Read The Daring Heart (The Highland Heather and Hearts Scottish Romance Series) Online

Authors: Carmen Caine

Tags: #historical romance, #scottish romances, #highlands, #medieval, #Romance, #scottish romance novels, #scottish, #mafia, #assassin, #godfather

The Daring Heart (The Highland Heather and Hearts Scottish Romance Series) (38 page)

His brows arched in surprise. “Are ye ordering me to be silent in my own house?” he asked in astonishment.

“O cièl
!
” Nicoletta rolled her eyes. “Is the man deaf?”

Bursting into laughter, Liselle pulled her sister into the hall, and then tossing her cloak aside, grabbed both of Nicoletta’s hands in hers. “Tell me the news! All of it, Nicoletta!”

But Nicoletta’s face registered shock. “Are you with
child
, Liselle?” Her lips broke into a smile that quickly withered as her gaze fell upon Julian.

He grinned.

“Osti!
” Nicoletta wailed before turning back to Liselle and hissing with a gleam of hope, “Please tell me that
macaròn
is not the father!”

“Nicoletta!” Liselle gasped, but more in amusement than anything else.

Pipes keened, announcing it was time for the midday feast, and as Liselle drew her sister towards the high table, Nicoletta sighed heavily.

“I worry for you!” she said, her voice taking on a dire tone. “You are cast alone in a savage land!”

“Alone?” Julian repeated in a tone of derision.

Politely holding out Nicoletta’s chair, he waited until she had taken it before playfully shoving it forward a bit with his booted foot.

Nicoletta sent him a dark look, and glancing up at Liselle, she repeated, “And you are cast
alone
in a
savage
land,
sorèlina cara!

“My lady, please sit.” Julian smiled warmly at his wife, assisting her with exaggerated care and kissing the top of her head before taking his place by her side.

Liselle watched the two of them, amused.

The meal passed pleasantly enough, and when Julian finally rose to excuse himself on estate matters, Nicoletta turned excitedly to Liselle.

“Have you heard the news of Albany?” she whispered.

“Albany?” Liselle blinked in surprise. “Is he not in France?”

Nicoletta tossed her head back and laughed. “He
was
,
cara
.” The smile on her lips was a smug one.

The way she said the word
was
spoke volumes. “He is dead then,” Liselle said.

It was the hand of the Vindictam. She could tell by the expression in Nicoletta’s eyes.

“Soon, you will hear the tidings,” Nicoletta said a bit proudly. “They will say that he was killed in a tournament in Paris—from a splinter entering his eye. They will never discover how he truly died. And Orazio! His hands flow with gold. England, France,
and
Scotland, they each secretly paid him to see the deed done!”

Orazio had ever been the wily one in such matters, but Liselle could only stare at her sister in slight horror. “You?” She swallowed.

“Not I!” Nicoletta shook her head, but her denial rang false.

Liselle glanced away. “Albany caused many to die,” she said finally. “I suppose it is only fitting.”

At that, Nicoletta reached over to cup Liselle’s face between her hands. “Forgive me, but I forget,
cara!
You do not have the assassin’s heart. Let us speak of other things.”

Liselle took a deep breath. She had changed. Far more than she had realized.

Across the hall, she saw the tall form of her husband clad in his white shirt and favorite plaid. Sensing her eyes upon him, he turned and grinned.
Santo
Ciélo
, but his smile alone weakened her knees.

And then glancing down at the small curve of her belly, she closed her eyes, and for the first time in her life, she felt complete and at peace.

She was where she belonged.

Reaching over, she hugged her sister tightly.

“You and Orazio were right from the start, Nicoletta. I should have listened,” she said softly. “I was meant for other things.”

The end

Click this link for more books written by Carmen Caine on Amazon

The next book in “The Highland Heather and Hearts Scottish Romance Series”:

"The Bold Heart - due 2013"

“Moridac is beyond skilled as an archer, I’ll grant him that,” Ewan agreed, eyeing the slim, dark-haired youth playing a rowdy game of dice in the corner with several of Ewan’s men. “And his heart is as brave and valiant as any. But we are at war. There’s no place for a lad to ride amongst us.”

“Ach, Ewan!” Alec MacGreggor protested mildly around a mouthful of oatcake. “I’d wager my finest dirk that he’s older than I am!” Tipping his chair back on two legs, he raised his voice, “Moridac, lad, how many summers do ye have under your belt?”

Across the room, Moridac craned his neck in their direction. “And why do ye care?” he challenged, his lively dark eyes brightening with interest.

“Why canna ye answer a simple question?” Alec snorted, slamming his chair down. “’Tis always a challenge with ye!”

“Ye’ve the patience of a nit, MacGreggor!” Moridac retorted in reply.

As their banter continued, Ewan crossed his arms and observed the raven-haired Moridac from beneath furrowed brows.

There were times of late that he had thought the lad would make a better lass. He was far too slender, too graceful, and his skin too soft. But Sweet Mary! This evening in the dim light of the burning embers, he didn’t look like a lad at all. The curve of his throat was downright womanly!

And then Moridac’s dark eyes met his, gleaming with amusement, and Ewan glanced away.

There it was again. The odd effect the lad had on him.

Abruptly, the lad threw in his hand at the dice and left to care for the horses, and it was with some measure of relief that Ewan watched him go.

“He’s old enough—” Alec began.

But Ewan cut him short. “The lad leaves on the morrow.”

Several of the men gasped.

“Ach, but ye’ve grown downright disagreeable of late, Ewan!” Alec’s tawny brows knit into a line. “If ‘tweren’t for Moridac, we’d be feeding the crows now, and well ye know it!”

“I’ll brook no argument. Give the lad coin and send him on his way!” Ewan ordered, a little surprised himself at the harshness in his tone.

At that, Alec rose abruptly to his feet, knocking his chair to the floor. “Nay! Not
after what he’s done for us,” he said hotly. “Tell him yourself!”

All eyes followed him as he stalked out of the room, slamming the door behind him.

There was a stilted silence, one in which Ewan moved to prop his booted foot on the table. And keenly aware of the disapproving glares of his men, he turned to his own thoughts and settled in for another long, sleepless night.

There was no doubt he owed his life to the young Moridac.

They all did.

But ‘twas precisely for that reason that he’d see the lad go. The battlefield was too grim a place for such a gentle soul.

A mirthless smile played on Ewan’s lips.

Over the years, his reputation as a renowned warrior and a swordsman unmatched had only grown with each battle he fought. But few saw the scars upon his heart and fewer still knew that his sleep was haunted with the screams of dying men.

He would spare the tender Moridac that pain at least.

After a time, both Moridac and Alec returned, and as the men rolled into their cloaks upon the floor, snores gradually replaced all other sounds.

The night passed with interminable slowness. For Ewan, sleep came only in fits and starts. And it was with his customary relief that he saw the dawn break.

And when Moridac rose to tiptoe over the sleeping men to slip outside, Ewan made up his mind.

He’d tell the lad now.

Fastening
his woolen cloak over his leather hauberk with a large round brooch, he stepped out into the cold morning air.

Frozen peat crackled beneath his feet as he shaded his eyes and scanned the dun-colored hills spread out before him.

There was no sign of the lad.

A bitter gust of wind lifted the hem of his cloak. The thin sunshine would do little to warm the day.
In the distance, clouds gathered on the horizon,
heralding more snow. It would be a cold ride.

It was then that a movement near the trees in the distance caught his attention.

Ewan hesitated, suddenly recalling the awkward encounter the last time he had spied upon the lad’s peculiar habits. His own reactions had been disconcerting to say the least.

But he had little time for such concerns, not with a storm approaching.

Steeling his resolve, he swiftly set off down the narrow path towards the forest.

He didn’t go far. By the time he heard the sound of the murmuring brook tumbling over the rocks, he spied Moridac through a gap in the ancient, gnarled trees.

The lad was kneeling by the water, his cloak and his tunic had fallen off his shoulders, and he appeared to be concentrating upon unwinding a bandage wrapped around his chest.

Ewan’s mouth tightened in concern.

The lad was injured!

Alarmed, he stepped through the underbrush just as the bandage fell away.

It took Ewan a moment to recognize what he was seeing.

The soft swell of a breast. The gentle curve of a hip.

And then his jaw dropped open.

This was no lad!

Moridac was a
woman!

Relief coursed through him, a relief so profound that he chuckled outright.

At the sound, Moridac whirled, tripping back over the exposed roots of an ancient oak to sprawl headlong into the damp earth.

“Aye, now, lass!” Ewan laughed, stepping forward with an outstretched hand. “’Tis no cause for alarm!”

Rolling over, she sprang to her feet and gathered her cloak close about her. “Stand back, Ewan!” She glared.

The cloak slipped a little, exposing her bare shoulder, and all at once his blood ran hot. Aye, it had been too long since he’d allowed himself lusty thoughts over a lass. He could only grin. How had he not seen from the start?

She was downright bonny! From her willowy height, short-cropped curls, to the perpetual mischievous gleam in her brown eyes.

And then she scowled.

And that simple knotting of the brows effectively doused any impulse he might have had. For in that instant, he knew
exactly
who she was.

Sweet Mary, but she had changed since he’d helped to rescue her as a lassie from her aged and cruel husband!

His heart sank.

How could he even dare to think one lusty thought over Ruan MacLeod’s wee sister? Aye, he’d almost preferred that Moridac was a lad!

Half-choking, the name was torn from his lips:

“Merry MacLeod!”

 

ABOUT CARMEN CAINE

Like many of us on this planet, Carmen
Caine/Madison Adler is from another world. She spends every moment
she can scribbling stories on sticky notes that her kids find
posted all over the car, house, and barn.

When she is not working as a software
engineer, she is busy ferrying her kids to various appointments,
writing lyrics for her husband's songs,raising her Doberman Ajax,
attempting to tame her three insane cats, scratching her three
Nigerian Dwarf Goats behind the horns or coddling her flock of
thirty bizarre chickens from around the world.

And although I am terrible at tweeting and
posting on Facebook (though I do strive to improve), please find me at the following places:

Carmen and Madison's Facebook Fanpage

Facebook friends with Madison Adler ( aka Carmen )

Facebook friends with Carmen Caine ( aka Madison )

Madison's Twitter - more paranormal content

Carmen's Twitter - more medieval content

Carmen and Madison's website

THE GLASS WALL SERIES (PG-13)

What if humans were more powerful than they thought? What if an alien race had a reason to keep humanity entrenched in fear? And what if ancient beings that we've met before were still trying to protect us?

And just what if the fate of Earth depended upon an average 17-year-old girl with a few secrets of her own?

Would she discover that the power of love was truly the strongest of all?

Prequel - the short story "Behind the Mirror"

Rafael Channing is a Fate Tracker, protecting his world and Earth from disaster, but what should he do when disaster appears in the form of love?

Book One - The Glass Wall

17-year-old Sydney's only interest in life is flying under the radar.

But destiny has other plans when the tall, handsome, formal, and unusual Rafael Channing moves into the neighborhood. Athletic and with killer looks, he wears black eyeliner like a magician and seems to be watching Sydney's every move.

What starts out as a light-hearted investigation with her gadget-happy foster father takes a serious turn when she discovers that Rafael isn't human. Add Jareth, the country's latest rock sensation, into the mix and Sydney is swept into a mysterious world of Tulpas, the Fae, and the Brotherhood of the Snake.

Sydney doesn't know she's a Blue Thread of Fate. She doesn't know the fate of humanity depends on her choice of whom to trust--Jareth or Rafael. And she certainly doesn't know that she's taken the first step on the unexpected path of love.

Book Two of the Glass Wall- The Brotherhood of the Snake

The excitement and mystery continues as the romance begins. After breaking the Glass Wall, Sydney finds herself on the run with Rafael. And as her feelings for him awaken, danger arrives in the form of Mesmers, agents of evil sent by the Brotherhood of the Snake.

But when Jareth struts back onto the scene, it isn't long before Sydney finds herself immersed in sinister secrets, and the subsequent whirlwind of events leaves her wondering just who is right and who is wrong?

Book Three of the Glass Wall - The Inner Circle

As the predictions from the Hall of Mirrors come true, Sydney seizes control of her destiny and makes a choice between Rafael and Jareth. A choice of true love.

And as she evades Mesmers, Tulpas, and the Fae's Inner Circle, she discovers the power of human thought.

But then one of the three makes their Blue-Threaded decision, the decision of fate.

Other books

The Night Monster by James Swain
Flush by Carl Hiaasen
B00CCYP714 EBOK by Bradshaw, R. E.
Homeland and Other Stories by Barbara Kingsolver
Harmful Intent by Robin Cook
A Dark Hunger by Natalie Hancock
15 Months in SOG by Thom Nicholson
The Survivor by Gregg Hurwitz
First Date by Melody Carlson