by L. L. Muir
“What cowboy could ever resist a cute girl in cowboy boots, a tank top, and cut-off jeans?”
Although the cut-off length of 2011 was probably short enough to give a Highlander—or two—a heart attack, she was sure the conservative length she’d chosen would serve her the justice she thirsted for. These men weren’t ever publicly exposed to naked thighs, so it shouldn’t take much to get their attention.
For a moment, when she hit the bottom of the stairs, she thought she may have been wrong about that because both men glanced at her and then turned back to their tasks. When she actually heard them swallow, she knew she had before her two handfuls of putty.
“Sorry about the shorts, but I was hot all night. Still am.” She pinched the front of her desecrated Swagger shirt and fanned herself with it. “May I ask what you guys are doing?”
Both men’s heads turned to her, skimmed her up and down then turned back to what was held in their hands. They squirmed just a little on two stools which had made their way back inside the hall.
“We’re making toys. For the children.”
Monty’s voice broke on the word children. She really should have lied to him and told him he’d have many sons.
Don’t you get soft on him. Not today.
Ewan held up a piece to inspect it, but he made a brief inspection of her as he did it.
“Look here. Have I got the ears straight?” He handed the piece to Monty, who also turned a bit toward her while he compared the ears on the carved piece to who-knows-what on her person.
“The ears are fine.”
Jillian sat down in the laird’s chair and both men gasped.
Slowly, both men turned and looked at her bare, crossed legs. She hoped they couldn’t see the stubble from this distance, but if she’d tried to shave with that sword, she’d have lost everything below the knee.
“Is something wrong?”
“Nay.” Ewan shook his head. “Nay.”
“It’s just that none usually sit in the Ross chair, but The Ross.” Monty looked at his cousin. “Isn’t that right, Ewan?”
“Aye.”
Both had forgotten the children entirely.
“I’m sorry. I should sit somewhere else.”
“Nay. Stay. Stay where ye are.” Monty turned to Ewan. “Cousin, ye should go see to yer sister now.”
Ewan started shaking his head before Monty finished.
“Cousin, ye will go and see to yer sister. Now.”
At the end of a one-on-one basketball game, when the onlookers were whooping and hollering, there was a sound that could be heard in spite of the rest; the sound of the opponents breathing very hard.
Watching these two argue, without words, was kind of like that. Jillian could stand it no longer.
“Excuse me for a minute.” She hurried toward the stairs and scurried to her room, searching for that towel again. Unfortunately searching with both hands over her mouth was hardly efficient and her laughter burst out around her fingers.
She bent and peaked over the shallow copper tub which had made her feel like a giant baby while using it—and heard a gasp.
When she straightened so quickly, hands still over her mouth, she lost her balance and landed arse-first in very cold water.
Her squeal was probably heard by the MacKays.
Monty’s chest was heaving. His finger pointed at her, his mouth opened and shut a couple of times before his voice showed up.
“Ye did it a purpose.”
Wasn’t he standing there? Didn’t he see her fall in?
“Of course I didn’t. The water is freaking cold. Even you would have squealed.”
“I’m not talking about the squealin’, Jillian.” He stepped tentatively over to the tub and peaked past her knees. “I’m talking about the skin ye’ve been parading around for my cousin to see.”
Okay, she was busted. But really, it had taken him far too long to catch on, hadn’t it?
“For Ewan to see?” Jilly crossed her legs. “You mean you never looked? Because I promise I did it for you both. I didn’t sleep at all last night and it was both your faults.”
The water showed no intention of warming, so she uncrossed her legs and held up a hand in a silent request for help.
Monty shook his head.
“But Ewan has no right to look on yer legs—yer entire legs, mind ye.”
But Monty did? It was the sweetest thing anyone had ever not said to her.
“Nor yer shoulders, yer back, or whatever may have peeked out from yer towel this morn.” His voice had gotten a bit louder at that last bit.
He looked down into the water again and Jilly thanked God for the inspiration to cut the jeans just a bit more 1980ish in length.
Jilly wondered if her blush might be enough to bring the water around her to a swift boil.
“Wait a minute.” She pulled hair out of her face and tucked it behind one ear so he wouldn’t miss her frown. “Nothing peeked out from under my towel!”
“Are ye certain?” He lifted his brow.
“Let me up and I’ll show you.”
Monty froze. Hah, let him live in fear.
He finally blinked, offered her hand, and pulled her up. She quickly kicked off her boots so they didn’t get wetter, then stood in a puddle, unbuttoned her jeans, and slid the zipper down a few inches.
When she reached into her pants, the man staggered backward and sat on the bed but never took his eyes from her hands.
“Nothing peeked out from under that towel, Monty, because I was also wearing these.” She pulled the edge of her pink cotton panties up far enough for him to get a good look. “See? Before you saw anything else, you would have seen these.”
Monty watched her hands as she refastened her shorts.
He took a deep breath. “Take them off, lass.”
Jilly froze. Well, her butt was already frozen, but the rest of her didn’t move either. She wasn’t sure she was breathing.
“I beg your pardon?”
Monty stood and closed the distance, slowly. He lifted her chin and lowered those wonderful lips onto hers and she stood there, clutching the top of her jeans, not daring to let go.
When another perfectly good kiss ended far too soon, he clutched at her shoulders and looked into the depths of her eyes.
“Take them off, Jillian,” he whispered. “They’re wet.”
He spun her around, smacked her on the bum, and pushed her onto the bed before she ever got her hands in front of her, plowing her face into the blankets.
His laughter filled the room, then the hall, then the stairwell, damn him.
# # #
Monty had sensed every step she’d taken into the hall. Now he turned to find her only an arm’s length away.
“I don’t want you to go.” Jilly looked at her hands.
So, she had heard him, then. Ewan clearly hadn’t, or if he had, his mind had been emptied by a MacKay in nothing but a towel.
“I’m sorry, lass. I must.” He stood back and looked over her finally appropriate clothing. “A fine improvement, I’d say. I’ll be able to look ye in the eye when ye speak.”
“Um hm.” She looked at him beseechingly. “But can’t you put it off for a couple of days? Maybe go after you’ve reopened the hall?”
“Sorry lass, I canna. I have a clan to feed, aye? Every year I meet with other lairds to plan the harvest exchange, and I must go.”
She and Ewan need not know he’d already sent one of the elders to the gathering in his stead.
The poor thing was going to cry and he nearly pitied her, but not quite. She’d won Ewan’s loyalty long before the towel incident, and he was still wincing from that. Making them pay for another two days should be enough to satisfy him.
“Look around ye, lass. This is not Scotland, it’s the cold inside of a single castle. Life goes on outside, amongst people, in the fields, in the dirt, in the rain, even.” He checked the water level of her eyes. Not quite there, but if he pushed her much harder, he
’d be greetin’ alongside her.
He wished he’d never said he was going. What if his plans went awry? What if this truly was their last chance to be together? What if he was handed what he deserved, to give up Jillian as penance for what he’d done to Morna and Ivar? What if he’d never be able to share with her the magic of Scotland in the fields, and dirt, and rain?
Hold. Breathe. Dear God, breathe.
He raised his brows and tried to smile.
“We’ve had a lovely time of it, Jillian, but we canna hide here forever. Once the hall is open, and we introduce ye as our English cousin—”
“What? Cousin? What?” She backed away from him with her eyes drying rapidly. “You know why I’m here, Laird Ross—”
“I thought ye were going to call me Monty.”
“—and as soon as I’m done, I’ll be gone.”
“Oh, that.” He casually walked over to his chair and sat. “I’ve already sent Morna and Ivar to their very separate lives, Jillian. It’s over.”
She was bursting to tell him, the way she was dancing about, waving her hands while her lips held in her secrets, her frustrations.
She stopped suddenly to look at him, a look that promised some form of pain, for them both.
“When my task is finished here, whether I succeed or fail, I will be going home. I will not be around to be introduced to your clan as your cousin or anything else.” She crossed her arms covered in a pale yellow bliaut and cocked a hip, thankfully concealed by a long full tunic. “Now, do you still want to go? Or do you want to stick around for what may be our last day together?”
She’d hate herself when she realized how much she’d given away. But ever the talented player, Monty pretended a slow wit.
“Marry me, Jillian. Marry me and stay. I no longer care if ye’re daft, I daresay I saw no faery’s wings on yer near-to-bare back, I have enough of an alliance with the Gordons to ease my mind, and we won’t have to tell anyone ye’re a MacKay, and—”
“And?”
“—and I want ye to stay away from the witch’s hole while I’m gone.”
She looked away as the tide rose and spilled down her cheeks in waves. His work here was finished. She’d defy him, of course, but she’d be miserable doing so. And once it was finished, they’d have a good laugh.
“I’ll be leaving in the wee hours, love, so let us make the most of what is left to us. I’ll return to open the hall three days from now.”
The rest of the day raced by even though Jilly tried to slow it with long drawn out silences. They spoke of his grandfather and father and the table Monty had watched them build together. She told him of some of the renovations he would do and he admitted the ideas had never occurred to him. The garderobe improvements spun his mind.
Ewan brought food, but never ate with them. Monty told him his plans to leave in the morning and Ewan agreed that it was best that Monty attend the gathering in person. The shaggy man was somber and said very little, likely due to his concession to defy his laird to help her with Ivar and Morna. The last time she saw him he was helping Monty cover the high windows when darkness fell, then her reluctant conspirator disappeared into the shadows.
“Jillian, stop.” Monty shook his head when she tried to add more wood to the dying fire. “I must at least sleep a wee while before I go, else I’ll fall from me horse.”
She could only nod. This daft man had no idea this was the last time they would be together, even though she’d nearly told him her entire plan that morning. What part of “I won’t be here when you get back” didn’t he understand?
He pulled her along behind him all the way to her bedroom; she dragged her feet as she had when the Muir sisters were escorting her out of the pub.
When she realized he didn’t even plan to kiss her goodnight, she threw herself into his arms and took control, sincerely wishing she hadn’t stopped kissing him since the day she’d arrived. Maybe by now they would have moved on to other things.
He wrapped an arm about her waist and snaked that wonderful hand up through her hair to hold her in place, then he did some controlling of his own. He kissed her eyes, her nose, and kissed a trail down her cheek to her chin, as if trying to memorize her face.
As if he were thinking, “Just in case.”
And suddenly, when his lips met hers again, she began to sob. How could a kiss break her heart?
That was it. It had to be. There was no apt explanation for the crush she felt in her chest. Her heart was breaking, truly.
So unfair. So ripped off. The thrill of being in love should come with a minimum time allotment, with a clear expiration date stamped on the bugger’s forehead so she knew how long she had.
He turned her head then and pressed her ear to his heart, holding her as completely as she’d ever wished to be held in her life. And then it was over. She was the wall, blank but for the flickering light of her pathetic candle.
She brought her arms down and looked at the open doorway, but that kilt had long since disappeared around the corner.
Silly man. They’d be finished when she said they were finished.
CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE
Montgomery lay on his side and wept. He was a stupid, stupid man for frittering away that last few days. As he’d kissed Jillian’s face, he had a horrifying image of himself, sitting alone in his hall, with no wife and no bairns, not caring that his kinfolk were calling Ewan “yer lairdship.”
Was this akin to the nightmares he had visited upon Ivar, Morna, and likely Isobelle as well? If so, it was a good thing he’d already decided to remedy it.
The night before had been long in coming. He’d forced his mind back to the day when he’d found Ivar and Morna at the burn. Considering the two were in the throes of passion when he’d found them, he’d tried to push the images from his mind, but he’d pushed away other details as well.
He remembered climbing up into his usual tree, planning on surprising Ivar by arriving early. The man had promised Monty a bit of news if he’d meet him at the nooning hour, and Monty had not been able to hold his curiosity in check.
He’d heard their noisy lovemaking before he saw them, but his amusement died when he caught sight of Morna’s face. Realizing they’d been keeping secrets from him, wondering how long they’d been doing so, drove him mad. How could they both betray him?
Pain. The memory brought so much pain, and not just because of the betrayal.
He’d attacked his friend, wounding him badly without even giving him the chance to dress or defend himself. More pain.
He’d called his sister horrible things while binding her to her horse, things he knew weren’t true, to hurt her as he was hurting. More and more pain.
He forbid his bleeding friend from ever crossing The Burn again. The pain turned his heart inside out when he saw the horror on Morna’s face, when he declared she’d be given in marriage to the Gordon’s runt-of-a-son if it were the last thing he accomplished in this life.
And the meanness overtook him, growing over his wounds like a rough, ugly scar. And he began to forget that day, remembering only that he was betrayed, that Ivar MacKay was to blame.
Even when his sister was being led inside her tomb, he blamed his old friend. When Ossian took her from his life, it was Ivar’s doing. How, then, had Ivar survived so long?
Was it because somewhere around those scars there was some hint at the truth beneath? And when Jillian came and threatened to expose him he hadn’t been able to silence her as he had vowed to do. Was it because he wanted her to find the truth and exonerate his friend? Or was it just because he wanted to prove to the wife of his dreams that he could discard the monster and be a man again?
Perhaps both.
And as Jillian’s arms snaked around him in his bed and soothed him toward sleep, he hoped that in two days’ time, she’d see him as that man again.
# # #
Near the massive bulk of the Gordon keep, the North Sea slammed itself against rocks raised by God himself to
keep the sea from eating at Scotland. The surf was loud and angry, like the rantings of a fanatic priest at a wicked man’s door. The receding waves dragged any lose debris hungrily into the deadly blue water of a hellish maw.
At the headland, a fair walk away from the keep, Morna stripped off her Gordon plaid, took down her hair, and used the strip of leather to tie her Gordon’s ring to the tartan. The slippers from her feet went sailing over the edge to land on the rocks below, one of them landing just out of the reach of the waves that clawed and climbed over each other to get at it.
Shading her eyes, she looked back at the shadow that had been her home for nearly a year, then turned fearlessly to the ledge and jumped over.
At least that is what it would look like to the man watching her.
Ewan was just about to cast off his skiff when a heavy boot landed on the bow. He would know the boot, but the blond man refused to look up at the wearer, likely sick unto death at what he would suppose Monty was thinking.
“Hold on, now.” Monty shoved the boat off the sand and hopped inside. “Do ye mind, cousin, if I come along? ‘Tis a mean sea this day and ye may need another pair o’ hands, aye?”
Ewan clutched at both sides of the vessel which moved at the will of the water until the man was able to clap shut his own maw and take up the oars.
“What plan ye to do?” Ewan’s long oars dug deep into the waters of the only cove for miles. “Banish me?”
Monty smiled. There was no need to make the man suffer; he had obviously been torturing himself for days.
“Nay, cousin. Let us merely say that I have come to put the monster out to sea.” He met the other man’s eyes. “For good, let’s say.”
“Aye, let’s say.” Ewan grinned. “But ye’ll be stayin’ in the boat?”
“Aye, if ye doona push me over.”
Ewan frowned. “I’ll not be pushin ye, but I canna speak for Morna, aye? There she be.” Ewan pointed to the woman clad only in her bliaut, clutching rocks that hung over a temporarily tame surge.
A moment later, the boat held steady beneath her.