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build his fearsome reputation,” the Norseman explained, lowering the hands he’d formerly held aloft.

      “If you reach for a weapon, I will let this arrow fly,” she warned, her arm aching with the effort of keeping the bowstring taut.

      The whipping wind stung her cheeks and made her eyes water. Or perhaps there were tears on her face. They were common enough after she’d lost her sovereignty and her home to the invaders. Casualties had been few, but only because her heartless father had quickly promised her hand to a warrior who fought like the devil’s spawn and had robbed her mother’s shrine in the family chapel.

      “My weapons are all in the boat,” Reinn assured her. “I vow not to touch them, but I am getting into the vessel now, and you must return to the safety of your chamber.”

      Her chest squeezed tight as he lifted a dripping boot and hooked it over the side of the boat. She could not let him leave without her.

      “Nay!” she cried, dropping the crossbow to run across the slippery rocks that separated them. “Do not!”

      One moment she was running and the next her foot went out from under her. She sailed through the air to land in a heap on the beach, her cheek splashing into the surf. Grit and muck weighed her down, but she attempted to rise. She reached a hand toward the wooden vessel as he reached for the oars.

      “Curse you, Norns!” he shouted, shaking a fist at the sky.

      She winced, not from his shout but from the pain in her knee as she tried to stand.

      “You are the one who deserves the cursing,” she muttered, swiping wet sand from one cheek. “I thought you were a man of mercy.”

      He stood back in the water, no longer in his boat. Only then did she realize he hadn’t been able to push the craft out to sea with his weight in it, the bow pushed into the shore. Thank the saints. There was still a chance she could escape the keep with him. She had to believe a warrior who did not kill an armed boy would never harm a defenseless woman.

      “Why did you follow me?” he shouted, his frustration evident. He seemed angry, but she did not sense the fury was directed toward her.

      She’d weathered enough storms of temper with her father to know the difference. This man’s hands did not flex and curl with the need to lash out.

      “I did not follow you.” She pushed the hood back from her cloak and unfastened the brooch that held it closed at her neck. The garment was sodden and she would be warmer without the chilly length pressed against her. “I waited for you in one of the boats after my maid overheard one of your men say you might depart before morn.”

      He stalked closer, his shadow blocking out the moonlight and reminding her how large he was. She prayed she had not misjudged him. On second thought, she kept her wet cloak about her shoulders, suddenly less keen to drop any barrier between them.

      “You have no cause to think I will aid you.” His lowered voice intimidated her far more than when he’d shouted, and she wasn’t sure why. There was a tension between them, a thread of anxiety he seemed to feel as much as she. “You are not mine. I will not betray my brother to steal his promised bride.”

      Eva’s breath came faster. She shivered from the cold seeping through her cloak and from the chill in his voice.

      “You are not stealing me. I am demanding you show compassion toward a captive of war by taking me to the nearest settlement.” She would find shelter there, whether in a nobleman’s keep or a nunnery. “My father has allies in Cledemutha, a short journey to the west. No one needs to know who aided me when I fled.”

      “I will know.” He glared down at her from his imposing height, his words as intractable as his stance.

      Her mouth went dry. “You would leave me to walk to Cledemutha when you will surely pass the settlement on your way to...wherever it is you are going?”

      “You will not walk anywhere.” He gripped her elbow through her wet garments. “I am escorting you back to your father’s keep.”

      He urged her up the shore, but her first step was a stumble, her knee still unsteady from her fall. A string of foreign curses—well, they sounded like curses—flew from his lips as he hauled her closer, taking her weight by wrapping an arm around her waist. The heat of his body warmed her, the scent of leather and hearth fire rising from his tunic.

      “You are injured,” he observed. “Unfit to walk anywhere.”

      “And it is your fault for trying to leave without me.” She braced a hand on his chest to keep herself from leaning too heavily upon him and was dismayed to feel more heated sinew beneath her palm.

      Being caught in his arm was like settling into a bed next to wrapped hearthstones on a chilly winter’s eve.

      “I must get you home.” He hefted her higher against him then swept her legs out from under her so that he cradled her like a babe. “You are injured and chilled.”

      “Nay!” She wrenched hard away from him, surprising him so that he nearly lost his grip. But he recovered quickly, tightening his hold while she struggled. “By all that is holy, you cannot bring me back. I would sooner fling myself from the cliffs than wed your knave of a sibling and I swear I will do it. He cannot guard me every moment of the day and I know my own keep well enough to slip out at night when I wish.”

      Reinn slowed his step at that, his face close to hers while one broad hand palmed her thigh and the other gripped her forearm, his knuckles tucked against her breast. She had soaked his clothes as well as her own, but the dampness seemed to steam away from his skin, his body was so warm next to hers. She swallowed hard, confused by the onslaught of sensations when she needed to be focused on one goal.

      Escape from Gunnar Geirsson and any fate that included marriage to a soulless cur.

      She peered up into Reinn’s face, the sharp cheekbones and chiseled jaw unyielding. But she could swear there was something softer in his eyes, just as she had suspected that first day when he sat at his brother’s side in the great hall of the conquered stronghold. His gaze held her as surely as his arms. She could not look away.

      Warmth curled through her, a slow sweetening of her blood that left her with a surprisingly pleasant feeling despite her aching knee, her gritty clothes and damp skin. She felt drawn to the Norseman, her shoulders leaning closer. Closer.

      Just when her eyes drifted shut, she heard a commotion up the shore. Dogs barking. Men shouting.

      Turning, she saw a throng of wavering torches at the castle walls on the cliffs above. Ice filled her veins.

      “They’ve realized I’m missing.” She shoved against Reinn, needing to run before they caught her.

      But to her surprise, his feet were already moving. Not toward the keep, but toward his vessel and the freedom of the open sea.

      Chapter Two

      His bastard brother had released the hounds on her.

      Reinn had not wanted to believe a man who shared his blood could be so cruel, but he had seen the evidence with his own eyes when the gates had opened and a fast-moving shadow of snapping teeth and howling fury descended upon the shore. Gunnar had been raiding and warring for too long, it seemed, having lost some of the humanity instilled in them by their warrior father. With their sire recently in his grave, Reinn had no one to appeal to, which meant he would have to confront his brother.

      A feat he did not relish since—if he could not make his brother see the error of his ways—Reinn would have to assume control of the family’s holdings to ensure they were fairly ruled. His days of wandering would be over. He had never craved his brother’s position as first-born, never hungered for the power and responsibility that came with being the eldest.

      But neither could he witness the growing brutality of his brother and not act. Reinn had subjugated people for Gunnar to rule. That alone made him responsible for how they were

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