caught her hand and pressed his lips against it. “Are you really?” he asked softly. “I’ll be … anxious … to see this myself. After you’re cleaned up, of course.”
She did jerk her hand back, but forced her lips into another smile. He lifted a hand to summon the serving wench, but as they waited for the girl, the tavern doors swung open. An old peg leg entered, shouting excitedly. “They’re combing the streets out there—a witch-hunt if ever I’ve seen one!”
Brianna froze in her chair, feeling as if cold fingers had grabbed her by the throat. She lowered her lashes instantly over her eyes in hope of concealing her terror.
But the handsome captain didn’t notice. She heard him utter an exclamation of disgust, and her eyes flew open. “Superstitious rot!” he muttered, but he wasn’t talking to her, just to himself.
Brianna barely noticed his words because panic was with her once again. She stood, took his hand, and leaned against him. “May we leave?” she murmured. Leave! When they left, she would be running out of time. No, no, she could stall, and play for time once he took her to his lodgings. Fool! she charged herself. How would she play for time then—when she had been telling him how “anxious” she was! Then he would discover that she was not at all what she claimed.
That would still be minutes away, and right now she had to take things minute by minute. She had to get out of the main room of the tavern just in case the searchers did burst through the doors.
One of his handsome black brows quirked up a third time as her entreaty brought him back from private thoughts. “Please,” she said more softly.
He inclined his head slightly, a faint smile curving the full and sensuous mouth. “Certainly.” He stood, and once again she was struck by his height and powerful size.
Where were his lodgings? she wondered in a moment of panic. If he headed toward the street, she was doomed.
His hand slipped around her elbow and they left the sheltered table behind. The tavern’s patrons, listening avidly to the peg leg’s account of the witch burning that had taken place in the common, barely glanced up as they made their way toward the stairs.
Bessie, her pert nose still somewhat in the air, stopped them at the landing. Her eyes flashed over Brianna’s slender figure contemptuously before boldly meeting those of the man.
“Yer room’s fresh and clean, m’lord Treveryan,” she said with a little bob. “Ye will call me …” Her voice trailed away insinuatingly.
“Water, Bessie, and soap, please.”
“Right away, Lord Treveryan,” Bessie said with another bob. She wrinkled her nose toward Brianna, but Brianna barely noticed, she was so intent upon Bessie’s words.
Lord Treveryan. Whoever he was, he was of the nobility. He might think witch-hunts contemptible, but he might still be loyal to the crown of James.
She didn’t have long to think, for moments later she was being ushered into a small, sparsely furnished room. There was a bed and a dresser, and a plain latticed screen to the far left of the room. They had barely entered the room before Bessie followed them with a washbowl and pitcher. She carried them behind the screen, where there must have been a table, as Brianna heard the pottery click against the wood.
But she did not pay attention to Treveryan or Bessie, because there was a shuttered window overlooking the street below. Brianna walked nervously to the window and cracked open the shutters. The rain had stopped, and afternoon was fast fading into night. Her heart skipped a little beat as she saw a man in the king’s uniform stalking down the street.
She almost jumped out the window when a hand came down upon her shoulder.
“What is the matter with you?” Jade eyes bored into hers as Treveryan irritably voiced the question. His hands were upon her shoulders, holding her to face him.
Brianna blinked quickly, and reminded herself that it was her life at stake.
MR. PINK-WHISTLE INTERFERES