Tatiana March

The Virgin's Debt


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during the ride out of the village, where people had gathered by the roadside to stare at them.

      The witch is Rothmore’s whore, she heard someone shout.

      Whore. Mistress. The words pounded in her head. Was there a difference?

      By nightfall, she’d be a sinner, in the eyes of God and man. At least her father would never find out. For the first time, there was consolation in the fact that illness would finally take him before the month was out. And then, she would be alone. She would be the Countess of Glenstrachan, the lands and knights and tenants and servants her responsibility.

      Katrina stole another glance at Rothmore.

      His face was like granite, but a dull stain of colour darkened the crest of his high cheekbones. Was he thinking of the coming night, of what he would do to her? Would it hurt? How long would he want her? Would he tire of her soon, and discard her to deal with her fate alone?

      Or...could he become the protector she needed?

      ‘Why have you not taken a wife?’ she asked without preamble.

      ‘How do you know that I haven’t?’

      Her heart gave a hard thump in her chest. With a jerk of her spine, Katrina straightened in his lap. She hadn’t realised that she’d leaned into him, her body seeking the shelter of his. Tears of humiliation gathered in her eyes as she realised that like a weak woman, she had instantly seized upon the dream that a man could be what she needed him to be.

      ‘I just...assumed,’ she muttered.

      ‘You thought that a married man has no use for a mistress?’

      Her head inclined in a nod of agreement.

      ‘I’m not married,’ Rothmore informed her. ‘And never will be.’

      He tipped her over his arm so he could study her face. A shiver shook Katrina when she saw his fierce expression. She guessed that the heat that burned in his amber eyes came from anticipation of how she would fulfil her duties as his mistress.

      ‘There’s no need to look so frightened,’ he remarked bluntly. ‘I’m taking you to my house and to my bed, not to the gallows.’

      Katrina gasped. She sought for something to say, some means to fight back, to prove her courage, but she came up with nothing. Beneath her, she could feel Rothmore shifting in the saddle, attempting to get more comfortable. Conscious of the fact that her buttocks bounced against his thigh on every gait of the big stallion, Katrina tried to ease her body away from his.

      ‘My leg doesn’t suffer from your weight,’ he told her curtly. ‘But your wriggling is testing my patience.’

      ‘I’m sorry,’ she said. ‘I feel awkward, the way I’m trapped inside the blanket.’

      ‘I won’t let you fall. I can control the horse with one hand.’

      ‘I’m aware of your skill as a rider.’

      ‘You know how to ride?’ His voice betrayed surprise.

      ‘Yes,’ she replied, and looked straight ahead, lapsing into a silence that would discourage further questions. From the first, when she had fled from Glenstrachan Castle, she had tried to avoid lies. Not telling the entire truth wasn’t nearly as great a sin as voicing an outright falsehood, and so far she had managed to protect her immortal soul.

      She had referred to the man whose cottage she had occupied as Grandfather, and the villagers had assumed they were blood kin. Katrina had felt no need to explain that the man had been related to her maid, any more than she had felt compelled to correct anyone when they misheard her family name, McLeod, which she had deliberately mispronounced.

      At the thought of her heritage, worry clouded her mind.

      She needed one man, only one, but he had to be a man of great courage, someone she could trust with her life and the lives of those who depended upon her for protection. That man would have to be willing to defy the King’s command by marrying her, even though she had been pledged to another.

      For a few fleeting moments, she had hoped the stranger could be the one.

      He had confronted the officials at the witch trial with valour, and something about him had convinced her that once he gave his loyalty, he would never waver. She was drawn to him, in a way she had never been drawn to a man. Her eyes kept straying to his broad shoulders and stern features, and the golden eagle eyes beneath the level dark brows. Heat flared to her face as she admitted she didn’t expect a night in his bed to be a hardship.

      But...being a wife would be much better than being a mistress.

      The man had sworn he would never marry, but according to Katrina’s experience, every groom she had congratulated at a wedding feast had said those words at some point in his life. She would wait, keep her secrets while she learned more about her rescuer, and then she would decide if she should confide in him and seek his help.

      Rothmore.

      She recalled the name from the lessons with her father, before he became too ill to teach her. One of the most powerful vassals of King James, Baron Rothmore commanded more than two hundred knights. And the late Baron Rothmore, who had died two years ago, only had one son—born with a club foot.

      I’m no longer Baron Rothmore. Whatever had happened to the handsome man with eyes that were filled with too much suffering, he had lost his title and his lands.

      ‘Are you no longer pledged to fight for the King?’ Katrina asked.

      ‘Be quiet.’

      ‘Why?’ She bolted up inside the blanket. ‘Is someone following us?’

      ‘Settle down.’ His arm tightened around her, anchoring her to his chest. ‘I value silence in a woman more than beauty.’

      Katrina forced her body to relax, seeking to hide her fear of being pursued. ‘In which case, it is fortunate that I have some of the latter, since I scarcely know the former.’ She managed to make the comment tart, although she couldn’t stop her voice from trembling.

      ‘You’ll soon learn. There isn’t anyone to talk to where we’re going.’ With that ominous statement, her rescuer ended the conversation, and didn’t say a single word in the two hours it took to reach their destination through the hills covered in purple heather and evergreen trees.

      * * *

      Duncan Rothmore cradled the woman against his chest. For the thousandth time, he wondered what foolishness had ruled his mind when he offered to take her. What was he going to do with her in the rambling old keep he’d made his home after he ceded his position to his cousin?

      Train her in the use of halbard and longbow?

      Discuss the politics of King James’s court with her?

      Shoulders sagging, he released a frustrated sigh. He had no wish to become entangled with a woman. Eight years ago, on his twentieth birthday, he had told his father that he would never marry. His father was dead now, but the promise held. Let someone else take care of bringing up the next generation of Rothmores.

      Someone better equipped for the role.

      With a bitter tilt to his mouth, Duncan thought back to the moment he’d entered the parish hall where the witch trial took place, and had seen the woman in the white linen robe. The sight of her had hit him like a thunderbolt. Her hair cascaded past her shoulders like a stream of molten gold, and no artist could hope to improve upon the beauty of her features.

      In his youth, it had taken Duncan two painful years to dismiss his dreams of love. All he wanted now was efficient satisfaction of the flesh. That was the reason he had offered to take her on as his mistress.

      He needed a woman in his bed.

      Ruthlessly, Duncan pushed aside the thought that he could have any one of the camp followers that served the Rothmore knights, any night he wished. He would walk all the way to Edinburgh