Highland Scoundrel (Campbell Trilogy #3)(64)
How wrong it was that one look at Duncan could provoke more desire in her than years with her husband. Her body's reaction seemed the cruelest disloyalty and one more nail in the coffin of her guilt.
He riffled through the contents of his pack, eventually removing a pair of black leather breeches and a clean linen shirt. When his hand went to the cloth at his waist, Jeannie carefully shifted her gaze. But her senses seemed unnaturally heightened and she was painstakingly aware of every movement. She knew it was impossible, but she could have sworn she heard the thin drying cloth drop on the floor. Heard the fabric stretching as he pulled the breeches over his legs. Felt the whoosh of air as he dropped his shirt over his head.
“I'm done,” he said, the wry amusement in his voice made her wonder if she was totally transparent. She turned to face him and he pulled out a chair for her. She hesitated, then told herself she was being ridiculous and sat, folding her hands primly in her lap. He lowered himself to the edge of the bed opposite her—much too close for her comfort. She could smell the warm tang of soap on his skin and the dark, male essence that had always haunted her.
“I wanted to thank you for what you did.”
“It was nothing,” she dismissed quickly, fighting the heat that rose to her cheeks and wondering how much he remembered.
He didn't argue with her, but they both knew she lied. “I'm sorry that my return might cause you difficulty. It was not my intention to hurt you. But you had to know I'd come home sometime.”
She gave him a sharp look. “Actually, I wasn't sure if you'd ever return. If half the legends are true, why would you?” She couldn't prevent the twinge of curiosity. “Did you really defeat an entire army with a dozen men?”
He looked uncomfortable. “Half of what you've heard is no doubt exaggerated.”
And the other half? She noticed he didn't deny her original question. “It must have been difficult having nothing but your sword arm to make your living. You went to Ireland?”
He nodded. “I was a gallowglass mercenary for the O'Neills. When they were forced from Ireland, I went with them. First to France, then to Switzerland, Italy, Flanders, and eventually Spain. It was a hard life, but not without its rewards.”
He turned the question back on her. “And what of you, Jeannie. What has your life been like? Have you been happy?”
She regretted her impulse to probe into his past—it was the last thing she wanted to discuss with him. But he'd answered her honestly and she would do as much for him. Happy? Nay, but she hadn't suffered. “I've been content. I've had my children.”
“And your husband? He was good to you?”
Something in his voice caught her attention. He seemed hanging on her every reaction. “Aye, Francis was a good man.” She should have loved him. Wanting to avoid further discussion of her husband, she returned to the original subject. “You've made a name for yourself on the continent, but nothing has changed here. You are still under a cloud of treason.”
“Not a cloud,” he said tightly. “I was convicted before I left. I would have hanged the moment they found me.”
“That's why you left so suddenly?”
He shrugged. The lack of bitterness in his voice surprised her. Everyone had turned against him and he acted like it meant nothing, but it had to have been horrible.
“With my father dead and the rest of my clan convinced of my guilt, I thought there was nothing left for me here.”
She could barely get the words out, her throat burned. “What about me?”
Their eyes locked and something passed between them—something deep and significant.
Jeannie swore she would not defend herself against his spurious charges again, but his silence compelled her to try one more time. It was too late to reclaim what was lost—not to mention dangerous with all she had to lose—but it seemed somehow important that he know the truth. “I did not take the map, Duncan. I would never have betrayed you like that. I loved you.”
He didn't look away, but neither did he respond. What had she expected? He hadn't believed her years ago when he'd claimed to love her, why should he now when she was nothing to him.
“All those years, did you not once question my guilt?” she asked, her voice climbing higher. “Did you not once think about coming back?”
Did you think of me at all?
His eyes went flat. Cold. She wanted to pound her fists against his granite wall of a chest, hating that he could be so unaffected when her pain felt so raw.
“You married. Rather quickly if I recall.”
She sucked in her breath. The edge in his voice gave him away. Had her marriage prevented him from coming back?
What horrible irony. She'd married to give their son a name and may have prevented him from attaining his rightful one. But she couldn't look back. What was done was done. She wouldn't be foolish enough to fall for him again.
His gaze leveled on her, hard and unwavering. “If you had nothing to do with the plot against me, why did you marry so quickly?”
Her pulse jumped, knowing the danger that lurked in his question. She tried to control the frantic race of her heart, but her knuckles turned white as she clenched her hands in her lap. “My father wished it.” It was the truth. As much as she would give him.
His mouth curled. “And, of course, the dutiful daughter would never think to defy him.”