“Ha! You young limb of Satan! “ Robin shouted triumphantly, dragging her toward him by the ankle. “A few smacks to your arse will remind you of the penalties for such jokes. For God’s sake stop thrashing about and take your medicine like a man!”
She managed a high, strangled sound of protest. The soft hat she’d pulled down over her hair had shifted, covering her face so that she couldn’t see him. Nor could he see her face.
“Fine then, you bloody bairn,” Robin said, sounding disgusted. “I’ll not lay a hand to you.
He transferred his grip from her ankle to the belt around her waist. She felt him shift and realized in horror that he’d moved to sit astride her thighs. Still unable to choke out any coherent words, she thrashed with renewed vigor. With one swift movement, he grabbed her wrists, flipping her to her back and pinning her hands on either side of her head.
“Now, let’s see your face, lad.”
Locking her wrists together above her head with one hand, he flicked the hat from her head. Her hair caught in the knit of the cap and came unbound, falling free and pooling around her head.
He stared down at her, dumbfounded. “Mother of God. What are you doing here?”
“I had to stop you!“ she snapped. “You were leaving. You were—you were
“Well, yes,” he agreed, his gaze roving her face. He seemed to have forgotten that he held her prisoner, his hands still holding her wrists pressed into the snow, his thighs locked around her hips.
“Why?” she shouted.
“It seems the most advisable course of action. Your father will hardly like seeing me here. This way he won’t.”
For some reason, the sensibleness of his reply infuriated her. She bucked, trying to unseat him, and in doing so shoved her loins straight into his. At once she felt the evidence of his masculinity. Very stiff and obvious evidence.
He drew his breath in sharply through his teeth. She barely heard. The brief contact had incited a maelstrom of sensations at the juncture of her thighs, an ache between her legs that was a potent pleasure, a tickle that was a throb . . .
Swearing beneath his breath, Robin swung his leg from over her, rising in one fluid motion to his feet, as he snagged her upper arm and hauled her effortlessly upright.
For the first time, he seemed to realize what she was wearing. His eyes narrowed and his jaw set. “Where did you come by that clothing?” he demanded.
“Catriona Burns found them.”
“And she gave them to you? To
“Yes,” she said defiantly. “They are a sight more comfortable and two sights warmer than what I was wearing. And they cover me modestly!”
“That they do not,” he ground out. “You are wearing boy’s clothing. The jacket is too tight over your . . .” His gaze dropped to her breasts and he seemed to forget whatever he’d been about to say, ending with: “That clothing is too tight.”
“Exactly,” she retorted. “Being compressed into a masculine outline cannot be called provocative.”
“I assure you, there is
“What is wrong with that woman?” he muttered angrily.
“What woman?” Cecily asked, hands on her hips.
“Catriona Burns. I thought she had more sense. Is she trying to ruin you?”
“Ruin me?” Cecily echoed disbelievingly.
“Yes,” he said, his gaze returning to her face. “You can’t appear in public in that . . . those . . .” He waved his hand in the general direction of her clothing.
“This is hardly public, and yes, I can and shall,” she assured him, her ire rising at his tone.
She had always done the acceptable thing, made the conventional reply, allowed herself to be guided by society’s expectations and rules. But lurking in her heart all these years must have been a hoyden simply waiting for the right man to lure her out: a man who did not obey all of society’s dictates, who recognized a person’s value before being told her assets, who was quicker to laugh than to judge.
Robin was that man—even if he was currently doing a fair imitation of his cousin, Oakley. Or at least, Oakley as he’d been before he met Fiona.
“
And with that he picked her up, slung her over his shoulder, and began making his way back toward the castle.