The Lass Who Kissed a Frog Lee, Caroline (short books to read TXT) đ
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When he chuckled, his shoulder brushed against hers, and it felt so natural, so right, to be sitting beside this man, where she wasnât the celebrated Oliphant Beauty, but justâŠVanessa.
âYe like that?â
She sighed again, which turned into another yawn. âI love it. I wish ye had two thumbs.â
âI do have two thumbs.â
âNay, I meant on this hand.â Her eyes closed briefly, and her lips twitched. âThat might be awkward.â
âDo frogs have thumbs?â he wondered out loud. âAnd if they did, would that increase the chance of ye kissing another one?â
Her eyes flew open. âKissing another frog?â
He increased the pressure of his massage, tugging at her hand enough to get her to turn to him. When she did, he lowered his voice. âKissing me.â
Immediately, she felt her face flushing, her heartbeat hastening. âIâ But the bargainâŠâ she stammered, unable to admit the idea of kissing this manâthis Froggieâwasnae as horrible as it ought to have been.
âAye, milady. The bargain.â His lips curled, but it wasnât a particularly nice smile. In fact, despite the beard obstructing much of his features, it was somehowâŠfamiliar. Gently, he disengaged his hand from hers, and a chill swept over her as she lost his touch. âOnce weâve reached York and accomplished whatever ye have planned, dinnae think Iâll noâ collect.â
It was a vow; one she was surprised to discover she didnât mind at all.
âWhen we reach Yorkââ Her words were interrupted by a loud yawn she couldnât contain. âOh, excuse me.â
He folded his arms across his chest and rested his head against the seat behind him. âYork is many hours away, and weâll have to change trains a few times. No need for ye to be awake for all of it.â
Perhaps it was the lack of sleep last night, but she wasnât following his reasoning. âWhat?â
âGo to sleep, milady,â he grumbled. âIâll watch out for ye.â His good eye was fixed on something down the aisle, though she had the impression it was more because he didnât want to look at her than it was anything particularly interesting. âIâll keep ye safe.â
Why did that simple vow send a flood of warmth through her?
Sighing, she decided to trust him, yet again, and closed her eyes. The seat wasnât as comfortable as the first-class compartments her father had rented all those years ago when they used to visit his aunt at Fangfoss, but at least they werenât wooden benches.
She tilted her head to one side, and when her cheek found his shoulder, neither of them flinched away. With her eyes closed, she could only imagine the stiff way he was holding himself, but the thought made her smile.
Her Froggie was certainly surprising her at every turn, wasnât he?
As she drifted off to sleep, her last thought was, The next few days will certainly be interestingâŠ
Chapter 7
âI seeâŠdanger approaching.â
âNay, ye dinnae.â
âAye, I do. See that squiggle there?â
âThatâs a bit of sugar, stuck to the leaf. See? It wipes right off.â
âHmm. Alright, yeâre correct. I dinnae see danger at all. I seeâŠa journey. Theyâre going on a journey.â
âOf love?â
âYes, Willa dear. Vanessa and Roland are going on a journey of love. Now do be quiet and let Broca concentrate. Reading the tea leaves is not an easy skill, and not everyone can master it.â
âLike Broca, for instance.â
âI heard that, Grisel!â
âGood, ye were supposed to. Now, what kind of journey?â
âHold on, the leaves arenae precise. AâŠplane trip?â
âWhatâs a plane? LikeâŠa plain trip? Theyâre going someplace plain?â
âNay, I got the âPâ wrong. Wain? Fain? Main! Maybe theyâre going on a main trip?â
âWhizzat mak bânow to ram?â
âI dinnae ken, Seonag. None of that makes sense to me either. Howâs the crystal ball coming?â
âBlantawit!â
ââŠOh.â
âLook, Grisel, if ye want to drink the damn tea and try to make sense ofââ
âOh! A train trip!â
âThatâs it, Willa dear! Excellent deductive work. So theyâre going on a train trip, Broca?â
âAye, I suppose that could be it. A train trip. South.â
âThank you, Broca. Now, where are they going?â
âYe dinnae ask the easy questions, do ye? Grisel, yeâd better brew another pot.â
* * *
It was rather a good thing they didnât have to change trains in Inverness, because Roland was enjoying having her head pillowed against his shoulder far more than he had expected. It also gave him time to study her, and despite his anger at her, he liked what he saw.
Whatever sheâd done to her faceâshe looked gaunter somehowâhadnât necessarily made her less beautiful, but more approachable. Heâd never been a man who was intimidated by beautiful women, and when heâd seen her at the ball, heâd made a point to seek her out because she was the most beautiful woman there.
The most beautiful woman heâd ever seen.
And heâd enjoyed the time heâd spent with herâŠespecially the time spent touching her. Had her mother not dragged her off, he was only minutes away from suggesting a tour of his fatherâs library so he could get her well and truly alone.
Finding out she was self-centered and cruel had been a blow indeed.
ExceptâŠnow, she wasnât quite as perfect, and he was beginning to realize she wasnât always cruel. Heâd heard her say those things about Lyon with his own ears, it was why heâd started on this disguised journey after all, but now he was beginning to see there might be more to her than her opinions about his brother.
Heâd bargained for a kiss from her, thinking it would increase her humiliation once she realized who he was. But he was coming to realize he very, very much wanted to kiss her for his own sake too. She was desirable in a way that wasnât based on her beauty at all. It was in the way she smiled when she saw the landscape of the Highlands from the train, or the way she didnât sit back and wait for life to happen to her.
Well, ye didnae expect this, did ye, ye wee dobber?
He mightâve dozed a few times as
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