Read The Warrior Bride Online

Authors: Lois Greiman

Tags: #Romance

The Warrior Bride (10 page)

BOOK: The Warrior Bride
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“I did not mean to… That is…” He motioned toward the bed where they had been seated. “Me apologies,” he said again and nodded brusquely as he backed away. “I will go inquire about the-”
But at that moment a knock sounded at the door.
Hunter tightened her grip on her dirk and shifted her gaze to the portal. Lachlan did not so much as turn. Instead, he set his hand to his own knife, as if welcoming a challenge, so long as it did not come from her.
“Who comes?” he asked. His voice was as deep as the night outside their lead-paned window.
“‘Tis your dinner, me lord.” A young woman answered. She was probably not the type he’d care to challenge either, Hunter mused, but his tone was no lighter when he spoke again.
”A moment,” he said and, keeping his gaze pinned to Hunter’s, motioned for her to get into bed.
She raised her chin and her dirk at his imperious manner, but he only lowered his brows as if mildly irritated. ‘They might not be as enlightened as you,” he murmured. “Indeed, if they see you thus, they might mistake you for a woman.”
She considered a half dozen appropriate rejoinders, but the maid spoke again, and Hunter finally stepped toward the bed. Lachlan swept the blankets aside, allowing her to slip beneath the woolens. In an instant he had covered her nearly to the top of her head.
“Enter,” he called.
The door creaked open.
“Good eventide, me lord. I was told to bring this meal to you and your…” She paused for a moment. Hunter could imagine her skimming the room, seeing the helmet, the jerkin, the gauntlets-spread upon the chamber floor. “Companion.”
“Me thanks,” said MacGowan, but his voice was little more than a feral growl.
Being bested by a woman surely made him contentious. But in truth, she had hardly bested him, though if she tried it would be a battle to remember, for she was not some frivolous wench ready to simper at his merest. scowl, and the sooner he realized that the better.
On the other hand, she had not meant to scare him off.
Indeed, perhaps she would have almost welcomed a bit of a tussle. Perhaps it would not be so hideous to feel his hard body against…
But nay. She was being foolish and there was no place for foolishness in the life she had made for herself.
“I hope the meal be to your liking.” The maid’s voice was dulcet and ultimately feminine.
“‘Twill be acceptable I am sure.” His response was little more than a grunt.
“‘Tis a fine bit of mutton stew and barley bread I’ve brought. It seemed like a good bit of food, until now when I lay eyes on ye. Master Crighton did not say you were such a braw one.”
Beneath the blankets, Hunter stiffened, then, tugging the woolens a half inch lower, she gazed through the tangle of sheets toward the speaker. She was small and soft and buxom with a pink bow of a mouth and fluttery, lily-white hands.
“Me name is Grace,” she said and paused. No response came. “And what might I call you, me lord?”
He delayed a moment as if distracted, then, “I am Lachlan, of the MacGowans.”
“And your… companion?”
“Your pardon,” he said gruffly, “but me friend is in need of me attention.”
“He is wounded?” Her mouth made a sympathetic circle as if she could not bear the thought.
“Only slightly.”
“Then I must assist you.”
Beneath the stifling blankets, Hunter tightened her grip on her dirk.
“Nay.” MacGowan’s voice was firm and a far cry from flirtatious.
“Then there is naught you want from me?” Grace drew out the word naught slightly as if he might be too daft to realize what she offered. Not that the flirtations bothered Hunter. Nay, ‘twould not matter to her in the least if the little tart ripped off her clothes and began humping his leg, but ‘twas a sorry way for a woman to act.
“Nay,” said MacGowan. “This will do nicely. Me thanks.”
Hunter scowled. ‘Twas not often that men turned down such obvious invitations. Why would he?
The maid paused for a moment, and in the silence Hunter could hear the girl’s irritation. “It’s certain you are then?”
“Aye.”
“Well, if you change your mind you’ve but to ask for Grace.”
Hunter could almost hear his scowl. “Very well.” There was a moment of silence, followed by a few quick footfalls and the sound of the closing door.
“Odd lass,” he muttered.
Hunter left her dirk on the chaff-filled mattress and pulled the blankets from her head. With an effort, she pushed herself to her elbow. Pain skittered through her and she failed to hide a wince.
“Here.” His voice was still gruff though he hustled to her side. “Let me assist you.”
She kept her tunic pressed against her breasts as she allowed him to help her sit up. Why was he all but rude to the maid and so strangely solicitous to her? What did he hope to gain?
“She is gone?” Hunter asked, and although the answer was obvious, it only prompted more questions.
“Aye.”
She scowled at the door for a moment, then returned her attention to him. “Did you not find her… comely?”
He shrugged. “Nay. Not to me own way of thinking, but…” His scowl deepened. “Mayhap you would find her so.”
She raised her brows. “I would find her comely?”
“Mayhap. I’ve no way of knowing.”
How very strange. If he did not think the maid bonny, what was he attracted to? It didn’t matter, of course, and yet she was curious. “How did she look?”
“Look?” He glanced up, not as if baffled, but more as if he were irritated.
“Aye. Was she slim, fair, tall, bonny?” Why the devil had he turned the girl aside? She’d all but crawled into his sporran and spent the night.
“She was bonny enough, I suspect. Though she didn’t-” His hands lingered for a moment as he shifted the pillows behind her.
“Didn’t what?” she asked, but in an instant he’d pulled his hands abruptly away.
“‘Tis naught. We’d best bind your wound.”
She skimmed her gaze to the tray and saw the bandages there. “She brought them?”
“Aye. I told the gaffer you’d sustained a slight injury.” She nodded, too intrigued by the conversation just past to bother with her wound. “And it does not concern you that you… missed your opportunity with her?” she asked, still watching his face.
He’d retrieved the flagon of spirits. ”This will sting,” he warned, and sat on the bed behind her.
“So you don’t care?” “Are you ready?”
“Aye,” she said, still distracted, but in a moment pain burned like lightning across her back. She hissed through her teeth and tightened her grip on her shirt, but it was over soon enough.
“Me apologies.” His hand felt warm and unutterably strong against her arm.
She glanced at it, then his face. It was the face of a warrior tested in battle and found to be strong. His eyes were solemn, his expression troubled. “Why did you turn her away, MacGowan?” she asked.
“Who?”
“The maid,” she said, exasperated. “If the bed hadn’t been occupied, you’d have had to bum it down to be rid of her.”
“The maid what brought the meal?”
“Aye. Grace, I believe her name was.”
He shrugged as if that answered everything. His face was utterly sober, sculpted and square and a long way from pretty. But the power there and the ferocity! Emotion skittered up her spine, and her face felt flushed.
“Are you well?” he asked. “You look a bit feverish.”
“Nay. I am well.”
He nodded and reached for the bindings. “I’ll see you bandaged then.”
She turned away with some relief, for the sight of him did naught to clear her mind…
He sat behind her, silent and motionless for a moment, then, “You’ll have to shift the tunic a bit.”
“Oh, aye,” she said and drawing a breath, gathered the garment into a smaller bundle and clasped her right arm across her chest. Beneath her fingers, she felt the rough path of the scar she’d sustained from the Munro’s blade. It was long and curved, slanting around the outside of her left breast, but it had been a small price to pay for the privilege of Knight’s company.
Lachlan sat unmoving behind her. She tightened her grip on the tunic, covering the scar, and in a moment his hands brushed her back. His fingers stroked the side of her ribs, and she held her breath as the same hand skimmed, light as moonlight, against the underside of her breast. Reaching across, he retrieved the bandage with his left hand and began the process again. Still, he never crossed her bosom, but stayed well beneath it, only brushing it now and then with his knuckles or thumbs.
Heat spread upward like evening tide until she felt hot and restive. Against her neck, she could feel the warmth of his breath, and upon her skin, his hands were as steady and gentle as sunlight. She concentrated on breathing, on remaining still, on refraining from any type of stupidity. But it seemed almost as if he were not just bandaging her. It felt as though he were caressing her, stroking her, seducing her. When he leaned close, she could feel the heat of his body against her back, could feel his power as surely as if she had placed her hand to his chest, had felt the muscles bunch and shift against her flesh. Aye, he would be a powerful force to contend with if ever she decided to take a lover, but she would not. Nay. She was a warrior, tried in battle, accustomed to temptation, strong, and not about to weaken now when she was so near solving the riddle.
Evil comes to Evermyst.
Maybe it was true, and if it was she would stop it, for she was no different than MacGowan; she would not be content until she had repaid her dues, righted her wrongs.
Still… She shifted her gaze to his hands again. If ever she were to take a mate, he would not be a horrid choice. He would not be binding her wounds then, but skimming his hands reverently over her body. True, she was not the type of woman men swooned over, for she was strong· and rough and scarred. Indeed, she was barely a woman at all, but perhaps he was different than most. After all, he had resisted the chambermaid’s obvious advances. So it was possible he was looking for something deeper-perhaps a woman who did not quake when he scowled or swoon when he smiled, but one who met him as an equal. Aye, she was an exceptional fighter, but if she set her mind to it perhaps she could also be an adequate-
“Hunter.”
She jumped at the sound of his voice. “Aye?”
“‘Tis finished,” he said, and she realized suddenly that his hands had stilled. He remained motionless behind her upon the bed. All but naked, she sat only inches from him. Her face felt flushed, her body the same as she sat frozen before him, but he made no attempt to touch her.
A thousand possibilities soared through her mind, but she had no experience in the ways of seduction. Indeed, she had spent much of her life avoiding any possibility of it. She glanced furtively over her shoulder at him. His eyes met hers, and she lowered hers hastily, praying he could not read her thoughts.
“You’d best clothe yourself,” he said.
“Oh.” The word escaped from her without thought, breathless, worthless, foolish. She cleared her throat and lowered her voice. “Aye,” she said, and lifted the tunic. Her face felt damnably hot.
“You’ve…” He paused, then tightened his large hands to fists and scowled at her. “You’ve naught else to wear?”
She shook her head once.
“Here,” he said and, turning abruptly, reached into the leather bag he’d kept behind his cantle. From it, he drew a fresh shirt. It was a simple garment, softened by time and use and faded to the color of aged bone. “‘Tis clean and dry and will be more comfortable for you.”
“Nay,” she said, and shook her head. She had no desire whatsoever to wear his clothing, to accept his favors, to make him believe she had some interest in him. ‘Twould be far too personal to feel his shirt against her skin, to smell the essence of him surrounding her like…
“I will see yours mended, and if the village has a decent leather wright, I will tend to your jerkin as well.”
“It is fine as it is,” she said.
“Nay, ‘tis not, for through the rend others will see either the bindings or your…” He paused. His gaze skimmed downward momentarily and when he lifted his eyes again they were darker than ever, with his brows pulled low and his expression hard. “‘Tis in need of repair,” he insisted and shoved his tunic toward her.
“Very well then,” she said and took the garment from him. Their fingers brushed.
Silence fell like spilled ink over the room.
“I will help you…” He drew a deep breath through his nostrils. “Don it.”
She would have to release the garment she held to her breast like an iron shield. The thought went unspoken. But it was obvious. She stared at him, and he stared back, his eyes earnest, his mouth unsmiling, as if this was no more than an unpleasant chore, best done quickly.
Was it all a ploy to see her unclothed yet again? Did he only hope to compromise her? But nay, she most probably had no need to worry on that account, not once he saw her in the full light of day, scared as she was.
Tipping up her chin, she met his gaze and dropped the tunic.
His attention remained focused on her face.
His square hands were formed into fists and for several seconds he stood exactly as he was. She remained unmoving, unspeaking, waiting in silence. Ready.
But in the end he neither turned away nor came in a rush.
Instead, he approached slowly. Her heart beat at the same laborious rate as she watched him fill her sight, and then he reached out. His fingers brushed hers. Lightning sensations shivered up her arm. Her heart leapt and stopped. For a moment the world stood still, but finally he tugged the garment from her clenched fingers.
“Lift your arms,” he ordered.
It was all she could manage to do. She felt absolutely naked, as vulnerable as a babe-breathless and lightheaded and foolish as she raised her arms toward the ceiling, revealing all.
BOOK: The Warrior Bride
2.69Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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