Highland Hawk: Highland Brides #7

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Highland Hawk: Highland Brides #7 Page 31

by Lois Greiman


  “Which is?”

  “My protection.”

  “Ah. And you think that is why I wish to marry you?”

  “Do you still?” He did not mean to voice the question, and certainly not in that odd, breathy tone, like a besotted lad awaiting a single word from his beloved. After all, she’d agreed to marry him once. He’d given her every opportunity to change her mind. He need not do so again and he would not. He was a selfish man at heart.

  “Aye,” she said. “I wish to marry you.”

  For a moment he forgot how to breathe. “Then you have my loyalty for eternity and beyond.”

  “I know,” she said simply.

  He swallowed the lump in his throat. “And my sword arm to guard against all that may threaten you.”

  “What if I want more than your sword arm, Sir Hawk?” She leaned forward and kissed him. Flame touched his lips. “What if I want your kindness?”

  It was difficult to breathe with her so near, but he managed. “I am not a kind man, Catriona. You should know that by now.”

  “Truly?”

  “Aye.”

  “Then mayhap I shall marry you for your sense of humor,” she said and kissed his bare shoulder.

  He tilted his head back. “In truth, I have none.”

  She laughed. The sound was like the bells of Christmas or the song of birds at first light. Immeasurably soothing. “Then it must be your body that tempts me so,” she said and slipped her hand down his chest.

  “I have one of those,” he rasped and pulled a sharp breath between his teeth.

  “Aye, you do.” She stretched out beside him, her breath warm against his bare skin, her fingers feather-soft as she traced a scar across his shoulder. “Am I hurting you?”

  His chuckle sounded a wee bit insane, he thought. “Nay.”

  She was silent for a moment. “How did you know?” she murmured.

  He stroked her hair for a moment, thinking, ” ‘Twas a fair enough lie you told about the medallion,” he said. “And producing Drummond’s piece—‘twas all but a stroke of genius. But you gave in too easily. The Catriona I have come to love would have fought to the death before letting me deliver it to Blackheart alone.”

  “But I saw you leave the castle.”

  “I did not go far. Just out of sight, and then I waited. ‘Twas following you through the woods that was difficult. But the finches are not known for their silence.” He tensed for a moment. “I should have found you sooner. I should have known they planned to take Lachlan to the cottage where Rory had gone. But when you are near, I cannot seem to think of ought but…” He shook his head, his words a whisper in the darkness. “You should have told me, lass. It breaks my heart to think you endured that alone.”

  “I was so scared. So confused. Blackheart said I must tell no one, for the very person I trusted might be him. No one was what they should be at Blackburn. Not Physic, or Father Matthew, or Drummond—”

  “Father Matthew?”

  She lifted her gaze to his. “Might you remember when I went charging around the corner and you nearly beheaded me in the hallway?”

  “Aye.”

  ” ‘Twas the priest I saw… coupling.”

  “Well, that’s it then, lass,” he rumbled. “He’ll not be marrying us.”

  She chuckled, but the sound was jagged and uncertain as she turned her face back against his shoulder. “The Earl of Harrowhead, he seemed so—”

  She shivered and he tightened his arm around her. “I should have known, lass. I should have seen through him. I had heard tales of his father’s evil, but I thought he had weathered the storm. I can almost pity the poor bastard—a frail lad unloved by his father. It might turn any mind septic.”

  “It didn’t you.”

  “What?”

  “Your childhood was somewhat similar to his, it seems. But while he was all that is evil, you are all that is good.” She shivered. “And I almost lost you.”

  He gazed down at her, letting the intoxicating emotions sink into his soul. “But you did not lose me,” he said, and curling his fingers under, he stroked her cheek.

  Silence settled in, soothing in the darkness.

  “Samuel MacKinnon asked me to thank you,” Haydan said. “For everything.” A pause. “He blushed when he said it. Is this something I should worry on?”

  “If you like.” She sighed as she brushed her fingers, feather-light, across his chest. “Another wound.”

  He let himself be distracted, for he had a feeling that forever and always there would be worries where Catriona was concerned. “Aye. Another wound. I only hope it does not mar the perfection of my skin.”

  “Me too,” she said and kissed a spot of flesh that was bared above a swath of bandage.

  Peace flowed through him, but one worry niggled. “Tell me one thing, lass,” he said, forcing himself to voice the question he was certain he should not. Leave well enough alone—she had agreed to be his. But honesty was a hard habit to break. “Do you marry me out of guilt?”

  “Guilt!” Her gaze met his in the darkness. Against his shoulder, he could feel her heart beat in time with his own. “Nay, Haydan, not out of guilt.”

  “For gratitude?”

  She hesitated a moment, then nodded. “Aye. Out of gratitude. Every day of my life, I will be grateful that you are the best, the kindest, the wisest man I have ever known. I will be grateful for the sound of your voice, the touch of your hand, the fact that you do not realize that you are too good for the likes of me.” She pressed against him. “I love you, Haydan the Hawk. Not because of what you can do, but because of what you are,” she whispered.

  And as their lips joined, so did their lives.

  Author’s Note

  James V was born in 1512 and crowned king of Scotland at seventeen months of age when his father died in the battle of the Field of Flodden. In 1525 he was seized by his mother’s husband, the Earl of Angus, and kept in comfortable captivity while an English faction took over the government. Three years later, he escaped and seized the political reins. But for many years he would often disguise himself as a peasant and travel about Scotland visiting his people. I like to imagine it was my fictional characters who first introduced him to the wonders of being “average.”

  Discover Lois Greiman

  “Dangerously funny stuff.”

  —Janet Evanovich

  American Historical Romance:

  Surrender My Heart

  The Gambler

  European Historical Romance:

  Highland Wolf

  Highland Flame

  Highland Jewel

  Highland Heroes Box Set

  Highland Hawk

  Highland Enchantment

  Highland Scoundrel

  The Lady and the Knight

  Bewitching the Highlander

  Tempting the Wolf

  Taming the Barbarian

  Seducing a Princess

  The Princess Masquerade

  The Princess and Her Pirate

  Paranormal Romance:

  Charming the Devil

  Seduced By Your Spell

  Under Your Spell

  Contemporary Mystery:

  Not One Clue

  One Hot Mess

  Unmanned

  Unscrewed

  Unplugged

  Unzipped

  Uncorked

  Praise for Lois Greiman

  “Simple sexy sport may be just what the doctor ordered.” -Publishers Weekly

  “Lois Greiman is a modern day Dorothy Sayers. Witty as hell, yet talented enough to write like an angel with a broken wing.” -Kinky Friedman, author of Ten Little New Yorkers

  “What a marvelous book! A delightful romp, a laugh on every page.” -MaryJanice Davidson, NYT bestselling author of the Undead series.

  “Amazingly good.” (Top Pick!) -Romantic Times

  “L.A. psychologist, Chrissy McMullen is back to prove that boobs, brass, and brains make for one heck of a good time…lau
gh out loud funny…sassy…clever.” -Mystery Scene

  “Excellent!” -Library Journal

  “Sexy, sassy, suspenseful, sensational!! Lois Greiman delivers with incomparable style.” -Bestselling author of TO THE EDGE, Cindy Gerard

  “Move over Stephanie Plum and Bubbles Yablonsky to make way for Christina McMullen, the newest blue collar sexy professional woman who finds herself in hair raising predicaments that almost get her murdered. The chemistry between the psychologist and the police lieutenant is so hot that readers will see sparks fly off the pages. Lois Greiman, who has written over fifteen delightful romance books, appears to have a great career as a mystery writer also.” -thebestreviews.com

  “Ms. Greiman makes a giant leap from historical fiction to this sexy and funny mystery. Bravo! Well done!” -Rendevous

  “A fun mystery that will keep you interested and rooting for the characters until the last page is turned.” -Fresh Fiction

  “Fast and fun with twists and turns that will keep you guessing. Enjoy the ride!” -Suzanne Enoch, USA Today bestselling author of Flirting with Danger

  “Lucy Ricardo meets Dr. Frasier Crane in Lois Greiman’s humorous, suspenseful series. The result is a highly successful tongue-in-cheek, comical suspense guaranteed to entice and entertain.” -Book Loons

  About the Author

  Born on a North Dakota cattle ranch, Lois Greiman graduated from a high school class of sixty students before moving to Minnesota where she professionally trained and showed Arabian Horses for several years. Since that time she’s been a high fashion model, a fitness instructor, and a veterinary assistant. But an incurable case of writing fever put a stop to all those occupations.

  Since selling her first book to Avon in 1992, she has sold 22 romance novels, 5 mysteries and the first in her Witches of Mayfair series.

  While caring for three children, fifteen horses, and a menagerie of pets on her small farm in Minnesota, Ms. Greiman writes full time, producing two or three novels a year and garnering much praise from readers and reviewers alike.

  Her Highland novels have received Affaire de Couer’s Critic’s Choice Award, Romantic Times K.I.S.S. Award, and have been nominated for Romance Writer’s of America’s prestigious Rita. Her titles have appeared on Barnes & Nobles’ bestselling romance list and won her the Midwest Fiction Writer’s Rising Star Award.

  To learn more about Lois Greiman and her award-winning novels, please visit Lois Greiman’s website.

  Table of Contents

  Highland Hawk

  Dedication

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Author’s Note

  Discover Lois Greiman

  Praise for Lois Greiman

  About the Author

 

 

 


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