Agnes asked. It troubled her that this man seemed to know who she was. Could her father actually have men looking for her to take her back home all the way in Scotland? No, that was inconceivable. He was a traitor to the Scottish people. No self-respecting Scotsman would dare to sell his labor to a man who so brazenly and unabashedly betrayed him.

What was more concerning, now that Agnes was able to think a bit more clearly, was the fact that she held the same name as her defecting father. Perhaps that's why she was detained and why this man was questioning her.

The man was eerily silent for a few moments, then he stood up, slamming his fist down on the table. "You don't think that I would let a Levin through my town, do you? You must have thought you were going to pull the wool over my eyes, but you're wearing an English fashioned dress. My mom was able to catch that, and from there it was simple enough to discern who you were," the man growled.

"No, I didn't come here to fool anyone--"

"Liar!" he said, his tone rising yet again, but Agnes wasn't daunted. She believed firmly that she was in the right, and she was determined to show it.

"I'm no liar! I am here to fight for Scotland! Unlike my father, I'm no turncoat!" Agnes replied, her voice alive with the passion of her convictions. This did not convince her interrogator, however.

"Oh yeah? And I'm the bloody queen in that case! Don't lie to me!" he said, though despite his yelling, Agnes was not afraid. She tried to stand to continue to engage him on the matter, but she realized then that she was tied to the chair. This was quite serious, then. She was earnestly considered a threat by this man.

"Besides my last name, what makes you believe I'm a liar?" Agnes asked, glaring at the shadowy figure who was insulting and interrogating her.

This question seemed to give the man pause, and he didn't attempt to reply right away. "I don't need another reason to think you're a traitor, Levin. The sins of the father are visited upon his children. Your father abandoned us because of a coming storm, yet you expect me to embrace you? Don't make me laugh!" he said, spitting on the ground.

"Perhaps my father did betray you," Agnes began, but then corrected herself. "No, my father definitely did betray you. I don't blame you for being angry with him. The reason I'm even here is because I'm angry with him, too. But just because my father betrayed you doesn't mean that I will! Why would I have come to the front lines of a war if all I meant to do was betray the Scottish people? I could have stayed at home in a large manor with servants, but I left that all because I knew I belonged in Scotland!" Agnes said.

"Perhaps you did leave Britain, but just because you did doesn't mean you're on the side of the Scots. After all, if you did want to help Scotland, wouldn't you do better for us by trying to sabotage England from within? What's one little woman going to do for a war?" the man demanded.

"Sabotage? I left my father's house to avoid disgracing and embarrassing myself, sir," Agnes replied, indignant. "And I'm not just one little woman!"

"Oh, and what are you?" the man asked curiously.

"I'm a woman with important documents about British stratagems," Agnes replied. "And the willingness to help my country in whatever way possible. What else could a person offer?"

The man hesitated for a moment, not sure that he wanted to trust this strange woman. Still, the earnestness with which she spoke did make him willing to at least give her a chance.

"Fine. Start by giving over those documents, and maybe we can work something out together," the man said.

"To do that, I have to be untied first," Agnes pointed out.

"Just tell me where they are. I'll grab them," he replied. She had the papers safely tucked away in her corset, and so she was not willing to let this strange man rustle around in there.

"Excuse me, sir, but you will not," Agnes replied, scooting away from him and glaring. The man just eyed her, but his expression was covered in darkness so much that she couldn't tell much about how he felt about her reaction.

"And why is that?" he asked.

"Because you owe me a show of trust, sir. Especially after tying me up like this," Agnes said, using "sir" in a somewhat sarcastic tone. She showed her total lack of fear, if nothing else, in speaking to her interrogator. That characteristic went some way towards proving that she wasn't actually the terrible spy that the Scots feared that she was, but it still made her seem mysterious.

"The reason I tied you up is because I don't trust you. Now you expect me to do a trust exercise for you? How dim are you?" the man asked, his voice lowering. Agnes just frowned and studied the shadowy face for any hint of an expression on his face.

"Fine," Agnes finally said with a heavy sigh. "The documents are in my corset, but after you read them, you have to untie me," she said. If he wouldn't just untie her upon request, she hoped that she could bargain for her confines to be lifted.

"Ah, that's why you didn't want me to get them myself," the man said. At least he understood that now, but he didn't hesitate to untie the corset and pull out the documents that were indeed where Agnes said that they would be. From there, he sat down at the table, and Agnes could finally see the rudiments of his face. He had dark brown hair with a strong jawline and defined features. His brow was somewhat on the low side, his eyes deep and intense. In short, he looked just how she would picture a man running the revolution.

Agnes herself was a fine specimen as well. She had black hair with a wild curl, a sensuous and full body with skin as pale as milk. Her father had no shortage of marriage offers, but he declined them all to keep his little girl close at hand until the right opportunity presented itself, but now it never would. At least, not unless her father could see the error of his ways and beg the good people of Scotland to forgive him for his trespasses, though considering the hostility with which she was met, she wouldn't hold her breath that her father would ever be welcomed back into the homeland.

Even though Agnes could appreciate the finer features on this man, she was more than a little annoyed that he just unceremoniously stuck his hand down her corset. Maybe his hands were chaste and didn't do anything untoward, but she was still annoyed. Despite her frowns, he didn't seem too fazed, and he just continued to look down at the paper as Agnes stared unhappily at his visage.

Once he was done reading, which took about twenty minutes, the man stacked all the papers neatly on the corner of the table, then looked at Agnes, meeting her hard expression unblinkingly.

"Why is it exactly that you want to join our ranks?" he asked.

"I've already explained this once to you. But if you want an encore then luckily the reason is simple. I wish to help Scotland fight against oppression," Agnes replied, a tinge of annoyance audible in her voice.

"And why is that?" the man asked.

"Because my father failed to do the job himself. As his only child, I feel like I must pick up the pieces that my father left behind," Agnes replied confidently.

"And the best way you decided that you could pick up the pieces, as you say, is to waltz into the country dressed like some English duchess without the least attempt for a disguise? Do you realize how conspicuous that makes you seem?"

Agnes just looked at the man with a genuine sense of curiosity. "No. I am here to save my country and countrymen. Why would I have to hide my face or disguise myself? Only assassins and ne’er-do-wells attempt to keep their identity a secret," Agnes replied calmly. "Why do you think that my behavior is strange? That is the real question that should be asked, in my opinion."

"Have you never left your father's estate, woman? You are dense," the man said.

This made Agnes' temper flare. She had borne much from this man, but his insults were getting to be a bit more than she could suffer with a smile. "I'm not dense! I have left my father's estate before. Just because I may not be cultured in this air of mystery and mistrustfulness is no means by which you should feel this prejudice. I am not a person who has spent her life learning what it is to be of the common folk. Perhaps that is my greatest sin. But my ignorance is not stupidity!"

The man considered this for a moment. Agnes was not a pleasure to speak with, but he was starting to like her despite that. She was a passionate and fiery woman with the strength of her convictions. For good or for worse.

"Woman, what is your first name?" the man asked quietly.

"Agnes. And yours?"

"Faolan," he replied. He hesitated slightly to give away his name, as if debating if it were a good idea. Thankfully, he ultimately did decide in her favor.

"That's an unusual name," Agnes replied, though in all honesty she was not the most cultured woman. She certainly hadn't met a large enough sampling of people to say that she knew what a common name was versus an uncommon one.

"My father bore this name, as did his father before him," Faolan replied.

"Is the name popular in this area, outside of your family?" Agnes asked.

"I've never heard anyone go by the name. But that doesn't mean much," Faolan replied, then stood and eyed over Agnes for a moment. "If I untie you, and you try anything funny, I will take appropriate action against you," Faolan said. The only thing that Agnes heard from that, however, was that she was being untied.

"It's about time! I was starting to get sore, just staying in this position all day! It's terrible that you'd treat a lady like this, you know!" Agnes replied, and Faolan merely rolled his eyes as he stood and began undoing the knots.

Once she was free, Agnes stood up and just stretched her taut and abused muscles. In doing so, her loose corset fell to the ground, but Agnes didn't care too much about that at the moment. What did catch her attention, however, was the sound of papers fluttering after hitting the floor.

"What were those?" Faolan's voice was a bit tenser when he spoke this time, as if he were accusing Agnes of hiding something. If she were trying to hide, she would be doing a really bad job by first instructing Faolan to take those papers, and then dropping them on the floor while she stretched. But she didn't say that of course, and instead she just leaned over and picked them up.

"These are some of the documents I had thought you already picked up off of my person. They must have been deeper in my corset than the others. Let's see," Agnes mused, looking over the papers. As she did, her eyes widened.

"What?" Faolan demanded, and snatched the papers out of Agnes' hand effortlessly.

"An attack is being launched on this village tomorrow," Agnes said, but Faolan just focused his attention on the document wholly and read until he saw the orders that Agnes had read herself. This was not good news, not at all.

"I have to organize a search party. Agnes, stay here--" Faolan began.

"I didn't travel all these miles to be told to wait in a dingy basement, Faolan. I'm going to go to the frontlines and fight, if I am useful there. If not, I'm going to go wherever I can be useful and offer up my labor there. You can't just ignore me and tell me that I should be staying in the basement, when I'm the only reason that you're going to be able to prepare for this attack and fortify your town.”

"I would have appreciated it if you would have gotten here a week ago with this information," Faolan replied, his brow furrowing in an annoyed expression.

"Well, perhaps if I had known that this was going to happen, I would have been here sooner. But I haven't had the time to do anything but travel after I stole those documents, because I was trying to get here as fast as possible. Even if I had read them, I couldn't have gotten here any faster than I did. If I pushed myself further still, then I would have probably ridden my horse to death," Agnes replied indignantly.

"Fine, you did your best. But this situation is pretty terrible," Faolan said, and bit his lower lip as he mulled over what he should do.

Other books

Moon of Skulls by Robert E. Howard
Phantom of Blood Alley by Paul Stewart
Stealing From a Dragon by Christie Sims, Alara Branwen
Another Me by Cathy MacPhail