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She cried out as his fingers tore into her hair, pulling her back hard against his chest. She saw pure fury in his eyes as they met hers for an instant—and then she was gasping again because he was tossing her over his shoulder and swearing viciously as he hurried along.
“Paddy!” he shouted loudly, his strides long as he carried Brianna along with him to a broad gangplank.
“Who goes there? Cap’n? Is that you?”
“Aye, Paddy, ’tis me. Rouse the crew and make way to sail.”
“Now? Damn, Cap’n, but we weren’t due to sail—”
“Now, Paddy. I’ve a feeling in my bones we’ll be contested if we don’t leave port with all haste.”
Brianna finally saw the man called Paddy as Sloan jumped to the deck and swung around. He was tall and slender, and a cap covered the shock of snow-white hair upon his head. His face was weathered by wind and sea, but his eyes were a young and brilliant snapping blue.
“Did ye get yerself in trouble, then, Lord Treveryan?”
“Aye, and ‘trouble’ is with me!” Sloan replied irritably. Brianna struggled to sink her teeth into his back. He cried out sharply, slapping her rear soundly once again. “More trouble than she’s worth!” Sloan muttered, further irritated by Paddy’s laughter.
“She seems to be quite a woman,” Paddy observed with amusement.
“I’m glad you approve,” Sloan said with a scowl. “Now, Paddy, cease your prattle and rally the crew. I’ll be topside as soon as I’ve secured Brianna within quarters.”
“Quarters!” Brianna cried, trying desperately to dislodge herself from Sloan’s hold. “Sir!” she called out, trying to gain Paddy’s attention. “This man is abducting me! I don’t wish to come aboard this ship! Sir, I’ve a family! I need help. I—”
“Talkative, isn’t she?” Sloan groaned.
Paddy laughed and Brianna realized she would have no assistance from Sloan Treveryan’s man. She groaned furiously as Sloan spun about again—knocking her cheek hard against his rigid back. Paddy shouted, and the silent ship came alive. Brianna instantly saw ghost shapes hurrying along as Sloan carried her along the deck, nodding briefly to the men who saluted him curiously. She tried to twist, from his grasp to survey the massive ship, to no avail. Near the aft he stopped before a door and shoved it open with his boot. He set her roughly on her feet, catching her for only a second as she staggered, then releasing her quickly. Brianna found her balance, then raged after him almost insanely, thrashing out at his chest with flailing fists. “You imperious, insolent, arrogant—rogue! I can’t go on this ship! I’ve got to get to my family. Please!”
“Leave off!” Sloan grated out like a whiplash, catching her wrists, then pushing her from him. “Girl, I am trying to keep you alive!”
Brianna paused, gasping for breath, staring at him incredulously. She just couldn’t make him understand, and there seemed to be no way to fight his strength.
Seeing her breasts heave as she struggled to breathe, he bowed mockingly. “Sleep well, mistress!”
“I will not be your prisoner, Lord Treveryan,” she raged, stamping a foot in her impotent fury.
“Really?” He cocked a rakishly angled brow with amusement, took a long step toward her, and reached out a finger to lift her chin. “ ’Tis a far better thing to be at the moment than a ‘witch’! And”—his voice deepened slightly to that soft but husky tone she was coming to know as dangerous—“for that matter, ’tis preferable, I would think, to be my prisoner than a lady of the streets. Of course, you would be going out with more experience now.”
Brianna jerked from his touch. How grating he was against her fully ignited temper—and her raw misery, and all the horror the day had wrought. It was true that she had no wish to burn, but how she hated him now! He was taking her from her only salvation—the dream of reaching her family, the Powells. She would get away from him; and tightening her lips in white rage, she raised a hand to strike him.
She never got the chance. He bowed again, and withdrew. The door closed upon her uplifted arm. She heard his husky laughter. “Perhaps you should spend the time meditating upon your temper, my love.”
The door shuddered as she struck wildly against it, and the next spate of curses he received would have brought a blush to Paddy’s face. “Treveryan, you have the sense and manners of an ass! Do you hear me? Open this door!”
“I haven’t the time, lass. But it is flattering to know how eager you are to see me! I shan’t be a minute longer than necessary.”
“Damn you, Treveryan! Open this door!”
There was no answer—except that of his footsteps receding along the planking.
She pulled at the doorknob, twisting and jerking, but to no avail. “Treveryan!” she screamed with rising anger. How dare he make her a prisoner! “Treveryan!” Her fists pounded furiously against wood, but the action was an exercise in futility.
Suddenly the great ship pitched, and she fell awkwardly to her knees. She scrambled back to her feet, but since she had never sailed before, she found even the slightest rocking of the ship difficult to handle. She finally discovered that she could stand and sway with the movement of the ship, and Brianna hung on, listening to the shouts in the night and the pounding of feet along the decks.
How many minutes passed as she clung to the door? she wondered. She wasn’t sure, but finally the pitching ship seemed to steady, and she was finally able to survey her surroundings.
It was, most obviously, the captain’s cabin. A broad bunk was fitted into the far left corner, with cabinets above and below. A large wardrobe was built into the opposite corner, and a huge desk stood prominently to the right. The cabin was compact, and yet it held all the amenities. A rich Oriental carpet covered the floor, and the teakwood that made up the few furnishings was sleek and simply carved. A large bird in flight was the emblem on the footboard of the bunk and the huge desk. Upon careful examination Brianna noted that the bird was a seahawk.
“Treveryan!” she murmured dryly to herself. He had saved her life, that much she had to admit. But though “Lord” might be his title, the man was no gentleman. He seemed to be an adventurer—fond of action. He didn’t own her, though, and he had no right to hold her against her will.
The ship rolled again suddenly and she grasped at the desk for balance. It occurred to her then that they had actually set sail, and her eyes moved instinctively to the bunk and the shuttered porthole above it.
She moved quickly to the bunk, mindless of the neatly folded comforter. The window glass was fogged, and she quickly ran her fingers over it.
Already the coastline was growing dim. The buildings of Glasgow were fading into the glow of darkness, becoming like little miniatures in a shop window. The other ships at dock appeared as nothing more than toys.
A haze was over the city. It joined with the misted light and orange color of distant lamps and reminded her of the fire that had burned earlier the same day. It reminded her that Pegeen was dead.
The pain was like the honed edge of a blade, twisting deeply within her, cutting away a piece of her heart, of her very existence.
Would she ever see Scotland again, her homeland? The heathered hill where she had grown, the slopes and valleys that had embraced her and all the dreams of innocence? Tears filled her eyes and she fought hard not to cry. Yes! Yes! She promised herself. She would escape Treveryan, and she would get to the Powells! It was a promise she made to herself, a vow. It was all she could do to hang on to the shreds of her pride—and her life—and to still the misery in her heart.
And so she continued to stare as the distance and night swallowed the shore. The pain of her heart began to fade like the shoreline, dimmed by the succor of exhaustion. It was impossible that one day had held so much. Impossible that Pegeen was dead, impossible that her fate was in the hands of an arrogant Welsh lord—whom she had come to know far too well. But he didn’t own her! And if he thought she would be waiting for him, that she would ever allow him to touch her
again—he was crazy!
A gentle shudder touched her, warm and aching. In all her dreams the man to have claimed her, loved her, would have been of a gentler sort—more determined to woo and please. But he might have stood as tall as Sloan, and he might have had his muscled, agile form. His eyes would have had such a touch of steel—or of fire that made her tremble at their gaze, too weak and stunned to do other than relish his touch.
She smiled, bitterly, sadly. The girl she had been was gone. Her world of independence had crumbled. But she would have it again, she promised herself. She would have it again …
All she had to do was escape Sloan Treveryan. When and where, she couldn’t know yet, but she would use her time wisely and well.
Brianna stared out the window again. There seemed to be nothing but clouds, obscuring all vision of land, even all vision of the seemingly endless sea.
Scotland was gone, but maybe not forever.
But Pegeen was dead.
Brianna took a deep, shuddering breath. Tears fell from her eyes in a sudden cascade of loss and misery. They fell, and fell, and fell, and she could not control them. She shuddered and gave up. Perhaps they could cleanse her soul and take away the terrible edge of pain.
I will cry tonight, she promised herself, and then I will cry no more.
She realized that she wasn’t afraid anymore. Not of the sea, not of fire, not of anything. She was just weary. Numbness and exhaustion at last took their toll upon her. She slipped out of consciousness rather than into sleep.
Chapter Five
Sloan slowed his footsteps as he neared his cabin. He hesitated, then quietly twisted his key in the lock and silently slid the well-oiled door inward. His tread was silent as he moved toward the bunk, and he stood still again, gazing upon her by the muted light of the moon. She was curled upon the lower section of the bunk with no pillow beneath her head. Watching her, he thought of how he had first seen her lying upon the bed at the tavern. Then, he had been fascinated by her. And he still was.
He bent to see her closer, and noticed the tears that had dried upon her cheeks. A strange feeling of tenderness assailed him as he watched her; how horrible it must have been for her to see one she loved murdered so cruelly, and to know that the same fate awaited her.
Sloan straightened. It was over. She was in his care now and there she would have to stay. She was so desperately fighting him that she could not see her own danger. She didn’t realize that she was condemned without a trial. He could not bring her to her family because Matthews would find her.
He sighed and strode the few steps to his desk, where he pulled out the captain’s chair, sat, and stretched his booted legs comfortably over the teakwood corner. From the bottom left drawer he drew out a pint of Caribbean dark rum and drank a long draft from it, wincing slightly as the potent brew burned down his throat.
Rubbing his temple, he began to think of his own future, and of the business that had brought him to Glasgow. Ostensibly, he had been selling tobacco. In truth, he had been sent by a London delegation to ferret out the political climate in the city.
The same English lords who had sent him to Scotland had recently sent ambassadors to Holland, inviting William of Orange to invade England—and force James to abdicate his throne.
On June twentieth, James II’s wife had given birth to a son. While the English people had tolerated their Catholic monarch as long as they assumed his heir apparent to be his oldest daughter, Mary, a staunch Protestant and the wife of William of Orange, they were not likely to tolerate the possibility of their king’s leaving the throne to a Catholic son. There was trouble ahead; of that Sloan was keenly aware. He knew the king. He knew that James would so implement his power that he would enrage his barons, as well as the English people. Sloan also knew William of Orange and understood that he was very ambitious and determined.
Sloan winced slightly. There had been a time when he had liked James. A time when James had been a bold and brave man, a careful thinker, and a fine admiral. But that time was past. James had grown older, and fanatical—unbending, and sometimes cruel. He had executed his own nephew. Over the crown.
James, the Duke of Monmouth—“Jemmy” to his friends—had been the illegitimate son of Charles II. He’d possessed a full quota of Stuart charm; he’d been reckless, daring, and adventurous.
To Sloan he had been much more. When he was ten years old, his father had died—and he’d been sent to live in Jemmy’s household. When Sloan was young, Jemmy had been his hero. As he grew older and wiser, Sloan recognized his good points as well as his lack of prudence over the matter of the crown. But knowing his recklessness had done nothing to change the emotions that had grown over the years, and when Sloan heard that Jemmy had lost his head after his fruitless rebellion to gain the throne, he felt the deepest loss and fury. Jemmy had pleaded for his life but James had refused him—and executed him.
Sloan cast his head back and drank another long, long draft of the rum. The things he’d learned in the tavern that day had been interesting. William of Orange had assumed the Scots would be solidly against him. Some of them would be, but not all, Sloan knew now. If William and Mary secured their position in England, it was quite likely that the northern country would accept them too.
He laid his head back, brooding about politics, and then about the ties that bound him to Wales with webs spun of pity and honor.
Then he started suddenly, hearing a rustle from the bed. He had forgotten the Scottish lass in the gloom of his thoughts.
He smiled and pulled his boots from his feet, setting them beneath his desk before stripping methodically and casting his clothing over the chair. Then he stood over the girl again, debating whether to move her to a more comfortable position or let her be.
It was not surprising that she had been labeled “witch”—she was incredibly beautiful. The loveliest ladies were usually marred in some way; minus several teeth, perhaps, or scarred in face or form by pockmarks or the like. This girl was nothing less than perfect. It was easy to believe that a less fortunate person might enviously decide that only a pact with the devil could create such flawless beauty. But that didn’t matter now. He would keep her safe. He found himself shuddering slightly, warmed by the thought of her. He wanted to sleep with her again—and again. He wanted her to touch him and practice her brand of witchcraft upon him. He could lose himself so easily within the midnight web of her hair, the soft mystique of her cream-and-rose flesh.
His thinking should have surprised him—perhaps even worried him. He had never before been so enamored of a woman as to worry about their future together. But he thought of permanency when he looked at this girl. And as he was of high-ranking nobility, Sloan possessed the inevitable ego of his rank. He was the Fourteenth Duke of Loghaire and a Scottish country lass should be quite content as his coveted mistress.
Would this fascination last forever? Or would he find, even now, his passions rising for another voluptuous woman?
Men were not sworn to be loyal to their mistresses.
She is a witch, he thought again with a smile as he looked upon her. So exquisite …
She inhaled and exhaled with a slight shuddering sob. Sloan bent nearer, but saw that she still slept. He knelt beside her and unlaced her shoes, then carefully slid her stockings from her shapely legs, feeling the heat rise in him as he performed the simple service. Still she did not awaken, and he realized how sorely exhausted she must be. The compassion she brought forth from him worked well to dampen the fires the touch of her created, but he was determined still to undress her for her comfort. Therefore he worked carefully upon her gown hooks without moving her, then lifted her into his arms to attempt to lift the fabric over her head. The muddied gown he cast haphazardly to the floor, making a mental note to purchase her some clothing. They would have to dock somewhere along the English coast—probably at Liverpool—before sailing to Holland. He could shop for her then.
She was slumped against him still, and he tenderly
adjusted her weight to wrest her shift from her. It was then that she awoke, her huge blue eyes reflections of dazed alarm in the dimness, her fists instantly flailing against him.
“I am not a witch! Leave me! Leave me! Before God most holy, I am not a witch!”
She pounded against Sloan’s bare chest, causing little harm, but one of her blows caught him well in the chin, causing his mouth to bleed where his tooth caught against his inner lip. Grimacing with a bit of surprise at the extent of her power, he secured her wrists and held them tight over her head, breaking, still gently, into her wild speech. “Shhh! You are not a witch, and no man will harm you! Shhh … It is all right, everything is all right.”
The wide, terrified alarm slowly faded from her eyes, but still she surveyed him. “You …” she whispered, and it was not with pleasure that she did so.
“Aye, me,” he agreed, with a wry bite to his words.
“Treveryan, let me be!” she ordered with quiet fury.
Sloan became keenly aware that she was naked now, as was he. Each of her tense gasps for breath pressed the hard peaks of her breasts more temptingly to his chest; her slightest movement was a brand of her body against his own. To his vast annoyance he found his own resolve faltering; against his will intense desire took hold of his body.
“I’ve every intention of letting you be,” he informed her irritably, further annoyed by the flickering of her lustrous lashes, which signified all too clearly her knowledge of his arousal, her fear that he could not wield control over his own body as he lay with his weight sprawled over hers. “I am but trying to allow you to sleep in comfort,” he informed her, scowling darkly.
“If you wish to grant me comfort,” she snapped, “leave.”
Sloan took a perverse pleasure in the slight tremor that touched her voice. Damn her! They might have been strangers.
“Sorry—this is my cabin.”
“Oh,” she said. “Well, then, I shall be glad to leave.”

Deadly Night
The Uninvited
Dust to Dust
Heart of Evil
A Perfect Obsession
The Keepers
Pale as Death
Phantom Evil
Hallow Be the Haunt
Night of the Wolves
The Night Is Forever
Golden Surrender
Kiss of Darkness
Beneath a Blood Red Moon
A Dangerous Game
Ghost Shadow
Long, Lean, and Lethal
Fade to Black
The Rising
And One Wore Gray
Rebel
The Unseen
The Night Is Watching
The Evil Inside
The Unspoken
The Night Is Alive
The Unholy
Nightwalker
Deadly Harvest
An Angel for Christmas
A Pirate's Pleasure
American Drifter
Realm of Shadows
Blood on the Bayou
Sacred Evil
Dying to Have Her
The Cursed
Captive
Hurricane Bay
Drop Dead Gorgeous
Ghost Memories
All Hallows Eve
Dying Breath
Deadly Fate
The Dead Room
Lord of the Wolves
Ghost Night
Ghost Walk
The Forgotten
Unhallowed Ground
One Wore Blue
Dead By Dusk
Night of the Blackbird
The Dead Play On
Bride of the Night
Wicked Deeds
The Forbidden
Triumph
Out of the Darkness
Love Not a Rebel
The Last Noel
Tall, Dark, and Deadly
The Death Dealer
Dead on the Dance Floor
Law and Disorder
Dark Rites
New Year's Eve
Hostage At Crystal Manor
And One Rode West
Home in Time for Christmas
Killing Kelly
Blood Night
Tangled Threat (Mills & Boon Heroes)
Darkest Journey
Glory
Deadly Touch
An Unexpected Guest
Night of the Vampires
Seize the Wind
Ghost Moon
The Vision
Dreaming Death
Conspiracy to Murder
Horror-Ween (Krewe of Hunters)
The Summoning
Waking the Dead
Danger in Numbers
The Hidden
Sweet Savage Eden
Tangled Threat ; Suspicious
Mother's Day, the Krewe, and a Really Big Dog
Picture Me Dead
The Killing Edge
St. Patrick's Day
Seeing Darkness
The Dead Heat of Summer: A Krewe of Hunters Novella
Crimson Twilight
Haunted Destiny
Devil's Mistress
Banshee
The Unforgiven
The Final Deception
A Horribly Haunted Halloween
Haunted Be the Holidays
Deadly Gift
Easter, the Krewe and Another Large White Rabbit
Haunted
The Silenced
Let the Dead Sleep
Christmas, the Krewe, and Kenneth
Big Easy Evil
Sinister Intentions & Confiscated Conception
Haunted Be the Holidays: A Krewe of Hunters Novella
Blood Red
A Perilous Eden
Slow Burn
Strangers In Paradise
Bitter Reckoning
Krewe of Hunters, Volume 1: Phantom Evil ; Heart of Evil ; Sacred Evil ; The Evil Inside
Do You Fear What I Fear?
The Face in the Window
Krewe of Hunters, Volume 3: The Night Is WatchingThe Night Is AliveThe Night Is Forever
Eyes of Fire
Apache Summer sb-3
Sensuous Angel
In the Dark
Knight Triumphant
Hours to Cherish
Tender Deception
Keeper of the Dawn tkl-4
Apache Summer
Between Roc and a Hard Place
Echoes of Evil
The Game of Love
Sacred Evil (Krewe of Hunters)
Bougainvillea
Tender Taming
Keeper of the Night (The Keepers: L.A.)
Lonesome Rider and Wilde Imaginings
Lucia in Love
The Gatekeeper
Liar's Moon
Dark Rites--A Paranormal Romance Novel
A Season for Love
Krewe of Hunters, Volume 6: Haunted Destiny ; Deadly Fate ; Darkest Journey
Keeper of the Dawn (The Keepers: L.A.)
Blood on the Bayou: A Cafferty & Quinn Novella
Double Entendre
A Perfect Obsession--A Novel of Romantic Suspense
The Night Is Forever koh-11
The Di Medici Bride
When Irish Eyes Are Haunting: A Krewe of Hunters Novella
The Keepers: Christmas in Salem: Do You Fear What I Fear?The Fright Before ChristmasUnholy NightStalking in a Winter Wonderland (Harlequin Nocturne)
Never Fear
Dying Breath--A Heart-Stopping Novel of Paranormal Romantic Suspense
If Looks Could Kill
This Rough Magic
Heather Graham's Christmas Treasures
Hatfield and McCoy
The Trouble with Andrew
Never Fear - The Tarot: Do You Really Want To Know?
Blue Heaven, Black Night
Forbidden Fire
Come the Morning
Dark Stranger sb-4
Lie Down in Roses
Red Midnight
Krewe of Hunters Series, Volume 5
Night, Sea, And Stars
Snowfire
Quiet Walks the Tiger
Mistress of Magic
For All of Her Life
Runaway
The Night Is Alive koh-10
The Evil Inside (Krewe of Hunters)
All Hallows Eve: A Krewe of Hunters Novella (1001 Dark Nights)
Tomorrow the Glory
Ondine
Angel of Mercy & Standoff at Mustang Ridge
Bride of the Tiger
When Next We Love
Heather Graham Krewe of Hunters Series, Volume 4
A Season of Miracles
Realm of Shadows (Vampire Alliance)
When We Touch
Serena's Magic
Rides a Hero sb-2
All in the Family
Handful of Dreams
A Stranger in the Hamptons
Krewe of Hunters, Volume 2: The Unseen ; The Unholy ; The Unspoken ; The Uninvited
Never Sleep With Strangers
Eden's Spell
A Magical Christmas
Forever My Love
King of the Castle
Night Moves (60th Anniversary)
The Island
Borrowed Angel
Hallow Be the Haunt: A Krewe of Hunters Novella
Why I Love New Orleans
The Last Cavalier
A Matter of Circumstance
Heather Graham's Haunted Treasures
Tempestuous Eden
Krewe 11 - The Night Is Forever