the edge of the road and they sped away into the night, disappearing into the vast Irish wildside.
Chapter 12
They halted briefly an hour later beside a wide, rushing stream, a tributary of a larger, more riotous river flowing some fifty steps away, behind a long, narrow copse of trees.
Finian knelt at the waterâs edge and adjusted his tunic. His arms burned from the effort of lifting them overhead. By chance, his eye caught Senna. She was staring, her lips slightly parted.
âYe might want to turn away, lass,â he suggested quietly.
She spun so quickly her braid lifted in the air, then thumped against her back. The curls poking out at the bottom bounced in small, ruddy ringlets at the dip of her spine. He looked at them a moment, then turned back to the river.
âIâll need but a trice.â
âTake all the time you need. And Iâve seen men before,â she added sharply.
âUmm.â
He tore off his léine, the traditional knee-length tunic, and tossed it over the boulder beside him, then waded into the frigid stream. Kneeling, he gave his body a rough but thorough scrub with the small, sand-like pebbles that covered the riverbed, washing away the stink of the prisons. His skin rippled prickly-hot at the freezing temperatures, and he dunked his head under the water. Coming up again, he shook himself like a dog, spraying water droplets. With the palm of his hand, he flipped his hair off his forehead and turned.
A tunic and pair of leggings came sailing over and landed on his face. He dragged them off. Sennaâs back was still conspicuously toward the river, as if she were aiming it at him. But her head was turned in his direction slightly, so that her chin sat on her shoulder.
âYouâll want something clean and English-looking to put on,â she mumbled.
âMy thanks.â
âAnd in any event, I didnât have one ofââher hand waved vaguely in the direction of his hipsââthose.â
Even from this distance, even through the moonlight, he could see her cheeks flush pink. And he did not have to see anything at all to know this was due the fact she was not fully turned away. Sheâd been watching him.
He pulled the tunic over his head. Once his leggings were on and laced, she turned. Her gaze didnât quite meet his.
âAre we quite ready?â she asked in an imperious voice.
âI am ever ready, Senna. Why donât you take off yer skirts?â
Her jaw dropped. Everything about her shone in the moonlight. Her bright, wide eyes, her lower lip, now wet as her tongue slipped along its fullness. That long, chestnut brown braid, which trapped the wild, rampant curls.
âMâmy gown?â
He stepped closer. âYe have leggings on under? And a short tunic? Aye. Then, off with it.â
Her cheeks flushed so brightly he could see it through the moonlight, but she was already pulling it over her head, huffing something incomprehensible while under its folds. He took it and threw it away, next to his léine, halfway behind a large rock on the streambed. It looked as if the clothes had been hidden, but poorly.
Quickly he took a head-to-toe appraisal of herâit was impossible not to, with leggings that skimmed her thighs so snuglyâthen he turned away and shouldered his pack again. But in the time it took to make the visual sweep of her body, he heard a small, quick breath slip out from between her parted lips.
âLetâs go, then,â he said.
She spun on her heel, took her very pink cheeks, and stalked away down the path theyâd been following for the past hour.
âThis way, Senna,â he called out softly, turning back the way theyâd come.
Stones crunched as she spun. âBack that way? Why?â
âIâve a mad notion to throw them off our scent.â He rubbed his palm across the back of his neck. âWeâve a long way to go, lass, and I havenât the time