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Seduced by the Scot

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by Eaton, Jillian




  Seduced by the Scot

  Perks of Being an Heiress, Book 3

  By Jillian Eaton

  © Copyright 2021 by Jillian Eaton

  Text by Jillian Eaton

  Cover by Wicked Smart Designs

  Dragonblade Publishing, Inc. is an imprint of Kathryn Le Veque Novels, Inc.

  P.O. Box 7968

  La Verne CA 91750

  ceo@dragonbladepublishing.com

  Produced in the United States of America

  First Edition July 2021

  Kindle Edition

  Reproduction of any kind except where it pertains to short quotes in relation to advertising or promotion is strictly prohibited.

  All Rights Reserved.

  The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

  License Notes:

  This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook, once purchased, may not be re-sold. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it or borrow it, or it was not purchased for you and given as a gift for your use only, then please return it and purchase your own copy. If this book was purchased on an unauthorized platform, then it is a pirated and/or unauthorized copy and violators will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law. Do not purchase or accept pirated copies. Thank you for respecting the author’s hard work. For subsidiary rights, contact Dragonblade Publishing, Inc.

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  Dearest Reader;

  Thank you for your support of a small press. At Dragonblade Publishing, we strive to bring you the highest quality Historical Romance from the some of the best authors in the business. Without your support, there is no ‘us’, so we sincerely hope you adore these stories and find some new favorite authors along the way.

  Happy Reading!

  CEO, Dragonblade Publishing

  Additional Dragonblade books by Author Jillian Eaton

  The Perks of Being an Heiress Series

  Bewitched by the Bluestocking

  Entranced by the Earl

  Seduced by the Scot

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Publisher’s Note

  Additional Dragonblade books by Author Jillian Eaton

  Epigraph

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Epilogue

  About the Author

  You are the star of each night

  You are the brightness of every morning

  You are the story of each guest

  You are the report of every land

  No evil shall befall you

  on hill nor bank

  In field or valley

  On mountain or in a glen.

  ~ Gaelic Blessing

  Chapter One

  Lachlan smelled her perfume before he saw her.

  It was a delicate, intimate scent. Difficult, if not impossible, to discern from the wild pink roses that surrounded the gazebo in a tangled sprawl of pale pink and deep green. Had he not held her in his arms, or pressed his mouth to the sensitive stem of her neck, or slept beside her when the only two things she wore were moonlight and that intoxicating perfume, he might have missed it.

  But Lachlan had done all those things. And more. Which was why his nostrils flared and his eyes darkened with recognition the instant before he stepped around the side of Hawkridge Manor and saw her sitting in the gazebo, looking as pretty as a picture with her paintbrush in hand and her golden hair swept back from her countenance in an elegant coiffure.

  She was the epitome of an English lady. Fair coloring, high cheekbones, a long, willowy frame. A top lip that was ever-so-slightly heavier than the bottom and curved in the shape of a cupid’s bow. Hazel eyes, flecked with green, which could go as sharp as a scalpel or as soft as lamb’s wool, depending on her mood. A faint dusting of freckles, so slight as to nearly be invisible, across the bridge of her nose.

  In his humble opinion, Lady Brynne Weston was the most beautiful creature that God had ever seen fit to create. Was it any wonder he had fallen in love with her when he was a lad of sixteen? And had remained in love with her these eleven years past as he’d grown from a bairn into a man.

  He’d loved her every month, every day, every second.

  For Lachlan, it was always Brynne.

  Which was why he had finally returned to claim her. To apologize for his wrongs, and to make her remember–she had to remember–how good they’d been together before he allowed secrets to tear them apart.

  His boots sank silently into the grass as he approached the gazebo. Growing up in a rambling castle with a father whose hand had been heavy and vicious, particularly after a night of drinking, Lachlan had learned at a young age to walk without making a sound.

  He stopped at the bottom of the steps and, for a moment, he simply allowed himself to drink in the sight of her. This was the closest they’d been in a year. And it had been eighteen months of torment. Eighteen months without hearing her laugh, or seeing the shape of her smile, or tasting the sweet nectar of her lips.

  Surely there was no greater torture contrived by man than being kept from the woman he loved. Give him the rack, or the wheel, or that horrific metal box with the spikes in it. He’d take them all, gladly, if it meant never having to go another day without seeing his Brynne.

  Her face was obscured by the large easel, but she’d stretched her legs out in front of her stool as she worked, affording him a tantalizing glimpse of her slender calves enclosed in silk stockings.

  Not so very long ago, he’d peeled those stockings off of her…with his teeth. He would like nothing better than a repeat performance of that very memorable night, but he had a feeling that Brynne wasn’t going to be nearly as happy to see him as he was to see her…considering the last time they were together she’d pointed a pistol at his nether regions and told him, in no uncertain terms, that if he ever dared approach her again she wouldn’t hesitate to pull the trigger.

  Feisty lass.

  “Could you step to the side please, Mae?” she said without bothering to glance up from her canvas. “I fear you’re in my light.”

  Her voice, as lilting and musical as chimes in the wind, was like a balm to his soul.

  “Is this better?” he drawled, moving slightly to the left.

  Blue paint splattered across the gazebo’s white floorboards as the paintbrush she’d been holding fell from her fingers. Lachlan unconsciously held his breath as Brynne rose to her feet, and released it on a spill of air from the corner of his mouth when her
shocked, furious gaze met his.

  “Get out of here,” she whispered, pointing in the direction of the drive where his belongings, unbeknownst to her, were being unloaded and carried into the manor as they spoke. “Before I pick up that brush and stab you through the heart with it.”

  Like the roses her perfume reminded him of, Brynne’s thorns were buried out of sight. Which made them all the more painful when they drew blood. Not that he’d been expecting a warm welcome with open arms (he was an optimist, not an idiot), but he had held out hope that they’d moved beyond death threats. Although considering what he had done to his beloved’s fragile heart, a brush stabbed through the middle of his chest wasn’t any less than what he deserved.

  “Now, Bry, me love,” he said with an admonishing cluck of his tongue. “Is that any way tae greet yer husband?”

  Her eyes narrowing, she took a menacing step towards him with her fists clenched, as if she were a boxer capable of knocking him out with one mighty swing instead of a tiny slip of a lass whose head barely reached his chin.

  “You’re no husband of mine, Lachlan Campbell,” she spat.

  He arched an auburn brow. “The priest who married us might have a word or two tae say about that.”

  “Our marriage should have been dissolved a year ago.” A beam of sunlight slid beneath the gazebo’s domed roof and surrounded Brynne’s head in a halo of glowing light as she lifted her chin. With the sun in her hair and fury in her eyes, his wife was half ethereal fairy, half wrathful sprite…and he desired all of her.

  Even when they were little more than children, there’d always been two sides of Brynne. The obedient daughter who had diligently listened to every rule her governess set, and the rebellious lass who had snuck out her window at night to meet him underneath an alder tree where he’d carved their initials into the rough bark. The elegantly composed lady who had entertained everyone from princes to esteemed foreign dignitaries, and the seductive minx who had run away to Gretna Green to marry a brutish Scot.

  “On what grounds would ye call for an annulment?” he drawled, his second eyebrow rising to join the first. “In case ye forgot, our union was consummated. Several times.” As his mouth curved into a wicked, wolfish grin, twin blooms of color flooded Brynne’s cheeks.

  “On the grounds that you’re a boorish lummox and I never should have married you!” Her shout was loud enough to spook a pair of nesting doves out of a nearby bush. They took to the air as she took another step towards him but, in her anger, she misjudged the depth of the stair and her foot slipped.

  Lachlan lunged forward and caught her before she could fall, his arms wrapping around her slender frame like two steel bands as he settled her on her feet. And for an instant…just an instant…she leaned into him, the weight of her head on his chest as light as a feather on the wind. But it was there. He felt it as clearly as he felt the sun on his face and the ground under his legs. Then she made a ball with her hand and drove it into his gut, and he felt that as well.

  “Bluidy hell,” he grunted, letting her slip out of his embrace as he doubled over. “Ye knocked the wind right out of me, love.” Stretching upright, he gazed at her flushed countenance with some amusement. “Have ye ever considered stepping intae the ring? Ye would do some serious damage with that right hook.”

  Brynne’s hands went to her hips. “Do not call me that. I am not your ‘love’.”

  “Ye were once,” he reminded her. “Not so long ago.”

  “A lifetime ago. What are you doing here, Lachlan? What do you want?”

  It was the first time he’d heard her say his name in a year, and he savored the sound of it on her lips as he would the first sip of a vintage scotch straight from the oak barrel.

  “Ye,” he said roughly, dragging a hand through his tangled mane. Loose from the leather tie he normally used to bind them, the auburn locks brushed his shoulders. “I want ye, Bry. That’s why I’ve come. That’s why I’m here. Tae win ye back.”

  The color drained from her cheeks, leaving her as pale as the white sheets he’d seen flapping in the wind on the far side of the manor. Slightly alarmed by her lack of pallor, and the way she suddenly swayed on her feet, he reached an arm to steady her, but she slapped his hand away.

  “No,” she said forcefully. “No to all of it. I do not know what possessed you to think anything has changed between us, but nothing has. Nothing will. All you’ve done by coming here is waste your time and tire a good horse.” The flecks of emerald in her eyes intensified with her heightened emotions, giving the illusion that her irises had shifted from brown to green.

  From personal experience, Lachlan knew they only did that when she was genuinely furious…or in the midst of lovemaking.

  “We can change it if we want,” he said with a Scot’s bred-into-the-bone stubbornness. Unable to help himself, he closed the distance between them with a single stride and cupped her cheek in his large palm. She glared up at him, a she-wolf ready to bite. “I made a mistake, Bry. I should have told ye the truth–”

  “Yes,” she interrupted. “You should have. About a lot of things. But you lied, Lachlan. You lied. And you ruined us.”

  “I’m many things, mo lean nan.” As his temper flared, he unconsciously slipped into the native Gaelic that he’d learned at his grandmother’s knee. “A liar isna one of them.”

  “What is an omission, if not a lie that hasn’t been spoken yet?” Deftly, she twisted her head to the side and ducked under his arm. “You may not have lied outright, but you didn’t tell me the truth, either. If you had–” She stopped short. Gave a clipped, irritated shake of her head. “It doesn’t matter. The past cannot be changed, and there is no possible future where we are together.”

  He’d been expecting this reaction.

  Had braced himself for it.

  But it still hurt like a bloody son of a bitch.

  Especially since he couldn’t help but compare how they were now to what they’d been. To who they’d been. Two young, naïve lovers ready to tackle the world and all the troubles it contained. Never guessing that the troubles on their own doorstep were far larger than any ills that awaited them beyond it.

  “There are things we need tae discuss,” he said roughly. “Matters that need to be handled. If we could sit down and have a civil discussion over tea and biscuits–”

  “Tea and biscuits?” she said incredulously. “Tea and biscuits? There’s no amount of tea in the world that would fix what you broke, Lachlan. And the only thing that needs to be handled is our annulment. Which can be done through our solicitors. I’ll send a letter to London in the morning.”

  He gritted his teeth. “I dinna want an annulment.”

  “And I do not want to go through this again. I refuse. Do you understand me? I refuse.” Her chest rose as she took a deep breath, and fell as she released it. “You need to leave.”

  “Little songbird–”

  “Leave!” she cried, and the glitter of tears he saw in her eyes stopped him cold.

  His Bry never cried.

  Never.

  Lachlan knew he was a right bastard for bringing her this pain again. But he wasn’t the only guilty party…and she wasn’t the only one hurting. There were two sides to this Shakespearean tragedy, and while he may have shouldered most of the blame for what had happened to them, he didn’t lay claim to all of it.

  “Right then,” he said. “I’ll go. There are some supplies I need in the village.”

  “Supplies?” A line of bewilderment creased her fair brow. “Supplies for what?”

  “Why, for me stay.” At her blank stare, his smile hardened. “Ye didna think I came all this way tae just turn around and leave again, did ye? Ye’re my wife, Lady Brynne Campbell. I’m yer husband. And it’s high time we shared the same roof…and the same bed.”

  Her eyes widened, her lips parted in outrage, but before she could muster a reply, he turned on his heel and loped away.

  Brynne’s legs felt as if they were carved
from wood as she staggered into the manor. One look at her, and Mrs. Grimsby, the housekeeper, ushered her straight into the parlor and nudged the door closed behind them.

  Soft and plump with a merry smile and a perpetual twinkle in her brown eyes, Mrs. Grimsby was the eldest daughter of the previous housekeeper, a dragon of a woman who had often sent Brynne scurrying away in terror. She had a husband, who worked as the head groundskeeper, and three daughters of her own, all grown with families. Both she and Mr. Grimsby had begun discussing their retirement, but they were loyal above all else, and loath to leave the family they’d served so diligently for more than two decades.

  “Sit down and drink this,” Mrs. Grimsby said gently, pressing a cool glass of water into Brynne’s numb hands. “That’s it. Slowly now. Good, good. Head between your knees if you’re feeling faint, just as we talked about.”

  Wordlessly, Brynne lowered her forehead towards the ground as the housekeeper took the glass and then began to rub her back in large, soothing circles.

  “My poor dear,” Mrs. Grimsby clucked. “I haven’t seen you in such a state in ages. Deep breaths, my lady. Deep breaths.”

  Years, Brynne thought silently as she inhaled through her mouth and exhaled through her nose, just as Mrs. Grimsby had taught her. It had been years since she’d had an Episode. So long that she thought they were a thing of the past. Why, she hadn’t even had one when she walked into the bedroom and saw Lachlan–no. Best not to think about that now. Or ever again, if she could help it. Which was why she’d buried that brief period of time in a box, and she’d put the box in a trunk, and she’d locked the trunk with a key.

  For eighteen months, almost to the day, she’d kept that key tucked away and the trunk closed. For eighteen months, she’d avoided dwelling on what she had seen that day when it all came crashing down. Her life, her love, her happily-ever-after. Like wooden blocks knocked asunder by a child’s clumsy hand.

 

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