The Highlander's Heart Read Online Free Page A

The Highlander's Heart
Book: The Highlander's Heart Read Online Free
Author: Amanda Forester
Tags: Fiction, Romance, Historical
Pages:
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from crying like a small child. He smelled nice for a barbarian.
    “I understand.” The big man sighed. “My day has no’ been going so well either.”
    “And yet you stopped to save me—twice. I should thank you.”
    “Indeed ye should.”
    “I wish I had something to give you to show my appreciation, but I have nothing, I fear.”
    The man wrapped both arms around her waist. “I woud’na say that.”
    Isabelle swallowed hard on a throat that had instantly gone dry. “I… I have no…” It occurred to her, somewhat belatedly, that she was in the middle of a forest with a man she did not know holding her close, and the only thing she wanted was for him to be closer.
    “Would you accept a kiss as a boon?” she asked, surprising herself with her own boldness. She had been lost in the woods, attacked by highwaymen, and nearly gored by a wild boar, all valid justifications for this shocking lapse in propriety.
    “Aye.” His green eyes smoldered.
    With some hesitation, she gently pecked his cheek with her lips. He frowned.
    “You do not appear to like my kiss,” said Isabelle, frowning herself.
    “I dinna ken ye would kiss like my Aunt Edna, God rest her soul. She used to pinch my cheeks to keep me from running and give me a peck like that. I warrant if I saved good ol’ Edna from a boar, even she might find a wee more passion.”
    Isabelle could not suppress a smile. “I do apologize for kissing like Aunt Edna. How dreadful.”
    “We’ll ne’er speak o’ it again. And to show ye how forgiving I can be, I’ll give ye another chance.”
    Heat crawled up the back of her neck. She was acutely aware of all the parts of her that were touching all the parts of him. Very wrong. Very nice. She went up on her toes and lightly gave him a peck on his lips.
    “Thank ye, Edna.”
    She scrunched her nose. “I am not your sainted aunt.”
    “Then stop acting like it.”
    She grabbed either side of his head and smashed her mouth to his. She came away breathless. It was the single boldest thing she had ever done with a man. “There! Not Edna.”
    He looked up at the sky, considering. “Better, I grant ye. But still with an Edna quality.”
    “Oh! You are a wretched man to say so! Pray tell, how would you give a kiss?”
    He smiled at her, his eyes gleaming. “Since ye have asked, I will give ye some instruction.” He leaned down and brushed his lips across hers, soft and tempting. He kissed her sweetly on her lips, while massaging his hands up her back to her neck. It was achingly good. She arched back into his touch and a small ahhhh , escaped from her lips. He kissed her again, caressing her open mouth with lips and, shockingly, tongue. She had not known such a thing was possible and leaned into the kiss, the rest of the world slipping away.
    When their lips finally parted, she took several short breaths, trying to remember who she was and what she was doing.
    “Not Edna,” she said, stepping back from him, trying to regain some composure.
    “God rest her soul.” He made the sign of the cross.
    “Sainted woman she was.” She also made the sign of the cross. He raised an eyebrow. “To tolerate you, she must have been.”
    He picked up his sword with one hand and held out his other to her, leading her back to the road. “Ye’re no’ much o’ a lightskirt, though ye look like one.”
    Isabelle tried in vain to smooth the wrinkles from her gown. “It has been a trying day, but I can hardly look as bad as that.”
    “Yer hair is loose.”
    Isabelle winced. No decent woman traveled unaccompanied with loose hair. Little wonder everyone thought she was public property. “A tree got my veil.”
    “Ye ought to have fought harder for it. Ne’er let yerself be bullied by a sapling.”
    “It was a large tree and I was on horseback and I could not make the dreadful beast turn around and…” She noticed he was laughing at her. “You are making a jest of me.”
    “Aye, lassie.”
    She stopped and put her
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