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Judith put the stool she'd been sitting on back against the wall near the hearth and carried another pitcher of water over to the table. Cameron nodded his thanks to her.
Lord, she was weary. The men swallowed up the s.p.a.ce she'd occupied, and her back was aching too much to sit there anyway. She went over to the stool by the hearth, sat down and rested her shoulders against the cool stone wall. She closed her eyes and was sound asleep less than a minute later.
Iain couldn't take his gaze off her. She was so lovely. Her face looked angelic. He stared at her a long, long while, until he realized she was slumping herself off the stool.
He nodded to Brod.i.c.k to continue the story he was telling, then went over to stand next to Judith. He leaned against the wall, folded his arms across his chest in a relaxed stance and listened to the tale Brod.i.c.k was telling about Winslow and Isabelle. Margaret and Cameron were hanging on his every word. They both smiled when Brod.i.c.k made mention that Isabelle was generous to a fault.
Judith lost her balance. She would have pitched forward if Iain hadn't reached down to steady her. He pushed her back against the wall, then nudged her head toward him. The side of her face rested against the lower portion of his thigh.
A good hour pa.s.sed before Iain called a halt to the conversation. "We'll leave at first light, Cameron. We've still two full days ahead of us before we reach home."
"Your woman can have our bed," Cameron suggested. His voice started out loud, but then he turned and saw that Judith was sleeping, and his voice dropped to a whisper.
"She'll sleep outside with us," Iain replied. He softened his denial. "Judith wouldn't want you to give up your bed for her."
Neither Margaret nor Cameron argued over the laird's decision. Iain leaned down, transferred Judith into his arms, then stood up.
"The la.s.s is dead to the world," Alex remarked with a grin.
"Would you like extra blankets? The wind's biting tonight," Margaret warned.
Gowrie opened the door for Iain. "We have everything we need."
Iain carried Judith through the opening, then suddenly stopped. He turned around. "Thank you for the supper, Margaret. It was a fine meal."
The compliment sounded awkward to him, but Margaret looked pleased. Her blush was as bright as the fire in the hearth. Cameron acted as though he'd been given the praise, too. His chest swelled until it was in jeopardy of bursting.
Iain continued on toward the trees across from the barn. The foliage would give them protection against the wind, privacy too. He held Judith while Alex fixed a shelter for her, then knelt down and placed her on the plaid Gowrie had spread inside the small fur-lined tent.
"I promised the la.s.s she would have a warm bed inside tonight," Alex remarked.
Iain shook his head. "She stays with us," he announced.
No one argued over that statement. The men turned and walked away just as Iain was covering Judith with a second plaid. She never opened her eyes. The back of his hand deliberately brushed against her cheek.
"What am I going to do about you?" he whispered.
He hadn't expected an answer and didn't get one. Judith snuggled under the blankets and let out a little moan.
He was reluctant to leave her. He forced himself to stand up, and grabbed one of the plaids Alex offered him on his way over to the nearest tree. He scratched his shoulders against the bark, sat down, leaned back and closed his eyes.
A sound he'd never heard before awakened him in the dead of the night. The other men heard it, too.
"What in G.o.d's name is that noise?" Brod.i.c.k muttered.
Judith was making all the racket. She was wide awake, miserable too. She thought she was in jeopardy of freezing to death. She couldn't quit s.h.i.+vering. Her teeth were chattering, and that was the sound the men were hearing.
"I didn't mean to wake you, Brod.i.c.k," she called out. Her voice literally trembled with each word. "I was moaning over the cold."
"You're really cold, la.s.s?" Alex asked. The surprise in his voice was evident.
"I just said that I was," she answered.
"Come here," Iain commanded, sounding a bit surly.
Judith responded in kind. "No."
He smiled in the darkness. "Then I'll have to come to you."
"You stay away from me, Iain Maitland," she commanded. "And if you think to order me to quit being cold, I'm warning you now-it won't work."
He walked over to stand in front of the tent. She could only see the tips of his boots until he tore the furs away. He destroyed the coc.o.o.n in seconds.
"That helped," she muttered. She sat up so she could glare at him.
Iain pushed her back and stretched out on the ground beside her. He rested on his side, giving her the heat from his back.
Brod.i.c.k suddenly appeared on her other side. He stretched out on his side with his back toward her. Judith instinctively wiggled closer to Iain. Brod.i.c.k followed her, until his back was pressed against hers.
She was certainly warm enough now. The heat radiating from the giant warriors was amazing.
It felt wonderful.
"She feels like a block of ice," Brod.i.c.k remarked.
Judith started laughing. The sound made both Iain and Brod.i.c.k smile.
"Brod.i.c.k?"
"What is it?"
He sounded mean again. She didn't let that bother her. She was finally catching on to his ways, and knew the bl.u.s.ter was all for show. Underneath that gruff exterior beat a kind heart. "Thank you."
"What for?"
"For taking the time to talk about Isabelle."
The warrior grunted. She laughed again.
"Judith?"
She snuggled closer to Iain's back before answering him. "Yes, Iain?"
"Quit wiggling and go to sleep."
She felt like obeying him. She fell asleep almost immediately.
A long while pa.s.sed before Brod.i.c.k spoke again. He wanted to be certain Judith really was asleep and wouldn't hear what he was going to say. "Each time she's given a choice, she turns to you."