The Highlander(30)

“Aye,” he agreed, his emerald eyes becoming heady and dark. “Ye’re shivering, lass, and yer lips are a wee bit blue. May I give ye a kiss to keep ye warm and turn them rosy?”

Flustered, Mena squirmed away, pulling her hand from his. “Certainly not.” She’d meant to sound stern, but her smile ruined the effect. “What kind of woman do you take me for?”

He twinkled eyes full of insinuation at her, and Mena did, in fact, feel a little warmth creep from beneath the collar of her dress. “Other than an intelligent lass and a selfless savior of wee beasties, I doona ken what kind of woman ye are, only what kind of woman I was hoping ye’d be.”

His smile was devilish and handsome.

“Well.” Mena laughed a little breathlessly. “I do hate to dash your hopes, but I am a respectable lady, and do not grant my favors lightly, if at all. Now I must bid you a good afternoon and return to the keep.”

He bowed over her hand and pressed a lingering kiss there, the loose collar of his shirt exposing the impressive swells of his chest. “Good evening, then, lass.” He gestured to where the sun began to dip below the trees.

Mena turned away and wandered into the gardens, though she smiled when he called after her. “I’ll be seeing ye again, English, of that ye can be certain.”

Shaking her head at his behavior, she found it impossible to repress a smile. She pressed her nose to her bouquet again and inhaled the loamy scent of the heather, mixed with the pleasant, camphorlike smell of the lavender blossoms.

The probability of another such encounter with Gavin was not just unlikely, it was imprudent. Not only was she still a married woman hiding from the high court of the queen, she was not at all looking to become embroiled with another charming, if devastatingly handsome, man.

She’d learned her lesson the first time.

Though, she had to admit, it had been rather nice to enjoy the attentions of a handsome Highlander. During the years she’d spent as a married woman, her sense of self-worth had been stripped away by means of underhanded jibes and blatant humiliation. Sometimes, the wounds produced thusly were slower to heal than bruised flesh.

It seemed to Mena that the standard of beauty up here in the verdant north was a great deal different than in London. Petite, thin, and delicate ladies had always been the draper’s favorite. And though men had tended to pay Mena their more vulgar attentions, they’d always remarked unfavorably on her uncommon height … or her weight.

Gordon had been lusty and voracious at first. But that hadn’t at all been pleasant. Quite the opposite, in fact. Then, as his mother and sister had done their best to craft her into the woman they wanted her to be, he’d turned into a cold and cruel beast.

Other men had approached her. Desired her. Her father-in-law for one, then Dr. Rosenblatt, and the late Mr. Burns. But she’d been nothing but an object to them. A pair of uncommonly large breasts with a few warm orifices attached, to use for their pleasure.

But these Highlanders … they roamed their untamed land like giants, and among them she felt like … well … like more of a woman than an object. A feminine creature.

She’d be lying to herself if she couldn’t admit that she liked it. The afternoon’s flirtation with Gavin St. James somehow felt as rare and warm as the disappearing rays of the sun. Full of impossibility, but lovely nonetheless.

Reaching the edge of the garden, she circumnavigated a thorny everblooming rosebush, and a few fading pink and burgundy blooms caught her eye. The frost was coming and these were, no doubt, the last roses she’d see this season, as Ravencroft had no hothouse.

Reaching in, she carefully plucked the roses and added them to her bundle.

She closed her eyes and enjoyed their sweet, almost ostentatious fragrance as she turned toward the keep. Perhaps once she’d changed for dinner she’d beg Mrs. Grady, the housekeeper, for a vase. Or maybe make a satchel of lavender for her pillow or to soak in the bath—

Large hands clamped around her upper arms like manacles, barely stopping her from plowing into a barrel-chest.

“Forgive me, I wasn’t looking where I—”

The hands around her arms twitched with anger, or the effort it took for him to not snap her bones in two, she couldn’t tell. Dark eyes flashed with wrath in the quickly fading afternoon light, and Mena blinked against the savage majesty of the Laird of Ravencroft as he glowered down at her with barely leashed hostility.

“Explain to me, Miss Lockhart, just what the fuck ye were doing alone in the woods with that man?”

CHAPTER SIX

It was her mouth that did him in, Liam decided, as he glowered down at the startled governess held captured in his hands.

He’d spied her drifting through the gardens like a wayward flower petal, her lush lips tilting up slightly, as though the fragrance of the blooms brought a forbidden secret to mind.

Her mouth not only haunted his dreams, but also his every waking moment. And if that fucking ingrate had charmed her into letting him have a taste, Liam was going to burn Inverthorne Keep to the ground.

With Gavin St. James still inside.

After an enjoyable day out with his children, Liam was surprised to discover how much he looked forward to returning home. Because Miss Lockhart would be there, swishing about the halls of his keep in some lovely gown or other. Charming the staff, tantalizing the men, and smiling that kind but mysterious smile.

He’d anticipated that smile all bloody afternoon.