Home > Scoundrel's Redemption (Highlander's Pact #3)(22)

Scoundrel's Redemption (Highlander's Pact #3)(22)
Author: Sky Purington

“I dinnae know, but it sounds rather interesting in itself, aye?” He chuckled as well and cocked his head. “And what if I grow uninteresting?”

“Then, I suppose the intrigue will only grow to figure out how to make you interesting again, too.” Her chuckle dwindled down to a soft smile, her self-confidence improved. “You really are unexpected, Teagan.”

“As are ye, Greer.” He enjoyed the way her gaze lingered shyly on his face. Enjoyed everything about her, for that matter. Especially the way his name sounded on her lips. How her voice changed a wee bit when she said it. As if she liked voicing it as much as he liked hearing it. He got the impression that wasn’t something she was used to with men. That they were so high above her, their names were a privilege to say.

Though he hated to ruin the moment, she would want to know what was going on, so he filled her in on Duncan’s plight.

“Oh, dear,” she exclaimed.

When she went to stand, he held back from grabbing her wrist to stop her lest the action remind her of Bartholomew.

“There isnae anything we can do at the moment, lass.” He gestured at the river. “Please, enjoy the water and let us plan things out, aye? I would like yer thoughts on how we shall get them out of here tonight.”

“Tonight?” she exclaimed, sinking back down. “But, of course, tonight.” Where days ago, she would have lowered her head and reminded him he was the man so he should decide, now she looked him in the eyes. “What shall we do?”

He shrugged and leaned back on his hands, much preferring to watch her plot. To enjoy her brilliance at work. To see intelligence where others saw madness. “What would ye do?”

“I would have to give it some thought.” She leaned back on her hands as well and wiggled her toes in the water as if restless to sneak away at once, to start out on their grand adventure straight away. “’Twill have to be very secretive indeed.” The way she pondered so briefly told him she’d been mulling this over for some time. Mapping out their ‘great escape’ as she would call it when storytelling. “My uncle has men posted everywhere all night.”

“He does,” Teagan agreed. “Well-armed men at that.”

“But are they all seasoned?” she wondered. “I have watched them for a time and am fairly certain they are not.”

He slid her a sly look, enjoying this a great deal. “How do ye know?”

“Well, at least one in four prefers drinking ale and eyeing women rather than watching the surrounding countryside.”

“Aye,” he agreed, impressed. “But what about the three in four? ’Tis a sizeable amount.”

“Honestly, and I say this with the utmost respect,” she replied, “at least one in three of them are older and, quite frankly, tired and bored.” She put a hand to her chest and gazed into the distance as if recalling better times. “As though longing for days of old. Days of excitement and freedom on the battlefield.”

“Do ye think being on the battlefield is freedom, then?”

“No, no, quite right.” She thought about how to rephrase it. “They long for days of valor and excitement. Days of youth and vigor and…” Greer's eyes rounded, her wee tale taking an unexpected turn. “And perhaps even mysterious activities.”

“And what might those be?” he asked, unable to stop a small smile.

“I think we both know.” Greer bumped her shoulder against his this time. “Moments in time far more exciting than being in the service of my uncle now. Therefore, they grow bored of late, lost in their own past.” She tilted her head, contemplating that. “Which one might think would happen to the other two in four guardsmen, but no.”

“Nay?”

“No, most certainly not. They run more ambitious.” She shook her head, rueful. “Those are the ones we must sneak past in the end, for they are constantly striving for my uncle’s approval.”

“Aye,” he agreed, yet again impressed. “I came to the same conclusion.”

“Did you?”

She looked at him in a way she'd only started doing lately. A confident, passionate way that made him feel different. More alive. Aware of a lass like he'd never been before.

“I did come to the same conclusion,” he confirmed. “So, what now? With two in four guardsmen paying attention, how should we go about sneaking out of here?”

“’Tis easy.” She gestured at the river. “Use this.” She slid him a sly grin. “More specifically, use my mother and me.”

He narrowed his eyes. “How so?”

“Well, would a squabbling mother and daughter not draw their attention but at the same time be worth leaving alone?” She shrugged. “So whilst mother and I make a show of arguing, you, Ada, and the children head for the river undetected. We will join you soon after.” She pointed south. “There’s a means to cross over a short way down. From there, a route that passes between watchtowers, then ’tis on to freedom.”

“’Tis on to hiding and waiting until Edmund is closer,” he corrected, liking the way she thought. “But aye, lass, yers is a sound plan.” He nodded with approval. “Ada will be relieved to hear it.”

“So, you would not have gone about it any differently?” Greer asked, surprised.

When he shook his head, she eyed him.

“You are not just saying that because of your determination to help me, are you?” She struggled for the right words. “To see the way I think changed?”

“Only when it comes to not speaking yer mind,” he replied. “Which ye just did and did so well.” He shook his head, absolutely honest, because she deserved nothing less. “Ye came to the same conclusion I did after scouting this land for weeks and watching yer uncle’s guardsmen.” He winked. “As to ye and yer mother squabbling, that was just pure brilliance.”

Though she blushed, her eyes lit up. “You think so?”

“I promised ye the truth in all things, aye?”

“Yes.” Her gaze lingered on his face again before she seemed to catch herself and looked at the river once more. “Thank you.”

Shockingly enough, she rested her shoulder against his and stayed put this time.

“Nay, thank ye,” he murmured, content to leave it at that and simply enjoy the moment. Her. This place in England he would have never thought he’d sit a decade ago. And with an Englishwoman at that.

“I will miss this place,” he admitted softly. He knew she grew shy if he admired her too much, so he kept his gaze on the water. “Our time here.”

“I will, too,” she said just as softly, toying with a pebble beneath the water with her toe. A nervous reaction, he realized. “You have made this place all the more special, and I thank you for that.”

He couldn’t help but look at her. “The feeling is mutual.”

“I’m also hopeful,” she whispered. Though she seemed a little surprised she’d said such, she pushed on, her voice a wee bit shaky. “Wishing perhaps…”

“Wishing perhaps what, lass?” he asked when uncertainty flashed in her eyes.

“’Tis nothing,” she managed, her attention still on the river. Her cheeks flamed red. “I don’t know what I was thinking.”

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)