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Authors: Kira Morgan

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BOOK: Seduced by Destiny
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Drew clenched his jaw. At this angle, mere inches apart, he could see the sweet shadow between her lovely breasts, could too
easily imagine how silky her flesh was there, too vividly envision resting his head upon her soft, warm…

He grabbed his tankard and took a large gulp of ale, a gulp he definitely didn’t need and shouldn’t have taken.

She arched her brow seductively above smoldering green eyes. “An’ am I distractin’ ye now?”

He smiled in self-mockery. “Ye know ye are.”

The lass might be half-drunk, but she knew damned well what she was doing. The wee minx was riling him up like a lad poking
at a hornet’s nest. Shite, another ale, and she’d have him by the ballocks.

Josselin returned his smile, then hiccoughed. Things were going quite well, she thought, even if she had drunk a wee bit more
than she’d intended. So far in her inquisition of Drew MacAdam she’d learned he’d been in the field for three years, he was
staying at this inn—up the stairs, third door on the right, and he was born in… what was it again? Tint. Clach. An.

She creased her brow. What an odd word. Sometimes
she wondered if Highlanders named their burghs by clearing their throats. Tintclachan. She’d have to write that down as soon
as she had pen and parchment.

Meanwhile, Drew had definitely taken an interest in her. Her plan to get closer to him was working. Soon she’d have the besotted
Highlander eating out of her fingers and spilling all his secrets.

Marry, she must have some talent as a spy after all. ’Twasn’t as difficult as she’d imagined, nor as unpleasant. Indeed, sitting
in the cozy tavern with a full belly by the warm fire, watching the way the light danced over his hair and flickered in his
smoky blue eyes and kissed his curving lips…

Her chin slipped suddenly off her palm.

She blinked. Perhaps she shouldn’t have ordered that last ale. She’d meant to get the Highlander drunk, but at the moment
he didn’t look half as addled as she felt.

In fact, he looked amazing.

In the firelight, his skin was golden, and his eyes were the deep color of the sea. Where his hair hung in jagged locks, shadows
played across his cheek, flirting with the upturned corners of his lips and sweeping over his angular jaw, already shaded
by a day’s growth of dark beard.

She remembered how it felt—that short stubble—rough against her cheek, in contrast to the gentle pressure of his mouth, and
the memory sent a delicious shiver through her bones.

’Twasn’t that she wanted to kiss him again. God knew ’twas not a sensation she cared to repeat—that blood-simmering dizziness
that left her speechless and breathless and witless and weak.

On the other hand, if ’twould further her progress
toward uncovering his secrets, she supposed ’twas a wee sacrifice she must make for queen and country.

Of course, she’d keep the tightest rein on her affections. She didn’t intend to bed the man, after all. ’Twas only a kiss.
And they’d kissed before. Thrice.

Aye, she resolved, she’d do it.

No sooner did she make that decision than, moving her tankard out of the way, she rose from her chair and bent toward him.
She captured the back of his shaggy head with one hand, clasped his suddenly slack jaw with the other, and molded her lips
to his.

Chapter 24

D
rew was so astonished by the lass’s attack that he actually flinched.

In the next instant, of course, he moved from astonishment to baffled pleasure.

Finally his male instincts took over. He seized the opportunity… and the lass… and returned her enthusiastic kiss, ignoring
the clatter of upset tankards and spoons as they grappled across the table.

She tasted of ale and woman and desire, the last flavor more intoxicating than anything he’d ever drunk before. His head whirled
as she came after him with a vengeance, pressing her lips to his with delicious determination.

What had come over the lass, he didn’t know. Nor did he much feel like asking. He only wanted her to keep on.

As she continued her impulsive caress, the world somehow gradually dropped away. Suddenly there was no tavern, no ale, no
crackling fire, only this beautiful woman and her irresistible kiss. Her touch was as real as anything he’d ever felt, and
he longed to embrace her more fully. But he was half afraid to move, lest he burst the fragile bubble of the moment.

So while she clung to him, he slowly tangled his fingers through her tresses, angling her face so he might delve between her
eager lips. She responded with a soft mewl of pleasure and let her mouth fall open, granting him leave to explore. Ever so
gently, he swept his tongue across her soft lips, and she sighed, shivering, into his mouth.

But when he would have made patient forays with the tip of his tongue into the sweet recesses there, gradually earning her
trust, tempting her to greater intimacies, all at once Jossy made it abundantly clear she was having none of that.

She grabbed his face between forceful hands and, with a groan of feminine need, opened her mouth wide and utterly devoured
him.

The lusty growl he returned must have come from some animal lodged in a deep, dark corner of his chest. The wild creature
charged to the surface, shoving aside Drew’s noble intentions and ravenously slaking its thirst on the willing maiden.

And still she didn’t recoil. Instead, she demanded more, clawing at his neck, gasping against his mouth, thrusting and parrying
with her tongue as if they were engaged in a duel to the death.

His blood boiled, his heart pounded, and his cock strained at his trews, as hard as the oak table over which they tussled.
Faith, if he’d been the coarse-mannered Highlander he pretended to be instead of an English gentleman, he’d have cleared the
table with a sweep of his arm, tossed up her skirts, and taken her then and there.

What the Highlander had done to her, Josselin didn’t know.

She couldn’t think.

She couldn’t breathe.

And she couldn’t stop.

He was scattering her focus and shattering her restraint, stripping away her inhibitions and destroying her self-control.
Yet she’d never felt more vibrant and alive.

Her lips tingled as his mouth moved restlessly over hers with a nameless hunger. Her heart raced, her bones melted, and she
could hear the blood singing in her ears. She knew only that she desired, she needed, she craved, and that some sensual reward
kept eluding her, dancing just out of reach.

A moment more, and she might have lost herself completely to desire. But with the last remaining dregs of reason, she managed
to hold on long enough to sense the change in the room.

Applause.

The men in the tavern were clapping. And whistling. And cheering.

She opened her eyes.

He heard it, too. He grunted and frowned like a groggy child, then lifted his lids a quarter of an inch.

Recognition struck them simultaneously, and they drew apart. Josselin stumbled back, plopping down onto her chair while Drew
scrutinized the applauding audience with a stormy scowl.

“That’s it, MacAdam!” someone crowed. “I knew ye wouldn’t disappoint.”

“Four kisses! Pay up, Cullen!” another man shouted. “That’s two pounds ye owe me.”

“Oh, fine,” Cullen grumbled. “Anyone want to gamble on five then?”

“Five!” someone yelled back.

“Those Highlanders are a lusty lot,” the tavern wench declared, giving Drew a wink. “If I were ye gentlemen, I’d wager on
six.”

Hoots and cries went up, and for a few moments, Drew looked disoriented, as if he’d been roughly wakened from a deep sleep.
Then, bemused, he shook his head as he settled back down onto his chair.

But Josselin felt the blood rise in her cheeks. She was humiliated and confused and, aye, a wee bit tipsy, and she longed
to skewer a few of the leering spectators. Lucky for them she couldn’t summon up the coordination to draw her dagger.

What had happened? What had Drew done to her? She’d meant to give him one kiss, that was all, a kiss to incur his trust and
loosen his tongue.

Loosen his tongue. Aye, she’d certainly done that, she thought as an unwelcome wave of desire washed over her. But then he’d
done … whatever ’twas he’d done, and he’d ruined everything. He’d made her forget all about her objectives, her progress, her
service to the queen. Not only that, but he’d drawn attention to her, which was the last thing she wanted.

Yet there he sat, looking not a bit sorry.

’Twas ungentlemanly, uncouth, and unforgivable. With an angry pout, she reached across the table and gave him a good shove.

“What was that for?” His brow furrowed in genuine confusion.

“Ye know what.”

She huffed out an annoyed breath, then shot to her feet. Unfortunately, she didn’t quite have her balance, and she
listed a bit to the left. Drew caught her arm to steady her, and she slapped his hand away.

But at her next step, her knee buckled, and she would have fallen if he hadn’t caught her waist.

“Easy, lass.”

She sighed. Bloody hell. This assignment was not going well at all. Her legs had turned to custard. Everyone was staring at
her. And curse it all, she couldn’t even remember the unpronounceable name of the Highland spy’s hometown.

“Let’s get out o’ here,” he murmured.

She glared at him, making a halfhearted effort to wrench herself out of his grasp. But his gaze softened, and the curious
vulnerability she saw in his eyes took the edge off of her ire. Still, nothing save leaving would ease the sting of her shame.

They departed to the bawdy jeers of the tavern patrons, and if it weren’t for the Highlander whisking her quickly out the
door, she might have hurled a few choice oaths their way.

Drew was glad of the sobering sea breeze that slapped his face as they left the tavern. It cooled his fevered brain, even
if it couldn’t quench the fire burning in his loins.

Only one thing could do that.

And that wasn’t going to happen. Not today.

Perhaps if he’d truly been a ruthless Highland laird, accustomed to seizing what he wanted and damn the consequences, he might
have taken advantage of her innocence. ’Twould have been easy to seduce the wanton maid, given she was in her cups and over
her head.

But his uncles had raised him to be an honorable
man. Never in his life had he violated an unwilling lass or seduced an unwitting one, and he wasn’t about to start now, even
if that lass was an enemy Scot.

While they weaved their way back to the beer wagon, Jossy remained silent, which was a blessing. He didn’t think he could
endure discussing what had happened at the tavern, and he certainly didn’t want to dwell on what wasn’t going to happen now.

Instead, he did what he’d always done when he suffered from excessive sexual frustration.

When they arrived at the links, he took out his fairway club, stood at one end of the course with a dozen balls, and hit the
bloody hell out of them.

Chapter 25

T
wo ales. That was Josselin’s new limit. Faith, she’d almost exposed herself and endangered her mission by imbibing too freely
yesterday. True, a bit of the ale’s fortification had expedited her progress somewhat. But from now on, she’d avoid walking
that narrow precipice between tipsy and sloshed.

If the Highlander came to the links today—and the odds were in favor of it, seeing as how a number of his supporters were
demanding to win their coin back and knew he could prevail against the visiting golfer—she wouldn’t make the same mistake
again.

So she believed, until Drew arrived on the course at dawn, gazing at her with his seductive blue eyes, tempting her with his
sweet, wicked grin. Then she suddenly longed for a cold pint in which to douse her lust.

She told herself over and over that he was only a target. There was no true affection between them. ’Twas all a ruse. If he
was a spy, as she suspected, they were probably playing at the same game. Any romantic overtures were cool, calculated manipulations
on both their parts.

That was what she told herself.

Her heart, however, told her something entirely different. It leapt as he came toward the beer wagon. It fluttered as he flashed
her a contrite smile. It pounded as she recalled the warmth of his lips pressed to hers.

“Good mornin’,” he said.

“Mornin’.” Marry, was she blushing? She tucked her hair behind her ear. “Ye’re here early.”

“I’ve got somethin’ for ye.” He dug in his pouch, enclosing something in his palm. “Hold out your hand.”

She did. He slowly uncurled his fingers on her palm, sending an uninvited shiver up her arm and leaving behind a tiny metal
bauble.

She smiled. “A thimble.”

“To guard against pricks,” he told her with a wink.

“Ye didn’t have to.”

“Oh, aye, lass.” He leaned in closer, confiding, “ ’Twas at the queen’s command, after all.”

She placed it on her finger, admiring it as if ’twere a priceless ring of gold, which made Drew chuckle. Then she tucked the
thimble into her pocket and casually asked, “So … do ye think she’ll ever challenge ye again—the queen?”

Drew’s reply could be important. If he
was
a spy, and he’d scheduled a match with Mary, Philipe would surely want to know about it so he could make certain the queen
was well-defended.

But Drew only grinned. “Not unless she’s lookin’ to drain the royal coffers.”

“Faugh!” Josselin bristled at the slight to her queen. “Mary’s said to be an exceptional golfer. She was likely only havin’
a bad day. Ye said yourself ’twasn’t fair to challenge her when she’d ne’er played the course before.”

“Oh, I’m sure she’s a fine player,” he said with a cocky tilt of his brow. “ ’Tis only that I’m better.”

“Hmph. How much skill can it take to knock a ball about on the grass?”

His jaw dropped at her insult, and he shook his head.

“That’s it, lass,” he said with a grim smile, glaring at her in feigned threat and grabbing her wrist. “I’ve heard enough
out o’ ye about the dubious merits o’ my sport.”

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