Together they strove with increasing desperation until lust began to bubble up inside her like beer left overlong in the cask.
She arched up, and in one frozen instant of time, every impulse centered on that one vulnerable pinpoint where their bodies
connected. Then the world shattered into a thousand pieces, exploding outward like shards of a burst bottle.
Drew had managed to restrain himself, despite Jossy’s wanton gazes and welcoming arms and enthusiastic kisses and enticing
moans and mouthwatering breasts and thrusting hips. But when she contracted around him in the throes of ecstasy, ’twas all
he could do to keep from hammering the poor lass into the mattress.
His release came upon him like the powerful drive of a longnose club, striking hard and catapulting him high into the heavens.
He shuddered with the strength of it, and when he finally fell to earth, his satisfaction was so complete and so perfect,
’twas as if he’d sunk his ball in one stroke.
Utterly drained, he used the last of his energy to ease off of the lass so he’d not suffocate her. He gathered her to him,
holding her close and kissing her hair. And for the
first time in his life, he felt like he was exactly where he belonged.
“Are ye all right?” he whispered.
“Mm.”
He smiled and snuggled closer.
She mumbled against his throat. “Are
ye
?”
His smile widened into a grin. “Oh, aye, lass.”
She breathed a contented sigh that tickled his chest and warmed him down to his toes, and he closed his eyes, utterly fulfilled.
He must have dozed off then. When he awoke, the fire had gone out, and he could hear Jossy breathing in the dark beside him.
Worried she might get chilled, he carefully dragged the coverlet over her shoulders, but his movement woke her.
She stirred groggily for a moment, then sat up with a gasp. “Shite!”
His heart knifed in his chest. “What?” Damn, he should have known she’d blame him for…
“The beer wagon!”
She threw back the coverlet and scrambled off the bed.
Relief flooded him. He sat up, raking his hands through his hair, which was probably a tangled mess. “Don’t worry, lass. I’m
sure Davey’s… Shite!”
“What?”
“I left Cochrane on the course.”
Later that night, Josselin tried to maintain a stern expression as she pushed Drew back against the tavern wall, poking him
in the chest. She knew she was failing miserably.
“I told ye ne’er to come to my place o’ work.”
She looked nervously over at the innkeeper of The White Hart, hoping he was too busy with patrons to notice her.
Drew only grinned and coiled a lock of her hair around his finger. “Ye’re done workin’.”
Damn him! When he looked at her with those irresistible laughing eyes and arched that seductive brow, she couldn’t stay vexed
with him for long.
“Shite.”
An unwilling smile tugged at her lips, and she shook her head at her own folly. He wasn’t going to leave, and in truth, she
didn’t want him to. She didn’t know what enchantment he’d worked on her today, but she could hardly bear the thought of separation.
“Come on then,” she told him in mock disgust, untying her apron. “At least order me supper so we’ve a reason to sit at the
table.”
Josselin watched him walk to the counter, her gaze dropping to his handsome arse, and a lusty shiver went through her. She
wanted him again.
’Twas absurd. Only this morn she’d been a maid, pure as snow, and already she was a wanton, ready to crawl into bed with the
next man who wagged his handsome arse at her.
Nae, she corrected, not any man. ’Twas only Drew who left her hot and troubled.
She’d never imagined that making love could be so divine.
She’d seen the hasty, furtive coupling of animals. For Josselin, it had always seemed like a ruthless duel in which the male
always won.
She’d even glimpsed the occasional harlot in an alley, and that had appeared to be a transaction in which the female was largely
detached.
This had been something altogether different, like swimming together in a wild sea or fighting side by side in battle. She’d
felt helpless and powerful all at once, both worshipper and goddess. And for the first time in her life, she hadn’t wished
she was a lad, but exalted in the fact that she was a woman.
She smiled as she watched him return with a pair of ales. How she could have doubted Drew, she didn’t know. Aye, she’d wondered
about that magnificent sword, but he’d explained that the weapon had belonged to his father. He’d learned to use it, but the
only combat he ever engaged in took place on the golf course.
He certainly wasn’t a spy. He could never be a follower of that woman-hating John Knox. Drew was kind and gentle and sweet
and charming and luscious and…
“Ye’d better stop lookin’ at me like that, darlin’,” he murmured with a smoky glance, setting down the tankards, “or I’m apt
to bed ye right here in front o’ the whole tavern.”
She blushed with wicked delight. “And I’m apt to let ye.”
He laughed. ’Twas a wonderful sound, and it warmed her like a winter fire. Oh, aye, she planned to bed him again—tonight,
if he’d have her. After all, her lodgings were just upstairs. She raised her tankard in a toast, and he gave her a smile that
promised a long night of hot trysting. Indeed, with the Highlander for company, she expected she’d never be cold again.
S
imon Armstrong, Andrew’s uncle, pulled the cap lower over his brow as he limped down Edinburgh’s Royal Mile, resisting the
impulse to glance up at the imposing gray stones that frowned down at him as if to say he didn’t belong here.
’Twas the truth, he supposed. He was English. He didn’t belong here. But neither did Queen Mary. She’d shunned King Henry’s
son, after all, and fled to Paris. In Simon’s opinion, she should have stayed there and left Scotland to Queen Elizabeth.
And if Simon had anything to say about it, the self-professed Scottish queen would go back to France—the sooner, the better.
Of course, Simon didn’t have anything to say about it. He was only a pawn in Elizabeth’s chess match with Mary. But even pawns
could distinguish themselves, and that was his hope.
Unlike his brothers, Robert and Thomas, he was no longer fit enough to go to war. His last skirmish with the Scots five years
ago had left his only son dead and Simon crippled, and his old eyes weren’t what they used to be. But he’d be damned if he’d
let his injuries keep him from
serving the English crown. His brothers’ sons served in Elizabeth’s army. Even Andrew—the son of their dead brother Edward
and a swordsman beyond compare—fought in tournaments throughout England, honing his skills for the coming war with Scotland.
Simon might be crippled, but he could still serve his country.
So a month ago, when Queen Elizabeth’s secretary, Sir Francis Walsingham, approached the loyal Armstrong brothers—Simon, Robert,
and Thomas—with this unique opportunity to serve the queen, they were honored beyond words.
For two weeks now, the three of them had shared a remote cottage in Scotland, a few miles south of Edinburgh. ’Twas all they
shared. Their service was a matter of great secrecy, and they never disclosed their assignments, even to each other.
Simon turned off the Royal Mile and down a narrow lane. A pair of unruly university students ending their day of studies jostled
him as they passed, but Simon kept his eyes trained on the cobblestones. Above all, Walsingham had told him, a spy must be
invisible.
In a place as crowded and active as Edinburgh, ’twasn’t a difficult task. He usually ventured out at twilight, when nobody
paid heed to a gray-bearded old cripple in a tattered coat and worn leather boots.
Simon leaned heavily on his walking staff as his old wound throbbed. He squinted down the curving road from beneath the brim
of his cap. ’Twasn’t much farther to The White Hart. Once inside, he could settle into his dark corner and order a pint, keeping
alert for any snippets of relevant conversation, and give his leg a much-needed rest.
’Twas rumored the tavern was a favorite haunt of
Mary’s secretary, Philipe de la Fontaine. Walsingham had sent Simon there to be his eyes and ears. He was to report any unusual
activity or suspicious characters and note everything that de la Fontaine said.
He’d been coming every evening for two weeks now, and he had to admit ’twas a rather dull assignment for a man trained for
combat. He’d sat for hours, sipping at his beer, which he’d quickly learned was much stronger here than in England. No one
had mentioned the name of Mary.
The only day that Philipe de la Fontaine showed up, he chatted with the innkeeper for a few moments, asking how his son Duncan
was faring and inquiring after the French wine he had on order, which the innkeeper said hadn’t yet arrived. He then joined
a table of three merchants, played a single game of dice, which he lost, and, after less than a quarter hour, he left the
tavern.
Simon had been tempted to follow the secretary, but Walsingham’s admonition about remaining inconspicuous rang in his ears.
There would be other opportunities, he told himself.
Perhaps this evening he’d learn something valuable, he thought as he pushed open the door of The White Hart.
When his feeble eyes grew accustomed to the dim interior, he was disappointed to discover his usual table was taken. A man
sat there with a lass who frequented the tavern. They were conversing over trenchers of leek pottage.
He squinted at the other tables around the room. There was an empty spot near the counter. ’Twasn’t quite as secluded, but
as long as he sat quietly and made no trouble, he’d blend into his surroundings, as innocuous as a stick of furniture.
Easing onto the stool and propping his walking staff against the wall, he huddled over his beer and surveyed the occupants
of the room.
De la Fontaine wasn’t here, but that wasn’t surprising. Mary probably kept him busy looking for English spies under her bed.
Two lads chatted with the tavern wench, but ’twas nothing unusual—the same two lads came by every evening to flirt with the
lass. A trio of men played at dice, and their conversation was mostly quarreling over whose turn ’twas or who owed whom how
much.
Simon took a sip of foamy beer.
Two gentlemen at one of the tables were studying a piece of parchment. One of them shook his head gravely. The other’s shoulders
slumped, and he gave the first a disgruntled frown. Then the first pointed at something on the page, and the second cocked
his head, as if considering it.
Could they be planning something? A rendezvous? An ambush? A plot to assassinate Elizabeth?
He couldn’t hear them, so he had to rely on what he could guess from their gestures.
They were arguing over whatever was on the parchment. The first man obviously wasn’t happy with it, and the second kept offering
changes, albeit reluctantly. The first frowned over the document and finally dismissed the thing with a wave of his hand,
which sent the second one scrambling in panic to please the first.
Simon had to find out what they were discussing. They might well be putting the polish on a conspiracy to overthrow the English
crown.
Leaving his beer and his cap conspicuously on the table so no one else would usurp his place, he slowly hobbled
past the pair toward the hearth, ostensibly to warm his hands at the fire.
As he passed, he squinted down at the parchment. ’Twas a drawing of a cupboard with leaves and flowers carved into the doors.
The man was obviously a craftsman then, presenting plans to an exacting patron.
Whatever their differences were, they didn’t seem to be engaged in a dangerous plot, so Simon moved on to the hearth.
As he stretched his fingers toward the fire, he glanced at the couple occupying his usual table. As he’d remarked on previous
nights, the lass was quite lovely… for a Scotswoman. She was fair of face with golden locks and looked to have all of her
teeth. Her companion…
Simon frowned.
There was something familiar about the man. ’Twas hard to tell in the shadows of the tavern, especially with his weak eyes,
but Simon thought he might have seen him before.
’Twas possible, he supposed, even in a place as big as Edinburgh, to see the same person twice. But this was something more
than simple recognition. There was something hauntingly, eerily familiar about him.
Then the man laughed at whatever the lass said, baring his teeth in a grin that was unmistakable, and Simon staggered, catching
himself on the hearthstones to keep from collapsing.
Invisible. He had to remain invisible. He turned his back on the couple and fought to breathe steadily, trying to make sense
of what he’d just seen.
There was no mistaking the young man. Aye, two years had passed—his hair had grown shaggy and there
was a day’s growth of beard on him—but he was the same bright-eyed lad Simon and his brothers had raised from the age of six.
What the hell was Andrew Armstrong doing
here
?
Simon stared into the flames, his eyes mirroring their fierce heat. The lad was supposed to be in England, fighting in tournaments.
What the devil was he doing in a Scots tavern?
Simon balled his fists against a mad urge to grab the lad by the scruff of the neck and march him out of The White Hart all
the way back to England, where he belonged. Of course, he didn’t dare. ’Twas just the sort of irresponsible action that would
earn him Sir Walsingham’s disapproval and subsequent dismissal.
But seeing Andrew here had thrown a loose cog into the machinery of Simon’s mission, and he knew he’d be of no use as a spy
until he solved the mystery of what his nephew was doing in Edinburgh.
He racked his brain for an explanation. Was it possible the lad had been recruited by Walsingham as well? Could he be an agent
of the queen? It seemed too improbable, and yet ’twas the only thing that made any sense.
He heard the scrape of a chair behind him, and he froze, wondering if Andrew had recognized him after all. But no tap on his
shoulder followed, and when Simon dared peek again, Andrew was on his way up the stairs with a hand around the lass’s waist.
To his further disgust, he saw that the lad was dressed in a saffron shirt and tartan trews, like a bloody Highlander, and
he carried a satchel of golfing clubs over his shoulder.