Reading Online Novel

If You Dare(61)



“And when I touched you at the posting house? Do you think about that when you stare out the coach window?”

Her lips parted. How did he see so much? “MacCarrick,” she began in a steady voice, though she felt anything but, “that’s a second question.”

“So it is.” He shocked her by brushing the backs of his fingers across her cheek before taking her arm again. “But I have my answer now.”





Twenty




T he moment she opened the door to let him in after her bath that night, Court knew he had a problem, and was actually thinking to himself, Court, we have a very serious problem.

Anna, breathless and smiling, with her hair down and curling about her bare shoulders was bad enough. That and Anna in a blouse with damn little underneath it to conceal her full breasts and clad in skirts that begged to be snatched to her hips as he turned her to a wall?…

“Why are you dressed to go out?” he demanded.

“The maid who brought my bath up told me there’s going to be dancing tonight. I love to dance.”

“You ken you canna go tonight. Too risky.”

“I thought you’d say that, but I am asking you to please let me go.” She took his hand between hers and clasped them to her chest, exactly as Court had instructed at the posting house. “I know you’ll keep me safe.”

“Have you forgotten the danger you’re in? You just opened the door without asking—”

“If the knock is really high and hard that means you. And I haven’t forgotten—that’s why it’s so important to go tonight. MacCarrick, it was made very clear to me when I was shot how short life can be, and if you knew how much I have to make up for, you’d let me go!”

She looked so young, so eager, and damn it, there was a hint of desperation in her eyes. He’d wondered how she could lightly brush off the attacks, and now understood she hadn’t at all.

“Will you let me pretend for one night that I don’t have this hanging over me?”

He finally said, “You’ll have your night, then. But you canna go out like that.”

“Why not?” She glanced down at her blouse and skirt, then frowned at him.

He scrubbed a hand over his mouth and muttered, “Your hair’s down.”

She smiled coyly and confided, “I know it is,” as if she’d pulled off a bold coup to have it free.

“Only the young women wear it so.”

She put her hand on her hip. “I am a young woman.”

“You’re a lady, as you like to remind me incessantly. So you should dress as one.”

“You’re right, of course.” She twisted her hair around behind her, tying it into a knot, just like that.

He exhaled as though put out, then offered his arm to escort her down. Once on the street, he braced for the torture of her breasts grazing him, fearing she’d discovered today to do that on purpose.

Still he walked proud to have a lady like her by his side. Even as he wanted to kill the men who ogled her, and envied him….

Some children ran by, laughing, and she smiled after them. “Thank you for taking me out, MacCarrick,” she said with a sigh, resting her head against him.

Her voice was so pleasing and the gesture so welcome that he almost regretted one of his reasons for agreeing to do so tonight—he planned to give her something more to think about when she stared out the window.



Annalía was determined to enjoy herself tonight and as she and MacCarrick walked to the center of the village, the music, the laughter, and the excitement around them helped relax her. As did the glasses of wine MacCarrick had gotten for her, though he didn’t touch a drop. She felt warm and reckless and dimly noted that she couldn’t seem to stop touching him. “MacCarrick, do you think I look pretty?” Where had that question come from? Did she care about the answer? Yes. Yes, she did.

“You know very well how you look,” he said, but ran his gaze over her appreciatively.

With a laugh, she asked, “Am I the type of woman who could bring you to your knees?”

He caught her gaze. “Depends,” he began in a low, husky tone, “on the context.”

The look in his eyes made her shiver, though she didn’t understand what he was implying. “Context? Then right now, right here.”

“Right now, right here, you’re the type of woman that drives a man to drink.”

She gave him a mock scowl to match his. “Take me to dance, MacCarrick.”

“No.”

Her face fell. “Why not?”

“Canna keep watch.”

“Oh.” Of course, he wouldn’t be able to. She thought about returning to the inn, but just then a daring young man marched up and asked her to dance. She glanced back at MacCarrick, but he appeared as though he couldn’t care less, which vexed her, so she accepted. As she’d known it would, her hair fell loose with the first turn.