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The Saint: A Highland Guard Novel Page 22
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His eyes sparked dangerously. God, how he hated to be denied! “Damn it, Muriel.” Before she realized what he intended to do, he grabbed her arm, hauled her up against him, and covered her mouth with his.
Her traitorous heart shattered at the contact. The first familiar taste of him drenched her with heat and happiness. Emotions she’d been trying to suppress broke free in an instant.
His kiss was bruising, punishing, his lips plundering with every demanding stroke. His passion for her had always been her weakness. He’d never kissed her like a damaged piece of china, he’d kissed her like a woman who could feel passion.
And God help her for a fool, she did. She slid her tongue against his and kissed him back every bit as ravenously, every bit as desperately. She loved him so much and wanted every inch of him. She clutched the steely muscles of his back, pressing herself more firmly against him. She loved the way he felt against her. Hard and strong. Warm and safe.
He groaned into her mouth, digging his fingers through her hair to bring her mouth more firmly against him. He opened her mouth wider, slid his tongue in deeper, stroking her harder and harder.
He was losing control. She could feel the stiff facade of the earl start to break apart and the warm, passionate man she’d fallen in love with begin to shine through.
But then he remembered himself.
With a fierce groan, he tore away. In profile, she watched the heaviness of his breath start to slow as he composed himself. “I’m sorry. I didn’t mean …” His eyes locked on hers. “I shouldn’t have done that. It’s not why I came.”
Muriel thought her heart was done breaking, but she was crumbling inside. He’d remembered his duty. The stiff, formidable earl had returned. The man who wouldn’t be denied. The man whose love would make her a whore.
“It will only be for a short while. Until a suitable replacement can be found.”
Her chest burned. A wife. The woman who would take her place. Oh God. She couldn’t bear it.
She would have refused him again, but he knew her weakness.
“You owe me, Muriel. You owe my family.”
She staggered at the blow. The expertly wielded dagger that pierced her heart. He was right. She did owe him. His family had taken her in and given her a place to heal. When her father died, Will had not forced her to take a husband like anyone else would have done. It didn’t matter that his motivation was selfish. But she hated him for using her gratitude against her. He’d given her freedom; now he was taking it away.
She forced her gaze to his, though the burning in her chest made it feel as if the air had been squeezed from her lungs. “I will come for one month. But after that, any debt I have to you will be paid in full.”
Cool, arrogant eyes met hers. He nodded. “Very well. A month.”
He thought he could change her mind. But he couldn’t. He’d done what she’d thought impossible: he’d made her hate him.
Sixteen
Motte of Dingwall, Cromarty
They’d been at the Earl of Ross’s fortress of Dingwall for a few days before Magnus had the opportunity to speak to Helen alone. His duties on the road, and their natural separation when they arrived, not to mention her brother and Munro’s hovering, had forced Magnus to keep a watch on her from a distance. He was almost—almost—glad for the other men’s presence. Sutherland and Munro’s vigilance was added protection against something happening to her. Of course, they thought he was the threat.
He hoped to hell they were right. But he wouldn’t relax his guard until …
He didn’t know when he’d ever be able to relax his guard. The danger would be there as long as there was anyone who sought to uncover the identities of Bruce’s phantom warriors. Helen was connected to the Guard, whether she wanted to be or not.
Magnus felt an unexpected flare of anger at his dead friend. Had Gordon even thought of the danger he was exposing her to when he’d married her?
The potential danger was all Magnus could think about. If their enemies thought Helen knew something …
Hell, he didn’t want to think about what they would do to her to extract it. He’d already thought about it plenty the night she’d been late in returning to the castle.
He never panicked. Never. No matter how dire the situation, he always knew what to do. Even among the cool, unflappable members of the Highland Guard, Magnus was known for his steely nerves and levelheaded thinking in the heat of battle. But for one horrible moment, he’d felt the icy grip of fear close around him to lock him in a mind-numbing state of helplessness. If anything happened to her …
He’d become completely unhinged.
In retrospect he’d overreacted, but at the time all he could think about was Helen in the grasp of some sadistic bastard bent on extracting information from her.
The king was right. There was probably nothing to worry about. But he wouldn’t be able to relax until he was damned sure of it.
Of course, in addition to watching Helen he also had his duty to the king. Like the Sutherlands’, Ross’s fealty had been recently and reluctantly given. Though Bruce had accepted Ross back into the fold for the good of the realm, never far from any of their minds was that Ross had been the man responsible for violating church sanctuary to turn Bruce’s queen, his sisters, his daughter, and the Countess of Buchan over to the English.
The tension in the Hall was understandably thick and the possibility of further treachery never far from their minds. But like the Sutherlands, Bruce had sought to solidify Ross’s pledge with an alliance, this one between Ross’s heir, Sir Hugh, and the king’s sister Maud. It was the agreement to the betrothal that they were celebrating in the Great Hall when Magnus saw Helen slip away.
Since they’d arrived at Dingwall she’d been acting strangely. Especially around the other ladies, she seemed unusually quiet and subdued. It reminded him of when he’d first seen her at Dunstaffnage—as if there were something missing. He could not fault her appearance. He’d never seen her hair so artfully arranged, and she’d returned to a more modest gown selection—thank God!—but he wondered if something was wrong.
After a quick glance to MacGregor to keep an eye on the king, Magnus slipped outside after her. It was his duty. It wasn’t because he was worried about her.
Though the sky was clear, it was windy, and this close to the sea, cold for a midsummer day. Dingwall, an old Viking fortress garrisoned by the English and recently given to Ross to keep, was situated on a large motte fortified by a stone rampart and a hundred feet below by a wide ditch. The circular tower had been added to over the years, and now the castle was said to be the largest north of Stirling.
Magnus looked around but didn’t see her right away. There were a number of people about: servants rushing back and forth from the kitchens to the Hall, as well as soldiers patrolling the wall and guarding the gates.
He forced his heart to beat and clenched his jaw—he wasn’t going to panic, damn it—and methodically looked around again. He almost missed her. She was half-hidden behind a wall overlooking the ramparts; only a banner of long auburn hair blowing in the wind gave away her location.
With a deeper sigh of relief than he wanted to admit, he headed toward her. When he caught how quickly he was walking, however, he frowned. At Dunrobin he’d been doing his damnedest—without success—to avoid her. But after nearly a week of watching her from afar and speaking only when surrounded by others, if he didn’t know better he’d think he was anxious to see her. That he missed her.
Ah hell. He knew he was slipping, and there wasn’t a damned thing he could do about it. They were together, whether he liked it or not. He might as well make the best of it.
Captivated by the seaside view of the Firth below her, she didn’t hear him approach.
“I thought you liked dancing?”
She jumped at the sound of his voice and spun around with a start. But when she realized who it was, a bright smile turned her lips. Her delight at seeing him shouldn’t make him