Read The Striker Page 6


  The bond held them together until the music stopped.

  The music stopped. Damn it. He released her so suddenly she gave a small, startled gasp.

  She stepped back, staring at him with a look on her face that was every bit as stunned as he was feeling. “Th-thank you,” she whispered, her breath falling unevenly from beneath her softly parted lips.

  God, they were so red and sweet looking. A fierce swell of desire rose inside him. The urge to cover them with his was so powerful—so elemental—he could think of nothing else. He lowered his head a few inches before a split second of sanity recalled his surroundings, and he stopped himself.

  Bloody hell. He might have said it aloud. What had just happened? It wasn’t a question the man who was supposed to be the smartest in the room found himself asking very often. But he couldn’t think straight—or in any other direction, for that matter. His mind was reeling.

  With a nod that was sharper than he intended, he walked away.

  While he still could.

  Margaret’s heart was beating so fast she thought it might explode. She couldn’t seem to catch her breath or stop shaking.

  What had just happened?

  Other than feel as if every one her senses had just come alive, she didn’t know. It had left her rattled—almost panicked.

  Needing to collect herself, she fled the Hall.

  She felt close to tears, as if she’d just gone through a tremendous emotional upheaval. Which maybe she had. What she’d just experienced hadn’t been a gentle awakening of emotion, it had been like a giant church bell going off in a small ambry. Loud, clamoring, reverberating . . . devastating.

  The feelings had been so intense. So powerful. So overwhelming. She’d felt bound to him. Connected. As if they were the only two people in the world.

  Her body still ached. Her stomach still flipped. Her pulse still raced. She could still feel the sensation of his hand resting on her waist, his fingers wrapped around her arm, his callused palm enveloping her hand. She could still feel the heat emanating from his body—the big, muscled body and broad-shouldered chest that had been so close, her body had strained to be pressed up against it. The tips of her breasts throbbed.

  He’d smelled so good. The pine of his soap, the mint of his breath . . . His mouth had been so close. She’d thought . . .

  She sucked in her breath with a small cry.

  How could a man who said so little make such an impact?

  She didn’t know where she was going, she just knew she had to get away. Standing there she’d felt exposed—vulnerable—as if anyone looking at her would know just how she felt. Her confidence, her bravado, had seemingly deserted her.

  She’d fled out the main entrance of the Hall and followed the corridor to the king’s donjon away from the noise. She needed quiet. Though it was only a couple of hours past midday, the corridor was already shadowed. Reaching the old tower that had once served as royal accommodation for William the Lion, but was now in disrepair, she sought out the solitude of a small room on the far end of the building. It had probably served as a waiting chamber or private solar for the king but was now a library. She had no use for the books, only for the quiet.

  Some of the men must have been enjoying the room earlier, as there were still embers in the brazier, although not enough to provide any warmth. What was in the flagon, however, would. Bringing it to her nose, she inhaled the slightly sweet but pungent scent of English brandy. She preferred good Scottish uisge beatha, but under the circumstances she could not afford to be discriminating. Pouring it into one of the goblets, she downed the contents in one long swallow. Almost instantly the calming effects of the spirits began to spread through her body.

  Her heartbeat started to slow, air filled her lungs, and her hands steadied. Most important, her head cleared.

  She’d overreacted. It was just a dance. He was just a man—an undeniably attractive one—but still just a man. She’d exaggerated the effect of his touch.

  Then why could she still feel the imprint of his fingers on her skin? Why was her body still trembling?

  She was bending over the brandy, gripping the edge of the table to steady herself, when she heard a noise behind her.

  Turning, her heart sank, seeing who it was—and his expression. She’d never noticed a resemblance to his father before, but she could see the Lord of Badenoch now in the hardness of John Comyn’s gaze and petulant twist of his mouth.

  He didn’t bother with politeness. “What is between you and the MacLean chief’s son?”

  Margaret straightened and looked him in the eye, her voice far steadier than she felt—even with the brandy. “Nothing.”

  She even meant it.

  His eyes narrowed, and he took a few steps toward her. “That isn’t what it looked like. I won’t be made a fool of, my lady.”

  With eight brothers ranging in age from ten to one and twenty, Margaret knew well how sensitive a young man’s pride could be and was quick to soothe it. “I’ve barely said more than a dozen words to the man. I told you what happened the first time we met.” She smiled. “I hardly think him calling me an idiot is going to endear him to me.”

  She’d closed the gap between them, and either her words or her closeness seemed to have mollified him. Partly. He frowned. “Then why did you dance with him?”

  I don’t know. She bit her lip, considering how much to tell him. Deciding it was best to be honest, she answered, “I overheard his sister say something unkind. He asked me to dance to stop me from confronting her and making a scene.”

  The slight flush and discomfort told her he’d probably heard something of the gossip. “You should pay them no mind. They are only jealous.”

  Margaret gave him a long look, seeing beyond the youth to the man he would become. “Thank you. That is very kind.”

  He blushed harder, and shuffled his feet. Without the anger, he was back to his uncertain self. “I should go. We shouldn’t be alone like this. I shouldn’t have followed you, but I was jealous.” His eyes met hers. “I thought he was going to kiss you, and I wanted it to be me.”

  “I’d like that, too.”

  She hadn’t meant that as an invitation, but he’d taken it as one. With more deftness than she would have thought him capable, he cupped her chin in his hand and tilted her mouth to his. She barely felt the gentle warmth of contact before it was over.

  The kiss was sweet and chaste. The look in his eyes was not. He wanted her, and although the kiss had not been unpleasant, she did not want to encourage another.

  Fortunately, she was not inexperienced at putting the reins on a young man’s passion.

  She stepped back, wanting distance between them.

  It was then that she glanced over to the mural chamber—the wide bench built into the thick wall of the castle that could be closed off with a curtain—and saw a boot.

  5

  AT FIRST EOIN thought she’d followed him. Sitting on the bench in the mural chamber with a flagon of whisky and a folio he’d grabbed without even looking at the title—The Rules of St. Benedict in Latin, for Christ’s sake!—he’d heard her enter and been about to address her when young Comyn had shown up. Realizing he would likely make the situation worse if he let his presence be known, Eoin was forced to sit there half-hidden in the shadow of the alcove and listen to their conversation.

  A conversation that was making his blood churn hotter and hotter, which to Eoin’s already on-edge state was like tossing oil on a roaring fire. What the hell was she doing? Didn’t she know that standing so close to Comyn like that, lifting her mouth to his, and telling him she wished he’d been the one about to kiss her was practically an invitation for him to do just that?

  When the pup accepted, putting his hand on her chin and tilting her mouth to his, Eoin had felt a primitive swell of emotion unlike anything he’d ever experienced before. All he could see was red. His chest burned, his muscles flexed, and every instinct he possessed clamored to put his fist through
the young lord’s mouth for touching her.

  But his anger wasn’t reserved just for the lad. If anything, what he felt toward the lady was far worse. If he didn’t know that she’d felt exactly what he did during that dance maybe it wouldn’t have been so bad. But she had. And somehow, rational or not—forgetting that minutes before she’d entered the room he’d been denying the whole thing—it stung like a betrayal.

  How much longer he would have been able to hold himself back, he didn’t know. But he did know the moment she realized they were not alone.

  Comyn mistook the startled gasp and sudden loss of color in her cheeks for maidenly shock at the kiss, which in Eoin’s present state of mind, he thought, was ironic.

  Maybe Fin was right. Maybe the rumors were true. Maybe she knew exactly what she was doing when she looked at Eoin like that. “I’d give her exactly what she was asking for and swive her senseless.”

  Right now he was wondering what was stopping him.

  “I probably should apologize,” Comyn said upon stepping back.

  She shot an anxious glance in Eoin’s direction and quickly turned back to the lad, obviously distracted. “For what?”

  “For taking advantage of your innocence like that.”

  Eoin saw a small frown gather between her brows before she seemed to realize what he meant. “Ah, yes, of course, the kiss.” She bit her lip, and shifted her gaze down. “I think it’s best if you leave now. It would not do for us to be discovered like this.”

  If Eoin heard the slight inflection in her voice, signifying a question, Comyn did not.

  “You’re right.” He smiled. “Although maybe it would be easier if we were.”

  She frowned again, clearly not understanding. But Eoin did. The lad was obviously aware of his father’s sentiments and looking for a way around them. Being caught in a compromising situation could suffice.

  Although Comyn was not yet a knight, he had all the honor and nobility of one. Eoin, on the other hand, wasn’t a knight and had no pretense of wanting to be to keep him in check.

  With a short bow, Comyn left the room. As soon as she closed the door after him, Lady Margaret turned around and folded her arms across her chest. “I know you are there, you might as well come out.”

  She made it sound as if he were a bairn hiding or purposefully lingering in the shadows to spy on them. Neither of which were true, damn it. He’d just been sitting there when she’d come bursting into the room and headed straight for the brandy. But somehow, the lass had managed to put him on the defensive.

  Though she wouldn’t have been able to see his face from where he was seated with his back to the stone wall of the alcove, she didn’t look surprised to see that it was him when he stood.

  “Had I known what I would be interrupting, I would have made my presence known sooner.”

  “You speak!” she said with mock surprise. “I wasn’t sure if dark, brooding stares were the extent of your communication skills.”

  Handful.

  His eyes bit into hers unrelentingly. “I didn’t realize we had anything to say.”

  She held his stare for a long moment before turning away. “Perhaps you are right.”

  Her voice held a note of sadness that made something inside him tug. Hard.

  He should have left. He should have taken the opening she’d given him and walked away. Instead, he crossed the distance between them in a few strides. The soft scent of flowers that he’d noticed during their dance taunted his senses. But he was still too angry to heed caution. “Comyn isn’t for you.”

  She lifted her brows, obviously taken aback by the adamancy of his tone. “You sound very certain of that.”

  He was trying to protect her, damn it. Badenoch would never let his son marry her. “I am. And letting him take liberties won’t change anything.”

  “Liberties?” Her brows drew together. “You mean that kiss?” She laughed. “Lud, that hardly signifies.”

  He didn’t know whether it was the laugh or the way she dismissed it as nothing that fanned the flames of his anger like a smith’s bellows. “And you are so experienced as to know the difference?”

  Something in his tone made her eyes narrow. “Have you never kissed a woman, my lord?”

  “What does that have to do with anything?”

  She looked at him for a long moment, as if willing him to see something, and then shook her head. “What I know or don’t know is none of your business.”

  She was right, and yet she was so bloody wrong. “Not all men are pups like Comyn, my lady, to be so easily turned away when you are done with them. Some might see your kiss as an invitation for more.”

  The flush of pink to her cheeks told him she wasn’t unaware of her reputation. He didn’t realize how close they were standing until she straightened her spine and the dart of her nipples grazed his chest.

  His knees almost buckled. He clenched his teeth against the guttural groan of pleasure that sent a flood of heat to his groin.

  She lifted her chin, tilting her head back to meet his angry glare. “A man like you, you mean?”

  Whether it was sarcasm or a challenge, he didn’t know, but Eoin’s control snapped. He wanted to punish her. He wanted to teach her a lesson. He wanted to prove to her that she played a dangerous game.

  But most of all he wanted to kiss her so badly he couldn’t see straight.

  “Aye, that’s exactly what I mean.” He slid his arm around her waist and hauled her up against him. It was so bloody perfect he couldn’t have pulled away if he wanted to. All of those lush, feminine curves molded against him felt incredible. He was hard against her. Pounding. Throbbing. Even when he was a lad he’d never felt desire like this so intensely. Need had reached up and grabbed him by the cock, stroking, licking, with more potency than a wanton’s tongue.

  He took advantage of her gasp and lowered his mouth to hers. The first touch, the first taste of her was like wildfire. Heat engulfed him. Pleasure tore through him in a scorching frenzy. Whatever rationality he might have still possessed went up in flames when she opened her mouth and kissed him back.

  Margaret had laughed when her brother Duncan caught her kissing Tristan in one of the caves below Dunskey Castle last year and warned her to be careful. She was playing with fire, he’d said. A kiss was one thing, but it could very easily end with something else. Beyond the fact that he referred to fornicating, she hadn’t understood and thought he was exaggerating.

  Out of control? Dangerous? What was he talking about? There was nothing that felt dangerous about kissing Tristan. It was pleasant and nice, but she was fully aware of what was happening. She wasn’t going to end up with her feet by her ears, grunting enthusiastically, as she’d had the misfortune of witnessing more than once when visitors bedded down for the night in the very un-private Hall of Garthland.

  But Margaret wasn’t laughing now. If anything her brother had understated the danger. Curiosity and experimentation might not be dangerous, but passion certainly was. And the moment Eoin MacLean had pulled her into his arms she’d felt the difference to the bottom of her soul.

  Desire practically exploded between them. All those sensations awakened and primed by their dance returned even more powerfully. A blast of heat poured over her in a molten wave. The strength of his arms and powerfully muscled body against her made her weak. She felt stunned—dazed—as if she’d fallen into a bog of sensation and couldn’t pull herself out. Or rather didn’t want to pull herself out because it felt too good. He felt too good.

  She didn’t want him to stop. Ever.

  His mouth was hot and possessive. He kissed her as if he belonged there. And truth be told, it felt as if she did.

  He tasted of an intoxicating mix of cloves and whisky, and she drank him in, opening her lips to taste him deeper. The deft strokes of his tongue weren’t tentative and probing like she expected but fierce and demanding. The first powerful stroke licked all the way down between her legs and nearly made them collapse.
r />   She felt a strange fluttering low in her belly that made her moan with pleasure. He answered with a harsh groan that sounded almost like a curse. Whatever restraint had existed between them in those first few moments was gone.

  His hand plunged through her hair to cup the back of her head and his kiss turned punishing, ravishing, desperate. She understood because she felt it, too. She was kissing him back with passion that seemed to spring from nowhere, borne more from instinct than from experience. In the five or six times that she’d allowed Tristan to kiss her, she’d never felt a fraction of this kind of fervor. She’d never felt anything like this at all.

  All that she knew was that she wanted him—more than she’d ever wanted anything in her life. Her fingers gripped the hard ridges of muscle on his shoulders as if she would never let go. He was even taller and bigger than she realized up close like this, making her feel oddly vulnerable.

  She wanted to kiss him, to feel his tongue in her mouth, his hands on her body, and his big, battle-hard body wrapped around her. She wanted to inhale the delicious masculine scent of pine and soap. She wanted to feel her breasts crushed against his chest and her hips pressed against his. She didn’t know how much she wanted that until she felt the thick club of him against her stomach. Good lord! And then she couldn’t seem to think of much else.

  Desire crashed over her in a drenching wave, dragging her under. She felt so heavy. Especially her breasts and the intimate place between her legs. She moaned at each new sensation as he kissed her deeper and harder, silently urging him to give her more.

  He answered with a groan and more pressure. Their bodies seemed to be melded together. She could feel the hard flex of his arm muscles as he drew her in tighter and tighter. Their tongues circled and sparred, waging a desperate battle of desire and urgency. Yet she never felt threatened. Even in the midst of this fierce onslaught of passion, there was an underlying emotion she didn’t recognize but trusted. It felt almost like tenderness, which seemed silly given the frenzy of the kiss. But it was there, squeezing her chest and hovering over her like a warm sentinel, silent and protecting.