Claiming Her (Renegades & Outlaws)

Claiming Her (Renegades & Outlaws) by Kris Kennedy Read Free Book Online Page A

Book: Claiming Her (Renegades & Outlaws) by Kris Kennedy Read Free Book Online
Authors: Kris Kennedy
shapes of mystical animals, some simply bursting into curves and flourishes.  
    God save her, he’d adorned his body with paint, like a barbarian. Like an illumination.  
    “Come in, Katarina.”
    She swallowed and lifted her head.  
    He certainly looked the barbarian. Gloriously so. His dark hair was untethered now, hanging freely, so she could no longer see the shaved sides. Divested of most of his armor, he still wore his arming doublet, the fustian fabric of the vest dyed a smoky black, so the mail encasing his arms seemed to grow out of the darker bulk of him like tree limbs. The metal rings winked dully in the firelight.  
    Hose encased his powerful legs, what she could see of them. A black-and-red tunic hung to mid-thigh, and his calves were clad in high, muddy leather boots. But his body was rock-hard and pulsed with masculine vitality in the cold, almost bare antechamber. A painted body that seemed sculpted of stone, and eyes wrought of icy steel.  
    He was magnificent.  
    What a terrible, terrible thing.
    Any moment now, he was going to do something wild and barbaric.  
    His eyes held hers, then slowly narrowed, his gaze piercing, pinned on her face.
    “Why is your nose red?”

Chapter Eight
    STARTLED, KATARINA’S HAND flew to her nose. She touched it, shielded it. It seemed suddenly important to protect her nose from observation. Aodh Mac Con stood motionless, awaiting her reply.
    Because I refused your wood. And your man’s cloak.  
    She finally said, “Because I am stubborn,” for if you could not tell the awful truth to your enemy, then who?
    His gaze trailed across the rest of her face, and she battled back the urge to cover the whole thing. “Stubborn people tend to end up dead before their time,” he said after a moment’s slow examination.
    She blinked. Was he threatening her? It did not sound so; it sounded…conversational.  
    “And I’d always been told it was the reckless ones,” she countered, having no other reply to hand.
    “You were misinformed, my lady. Recklessness gets you admirers.”
    “And enemies, who then get you dead,” she said tartly.
    “Only if you are stubborn too.” His gaze sailed down her body, as if examining it for signs of stubbornness.
    A sizzling thrill arced through her. “Some call it loyalty.”
    His gaze came back up. “Others call it idiocy.”
    She sniffed. “I see. So you will deal with any devil.”
    He grinned, a lopsided, sensual, self-approving thing. “Aye, I’ve dealt with England. What more proof does one need?”
    “And yet live on,” she observed darkly.  
    He bent closer, his face angled slightly away, his mouth directly beside her ear. “As do you, my lady, and recklessness marks you like a brand.”  
    The breath caught in her throat. He turned on his heel and strode into the inner chamber, saying over his shoulder, “Wine?”
    She blinked. “Wine?”  
      “Wine. ’Tis a drink.”  
    “Of course. Wine,” she said stupidly. “Indeed. I should very much like wine.” A large, potent pot of it. Perhaps two.
    Why was he not chaining her to the walls?
    She followed him into the inner chamber and stopped short in amazement.  
    A monstrous fire roared, orange and red and blue flames dancing merrily in the gaping maw of the hearth, so different from the low range of flames that flickered across the single log Katarina allowed herself each day. On the walls were hung tapestries both rich and thick, wool and silk weaves that seemed to undulate in the light of the conflagration.  
    A far cry from her threadbare, much-loved tapestries. On the floor lay a variety of plush pelts, and along the walls, every oil lamp was ablaze. The room practically pulsed with light and heat.
    What a shockingly profligate approach to warmth. Not at all how Katarina managed heat.
    Aodh Mac Con stood at the table that dominated one side of the room, pouring a stream of silky-looking wine into a silver goblet.
    He saw her standing by the door,

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