Once Upon A Highland Christmas
Page 10
Until something soft and hot flicked over that same tingly spot, the swirling wet heat bringing even greater, more thrilling pleasure.
It was his tongue.
Breena’s eyes snapped open. She almost bucked off the bed, but he only placed a big, staying hand on her stomach, holding her where she was.
“O-o-oh…” She couldn’t believe what he was doing to her. It was outrageous. And oh so delicious.
“How good you are, lass.” His deep voice came muffled, his dark head trapped between her thighs.
She shifted, her movements only serving to press his face even closer to the tingly, oh-so-aroused dampness of her soft woman’s flesh.
She opened her knees wider, Grim’s deep chuckle warning that she’d exposed even more of herself. He took advantage, pulling back to stare down at her, his dark eyes smoldering. Slowly, he lowered his head and licked her.
Breena melted.
Everything inside her, all that she was, came apart, turning liquid and spilling everywhere. Swirls of hot molten honey pooled and heated at her core. The sensations centered at that one dazzling spot and deeper still, wherever his tongue laved her. The intimacy was undeniable, a thrumming madness made more intense by the love words he murmured against her flesh, the slow-circling finger that rubbed so gently at that wondrous place of such bliss.
Nearing the brink of the primal, near desperate edge of pleasure she knew was about to crash over her, she cracked her eyes, peering down to see Grim looking right at her.
He lifted his head for a beat, his smile darkly wicked. “You taste sweeter than the nectar of the gods.” His deep voice was roughened, husky with passion. “Dinnae e’er naesay me this pleasure.”
“I couldn’t if I wished to, it feels too good.” Breena held his gaze as she spoke true, secretly knowing she’d beg him to do this if ever he forgot.
He lowered his head again, this time opening his mouth over her, drawing deep as if to drink her in, drowning on the very essence of her. It was too much. That glittery edge rushed her, sweeping her into forgetfulness as her body tightened and then quivered beneath him, her world once again spinning away into sweet, dark nothingness.
Then, she didn’t know if it was hours or only moments later, she became aware of Grim’s big, strong body stretched out beside her on the bed. The sumptuous coverlet was pulled over them, its warmth, and Grim’s, chasing the night’s cold. He’d rested his face against the curve of her neck and she knew he slept because of the slow, steady rhythm of his breathing.
He held her hand, their fingers loosely entwined. And it was that intimacy, the tenderness of their joined touch that made her heart thump hard against her ribs. Whatever might come between them, nothing would ever matter more to her than making him happy.
At first light, they’d return to Duncreag.
Grim had said that between Flora Munzie and Greer and his Gregorach, enough folk would be on their way to bring Yule to Archie. Any further journeying was unnecessary. Indeed, they now worried too many people would arrive before they reached the stronghold.
That Archie might send them all away, ruining their efforts before they’d had a chance to flower.
It was a risk they couldn’t allow. So they’d make haste to ride home.
Breena relaxed in Grim’s arms, realizing that for the first time she’d thought of Duncreag as her home.
It was a new and comforting prospect.
And offered so much promise that she turned her head and kissed Grim’s shoulder. “I love you, with the whole of my heart.”
Chapter Seven
“Gone and married, have you?” Archibald MacNab, proud Highland chieftain of Duncreag Castle, surely the most splendiferous cliff-top stronghold in all broad Scotland, jammed his hands on his hips. Smoke haze from the nearby great hall swirled around him, bringing the earthy-rich scent of peat and the delicious smell of roasted meat and other tempting fare. A wall torch blazed behind him, edging his head and shoulders in orange-red so he could’ve been standing at the entrance to hell and not in the heart of Duncreag. Looking fierce, he glared at Breena and Grim through narrowed eyes. “I’m thinking my ears have failed me, I am!”
“Nae, they haven’t.” Grim didn’t back down. “You heard us right enough.”
“It is true, my lord.” Breena offered him a smile, the knowledge making her heart thunder. She could still hear their sacred words, see the warmth in Grim’s eyes as he’d looked at her with so much love and longing. It’d been the most wondrous moment of her life.
She stepped up to Archie, touched his arm, wanting him to feel her excitement. “We spoke our vows in the old way.” She glanced at Grim, tingling just to see him standing so close beside her. To know that he was hers and she was his, that he’d claimed her for his own, and so proudly. “I have never been happier, lord.
“Not in all my days.” She squeezed Archie’s arm, then released him, returning to Grim. “We are blessed, and at such a special time of the year. The gods have smiled on us.”
“Humph!” Archie thrust out his chin, his eyes like slits. “The ancients ne’er did aught good or their way wouldn’t be ‘old’ now, would it?”
“Men of Nought abide by such laws.” Grim crossed his arms, calm as ever.
“This is Duncreag,” Archie shot right back at him. “My lands and my castle, lest you’ve forgotten. The only ancient creeping about here is me.”
“We know that, sir. I mean—” Breena clapped a hand to her lips, her cheeks heating.
“See?” Archie leaned in, his brows wagging. “No one respects me, I’m aye saying.”
“But you are loved, sir.” Breena’s heart sang to know it was true. “To be sure, men think highly of you, yet regard alone wouldn’t have brought so many here to celebrate Christmas with you. They came because they’re your friends.”
“Pah!” Archie shook a finger at her. “Dinnae go telling such tall tales that you tie yourself in a knot you cannae undo, lassie,” he huffed, looking pleased all the same. Resplendent in his lairdly finery, his sword even gleaming at his hip, he appeared every inch the proud Highland chieftain, well satisfied to be hosting a Yuletide feast.
“Thon guests”—he jerked a nod toward the hall’s arched entry—“are here because Cook decided to empty my larders and because of all the free-flowing ale. And maybe because no pipers in all the Highlands play better than mine.”
“Is that so?” Greer MacGregor appeared out of the shadows, clamped a hand on Archie’s shoulder. “Some might say my Gregorach pipers hold that honor. Truth be told, it’s their pipes gracing our ears just now.” He grinned when Archie scowled at him. “Your musicians are taking a wee break, if you’d be hearing the rights of it.”
Archie snorted. “I thought the skirling was a bit off.”
The MacGregor chuckled. “Always needing the last word, eh?”
“I’m for speaking no words with the likes of you,” Archie spluttered. But he nodded gruffly, his lips twitching in an almost-smile when Greer snatched two cups of ale from a passing servant and thrust one in Archie’s hand. “If I make an exception this night, it’s only because it’s Christmas. And for these two young folk who’ve been up to such mischief.
“Fetching you, and who kens all, from every glen within a hundred miles.” Archie brought his cup to his lips, taking a healthy swig.
“You’re glad they did, aye?” Greer knocked his own cup against Archie’s. “Time to forget past grievances, my friend. Allies are better than enemies. This is a night to make merry.”
“Hah.” Archie cast him a querulous look. “I’m thinking it’s an e’en for some folk to be reminded of how to treat their elders.”
He turned to Breena and Grim, not quite managing to look as stern as he sounded. “What have the two of you to say for yourselves?”
“We’ve told you the most important thing, sir.” Breena spoke first. She took Grim’s hand, twining her fingers with his. “We’re in love and we’ve married.”
Beside her, Grim smiled. In truth, just the way she’d slipped her hand into his filled him with such warmth and pride, he couldn’t speak. His chest felt too tight, his heart so full of his love for her. He did cast a discreet glance over his shoulder.
Praise Odin, no one was near.
The four of them stood in the passageway outside Duncreag’s great hall. With Grim and Breena’s surprise Yuletide feasting in full swing, there was hardly an inch of Duncreag not occupied by celebrants. The MacGregors, especially, had turned out in number. Even the Munzies brought enough kin and friends to fill four long tables. Malcolm MacDonald and his new bride, Moira, kindly delayed their journey to MacKenzie territory in Kintail to be a part of Christmas at Duncreag Castle.
Grim glanced into the hall, his gaze seeking the pair. He spotted them near the tapestry Breena had hidden behind the night before their journey, the memory hitting him like a mighty punch to the gut. The gods only knew what would’ve come of him if she hadn’t been there, had he not noticed her. Desiring her as he’d done for so long, his attraction to her stronger than anything he’d ever before felt for a woman, he’d have surely spoken to her, sooner or later. Or mayhap he wouldn’t have, given his doubts that a maid so fair would even glance at a big, rough-hewn brute like him.
As things stood, when the day came to return to his home at Nought in the Glen of Many Legends, he’d ask Archie if he could purchase the tapestry.
It’d make a fine heirloom to hang over their bed.
A treasure to pass on to their children.
Grim felt the corner of his mouth lifting at the thought, the most pleasurable warmth sliding through him to imagine the family he and Breena would raise. The many Yuletide feastings they’d enjoy. Happier than he’d ever been, he tore his gaze from Malcolm and Moira and looked out across the crowded hall, heartened by the revelers’ merriment.
Many of them were loud and in their cups. Archie’s and Greer’s pipers played lively tunes, as did a fiddler who’d jumped onto a trestle bench. Quite a few of the guests danced, leaping and whirling about in the hall, where a space had been cleared for the purpose.
“So, laddie!” Archie jabbed a finger into Grim’s chest, drawing his attention from the celebrants. “Dinnae try to distract me by gazing into the hall, all innocence.” He flashed a look at Breena, his eyes narrowed. “Think you it’s a fine thing to hie yourselves back here, wed behind my back? And me knowing naught of the deed?”
“We returned as swiftly as we could.” Grim slid a warning glance at Breena, hoped she wouldn’t now regret their vows. The pledges they’d made, binding as stone.
He knew how much she loved Archie.
Their plan had worked very well. Indeed, there was so much raucous merrymaking in the great hall behind them that Archie had to bellow with all his lung power to be heard.
“You shouldn’t have gone wedding yourselves, no’ yet!” Archie snatched his walking stick from a shadowed alcove, leaning heavily on it as he glared at them.
Grim smiled back. “You were pacing about fine without your crummock when we rode in. It’s good to see you’re setting it aside now and then.”
“I didnae see you use it once since I arrived,” Greer spoke up, looking amused.
Archie harrumphed. “I need it, aye! No’ that it’s aught of your business, MacGregor.” He turned back to Grim and Breena, drew a long breath. “Truth is, when folk started pounded on my door, each one bursting with the news that you’d wed, I was so fashed I misplaced it.
“Marrying in the old ways,” he huffed again, shaking the walking stick at them. “I still cannae believe it.”
Grim reached for Breena’s hand, squeezing her fingers. “We had to speak our vows. It was necessary.”
“Is that so?” Archie’s eyes rounded, his gaze snapping to Breena’s middle. “I wouldnae have believed you’d—”
“It was necessary to wed because we love each other.” Grim frowned back at him, not liking the old man’s suspicion. “Everything was right proper, ne’er you worry.”
“Aye, well…” Archie looked from Grim to Breena and back, flicking at his sleeve. “I’d have gone after you if I’d known. As is”—he waved his crummock at the hall’s arched entry where so much light and laughter spilled out into the passage—“thon folk started arriving with gifts and Yuletide gew-gaws to drape about the hall. I couldnae have hied myself anywhere.”
“You have had your hands full, we understand.” Breena spoke with warmth, her heart in her eyes. “Indeed”—she reached to touch the garland of holly Greer MacGregor had jauntily draped around his shoulders—“it would seem your friends are enjoying your hospitality.
“Who would’ve thought we’d return to such a jolly celebration?” She paused, blinking against the brightness in her eyes. “Some might say it’s a Christmas miracle.”
“Humph!” Archie glanced aside, the gruffness in his voice and the way he busily scratched his ear—a ploy to dash telltale dampness from his cheek—saying so much more than his scowls and bluster.
“Belike folk couldn’t do without the grand Yule feasts we used to have here.” Archie propped his walking stick against the wall again and set his hands on his hips. “Bet neither of you kent how well liked I am, eh? There be folk in the hall from near and far this night, all come to feast and carouse at Duncreag.
“No other laird could do a better a Yule.” He crossed his arms, satisfaction sparking in his eye. “There be some chieftains”—he slid a look at Greer—“who cannae host a good feast.
“Word gets out whose hall hosts the grandest Christmas.” Archie’s chin lifted, his beard jutting.
Beside him, Greer stifled a chuckle.
“Is that so?” Grim, too, could hardly keep a straight face.
He didn’t dare glance at Breena.
Apparently no one had shared their secret. The true reason for their holiday journey.
Archie thought their neighbors had come because they missed Archie and his once-famous Yuletide revels. That was fine with Grim. Indeed, it was better than he’d hoped.
Archie was welcome to the glory.
That’d been the idea.
Now that he and Breena had accomplished their goal, Archie seemingly pleased and—Grim hoped—well on his way to regaining the pleasure he’d once taken in life, all that mattered to Grim was making Breena happy. He’d do anything for her, carry her on his shoulders through life, spare her every difficulty, and treat her—
“Mercy me!” Breena clutched his arm. “My Uncle Dermot! I’m sure I just saw him in the hall!” She wheeled on Archie, her eyes wide. “The big man near the dais, with a shock of rust-colored hair, who is he? He looks like my—”
“He is your Uncle Dermot!” Archie’s chest swelled. He beamed, his earlier disgruntlement forgotten. He was clearly delighted to be the bearer of such great news. “Came riding in here the other day, asking for you. Said he’d been searching for you all this time.”
“But he’s dead!” Breena spun again to peer into the hall, but the big man had disappeared into the throng. “How can he be here? Everyone in my village was killed, I’m sure of it.” She turned back to Archie, gripped his hands. “Now my uncle is here. Why didn’t you tell me when we arrived?”
“Indeed.” Grim stepped up to them, disappointed in his friend. “You shouldn’t have held your tongue. Breena loves her uncle dearly.”
“So the man said.” Archie freed himself from Breena’s grasp and brushed at his plaid. “He claimed to feel the same about her. He also made me swear to say nothing until he’d approached her himself. He’s her kin, laddie.” His eyes glittered, his tone underscoring the weight of family. “Who was I to deny him?
“Archie speaks true.” Greer sided with Archie, nodding vigorously. “I heard him press Archie to keep his peace and no’ interfere in family matters.”
“I am Breena’s family now.” Grim’s chest tightened on the words, emotions more powerful than any he’d ever known rising inside him. �
��She is my wife.”
“Aye, and her uncle is one more reason you should’ve waited to speak your vows.” Archie’s voice turned reproachful. “Breena’s only surviving uncle ought to have seen her wed. You’ve taken that honor from him.”
“We didn’t know.” Grim felt a stab of guilt. He turned to Breena, feeling worse to find she no longer stood beside him.
He caught a glimpse of her flame-bright hair as she dashed into the great hall, and then she disappeared into the throng. Grim drew a deep breath, a sinking sensation in his gut. Never would he have wittingly kept Breena’s uncle from her side when they’d wed.
Not knowing how much the man meant to her.
He wouldn’t cause her distress for anything under the heavens. Not even if his gods asked it of him. He’d sooner lay down his life than hurt her.
Glancing at Archie, he pulled a hand down over his beard.
“By Thor, I’ll sort this for the lass. Come now, and we’ll speak with her uncle. He’ll understand.”
“Say you!” Archie kept pace with Grim as he and Greer followed Breena into the crowded hall. “He’s a gloomy one, he is. Hasn’t said much to a soul since he’s been here, just stalks about, brooding.”
“I know from Breena that he was like a father to her, more so than the one she had.” Grim glanced at Archie, noting how he walked straighter, chin up and shoulders back, as they wound their way past the hall’s jostling celebrants. With the agility of a much younger man, he maneuvered through the maze of evergreen bowers and dangling mistletoe balls. “Her uncle was surely disappointed to find her at last and then learn she was away.”
She was gone now, too.
Leaving Archie and Greer, Grim looked everywhere, but Breena was nowhere to be seen.
She’d surely slipped away to be alone with her uncle.
Yet…
For a moment, his heart lurched. It scarce mattered that he knew the man had every right to speak with her. Something wasn’t right. The hall even dimmed, as if someone had doused the torches, stealing the light from his world, his life. Surely her uncle wouldn’t expect to take her back to Ireland with him?