BONUS PROLOGUE
Spring 1305, Mhairi’s House of Pleasure
Isle of Harris, Scottish Western Isles
“Dinnae look now, Emily, but I reckon that’s the brawest feller I’ve ever laid eyes on in me life just come in!” whispered Raven MacDonald, neé MacNeil, to her fellow maid, nudging her in the ribs. Emily looked up at once and took in the tall, broad figure with short, pale-gold hair standing in the doorway.
“Och, aye, he’s dreamy,” she breathed, her mouth falling open as she stared at the newcomer.
“I told ye nae tae look! And stop starin’ at him like that,” Raven hissed, stifling a giggle with one hand while absently wiping at the table top with a damp cloth with the other.
“Why should I? Ye’re starin’,” Emily pointed out, not taking her eyes off the blond-haired man as he strode in on long, muscular, leather-clad legs and shut the door behind him.
Raven could not deny it. Since the man had come in, she had been transfixed by his powerful physique and rough, masculine beauty. “Look at his hair. ’Tis so lovely and thick and fair, like spun gold. And look at his muscles and his scars,” she whispered admiringly as strange chills such as she had never felt before ran up and down her spine. “He’s gorgeous. He looks like a fearsome warrior.”
“Aye, he is.”
Raven gasped and tore her eyes from the blond godlike man long enough to glance at her friend. “Ye ken who he is?”
“Aye, of course I dae! Ye must be the only person on Harris who daesnae recognize him,” Emily replied.
Raven frowned a little at that. She had very good reasons for never straying too far from the house, and she seldom ventured into the nearby village. It was safer that way. But she said nothing.
Emily continued. “But this is the first time I’ve seen him come in here.”
“Who is he then?” Raven asked, unable to stop looking at the man as she pretended to mop the table. He had light-colored eyes, which flickered about the room, taking in the bevy of painted courtesans and their male clientele already occupying the luxuriously furnished salon.
“Why, ’tis Arne MacLeod, Laird Haldor’s younger braither,” Emily told her, getting on with her job of loading used crockery onto a tray.
The laird’s braither?Raven, feeling unaccountably excited by his presence, watched covertly while Madam Morag glided over to greet MacLeod, an ingratiating smile plastered on her painted old face. Morag was tall for a woman, but the blond warrior dwarfed her. He was huge!
The two chatted in low voices for a few minutes, clearly discussing business. Straining her ears, Raven could hear the low, deep rumble of his voice. The sound made goosebumps rise all over her skin.
“Wait until ye get close enough tae see his eyes. All the girls would give their right arms tae get him intae bed. Wish ye were one of them, d’ye?” Emily smiled teasingly at Raven as she hurried off back to the kitchen with her tray.
Raven moved on to the next table, but her attention was on MacLeod and the courtesans who were eyeing him up with frank appreciation, giggling, thrusting out their breasts, practically licking their lips. Raven was well aware that in comparison to their usual clientele he was a choice morsel. She suspected that if not for Morag’s stern presence, the girls would have fought each other to be the one to take him to bed, without charging a penny. And the way Raven felt, for the first time in her life, just looking at him, strange tingles racing all over her body, she thought she understood why.
Before she had come to work at Mhairi’s, she had never really understood how a woman could want a man so much. She was not a virgin, but she had lain with only one man in her life, a cold, soulless man who repulsed her in every way.
So, to catch herself imagining what this MacLeod would look like without his clothes on shocked her to her core. And now, seeing the way each of the girls was trying to tempt him into choosing to lay with them, she felt a flash of jealousy.Why, that’s absurd! I’ve only just laid eyes on him. How can I be jealous?
“Maeve,” came a familiar voice, jolting her from her reverie.
“Aye,” Raven replied, responding to the false name she had adopted to shield her from her past. She smiled up at Morag, while noticing from the corner of her eye that MacLeod was now seated at a cozy corner table near the roaring hearth, his long legs stretched out, his boots resting on the fender.
Morag’s pinched, painted lips smiled back at her with a genuine warmth that was rare for her. “I see ye lookin’ at that feller that’s just come in. That’s new,” she said slyly. “And I dinnae blame ye. He’s a fine specimen, eh? Why, if I was thirty years younger…” Her husky voice trailed off, and her faded eyes took on a faraway look for a moment. Then she snapped back into her professional self.
“He’s the laird’s braither, Arne MacLeod is his name.”
“Aye, Emily said,” Raven put in, trying not to keep looking at him.
“He’s lookin’ fer a lass tae spend the night with him, but he wants tae take his time choosin’ which one. I’m tae tell the girls tae let him be fer a while, so he can have a look at what’s on offer at his leisure. But he has plenty of money tae spend, so we must keep him sweet. I want ye tae serve him, and make sure he gets everything he wants,” the madam ordered under her breath.
A fresh wave of excitement washed over Raven. “Aye, I will,” she found herself saying with an unfamiliar eagerness.
“Good lass.” Morag patted her shoulder and went off to speak to her girls. Raven heard soft expressions of disappointment from several of them as, with trembling fingers, she tucked her cleaning cloth in her apron pocket. She brushed down her skirts and straightened her cap, wondering why on earth she was bothering.I’m a maid, fer goodness sake, nae a courtesan out tae flirt with a man.
But for some odd reason, it suddenly felt important to do what little she could to present herself well. She straightened up, took a deep breath, summoned all her composure, and approached MacLeod’s table.