Sword of the Highlands(8)

James gave a quick shake of his head. The lass had been truly frightened. Now was not the time to let his mind wander. And yet the feel of those creamy thighs under his thumbs kept coming to him, bringing fantasies of slipping his hands further up, under the bodice of that dress, so thin, and hanging loose enough at the neck for tantalizing glimpses of flawless ivory décolletage.

Unsettled, James shifted in his seat. He didn't recognize her. With that strange accent, she wouldn't be a part of his staff. And what of the revealing shift she wore? The fabric was fine, a rich blue like the color of lapis, and surely hard to come by.

A friend of his sister's perhaps? But she'd see med terrified, and quite plainly out of her element. He'd felt her panic in her rigid legs, saw it in her eyes, flitting around the room as if she were a trapped animal.

Perhaps she was sick. That was the likeliest explanation, in fact. A blow to the head could cause such disorientation. But there was the matter of her personal effects. Tucking the covers around her, he'd felt a hard object in her pocket. Baffled, he sat there now. turning it over in his hand. It was hard as a rock and shone a uniform red. but wasn't crafted from any stone he'd ever seen. A silver band with a small pewter wheel capped one end of the device. The wheel sent sparks like flint, and James couldn't imagine what its use could be.

It was her peculiar bracelet, though, that had most troubled him. Ugly and black, it seemed some sort of magical contrivance, bearing dark numerals that flashed menacingly on a gray face.

James leaned in, staring at the woman on the bed as if that would give some clue as to her identity. Though leaner than his tastes ran, she was a beauty, with long hair the color of leaves in fall. When her broad, smooth brow had furrowed in fear, James thought his heart might break for the poor creature.

He was intrigued. His unflappable nature was a source of personal pride, but this Magdalen flustered him, and James found he savored the novel sensation.

Perhaps it was growing up so close with his sister, or maybe his many dalliances through the years but, until that moment, James had found few of the female sex who'd held much mystery.

Crossing his feet on the edge of the bed, he smiled. Any woman who could unsettle James Graham was one to keep close indeed.

Chapter 5

Magda rolled onto her side. With her eyes still shut, she gathered one of the bed's many pillows between her legs and burrowed more deeply under the covers. A faint musk lingered there. She pulled the sheets higher over her shoulders and neck, tucking a cool patch close to her breast, and savored the scent of woods and dark spices.

A man's scent.

With a sharp intake of breath, her eyes shot open.

"Ah, she arises."

Magda bolted up onto her elbow, the icy gust of reality blasting away sleep's warm fog. Him. Still him. With that shoulder-length brown hair tousled from sleep, and a blue and green tartan wrapp ed haphazardly underneath his nightshirt.

Last night's panic had driven a deep rut; her body remembered it, instantly flooding once again with adrenalin enough to tremble her hands and warp her vision. She felt the chill returning, her face blanching and fingertips prickling into numbness, as if her body were being drained of blood.

Her eyes darted around the room. The same room from her dream. He'd drawn back the thick draperies, revealing a bay of three rounded windows. Though narrow, they stood taller than a man, and the morning sun shimmered over the glass with a blinding white haze that obscured the view to the outside world. The seaside sounds she'd heard the night before were even louder now, made richer by the heavy brackish scent that hung, not unpleasantly, in the room.

"You?" she managed. The man from the portrait did not suffer in the light of day. The body that had been hidden in shadow was impossible to ignore now, with long, lean muscles and the bearing of an appraising panther. "But you…"

Jame s regarded her with eyes more wide-set and somehow even blacker than they'd been painted, and Magda thought distantly that the portrait hadn't done them justice.

"Aye, lass"—he chuckled—"'tis still I, though I do recall we've already conferred at length on that topic, or were you well and truly sleepwalking?"

Pinning her with a disarmingly unreadable gaze, he added in a soft voice, "I knew the dress would match the eyes."

"D-dress?"

"Indeed," James said, shifting back to his cavalier tone. "I've procured some more… suitable … clothing, aye? You cannot very well troop about in your current state." He nodded toward a lump of predominantly green fabric heaped atop his desk in the corner. "Now, speaking of emeralds, hen, from what stone on earth has this little treasure been conceived?"

Magda couldn't tear her own gaze from James. His scrutiny over, he was biting absentmindedly on his lower lip, which, she only now noticed, was slightly fuller than the other. "Magdalen?"

"Huh?" She looked down at her red lighter, weaving smoothly in and out of his nimble fingers.

"Oh, my lighter. I was using it to melt wax when I…" Magda took her head in her hands. Something about the man from the portrait tugged at her, and that nagging sense of familiarity had momentarily put he r too much at ease. "But…" Magda looked up, forcing her eyes to sharpen and meet his gaze. "I'm still dreaming."

James considered her, and their eyes met and held for a moment. Morning sunlight cut in at an angle, catching his profile, igniting the stubble along the edge of his strong jaw into flecks of gold and amber. Inexplicably, a brilliant smile dawned on his face. "No dream, I'm afraid." He hopped to his feet.

"You need some food in your belly," he stated authoritatively. "I'll have something brought in shortly to break your fast. I've set cook to preparing something more savory than the godforsaken bannocks she insists on serving each morning. You'd think we were on campaign." He pointed at her and added, "Kippers, black pudding, and a buttery. That's what a man needs."

He walked slowly to the door. "A lighter, you say? You'll not mind if I keep it in my possession a wee spell longer?" Considering the object closely, he added, "I'd have you demonstrate its uses."

"Oh," Magda replied, disoriented. "Of course." She smiled weakly, shaking her head at the absurdity, and thought wouldn't her parents be proud of the good breeding that maintained polite civility even in nightmares.