To Redeem a Highland Rake Read online




  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Quote

  Copyright

  Get Your FREE Digital Starter Library!

  Other Collette Cameron Books

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Epilogue

  About the Author

  From the Desk of Collette Cameron

  TO LOVE A HIGHLAND ROGUE

  Enjoy the first chapter of TO LOVE A HIGHLAND ROGUE

  TO REDEEM A HIGHLAND RAKE

  Heart of a Scot, Book Two

  By

  COLLETTE CAMERON

  Blue Rose Romance®

  Portland, Oregon

  Sweet-to-Spicy Timeless Romance®

  “I do want to wed ye, lass. Ye and no other. Ever.”

  “A lively writing style and detailed story lines are the mark of this truly excellent writer”

  ~Kathryn LeVeque USA TODAY Bestselling Author

  TO REDEEM A HIGHLAND RAKE

  HEART OF A SCOT

  Copyright © 2018 Collette Cameron

  Cover Design by Dar Albert

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By purchasing and downloading a digital copy of this book or purchasing a print copy of this book, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this book. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of copyright owner.

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  No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without the written permission of the publish­er, except where permitted by law. For permission requests, write to the publisher, addressed “Attention: Permissions Coordinator,” at the address below.

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  Portland, Oregon 97203

  ISBN eBook: 9781944973292

  ISBN Paperback: 9781944973995

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  A Waltz with a Rogue Series

  A Kiss for Miss Kingsley

  Bride of Falcon

  Her Scandalous Wish

  To Tame a Scoundrel’s Heart

  The Wallflower’s Wicked Wager

  Earl of Wainthorpe

  A Rose for a Rogue

  Castle Brides Series

  The Viscount’s Vow

  Heart of a Highlander (prequel to Highlander’s Hope)

  Highlander’s Hope

  The Earl’s Enticement

  The Blue Rose Regency Romances: The Culpepper Misses Series

  The Earl and the Spinster

  The Marquis and the Vixen

  The Lord and the Wallflower

  The Buccaneer and the Bluestocking

  The Lieutenant and the Lady

  Heart of a Scot Series

  To Love a Highland Rogue

  To Redeem a Highland Rake

  Highland Heather Romancing a Scot Series

  Triumph and Treasure

  Virtue and Valor

  Heartbreak and Honor

  Scandal’s Splendor

  Passion and Plunder

  Seductive Surrender

  Seductive Scoundrels Series

  A Diamond for a Duke

  Only a Duke Would Dare

  A December with a Duke

  Boxed Sets

  Embraced by a Rogue

  To Love a Reckless Lord

  When a Lord Loves a Lady

  Stand-Alones

  Heart of a Highlander

  Earl of Wainthorpe

  For every reader who longs for their own romantic escape to Scotland.

  I gasped when I saw the first cover draft for TO REDEEM A HIGHLAND RAKE, so I must thank Dar Albert of Wicked Smart Designs for the book’s amazing cover. I’d be remiss if I didn’t acknowledge Period Images for the fabulous cover models too.

  A special thank you to Fiona Murphy for helping me with my research of Edinburgh’s slums and tenements, and to my VIP Reader Group Collette’s Chéris for all of your invaluable input. You never fail to come through for me.

  Finally, a hearty thanks to Bookcamp Edits and my beta readers for helping polish Arieen and Coburn’s story.

  Outside Edinburgh, Scotland

  McCullough’s Masquerade Ball

  April 1720

  Arieen’s heart knocked behind her ribs as she trained her attention across the ballroom. Barely able to breathe, she could scarcely contain her glee.

  Och, I have the lying scunner now.

  Aye, she did. She good and truly did.

  And not any too soon, by Odin’s gnarly teeth.

  Their wedding was scheduled for next week.

  Though a domino covered the upper half of his aristocratic face, she easily recognized her loathsome affianced: Fulbright, Viscount Quartermain—every bit as pretentious and full of self-importance as the Englishman’s pompous name implied. His lordship also wore a black cape and a tricorn festooned with a ridiculous froth of ostrich feathers.

  Ever the charmer—much like the wily serpent in the Garden of Eden—he smiled, dipped his head, and spoke to acquaintances as he ambled along the ballroom’s perimeter.

  On the other side, about as subtle as a two-headed trow sipping tea in the parlor, Mrs. Jameson, his current love interest, mirrored his movements.

  Did they truly think no one noticed their unified, oh-so-casual meandering toward the terrace doors?

  After all these months, did he think Arieen was such a naïve bampot?

  Aye. He did.

  And that was one of the higher opinions he held of her.

  Lord Quartermain would soon learn he’d underestimated her. Anger and exhilaration tussled in her stomach, and an answering wave of anticipation and heat swept over her. She inhaled a soothing breath and slowly, deliberately released the air through her nose.

  Steady on, she ordered her galivanting pulse.

  Stick to the plan.

  Stay calm.

  Catch the cheating cawker in the act.

  No one, not even Da, could expect her to marry a lout she caught rutting another woman at a ball.

  She sl
id Morag a sideways look.

  Her stepmother tapped her toes to the music whilst fanning herself. Her advanced pregnancy precluded a need for a costume, and therefore, her hand-held mask lay on the empty chair on her other side.

  Morag ought to be home, abed and resting—not here chaperoning her stepdaughter.

  Arieen had actually counted on that detail.

  She couldn’t risk raising Morag’s suspicions. If she possessed the tiniest inkling that Arieen plotted something, she’d watch her that much closer and ruin everything. Thank goodness, Arieen’s mask and oversized pirate’s hat helped shield her eagerness. To succeed with her scheme, she must escape her stepmother’s scrutiny for several minutes.

  Arieen hadn’t told the viscount what she’d be wearing tonight. She might’ve hinted she’d come donned as a nun, if only to enjoy his eyes glazing over with disinterest. As she and her parents had arrived but a few minutes ago, Quartermain hadn’t yet noticed her.

  Not that it would’ve made much difference if he had.

  In general, he ignored her at social gatherings after their initial greeting. That didn’t mean he disregarded other women in the same brusque manner. No indeed. The man attracted willing bedmates faster than an open grain sack lured pesky vermin. She alone was the single female he’d eschewed. Probably because of her unfashionable height and dark coloring

  His disdain stung, although ’twas entirely absurd that it did since she couldn’t abide him either. Once, she’d overheard him admitting he preferred petite English blondes, not rustic Highland clodhoppers. There’d been no doubt to whom he referred.

  Was it a wonder she couldn’t wait to be rid of the dobber?

  The crowd parted, and her gaze collided again with that dashing swashbuckler’s she’d encountered earlier. He’d brazenly approached when she’d first entered the ballroom. Evidently, he’d thought her alone and an easy mark for his seductive wiles.

  Morag had succinctly curbed that assumption.

  Breathless, she’d waddled in and promptly snared Arieen’s elbow in a surprisingly firm grip. Giving the charming fellow a turn-your-attention-elsewhere glower, she’d whisked Arieen away before he’d introduced himself.

  Was he Scots or English?

  His burnished hair suggested Scots.

  Now, as their gazes meshed, a lazy grin hitched the buccaneer’s mouth—a much too attractive mouth for a man, not that she generally noticed that sort of thing—and he bent into a courtier’s exaggerated bow. The bright azure cloth tied about his longish auburn hair fell forward, sweeping the floor.

  Chin lifted, she presented her profile, sending him an unmistakable message. The impertinent, intriguing jackanape. She didn’t need nor want the attentions of another womanizer.

  The sensation of being stared at raised her nape hairs, and unable to resist another peek, she cut a covert glance in his direction.

  A shoulder braced against the door jamb, he unabashedly observed her, his mouth bent in that same gratified grin. As she averted her gaze, another man snagged Arieen’s attention.

  His expression, somewhere between disbelief and interest, he regarded her with disturbing keenness. They hadn’t been introduced. She was certain of it. Nevertheless, he seemed uncannily familiar and made her oddly uncomfortable.

  To ease her nervous tension, she tapped her fingertips on her thigh.

  The crowd shifted and blocked the men from her view once more. Just as well. She must focus on the task she’d set for herself. Besides, rakes, roués, and rapscallions—men of Quartermain’s ilk—were trouble through and through, and didn’t hold the least appeal for her.

  Then again, neither did serious, long-faced gentlemen.

  Or foolish, comedic, featherbrained chaps.

  Or scholarly, bookish men.

  In short, she hadn’t, in her nineteen years, met a single Scot, Highlander, or Englishman who made her pulse patter and her knees go soft.

  Bah to the weak knees folderol.

  She’d be satisfied to find a man who conversed with her for more than five minutes without ogling other women or his attention repeatedly straying to her bosoms. She wasn’t that boring. And what was it with men and breasts? No males of any other species obsessed as much about them.

  With a small huff, Arieen dismissed her rambling musings and concentrated on the matter at hand.

  Too bad she dared not drag a witness along for what she had planned tonight. Doing so would only strengthen her position.

  It wouldn’t do, however.

  She couldn’t very well approach one of her friends and ask her to help Arieen spy on the bounder she was supposed to wed in five days. Then pop out—Surprise!—and announce her presence at a most indelicate moment, as she intended.

  Nae. Not done.

  But to see Quartermain’s expression if she did dare do so… A secret smile arced her lips. That’d be bloody priceless. There’d be no excuses, no hastily contrived fabrications from the viscount this time. She meant to catch him with his breeches down. Literally.

  What were a pair of male buttocks and a few moments’ awkwardness compared to her freedom?

  Another wave of heat suffused her.

  Och, perhaps announcing her presence before he was that far along might be a wee bit wiser. She didn’t wish to become a voyeur.

  Her attention riveted on the objects of her musings.

  Hell’s fire.

  Quartermain and his mistress had almost made it to the doors.

  ’Twas now or never.

  Arms folded, Coburn Wallace braced a shoulder against the door frame, battling an insane urge to march across the floor and request a dance with the enchanting pirate. He couldn’t, of course, without a proper introduction.

  Besides being a tremendous breach of protocol, the fire in her chaperone’s eyes might incinerate him on the spot, so heated was her perpetual scowl.

  Not for the first time, he condemned etiquette and politesse to hell.

  Glancing around, he searched for his cousin, Logan Rutherford, clanking about in an ill-fitting suit of armor. Perhaps he could be persuaded to perform the niceties. As laird of Lockelieth Keep, Logan boasted many more influential connections than Coburn did.

  Coburn preferred it that way. Other than the plentiful feminine distractions Edinburgh offered, he also preferred the less chaotic Highland life.

  Truthfully, the only reason he was in the city at present was on behest of Logan. His cousin had needed Coburn to make himself scarce whilst Logan pretended to be him. As Coburn had warned, Logan’s plan had back-fired and estranged him from his betrothed even further.

  That’s why Logan clanged and banged about tonight, making a fool of himself in an effort to win Mayra Findlay’s affection. Thank God, Coburn was immune to that sort of sentimental drivel.

  Look what love had done to Logan, once a sensible man.

  Why, not fifteen minutes ago, he’d said, “Just ye wait, Coburn. Yer day may come yet. And if it does, I’ll be right there mockin’ ye, rubbin’ yer nose in yer warmer affections.”

  Never. Some men weren’t meant to wed.

  Coburn was one of them.

  Aye, far better to be the laird’s steward and second-in-command than expected to marry and produce an heir. Neither of which Coburn had any desire or need to do. He’d seen what became of men and women who allowed themselves to fall in love. He prayed Logan and Mayra would be spared the heartache Coburn’s mother and even Uncle Artair had endured for love’s sake.

  Coburn’s gut and lips involuntarily tightened. Thinking of his unfortunate mother always caused that reaction. Filling his lungs with a bracing breath, he tossed off his morbid thoughts. Straightening, he surveyed the teeming ballroom.

  Honestly, he couldn’t point out one couple present who could claim marital bliss. Either they’d married for gain or position, or the occasional fools who’d professed to wed out of mutual devotion, found one spouse—usually both—seeking other bedfellows soon enough.

  He pe
rmitted a partial gratified smile.

  Och, he on the other hand, had the best of it: No obligation to wed. No bearing the weight and duties of a Highland chief. And the pleasurable, occasional company of a willing lass.

  Perhaps his pockets weren’t as deep as he’d like at times, and he couldn’t lay claim to a single thing of value except his horse, but his belly was always full, and he had a warm place to lay his head each night.

  Neither of the latter two had been true as a young boy.

  He lowered his lashes for the briefest moment against another onslaught of memories.

  Och. Enough.

  Opening his eyes, his attention once again gravitated to the bewitching siren.

  She wasn’t the pale, oval-faced blonde with large round eyes and a rosebud mouth popular these past few seasons. Nae, slate-black winged brows graced her diamond-shaped face above upturned eyes and an oblong chin with the slightest cleft. Her mouth was slightly too wide to be classically bonnie, but her skin gleamed like polished marble.

  An irresistible aura surrounded her.

  It had beckoned to him from across the room. So much so, that he’d momentarily abandoned his intent to sample his host’s superior whisky in the study and had veered in her direction instead.

  More fool he.

  Nothing could come of pursuing her.

  Not only was she guarded like Windsor Castle or The Palace of Westminster with the King in residence, Coburn didn’t dally with innocents. This was also his last night here before returning to Lockelieth and resuming his duties as Logan’s second-in-command, amongst other things.

  Prudence nudged, and giving a resigned sigh, he opted for McCullough’s fine whisky rather than beg an introduction and dance with the bewitching wench. Still, he couldn’t deny himself another glimpse...