Faye didn’t want to go through another round of questioning with Ewan. She didn’t care for him to know her any more than she cared to know him.
His strong leg tensed against hers. It was evident in how his stare flicked to the low gap between her breasts in his leine she wore, or how he would look down at her bare leg when she stretched it into his line of sight. He was interested in the same thing as she was.
“Or mayhap if ye dinna like, ehm, needlepoint…” He licked his lips and drank from his wine again, his strong throat flexing around the swallow. “Ye could try…ehm…”
Desire thrummed between her legs. Eager for how he’d made her feel the night before. Desperate to distract her thoughts with lust and passion. While it didn’t fill the void in her chest, it at least took her mind from the pain.
“How do ye enjoy passing the night?” She ran the pad of her middle finger down the low neckline of the leine, parting it to share a glimpse of her breast.
His stare settled on her. “I oft remain in the Great Hall after the evening meal to see to the clan.”
Faye tilted her head to the side and caressed her skin. Her fingers grazed her nipple, and a sigh of pleasure escaped her lips. “What do ye wish to do this eve?”
His eyes slid up to hers. “Get to know my wife.”
She shifted her foot on his leg, gliding upward to where his cock strained at his trews. The heat of his arousal was apparent through the leather. She closed her eyes in anticipation of the pleasure she knew he would bring her.
“I’ve thought of ye all day,” she confessed.
A muscle flexed in his strong jaw. “As I have of ye.”
“Is it wanton of me to want ye so?” She gave him a wide-eyed look, intentionally innocent, even as she rubbed her foot over the hard column of his desire.
He gripped the table and issued a low groan.
Faye touched her fingertip to her lower lip. “I want ye, Ewan.”
He stood so abruptly that the chair tipped and crashed to the floor. Neither of them paid it any mind. Faye remained where she sat, wanting him to come to her. And come to her, he did.
He drew her up from her seat and took her there against the wall with hard, fast thrusts that left them both crying out in pleasure. After, he’d hauled her into his arms and carried her to the bed where their intimacy was drawn out between tangled sheets, enjoyed to the point of exhaustion.
Ewan fell asleep immediately, an arm thrown protectively over her despite them both being slick with sweat. The previous evening, she’d been so exhausted from walking through the cold for hours that she’d fallen into a deep slumber immediately. This night she was not so fortunate.
The pleasant glow from a night of being thoroughly loved had quickly cooled, bringing with it a hollow emptiness. This was a different world, a different life. It was loneliness and absent familiarity and love.
The chasm widened in her chest, expanding to an agonizing cavern that she could easily fall into and become lost. Her eyes filled with tears and leaked in hot streaks down the sides of her face, silent as they bled into the pillow.
As though sensing her sorrow, the hand on her side tightened. He was turned toward her in his sleep, his face relaxed in a way that made him look younger.
It was so tempting to trust him. He seemed eager to make her happy. He and Moiré both. Even Gavina. She could have love here if she accepted it.
The thought immediately gave way to a memory of when they were in England. Their hearts were still raw from Da’s death, their purses weighted with guilt coin from the lord who offered paltry compensation for their loss. The people who had once been neighbors, friends, set cold glares in their direction. No longer were they brethren. Not after their English father, along with many others, had died in a war against Scotland.
They were Scottish. Filth.
The worst had been when a girl Faye had loved like a sister spat on her. Years had passed, and still, Faye could recall her horror as she stared at the foamy puddle of spittle dripping down the sleeve of her kirtle.
It wasn’t the only time their trust was betrayed by those they loved. It had happened again in one of the Scottish villages when they’d been forced to leave in the middle of the night after Faye had confessed to a friend they were running from her grandfather. Nay. Faye’s trust had been twisted too many times. Love only brought disappointment and hurt.
No one had ever been worthy of such trust, save her family.
And they were now gone.
Faye swallowed hard to clear the lump, but this time it was far too stubborn. The tears came in a stream, and her face stretched with the grief of her silent cries. She turned from Ewan, slipping from his loose hold, and pressed her face to the pillow to allow her tears to pour freely as sorrow shuddered through her.
A strong arm secured around her shoulders. “Ye’re shivering, lass.” Ewan drew her back against the solid heat of his body, and a blanket came over them both. His lips pressed to her shoulder, and he relaxed once more, evidently asleep.
She hadn’t wanted his comfort.
Indeed, she would have declined if he’d offered. But his innocent mistake of her grief for a chill and the gesture to warm her allowed her to remain where she was, reveling in his comfort without sacrificing her pride. There, in the cradle of his arms, with the power of his body at her back and the heat of his skin melting the ice of her loneliness, she found a glimmer of solace.
She remained in his arms thus through the night until the mattress shifted under her, and Ewan slipped away from her. Her body immediately cooled without him near. She turned and found him washing by the basin. Firelight shone off his muscular torso as he scrubbed over his skin, washing away evidence of their passion from the night before.
“I see ye’re also awake, my bonny lass.” He grinned at her.
Faye gave a little moan and eased a naked leg from the sheets. “Return to bed with me.”
He dropped the linen into the basin and approached the bed. But he didn’t climb in. Instead, he braced his arms on the mattress and pressed a kiss to her brow. “If I do, I dinna think I’ll be able to leave for several hours.”
“Do ye promise?” Faye sat up, baring her breasts for his perusal.
And peruse he did, in an appreciative stare. Like a moth lured to a flame, he reached out and slowly cupped her breast as his thumb swept over her nipple.
Before Faye could moan her approval, he pulled his hand away and clenched it into a fist. “Nay, we’ve plans this morn.”
Faye leaned forward, going onto her hands and knees as she looked up at him. She’d seen a farmer’s wife being taken thus in the stables once and knew the position to be erotic. “Have we?”
He hesitated as he took her in, his expression sharpening with interest. “Aye.” He turned from her and pulled on a fresh pair of trews from the chest at the foot of his bed. “A ride.”
“A ride,” she echoed.
“Through the Sutherland lands.” He threaded his arms into his leine as he drew it on. “I thought ye’d want to see where ye live, meet the tenants. Ye’re their mistress now as well.”
A horse ride over the lands. Faye slid from the bed to hide her frown. She didn’t want to spend the day with him or see how good he was to his people. She wanted, needed, their lives to be separate.
She searched her mind for an excuse. Something. Anything.
“I haven’t a proper kirtle,” she protested.
“Gavina said she’d have it for ye by now, and it will be done.” He winked. “Gavina always does as she says.”
Faye smiled pleasantly and nodded even as she steeled herself for exploring the lands with her husband. Surely this had to happen at some point. She’d only hoped she might find something displeasing about him to focus on before it did.
As of now, there was nothing to disparage him. In fact, everything recommended him, laid out to pry open her chest and bear her heart.
Except she was not ready to trust and knew she might never be.
Even with a man like Ewan Sutherland.
Ewan worried Faye might decline to accompany him on the inspection of their lands after voicing concerns over her garment, but she offered no more protests.
She rode at his side now, the deep red kirtle cleaned and repaired and buried under a thick cloak to ensure her warmth.
“These are the lands we’ve had for years,” Ewan indicated the expanse of the Sutherland territory. Grass-covered hills rolled in the distance beneath an endless blue sky. In the distance, a loch lay nestled like a mirror between two swells of earth. It extended far beyond what they could see, but it would still give her an idea.
She lifted her face into the wind and gazed out at the land with reverence. “It feels like we’re the only two people in Scotland.”
It was more than she’d said thus far, apparently content to mainly listen.
But then, that seemed to be the way of it with her. She did not offer opinions or share stories of her childhood or family. It did not escape his notice that she often turned toward sexual distraction when he tried to learn more about her. And he’d been too easily led astray by her temptation to stop her.
This journey through the country would give them an opportunity to know one another better. He cared about her already. How could he not when he spent so much time thinking of her?
But he had to let her know he cared for her. An ache squeezed in his chest. She would not end up like Lara, whom he had so egregiously failed.
They slowed their horses to a stop so Faye could take her time studying Sutherland’s beauty.
Pride swelled in his chest at the look of awe on her face as she scanned the vast horizon. “Aye, it can feel like that at times. I imagine it seems especially so for ye as ye’ve lived in villages for most of yer life.” He pointed to the west. “Torish is that way.”
“Torish?”
“Aye, the lands of yer dowry. Have ye been to them before?”
“Nay,” Faye replied.
“Did ye know ye had land as part of yer dowry?” he asked.
She looked in the distance as though she could see it all laid out. “I never even considered that I might have a dowry, though it does make sense…” She spoke so softly that the wind nearly snatched her words.
“’Tis a handsome dowry that came with considerable wealth and fertile land.”
“Now yer wealth and yer land.” She said the statement in a flat voice.
He edged his horse closer to her and settled a gloved hand over hers. “Our land. And I’ve had Monroe ensure in the event of my death ye receive Torish for yer own keeping.”
She started at that. “It would not go back to my grandfather?”
Ewan chuckled. “Only if ye promise no’ to kill me.”
To his surprise, tears welled in her eyes.
“I dinna intend to die any time soon.” He smiled at her by way of reassurance. “But if I do, I want to ensure ye’re well cared for.”
She nodded, and a tear slid down her cheek. She hastily wiped it away and turned her face from him, as though ashamed of her emotion.
“What is it, lass?” Ewan asked.
She pressed her lips together and shook her head.
Her refusal to share what troubled her did not vex Ewan. The lass had been kidnapped by her own grandfather and forced into a new, strange world. Doubtless, her life had its share of difficulties and such struggles often curled one’s true thoughts into a protective shell. Getting her to open up to him would be a slow process, but he was a man of great patience.
Especially when faced with a task so worthy.
“Would ye like to see yer land?” he asked.
She turned her attention back to him and readjusted the reins in her gloved hands. “I’d like that very much.”
“As ye wish, my lady.” He directed his horse toward Torish and all its surrounding land.
Ewan intentionally kept his pace slow to allow them to speak. When Faye did not offer conversation, he filled the silence with stories of his youth and the many times he’d gone to visit their clan tenants.
“I wasna always my da’s choice to accompany him when he saw to his people,” he confessed.
“Because of yer older brother?” she surmised.
“Aye, ’twas he who was to be the chieftain and he who received the training for the task.” Ewan kept his tone neutral, ensuring the wisp of self-doubt at his role was not discernible. The same as he always did when speaking of his unexpected chieftainship. He’d lacked the formal training other chieftains had benefitted from.
She nodded, more to herself than to him. “Mayhap it was for the best,” she replied.
“Why do ye say that?” he asked.
She lifted her shoulder in a shrug. “Ye’re a strong chieftain who genuinely cares for his people. Mayhap if ye’d trained for it yer whole life, yer thoughts would be tailored toward a different way of ruling.”
He contemplated her statement. He’d never once considered he’d been at an advantage for having not learned the way of a chieftain his entire life.
“My brother wishes to be a knight,” she said. “He’s far more chivalrous than any English knight I’ve ever known. He hasna been able to become a knight due to being English and Scottish. I believe because he was not able to attend such formal education, he’s remained uncorrupted.”
“Drake,” Ewan recalled.
She nodded, and her silence resumed. But what she’d told him said more about her than if she’d chatted on extensively. She was an astute woman who was keenly aware of what transpired around her. What was more, her brother’s restrictions with the English no doubt were a shared burden.
Ewan didn’t remark further on what she’d said. Rather, he pointed out the village of Torish as they approached. The land appeared much the same as his own, save that it was dotted with sheep who milled about with their thick, billowing coats. As they neared, he could make out the shoddy thatching in the roofs and the general disrepair of the huts.
He’d anticipated Ross had not properly cared for the people in some time, especially in light of having it soon belong to someone else. But it was far worse than Ewan had expected.
“Is something amiss?” Faye asked.
“The homes need mending.” He directed them toward the edge of the village and dismounted. “We’ve wedding gifts for the people.” He offered her hand to her to assist her from her horse.
She put her fingers to his palm and slid from her steed. “For the people?”
“I thought they’d have need of it.” Sutherland untied a purse from his saddle. The coins within clinked.
Several villagers nearby glanced toward them, their faces guarded, but curious. Doubtless, it had been some time since they’d seen a chieftain. A considerable time if the state of their homes was any indication.
“Ye’re giving the people money?” she whispered incredulously at his side.
“They have need of it,” he responded again, quietly.
She stared at him for a long moment, her expression one he could not quite make out.
He handed the purse to her. “I’ll announce who we are. Would ye like to distribute the coins?”
She accepted the bag and nodded.
“Good morrow,” Ewan said to those who had gathered. “I’m Ewan Sutherland, Chieftain of the Sutherland clan and yer new chieftain as well. This bonny lass is the granddaughter of the Chieftain of the Ross clan and saw fit to wed a man like me, thanks be to God.”
Several people chuckled.
“And though I dinna deserve her or any of ye, I promise to care for ye to the best of my ability.” He looked about at the upturned faces as he spoke, conveying the earnestness of his words. “I’ll see to coordinating the repair of yer homes upon my return to Dunrobin Castle. Until then, my bonny wife has offered to share part of her dowry with all of ye to welcome ye to the Sutherland clan.”
Faye opened the purse and took out a coin. The villagers stepped forward but held a respectful distance. First, she approached a little boy whose grubby hand was extended with anticipation. Her hand trembled slightly as she settled the bit of metal into the boy’s palm. The coin disappeared in his fist, and he ran off as she approached the second villager.
On and on she went through the people of the village, smiling shyly at their gratitude, stopping only when the bag was empty.
She handed the empty purse to Ewan and accepted his proffered arm. She remained quiet as he led her back to their horses, and they left the village of Torish behind them.
“I hope ye are no’ displeased with me,” he said. “Mayhap, I ought to have told ye my intentions for Torish.”
“’Tis fine,” she replied.
A catch to her voice pulled his attention back to her, where he found her eyes swimming with tears. She looked away, but not swiftly enough to hide the fact that she was crying.