Chapter Thirty-Five #2
“We’ve just established that she is very well indeed,” William said.
Alec’s questing toes reached her knee, tickled. She swallowed a giggle, hiding it by taking a forkful of salmon.
“And Sinjon and Evelyn?” she asked after William’s brother and his wife.
“Healthy, as far as I am given to understand.” William leaned forward and smiled at her, just as Alec’s toes slipped behind her knee, moving against the sensitive flesh there.
She gasped, and William grinned at her. “May I say you are looking particularly lovely tonight?” William said, his eyes scanning her face.
Once she would have given anything to see that besotted look on his face. Now she was horrified.
“Thank you,” she murmured. Alec’s foot was insistently working at her knees, trying to force them apart. She stubbornly kept them closed. What on earth was he doing?
“And how is your father?” she asked William, only to recall they’d already discussed him too.
Alec’s foot edged higher, his toes flexing insistently where her stocking ended, and her naked flesh began. She shot him a sharp look, and he raised one eyebrow, and wiggled his toes. Her garter snapped, and she jumped.
“Are you quite all right, Caro?” William asked, patting her on the back, his touch warm between her shoulder blades, lingering just a little too long.
“Isn’t the tower lovely in the moonlight?
” Alec asked. “It’s been a trysting place for centuries, especially at Midsummer.
” Everyone else glanced out at the picturesque scene beyond the window, and Caroline shot Alec a sharp look.
He smiled at her, a slow, lopsided grin of pure seduction.
Her heart did a slow somersault. He took advantage of her shock to slip his foot between her knees.
She took a sip of wine to hide her gasp.
“I believe I will remain safely indoors tomorrow,” Somerson was saying. “I dislike hunting at the best of times. The wet weather here does not agree with me.”
“Sometimes it’s quite windy,” Sophie added.
He was caressing the inside of her thigh. Caroline felt a shiver of desire pass through her.
He was sitting beside her, calmly eating his dinner, presiding over the table filled with guests as if he’d had his shoes on, his feet on the floor where they belonged, and was not driving
her wild. She tried to shift away, but other than unbelievable rudeness of shooting to her feet in the middle of the meal, she was trapped. Had he no mercy? She sent him a pleading look, but he merely raised one arched brow and grinned. His foot remained.
“Shall we set out at dawn?” Speed asked eagerly.
She reached down and dug her nails into Alec’s foot, and he shot her a wicked look that told her he did not intend to stop.
She gasped as his foot slid farther still, coming to rest against a very sensitive spot indeed at the apex of her thighs.
A soft cry of surprise escaped her lips. She couldn’t help it.
“I quite agree with Caroline,” Sophie said. “I should say that ten o’clock is plenty early enough. Perhaps even eleven.”
Alec’s toes wiggled, stirred, and Caroline shot him a look of pure anguish, begging him to stop. “More wine, Lady Caroline?” he asked politely. “You look flushed.”
Flushed? She was on fire. He was the devil himself, she decided. She bit back a sob when he shifted his foot again, pressing gently.
“Or we could plan to set out at noon, and take luncheon outdoors if the weather is fine.” Lottie suggested hopefully.
“You could be back in time for tea.” Charlotte said.
Caroline was melting. Sophie and Lottie were now talking about what they would wear, if riding habits or walking gowns would be more suitable.
Alec’s toes were as persuasive as his fingers, teasing her, demanding a response.
It was almost impossible to breathe. She licked her lips.
Whenever she turned her attention to William, began a conversation, Alec would wiggle his toes.
Who knew a man could do such a thing with his feet?
She did her best to listen to what William was saying, to respond to the remarks others made to her, but she was in truth aware of no one but Alec, and what he was doing to her. It was the longest meal of her life.
In the gallery Angus watched as Devorguilla leaned forward to whisper to Brodie.
She pressed something into his hand. He excused himself, and left the room.
“What’s he up to?” Angus said. “Something’s not right.
” He watched Devorguilla turn and give Alec a smug, slit-eyed look of pure hatred, but Alec was too busy watching Caroline to notice.
The lass was uncommonly flushed, and Alec’s eyes were heavy-lidded.
Angus turned to watch for Brodie’s return.
Caroline could barely think, let alone carry on a conversation.
Alec kept up the slow, gentle torment throughout the meal.
Despite her dismay, sweet, hot desire flowed through her veins.
She nipples hardened, rubbed against the linen of her shift.
She twisted her napkin in her lap, strangling it tighter with every little movement of his toes against her sex.
Her cheeks burned. Her whole body burned.
She couldn’t look at him, didn’t dare, knowing that if she did, she’d explode.
She twisted the linen napkin harder to keep from sobbing.
Finally the last plates were removed, and she gave thanks that the meal—and surely the slow, sensual torment—was over. Surely they would now rise from the table and retire, and she would be out of his wicked reach at last. She was exhausted, her nerves frayed as taut as a bowstring.
Hamish carried in a tray of glasses and a decanter of golden whisky and set it on the sideboard. Muira snuffed half the candles out.
“What’s this?” Sophie asked.
Devorguilla smiled. “A special treat. Wait and see.”
Hamish and Leith opened the kitchen doors and took their places on either side of the portal, dressed in their plaids.
“Do you like a man in Scottish dress, Caroline?” William asked her.
“I can’t decide if I do or not. It’s very different from what English gentlemen wear.
I cannot help but feel a little frightened by it.
Living in the north of England, I grew up on terrible tales of the ’45 rebellion.
My nurse used to tell me that if I didn’t go to sleep, Bonnie Prince Charlie himself would come down from the hills and drag me across the border and eat me.
For the longest time, I imagined a nation of baby-eating men in skirts lurking right next door to Halliwell Hall. ”
Alec’s foot tensed indignantly, pausing at last. He would surely withdraw it now the conversation had taken a serious turn, she thought, and she would be free.
But he didn’t. Instead, his toes curled and flexed and played, and she swallowed a sob of misery.
She heard the low moan of bagpipes as they drew breath to sing, rising to the heart-stopping skirl of bright sound that filled the room as the pipers came out of the kitchen.
Megan, Lottie, and Alanna cried out in delight as the pipers appeared, and slowly marched down the length of the table, playing a merry tune. Sophie flinched at every note.
Caroline drew a sharp breath—not because of the magnificence of the ancient music that filled the hall, but because Alec’s toes were on the move again.
She could not bear it. Surely she would die of the torment.
She let her eyes drift shut, and her breath came in short gasps she couldn’t control.
She gripped the edge of the table. How dare he make her feel this, bring her to the edge, threaten to push her over.
Heat rose from the tender, inflamed bud his toes teased, and she felt it rise over her belly and breasts, until she was sure she’d burst into flames.
Behind the pipers came Muira, carrying a pudding on a huge platter, decorated with the clan symbols of heath, pine, and crowberry.
And behind her, Brodie carried in the laird’s cup.
Alec’s foot caught the rhythm of the music, throbbing, thrusting, toying, rubbing faster and faster, dancing a mad reel.
Muira touched a lighted taper to the pudding and it burst into flames. Everyone at the table cried out, Caroline loudest of all, as the sensation carried her over the edge. Alec gripped her hand under the table, squeezed it.
She stared at him in horror, mortified. Fortunately, all eyes were on the pudding, and not on her.
He had the audacity to smile, giving her a grin of pure male pride.
Caroline slipped her fork under the tablecloth and stabbed him in the leg, her smile rising as his faded. This time, it was his cry the skirl of the pipes hid.
“Why would Brodie be carrying the cup?” Angus asked. “It goes against tradition.”
“What?” Georgiana was watching the blue flames flicker over the pudding.
“It should be Jock, Alec’s seneschal.” Angus stared at Brodie, saw him flick a glance at Devorguilla, who smiled like the vixen she was.
There was no pride or joy in her smile, just pure malice.
It rose from her like grave rot. She nodded, and Brodie moved forward, carrying the cup down the length of the table toward Alec.
Angus looked into the cup as it passed under his perch, felt the prickle of warning and fear.
“No,” he hissed. “She wouldna!”
“Whatever is the matter?” Georgiana asked. “Look at Caroline—she’s positively radiant tonight.”
“Gràdhach, she’s going to poison him.”
Georgiana’s brow furrowed. “Why would Caroline poison Brodie?”
“Not Caroline, Devorguilla, and not Brodie—she’s going to poison Alec!”
Angus looked at the assembled company desperately.
Megan’s eyes were shining with pride as Brodie passed her.
Sophie was regarding the pipers as if she wished them to the depths of Hades.
Somerson looked bored. Alec, the fool, had eyes only for Caroline.
So, apparently did the young viscount seated beside her.
“Alec!” Angus cried out. “Alec, don’t drink it, lad! ” But he couldn’t hear.
Angus leaned over the railing, floated down, tried to stop Brodie, to push him, or knock the cup from his hand, but Brodie passed straight through him. Angus clawed uselessly at the cup.
It was then that Caroline turned and saw him over her shoulder.
She smiled a welcome. She imagined he was part of the damned fool ceremony.
He shook his head, desperate now. Brodie had arrived at Alec’s side, bowed, and was holding out the laird’s cup with a sickly grin on his florid face.
Alec nodded to his cousin, reached out to take the cup.
Angus looked at Caroline desperately. “Lass, do something!” he cried.
He saw Caroline’s smile fade, watched her high color turn to ashes.
She began rising to her feet, her eyes still on him, a frown drawing her brows together as she opened her mouth to speak.
Angus watched as her shoulder hit the cup, sending it spinning out of Brodie’s hands.
Everyone in the room watched the chalice arc through the air, the candlelight glinting off the cup’s silver embellishments as the ruby wine splashed, sparkled, and dropped to the floor.
The chalice rang on the stone, echoing through the ancient hall to the very rafters, like a bell warning of treachery and murder.
Devorguilla shot to her feet, her chair tipping backward. It landed in spreading pool of wine with a crash. She stared down at the rivulet flowing toward her in dull surprise, evil seeking its source, Angus thought as she lifted her skirts out of the way.
Angus looked back at Caroline, who hadn’t taken her eyes from him. She stood staring at him, her eyes hollows of surprise as if she’d seen a ghost.
He smiled. What else could he do? She knew what he was now. No one else had seen him. He smiled at her and touched a hand to his bonnet, and slipped back into the shadows.
Muira hurried forward to wipe up the spill, the white rag soon blood red.
A faint and familiar smell reached her, and she frowned.
Muira dipped a finger into the dregs in the cup and tasted it.
In horror she stared at Devorguilla, who was sitting quietly again, her face tight.
Devorguilla caught her look and returned one of pure malice. Muira made a sign against evil.