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Highlander Ever After

Page 33

by Jennifer Ashley


  Zarabeth’s heart filled, but she answered in a bright tone. “Well, now that the Curse of the MacDonalds is broken, there should be much more light and laughter.”

  Egan groaned in mock despair. “Will I never hear the last about that bloody curse?”

  “Probably not,” Zarabeth said complacently. “It makes an excellent story.”

  “With a happy ending,” Egan said, his voice going low. He kissed her, his lips warm, and she felt the passion behind his caress. “Do ye like happy endings, Princess Zarabeth?”

  “They are the best kind, my Highlander.”

  Egan’s next kiss stirred fires. “Mebbe we can slip away from this lot and celebrate the end of the curse by ourselves?”

  Zarabeth’s heart beat faster, the heat fanning into searing flames. “I’d like nothing better.”

  Egan gave her a wicked smile, his brown eyes twinkling. He laid her hand on his arm and proceeded to lead her out past his cousins and nephews and his usually proper sister who were busily toasting one thing after another with his best malt whisky.

  Behind them, high on the wall in its place of honor, the broken sword of Ian MacDonald glinted in satisfaction.

  End

  Excerpt: The Longest Night

  Nvengaria, Book 4

  December 1821

  “You will sort it out, Aunt Mary, won’t you? Please?”

  Seventeen-year-old Julia Lincolnbury bleated this plea while she pirouetted in front of the small mirror. Mary looked up distractedly from where she folded underclothing, trying to make sense of the chaos of Julia’s bedchamber.

  Julia expected “Aunt” Mary Cameron to sort out everything in her life—her bonnets, her gowns, her invitations, her maids, and her mind. If Mary had been the young woman’s governess or even her true aunt, she might feel obligated to do so, but Mary had offered to chaperone Julia these past few weeks solely as a favor to the girl’s father.

  Two weeks ago, when Mary had arrived in London to spend Christmas with her son, she’d happened upon Julia’s father, a sad baronet called Sir John Lincolnbury, outside a bookshop on a gray London street.

  “Stuck in London for the winter,” he’d said mournfully. His northern accent pronounced it Loondon. “I like th’ quiet, but Julia is driving me mad. She made her bow in the spring, but no one’s offered for her, poor gel. She’s been invited to a Christmas ball at the Hartwells’, the best invitation in Town, but of course she can’t attend unchaperoned. If her poor, dear mother had lived . . .”

  Julia’s poor, dear mother had been Mary’s closest childhood friend. When she’d died, Sir John had worked through his grief by spoiling Julia rotten.

  “You are allowed to escort her to a ball, Sir John,” Mary had pointed out as cold wind whipped at her skirts and oozed through her gloves. “You are her father, after all.”

  Sir John looked sadder still. “But a gel needs a wooman’s hand, don’t she? I can do nowt with her. And here we are in the south at an unfashionable time of year.” Sir John eyed Mary speculatively. “I say, Mrs. Cameron, if you’re stuck here like a lump as well . . .” He pronounced it loomp.

  Mary had cut off what was certain to be a long, rather wet appeal to her charitable instincts. She had come to London early to wait for her son Dougal, who would journey here to begin his holidays from Cambridge. She’d decided to meet Dougal in London because back in Scotland, Castle MacDonald—her home—was preparing for another warm, happy, overflowing celebration, which only reminded Mary of her acute loneliness. This year her brother and his new wife celebrated the coming of a child, which made Mary, though she was deliriously happy for them, lonelier still.

  “I’d be happy to chaperone Julia,” Mary said quickly. “For Allison’s sake.”

  Sir John had brightened immeasurably, which meant that the lines of perpetual gloom on his face smoothed out a bit. “Splendid, Mrs. Cameron. This will cheer up Julia no end. She’s moped about all through the shooting season in the north, and no amount of gowns and gewgaws will make her smile. Oh, you’ve changed me to a happy man indeed.”

  Mary had, the next morning, arrived at Sir John’s home, where Julia had gone into transports of joy that Aunt Mary would move into their London house and go with them to the Hartwell ball. Mary had received an invitation, as she had some acquaintance with the family, which made Mary, in Julia’s eyes, second only to a goddess.

  By the nineteenth of December, the day of the ball, Mary was reflecting that even her dear friend Allison wouldn’t have asked her to take on such an onerous task as looking after Julia. But it was a distraction, and Mary needed distractions these days.

  Julia held a new gown of pale yellow muslin against her body as she admired herself. “Lord Sheffley is certain to be at the Hartwell ball. We must think of ways to keep him from dancing with that horrid Miss Hamilton. Aunt Mary, do think of something clever.”

  “The best way to attract a gentleman is to do nothing,” Mary said as she untangled Julia’s pile of ribbons. “If Lord Sheffley dances with Miss Hamilton, you pretend you don’t care one whit for it.”

  “But I do care,” Julia said, her jaw hardening. She gave the dress a wild swing. “I want to scratch her eyes out.”

  “You’ll do nothing of the sort.” Just as with Julia’s father, Mary had discovered that a firm tone worked wonders. “Remember what I said about manners.”

  Julia held on to her rebellious look, then under Mary’s stare, wilted. “Yes, Aunt Mary,” she said meekly.

  Mary hid a sigh. Julia was naïve and feckless, but she meant well. Sir John had indulged her far too much, turning the sweet child Mary remembered into the unthinking, rather selfish creature Mary beheld now.

  A bell rang downstairs. Julia dropped the yellow gown, which crumpled to the floor, and dashed out of the room. “The post has come!” she shouted at the top of her voice.

  Mary bit back yet another exasperated sigh, picked up the dress, smoothed it out, and handed it to the lady’s maid, who’d jumped up from her mending. Mary gave the poor, overworked young woman a little smile of sympathy and left the chamber in Julia’s wake.

  She reached the landing in time to see Julia, in the hall below, snatch a handful of letters out of the footman’s gloved fingers. She sorted through them, dropping several and squealing when she found ones addressed to her.

  “So much correspondence one has when one’s friends are away in the country,” she said as the long-suffering footman gathered the letters she’d dropped. “Oh, here’s one for you Aunt Mary.” Julia tossed it carelessly at Mary as she stepped off the last stair.

  Mary took the letter, broke the wax seal stamped with the crest of Viscount Stoke, and opened it. The missive was from Lady Stoke, with whom Mary had made the acquaintance when she’d come to London last spring. It was whispered that Viscount Stoke had once been a pirate, and Mary admitted that with his tanned skin, barely tamed sun-drenched hair, and shrewd blue eyes, he looked the part.

  I was pleased to learn that you would be attending Lady Hartwell’s ball tomorrow evening, Lady Stoke wrote. It might interest you to know that the ambassador from Nvengaria and his wife will be there as well. Having met your brother, Mr. MacDonald, in Nvengaria, they are eager to make your acquaintance. The ambassador’s aide, one Baron Valentin, indicated that he previously met you at your family’s house in Scotland; indeed, that he stayed with your family for a number of months. I am certain you will enjoy this unlooked-for reunion.

  Mary’s fingers went numb and the letter fell to the floor.

  “Aunt Mary?” Julia asked, her jubilation turning quickly to concern. “Is it bad news? Your son?”

  “No, no.” Mary retrieved the letter before Julia could pounce on it. She held the paper away from the eager girl and crumpled it in her fist. “Not bad news. But I will not be able to attend the Hartwell Ball.”

  Mary turned and marched up the steps to her chamber, her heart hammering until she was sick with it, ignoring Julia’s shrieks of dismay. />
  * * *

  The man needed to be watched.

  Baron Valentin glided after the Nvengarian ambassador and his wife as they entered Hartwell House the night of the Christmas ball.

  The house overflowed with ladies in glittering jewels, gentlemen in dark finery, the women in gowns of all colors of the rainbow. Garlands of greenery lined the windows, the friezes around the tops of the rooms, and staircase banisters. Balls of mistletoe dangled from every doorway and chandelier.

  The English had a bizarre custom—if a person paused beneath a clump of mistletoe, it was an invitation to be kissed. In Nvengaria, the parasitic mistletoe was a symbol of death, used in funeral wreaths. But Valentin had learned during his previous visit to the British Isles just how odd the Britons could be.

  He had no interest in attending balls, even in one of the most lavish houses in London. Crowds unnerved him, English chatter unnerved him, and acres of bared female shoulders were unsettling.

  But Valentin couldn’t afford to let Duke Rudolfo out of his sight. Much as he chafed at this assignment, Valentin was not about to fail.

  He walked a pace and a half behind Rudolfo, watching the much-ribboned hem of Duchess Wilhelmina’s dress flow across the marble tiles. If the Hartwells’ servants hadn’t dusted the floor earlier it would be well dusted now.

  Rudolfo led them into the ballroom, a lavish chamber with a mosaic-patterned ceiling that spoke of Near Eastern luxury. Lines of colorful ladies and monochromatic gentlemen met and parted in an English country dance, the room seeming to move.

  Valentin couldn’t help glancing through the throng, searching, seeking. He did not really expect to see the red-lipped, dark-haired Scottish lady he’d met last year, though he’d fallen into the habit of looking for her everywhere. She’d tended him when he’d been hurt, and her lilting voice had twined around his heart and pulled him back to life.

  She wasn’t here. Of course she wasn’t. Mary would be in Scotland at her brother’s castle, preparing for Christmas and Hogmanay. She’d be helping the housekeeper stir the black bun, perspiring in the warm kitchen while firelight glistened on her hair. She’d smile her rare smile that had made his blood sing.

  Valentin had kissed her, touched her, asked her to come to him in Nvengaria. He’d gone home and waited for her through a brief, golden summer and a colder than usual autumn.

  She’d never come. As the weather worsened, so did Valentin’s hopes of opening the door of his rundown manor house to find Mary Cameron smiling on his threshold.

  Why should she bother? The journey to Nvengaria, a tiny country wedged between the Austrian Empire and the Ottoman one, was long and dangerous, and Mary had every reason to stay in her brother’s castle. Her new sister-in-law was having a baby, and Mary had a son of her own to look after, even if he was seventeen.

  As an added complication, Valentin was part logosh, one of the strange and magical creatures that inhabited Nvengaria’s mountains. Mary knew that. She’d seen him shift to his animal form—a black wolf—and she’d not been upset by it. Perhaps after Valentin had departed for Nvengaria, she’d had second thoughts about promising herself to a man who was part animal. That fact made even Nvengarian women think twice.

  Valentin had resigned himself to the fact that Mary wasn’t coming. That he’d likely never see her again unless he sought her out.

  When Grand Duke Alexander had come to Valentin and asked him to journey to England to keep an eye on Rudolfo, Valentin had quickly agreed. He’d already decided to make his way to Scotland again and find Mary—to know—and had seized on the opportunity to get this far.

  Ambassador Rudolfo didn’t know Valentin was logosh, which was one reason Alexander had chosen Valentin for this duty. Valentin, in fact, was only half logosh. He could pass for human very well.

  A commotion behind him made him turn. At the head of the receiving line, a young woman was crowing to Lady Hartwell at the top of her voice.

  “What a privilege to be here, my lady. What an honor. Mrs. Cameron and I were so pleased by your kind invitation.”

  And there stood Mary, Valentin’s Highland lady, just behind the girl, Mary’s face set in tired patience. Valentin had no idea who the young woman was, nor who was the plump gentleman behind Mary, nor why Mary should be with them. He only saw her. Here.

  A year fell away. Memories poured at him—Valentin lying in a stone chamber in a drafty Scottish castle, Mary leaning to tend him. Her bodice had been damp with the water she’d used to sponge his wound, her face beaded with perspiration. A tendril of dark hair had escaped her prim bun and stuck to her cheek, and he’d reached up to touch her.

  She’d gasped, eyes widening. Then Valentin had slid his hand behind her neck and pulled her down to him. Her breath had swirled into his mouth, and her lips had touched his. He’d tasted her sweetness—Scottish honey and heady wine.

  Later, he’d revealed all his secrets to her. Valentin had kissed her again, held her supple body against his. Now his heart beat in slow painful throbs as Mary stood in stillness across the Hartwell House ballroom.

  As her companions effused over Lord and Lady Hartwell, Mary turned to sweep the crowd with her gaze. Her eyes met Valentin’s.

  Everything stopped. Mary did not move, and neither did he. Her hair was dark brown, shining in the candlelight, and her deep blue bodice slid seductively from her shoulders. A man privileged to touch her could twine his arms around her waist, pull her against him, press his mouth to her bare throat.

  Valentin’s heartbeat thundered in his ears. After months of waiting and planning, torn by anger, impatience, and need, he at last stood in the same room with her.

  Shrill female laughter cut through the sounds of polite chatter and strains of music from the orchestra. The young lady Mary had arrived with had moved to a knot of gentlemen, where she waved her fan and sashayed her hips.

  Mary pressed her mouth closed and glided across the room, graceful as a doe, to fetch her. She took the young lady by the elbow and steered her out of the ballroom, the girl arguing every step of the way.

  Valentin let out the breath he hadn’t realized he’d been holding. Mary, here—why? Who were those people, and why did Mary behave as a mother would to the young lady?

  Too much time had passed, so much had happened in Mary’s life, and Valentin was no longer part of it. The thought burned through him like a slow match.

  Someone bumped him. New lines of dancing had formed around Valentin, as he stood like a rock against the tide. The guests eyed him askance, wondering what the strange-looking foreigner was doing. Valentin took himself out of the way.

  Then he cursed. Ambassador Rudolfo, the possible traitor whose every move Valentin was supposed to watch, was nowhere in sight.

  End of Excerpt

  Author’s Note

  Thank you for reading! Highlander Ever After was one of my first forays into writing Scottish historicals, and I fell in love! Researching for it made me determined to write more about hot Scottish heroes, which became the seed for the Mackenzies and McBrides series.

  Highlander Ever After also introduced some new characters into the Nvengaria world—Baron Valentin and Mary—and I decided to write their story, The Longest Night (first published in a multi-author anthology called A Christmas Ball). I am happy to now be able to bring that story out on its own, revised and expanded a bit.

  I hope you enjoyed the Scotland of Egan MacDonald. There are other intriguing characters here: Hamish, Adam Ross and his brother, Gemma and Angus, and I might just write more tales about any or all of them.

  As always, once you’ve finished the book, please consider leaving a review at Goodreads or the vendor from which you purchased it. Every little bit helps authors spread the word.

  I hope you continue to enjoy the Nvengaria series, my mixture of fantasy and historical romance!

  Best wishes,

  Jennifer Ashley

  Also by Jennifer Ashley

  Historical Romances

>   Nvengaria Series

  (paranormal historical)

  Penelope & Prince Charming

  The Mad, Bad Duke

  Highlander Ever After

  The Longest Night

  The Mackenzies Series

  The Madness of Lord Ian Mackenzie

  Lady Isabella’s Scandalous Marriage

  The Many Sins of Lord Cameron

  The Duke’s Perfect Wife

  A Mackenzie Family Christmas: The Perfect Gift

  The Seduction of Elliot McBride

  The Untamed Mackenzie

  The Wicked Deeds of Daniel Mackenzie

  Scandal and the Duchess

  Rules for a Proper Governess

  The Stolen Mackenzie Bride

  A Mackenzie Clan Gathering

  And more to come!

  Regency Pirate Series

  The Pirate Next Door

  The Pirate Hunter

  The Care and Feeding of Pirates

  Paranormal Romances

  Shifters Unbound

  Pride Mates

  Primal Bonds

  Bodyguard

  Wild Cat

  Hard Mated

  Mate Claimed

  “Perfect Mate” (novella)

  Lone Wolf

  Tiger Magic

  Feral Heat

  Wild Wolf

  Bear Attraction

  Mate Bond

  Lion Eyes

  Bad Wolf

  Wild Things

  White Tiger

  Guardian’s Mate

  Red Wolf

  Shifter Made ("Prequel" short story)

  Stormwalker

  (w/a Allyson James)

  Stormwalker

  Firewalker

  Shadow Walker

  “Double Hexed”

  Nightwalker

  Dreamwalker

  Dragon Bites

  Riding Hard

  (Contemporary Romance)

 

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