Highland Scoundrel (Campbell Trilogy #3)(13)
Had he thought she'd come? She shouldn't have. But no matter how hard she tried to suppress her spontaneity and thirst for adventure, he knew her well enough to know that she would be hard-pressed to resist. “I wasn't sure,” he hedged.
They'd reached the bottom of the rocky hill upon which Stirling Castle was perched. She tossed back her hood and turned to him, hands on her hips and emerald eyes flashing. “I think you are an arrogant rogue and knew very well I'd come.”
He tossed his head back and laughed. Did she have any idea how adorable she was? Her innocence and utter lack of pretense were as rare as they were enchanting.
A rogue. No one had ever accused him of that before. Serious, focused, determined, ambitious, ruthless, aye. But Jeannie brought out a side of him that he hadn't known existed. The playfulness in her that was so foreign to him was contagious. Two weeks in her company and he felt more carefree than he had in his entire life.
He caught her wrist and spun her toward him. They weren't touching but his body fired with awareness simply from having her near. Reaching down, he tilted her chin to look deep into her eyes. The incredible baby softness of her skin under his fingertips was almost unreal. “I'll not apologize for wanting you alone, lass.”
Her eyes scanned his face, lingering on his mouth. He stilled, his entire body consumed by the sudden flare of desire and the urge to kiss her. He heard her sharp intake of breath and knew she felt it, too—the hard pull that seemed to draw them together.
His eyes dropped to her mouth, her lips parted invitingly below his. God, they looked so soft and sweet. Her subtle floral perfume had wrapped itself around him, drawing him tighter. Just one taste …
He swore silently and dropped her wrist. He hadn't brought her out here to seduce her.
But he knew he was playing with fire. He couldn't look at her without getting hard. He'd seemingly lost control of his body, succumbing to the ailment that plagued men of his age—his mind obsessed by thoughts of one thing.
She dropped her gaze, but he could see the heat on her cheeks as if she didn't quite understand why he'd pulled away. Hell, he was trying to protect her. Sometimes he had to remind himself how damned young—and innocent—she was.
“Come,” he said gently, indicating the path through the trees to the north. “The loch is only a short walk from here.” It was dark, but the moon provided more than enough light to navigate through the sparse birch trees.
Not quite trusting himself to touch her with heat still surging through his body, he resisted the urge to take her hand again and they walked side by side for a few minutes in companionable silence. That was one of the things he found so special about her—they were just as comfortable talking as not. “How did you get away from your eagle-eyed warden?”
She glanced over at him, a sheepish look on her face. “My aunt has a certain fondness for a glass of claret before she goes to sleep.”
He grinned. “And let me guess, you made sure she had an extra?”
Jeannie bit her lip, an innocent, girlish habit that drew his attention to her lush sensuous mouth, to the pink fullness of her lips, arousing a decidedly non-innocent response in him. A mouth like that could drive a man wild with erotic images. Those pink full lips stretched tight around … hell, he adjusted the source of discomfort and focused his attention back on her.
“Actually, I had an entire flagon sent up,” she admitted. “I didn't want to take any chances.”
He chuckled, appreciating the foresight and ingenuity. “Done this before, have you?”
She turned to him, aghast. “Of course not—”
She stopped, seeing his expression and realizing he was teasing. Their eyes met and she burst into laughter. The soft tinkling sound made something in his chest expand and he thought he would be a happy man if he could listen to her laughter for the rest of his life.
He knew it with a certainty that should surprise him. Duncan didn't make gut decisions; he made rational ones. But not this time.
He'd never believed in fate, but there was no other way to describe what he felt about Jeannie Grant. The strength of those feelings made him uneasy. Romantic love was the province of troubadours, not of warriors. He'd thought himself immune to the weakness of emotions. Not that he wasn't capable. He loved his family, but it wasn't the same. The intensity, the ferocity of what he felt for Jeannie he feared as Achilles must have his tendon.
It was moving too fast, but for once in his life he couldn't seem to stop himself. When it came to Jeannie, his prized rationality and control had deserted him.
He only hoped she felt the same. He thought she did—that this connection was not merely one-sided—but she was so young. And her propensity to follow her heart, wherever it may lead, did not necessarily augur well for steadfastness and depth of feeling.
A few more minutes of walking brought them to the edge of a small pool. No more than a half mile from the castle, they might have entered another world. Surrounded by trees on one side and a jagged staircase of rock that disappeared into the hillside on the other, it was a lush oasis that seemed more suited to a remote part of the Highlands. The full moon was poised low in the sky, hanging right over the center of the loch. It couldn't have been in a more picturesque position had he hung it there himself.
“It's lovely,” she said softly beside him. “However did you find it?”