The Border Hostage

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The Border Hostage Page 6

by Virginia Henley


  “Sorry? She and Ram are celebrating this as if it were a gift from the gods. Anyway, you can let our father know. He'll be like a dog with two tails. He already thinks the sun shines out of Tina's arse, so this will put a halo round her head too.”

  When Beth didn't reprove him for his coarseness, he knew something was wrong. “What's amiss, lass?”

  “I cannot tell Father; Mother has left him,” she whispered. “She wants me to marry an Englishman, and he won't tolerate such a thing. We are moving into her family's town house next week.”

  “Whom does Elizabeth have in mind for you?”

  “Christopher Dacre,” Beth whispered again. “He frightens me as much as the Douglases.”

  Heath Kennedy wanted to choke his father's wife. Dacre's heir was no fit match for his sheltered half-sister. Chris Dacre would take her dowry, then wipe his feet on the passive girl as if she were a doormat. “Under no circumstances must you allow your mother to push you into a betrothal. You must assert yourself as Tina has always done. You need a backbone, not a wishbone, Beth.”

  “There is someone here I like,” Beth confided with a blush. “His name is Heron Carleton; he took me to the fair.” Her hand covered her mouth quickly, as if she had said something wicked.

  Heath was surprised. She was talking about Raven's brother. It was a small world! “Sir Lance Carleton, who used to be constable here, is related to your mother. Though English, he's a man of honor and integrity. If you want Heron Carleton, go after him!”

  Heath felt a tap on his bare shoulder, and looked through the mask and into the eyes of the man cutting in. It was Christopher Dacre. Since the dance had ended and partners were being sought for the next reel, Heath relinquished Beth without a word.

  From across the ballroom, Raven Carleton watched in amazement as the two handsomest men at the masquerade flanked Beth Kennedy. The Douglas laird was giving up the girl to Christopher Dacre. Raven immediately decided it was time to ditch the gold tissue cape. She removed it, scrunched it up, and stuffed it behind a potted plant. She left the gilded mask in place, then took the red poppies from her waistband and set one behind each ear. Raven was intent upon securing the notice of Christopher Dacre.

  Heath Kennedy, who had been watching for the red Gypsy dress, spotted Raven immediately. He stalked around the perimeter of the ballroom until he stood before her. “May I partner you, mistress?”

  His deep voice did strange things to Raven's pulse. Rather than refusing him, she quickly decided that the magnificent Scots laird might stir Chris Dacre's jealousy. “You may, my lord.”

  Heath took a firm hold of her hand and led her out of the ballroom onto a stone terrace.

  She felt a hint of danger. “What are you doing?”

  “I asked if I might partner you,” he pointed out, tightening his hold upon her hand. “I said nothing about a dance.”

  “Partner you in what?” she demanded, masking her apprehension.

  “A little dalliance. A real Gypsy girl wouldn't object; a real Gypsy girl would have fire in her blood.” With the toe of his boot he lifted her skirt to reveal the black silk stockings and winked.

  “You may be a Douglas lord, but you are no gentleman! I shall scream for my father if you don't let go of me immediately!”

  Heath's white teeth flashed in a grin. “I don't believe you will, Raven. The last thing you want is for your parents to find you dressed as a Gypsy harlot.”

  The moment he said her name, she recognized who it was. “It's you, you devil!” She also knew he had her trapped. “What do you want, Douglas?”

  “Pay a simple forfeit and I'll let you go.”

  Raven tossed back her hair, pulled a scarlet poppy from behind her ear, and held it out to him.

  Lust shot through him swiftly as a sword thrust. “If the males of your acquaintance are satisfied with paper flowers, it is time you learned what a real man desires.” He swept her into his arms and took possession of her lips in a long, slow kiss that was deliberately seductive.

  Raven began to struggle, then stopped. How else was she to learn what a real man desired? His hot mouth branded her as if he were claiming her as his own, now and forever. When he removed his arms and his mouth from her, she felt light-headed, slightly dizzy, and a little disoriented. She swayed imperceptibly, then drew back her hand and slapped his insolent face. “The first time we met, you left me half naked; tonight you have the temerity to manhandle me, you Douglas dog!”

  Heath saw her lavender-blue eyes glittering through the mask. “The name is Kennedy, sweetheart, and I want you to never forget it. Next time we meet, I promise to do something even more outrageous!” He vaulted over the stone balustrade and was swallowed by the misty darkness.

  Raven gasped. The wicked devil wore nothing beneath his kilt! He said his name is Kennedy; does that mean he's Beth Kennedy's brother? she wondered. Nay, there are probably hundreds of Kennedys. Raven wondered why she hadn't recognized him immediately as the Borderer who had stolen Sully. She concluded that since she had been told he was a Douglas laird, she had believed it. She shivered. She knew he was dangerous and that she was lucky to be rid of him. She went back into the ballroom on trembling legs and came face to face with Christopher Dacre.

  His glance took in the tawdry dress. “Don't think you can sneak in here through the balcony doors.”

  Raven was delighted that he didn't recognize her. “You don't know who I am?”

  “You're the Gypsy wench I bought for Heron Carleton last night! This is a respectable gathering; take yourself

  off.”

  Raven was momentarily shocked, then thought perhaps he was only teasing her. “Christopher, you do know me, don't you?” she asked tentatively. “It's me … Raven!”

  A silent moment passed, then Chris Dacre said, “What the hell are you doing dressed like a Gypsy wench? Go and change before someone recognizes you, Raven.”

  Her chin went up. “I don't take kindly to orders, sir.”

  Dacre knew he had blundered. “I'm sorry for speaking to you so brusquely, Raven. You are too innocent to realize that this costume could sully your reputation.”

  Not quite as innocent as you suppose, Raven reflected ruefully. She sighed with resignation. She had only chosen the costume to please Christopher, but since he was clearly displeased, she might as well give up the idea of being a Gypsy girl. She took the red flowers from her hair and went to retrieve her gold tissue cape from its hiding place. When she saw that Christopher followed her, suddenly her self-confidence returned. “Perhaps you had better go and dance with Beth Kennedy,” she taunted.

  He fastened the gold cape about her. “I don't want to be with Beth Kennedy, I want to be with you, Raven. Do you know how exciting it is to know that beneath this demure cloak, you are wearing a scarlet Gypsy dress?”

  “And beneath that I am wearing black silk stockings? No, I haven't the faintest notion how exciting that is,” she teased.

  “Then let me take you out on the balcony and show you.”

  “And risk sullying my reputation? I think not, sir.” Though Raven secretly wanted Christopher Dacre to kiss her so that she could compare it with the kiss of the bold Borderer, she was woman enough to know it would be far better to hold him off with one hand while beckoning him with the other. She was in no hurry.

  Heath Kennedy returned to the place where he had left his mount, then made his way to where the castle horses were grazing in the broad meadow beyond the walls. His considerable equine affinity had taught him that, like people, horses were clannish. They preferred to gather together in their own herd, which would make tonight's work much easier. He imitated the nasal call of a nightjar and was relieved when he received an answering peeyah that told him the Douglas brothers and their crew were waiting.

  Heath herded the horses, thankful that the mist and the darkness would conceal all from the eyes of the sentries on the wall. When he reached the men, he did not need to tell them that stealth and speed were necessary
. The horses' hooves were silent on the mossy turf as they drove the animals westward toward Carlisle city's Irish Gate. He did not ask whether the Douglases had bribed the guards on the gate or merely rendered them unconscious. All he cared about was getting the horses out of the walled city without setting off a cry of alarm.

  The posse herded the animals toward the bluffs that rose above the River Eden, then drove them through a cut in the sandstone to where the two Douglas vessels lay at anchor. The other half of the crew were awaiting them, and in a short time had the horses in the holds and were able to weigh anchor and head toward Solway Firth.

  It took only an hour's sail to reach Annan, and before the red fingers of dawn reached up the sky, the horses had been taken off the ships, none the worse for their short sea journey. Gavin and Cameron Douglas were jubilant at the success of the operation, and Heath's only regret was that his black stallion was still in Christopher Dacre's possession. That won't be for long! he vowed.

  Gavin Douglas opted to accompany Heath and the herd to Eskdale, while Cameron Douglas would take the ships west and up the River Dee to Castle Douglas, their Border fortress, where Ramsay moored his vessel, the Revenge.

  When Heath returned with the herd of horses he'd been working with for over a month, Ramsay Douglas shook his head in disbelief. “Where the hellfire did ye find them?”

  “Carlisle Castle.”

  “Bones of Christ! I should have known Dacre was behind this.”

  “I caught Dacre's son red-handed riding Blackadder. My stallion is the only one I couldn't retrieve.”

  “How the devil did ye manage?” Ram asked.

  “I had help. Gavin and Cameron loaded them aboard their ships and we sailed across the Solway to Annan,” Heath explained.

  Just then, Gavin rode up grinning from ear to ear and slid from his saddle. Ram looked from one to the other and shook his head again. “Ye're enough alike tae be twins. I warrant there's some truth tae the rumor that Angus was yer grandsire.”

  “Speaking of twins, has Tina made us uncles yet?” Heath asked.

  Ram shook his head. “I've not left her side. Sometimes I think she'll never foal.”

  Gavin laughed. “I would never have credited it if I hadna seen it with my own eyes—Black Ram Douglas domesticated, begod!”

  “Your turn will come, laddie,” Heath taunted.

  Ram grinned. “He'll never be that lucky. He hasn't the faintest notion what he's missing, poor sod. I have a woman in a million! Tina makes me whole, complete; she fills me with life.”

  Gavin winked at Heath. “His brain's gone soft. 'Tis the other way about—he filled her with life.”

  “We've the best blood in Scotland, 'tis time tae start doubling it, and if ye've no guts fer marriage, I'll do the job myself, two at a time,” Ram jested.

  Heath envied Ramsay his marriage, if Gavin did not. He longed for a family of his own, but he resolutely thrust the thought of a wife away, thinking it impossible because of the two great obstacles in his path: Gypsy blood and bastardy.

  Heath found his sister Tina reclining against cushions on the window seat overlooking the small lake behind Eskdale Castle. She was raptly watching a pair of swans that had arrived two days ago. As she glanced up, Heath saw her aura clearly against the mullioned windows and was glad that it was both vibrant and clear.

  “I wish I could find a way to persuade the swans to stay. We've had them before upon occasion, but they always fly away.”

  “We could catch them and clip their wings. If they laid eggs and they hatched here, perhaps the cygnets would stay,” Heath said.

  “I would never clip anything's wings.”

  Heath smiled warmly. “I didn't think so.” He straddled a chair so that he could talk to her. “I spoke with Beth last night.”

  “Beth? Where on earth did you run into her?” “As a matter of fact, I danced with her at a masquerade ball in Carlisle Castle, and I swear I'm not making this up.”

  Tina's eyes sparkled with amusement. “I'll believe you; thousands wouldn't!”

  Mr. Burque, Tina's French chef, joined them, bringing a cup of chocolate for the mother-to-be. He was accompanied by Ada, who carried a lap robe to tuck about Tina. Heath continued his story, for the four of them kept no secrets from each other. “Beth told me that your mother has left our father and intends to live in the Rickergate house in Carlisle.”

  “Well, I'll be damned! How did she ever summon the guts to leave him? If there ever was a crisis when I lived at home, Mother took to her bed and left all in my lap.”

  Ada's glance swept over Tina's middle. “No pun intended.”

  “Apparently, Lady Elizabeth wants an Englishman for Beth. I can only imagine the shouting and brawling to which our charming father subjected her,” Heath said.

  Tina dimpled with amusement and sipped her chocolate with relish. “Does she have a particular Englishman in mind?”

  “Thomas Dacre's heir, Christopher.” “Blood of God!” Tina exclaimed. “The crumb de la crumb!” Mr. Burque declared succinctly.

  “My mother must be mad. She must know Dacre will forever be my enemy for what he did to Ram!”

  Ada said shrewdly, “I know why your mother wants Dacre's son for Beth. She thought Thomas Dacre would ask her to wed him, but instead he carried off Rosalind Greystokes. Elizabeth wed Rob Kennedy just to show everyone she could catch a wealthy husband with a title. You need not worry about Beth. Your father controls the purse strings, and without a dowry for bait, Elizabeth won't hook a Dacre for your sister.”

  “And a damn good thing. Young Dacre is no fit mate for Beth,” Heath said grimly. “Beth confided to me that she fancies young Heron Carleton, whose father used to be constable of Carlisle Castle. I told her to go after him.”

  “You are the best brother in the world; I am so blessed.”

  Heath suddenly felt anger on Valentina's behalf. “Your mother should be here with you at this time, not suck-holing up to Dacre!”

  “Blood of God, I don't want my mother descending upon me like a biblical plague. Ada here is worth a thousand Elizabeths.”

  Ada winked. “That's what your father used to tell me! God's passion, Tina, you're just like him.”

  The four doubled up with laughter, for Rob Kennedy had often said to Tina, “God's passion, but ye get more like me every day.”

  “Perhaps Father was right; he always ate enough for three, and now I'm doing the same. What's for dinner, Mr. Burque?”

  “Lamb on skewers, the very thing to induce labor, chérie.”

  “I hope and pray you mean by eating them, Mr. Burque, and not by using them as probes,” Ada said with a straight face.

  Tina, laughing, held her belly. “You are so droll, Ada. If you don't cease and desist, I shall give birth by mirth.”

  “Save me some food, Mr. Burque. I intend to start branding the horses I managed to retrieve.”

  “Good. D for Douglas!” Tina saluted with her chocolate.

  “D for Douglas, or D for death to any who dare reive them ever again,” Heath vowed savagely.

  It took two days to brand all the horses. On the third day Heath packed his saddlebags for another journey. When Ram Douglas cocked a dark eyebrow at him, Heath simply replied, “Unfinished business.”

  “There's no need tae range alone like a wolf. Ye'll be safer with a dozen moss-troopers at yer back.”

  “I'm only going fishing.”

  Ram eyed the sword that Heath was wearing. It was one he had won from him in a dice game. “Fishing with a sword?”

  “Very handy for gutting and filleting. If I don't return, you can start the search for me at Bewcastle.”

  “In the dungeon or the graveyard?” Ram asked tersely.

  “If I'm not in one, odds are I'll be in the other.”

  “Dacre could have bought the horses legitimately.”

  “You and I are both too cynical to believe that,” Heath said evenly. He touched his knees to the roan gelding and cantered off.
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  Heath rode the dozen miles to Mangerton at a steady pace, then he slowed the roan to a walk and examined the town, building by building, farm by farm, and concluded that poverty was widespread in the area. He scrutinized the face of every individual he encountered, then he bought a drink at the alehouse and kept his ears open for the name of Mangey. When he made casual inquiries, the people looked afraid. It took most of the day, but he finally learned that a Border clan named Armstrong, outlawed by the late king of Scotland, terrorized the area. When the Armstrongs had been put to the horn, they had become vicious marauders and turned against their own.

  Heath rode through the fields on the outskirts of Mangerton looking for signs of a camp. A spiral of smoke above the trees drew him to the edge of the forest. Beneath the oaks he spotted four mares and knew immediately they were his. Caution told him to go no closer. He crushed down curiosity about the men, because it didn't matter whether there were four or forty within the forest; once darkness fell, Heath intended to retrieve his breeding mares.

  He looked up at the sky to gauge the time, and knew it was late afternoon because the sun was already setting. He retreated about a mile until he found a stream, then he followed it into the forest, dismounted, and watered his roan. He took a bag of fodder for his mount from his saddlebags, then with his back against the bole of a tree, he sat down to eat a couple of oatcakes.

  Heath reflected on the men in the forest. Most likely they were Armstrongs, and the evidence of their being in possession of his mares condemned them as being the scum who had been paid to murder Ramsay Douglas. He knew he lusted for their death, but struggled with his need for revenge, telling himself it was a luxury he could not indulge this night. Reclaiming his mares must take precedence over vengeance.

  The time dragged interminably for Heath, who knew he had to wait beyond darkness, until the raiders slept. The night was unusually warm, and the water of the stream was a potent lure; finally he gave in to the temptation. He unbuckled his sword and laid it on the ground, then he removed his clothes and dropped them atop the weapon. He waded into the water, which came to his knees. It wasn't deep enough for him to swim, but he knelt down and dipped his head in, then let the refreshing water trickle down his body. It felt so good, Heath repeated the motion, but this time when he lifted his head from the water, he was stunned to see four dark, burly Borderers staring at him. Their ugly faces were sickeningly familiar.

 

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