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10 Timeless Heroes; A Time Travel Romance Boxed Set

Page 49

by P. L. Parker, Beth Trissel, L. L. Muir, Skhye Moncrief, Sky Purington, Nancy Lee Badger, Caroline Clemmons, Bess McBride, Donna Michaels


  “It doesn’t adjoin the keep, but stands in the bailey.” Neil pointed, singling out the stone structure, its steep gabled roof worn by wind and weather. A marked tremor shook his gloved hand. And it wasn’t only due to the cold, but the growing weakness spreading through his body. “There, between the two walls in the outer ward.” His chest rose and fell with his words as if he’d run hard.

  Mora swiveled her head at him. “What ails ye?”

  He labored to reply. “More and more, I feel as Niall does. Hear what he hears. At first, it was like murmurs on the wind, now louder.”

  The jeering resounded in Neil’s head. Was it one man, two, three? He couldn’t tell. The voices ran together. Harsh. Unbearable. He covered his ears to shut them out, but couldn’t deafen the goading. “Do you not hear them?”

  White-faced, her eyes pools of alarm, Mora shook her head. Fergus surveyed him with pity in his gaze, also the look he wore when scheming.

  “What of Red MacDonald? Did you see or hear him?” he asked.

  “Not among these men.”

  “So, he could be anywhere?”

  How long Niall had undergone this torment, Neil didn’t know, but it was coming down on him now at its zenith. He struggled to shake it off, to fight back, and seize the upper hand. But this wasn’t a duel. He had no chance. Niall was losing the battle, again, and taking Neil with him.

  Unable to bear the suffering one single moment longer, Neil sank down, moaning, onto his knees in the snow. The sun was already low in a shrouded sky. Impossible to gauge how long he had before sunset. He must get up and make his way to the chapel, but the crushing weight held him down.

  The force that was Mora knelt beside him and circled her arms around his aching shoulders. “Ye mustn’t stay here—” Her voice cracked. “We’ve come so far. Neil, please. Do not give up.”

  Her plea reached him as if in a noisy throng, but her entreaty needed no words. For her, he would sacrifice all. Taking a breath, he reached deep inside to summon the fortitude to see this task through. It was as though stones were heaped on top of him.

  He struggled to rise and sank back down. Fergus bent over and gripped Neil’s sore arm. “Mora, give me a hand. We’ll see Neil through if we have to carry him.”

  Between the three of them, Mora tugging, Fergus pulling, and Neil, drawing on more strength than he thought he possessed, he staggered to his feet. The thirst was terrible. His voice little more than a croak, he asked, “Have you anything to drink?”

  Fergus fished in his pockets and produced a juice pouch. “Pomegranate.”

  Not a flavor Neil normally savored, or Fergus either. Probably why it remained untouched. He reached for it like manna from heaven. His fingers shook so hard Fergus stuck the mini straw attached to the packet through the tiny hole. He passed the pouch to Neil, who sucked it down, squeezing to get every last drop from the partly frozen juice.

  His giddiness cleared slightly, and a slender ray of hope shone in the impenetrable darkness. “I heard something in the voices that might prove valuable. One man spoke of a secret tunnel.”

  Mora cocked her head at him, and Fergus bent forward. “Into the castle?”

  “Yes. He said my clan would never find that way in if they came for me, which he assured me they wouldn’t.”

  Staring into the curtain of snow, Neil considered the agonizing truth of that declaration. The Neil he was blurred with the Niall he’d been in a meld of emotions. “No one came.”

  Mora’s gentle warmth pressed close. “Because they thought ye lost in the fire at Strome castle, not carried off to the black hole at Domhnall. I am here, my love, and yer dearest friend. Let go of bitterness and ponder.”

  Fergus clasped his shoulder. “I’m sorry, Neil, but she’s right. Did that man say anything more? Like where to find the opening to this passage.”

  He strove to snare that critical piece of information from the many taunts hurled at him—Niall. A word repeated in his fevered mind, an evil sounding word. “It leads from something called the Schull beneath the castle wall and comes out under the chapel.”

  Fergus slapped his hat back on his head. “Into the crypt?”

  Neil managed a nod. “What else lies beneath the chapel?”

  Fergus spoke animatedly. “Our first real break.”

  “Nae. The snow is,” Mora reasoned, her manner pensive. “Schull, ye say? I recall mention of a rock by sech a name. Thought it but a tale. Ye are certain he said schull?”

  “Certain.”

  “What does it mean?” Fergus asked.

  Neil staggered to the side as though his knees were giving out. “Just as it sounds—a human skull.”

  Closing supportive arms around him, Mora and Fergus joined him in sweeping their gaze over the terrain. He struggled to focus his burning stare and make sense of the maddening riddle.

  Nothing.

  “There must be a singular outcropping not far from the castle walls,” Fergus said. “No one would dig a very long passage through hard earth and stones. Just a tunnel that extends enough of a distance from the castle for men to come and go surreptitiously when needed.”

  Neil agreed, but images ran together. He couldn’t see straight. His desperation grew, along with the shudders he could no longer control.

  Mora shifted more of his weight onto her support. “That great rock,” she waved her hand, “is adrift with snow, but if ye imagine it away, are those not great black eyes gaping back at us?”

  Fergus answered excitedly, “So they are. Never thought I’d be so relieved to see a skull.”

  The gruesome face took form before Neil. “There’s the nose,” he said hoarsely. “The opening of the tunnel must lie, literally, in the mouth concealed by snow.”

  “And this miserable weather will give us the cover we need to make it there undetected,” Fergus said.

  “God willing.”

  Mora lifted her glistening gaze to Neil. “Why should he not?”

  The glaze of her tears reminded him of the sacred relic he carried filled with the Virgin Mary’s tears. “It’s time to give the vial to you.”

  She opened her mouth in protest, but he placed a quivering finger over her lips. “I lose strength by the moment. It’s up to you and Fergus now. Once we’re inside the crypt, you’ll need to warm it. The liquid may be partially frozen.”

  “I have a lighter,” Fergus offered.

  “Be careful not to crack the glass, then undo the seal. Mora, anoint my forehead. Preserve some for Niall. Remember, he mustn’t see me.”

  “How do we prevent him?”

  “He’s in a small chamber off the crypt, barely conscious.” Neil sensed his life force slipping away.

  She swallowed hard. “How many men guard the crypt?”

  “I’m not sure. Perhaps only one remains. Fergus and I will overpower him while you go to Niall.”

  “Where will ye be?”

  He exchanged glances with Fergus then met her tremulous query. “Swiftly dying, I fear. Hurry, sweetheart, and whatever happens, save Niall.”

  “I’ll save ye both,” she whispered fiercely.

  “You may not be able to.”

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Fergus led the way. Guided by the blue light of his strange torch, Mora and the two men made their cramped trek through the underground tunnel. The damp scent of earth filled her nose; Neil’s labored breathing her ears. She traveled between him and Fergus, praying the weight of the tunnel wouldn’t choose this moment to fall in upon them. Or that they’d find it caved in up ahead, their way barred.

  So cold. The wet penetrated her already damp arisaid and petticoats, the hems muddied, torn.

  Part of the tunnel was a natural feature of the land around the castle created by an underground channel. Men had further widened it with picks and shovels. Rivulets of icy water ran over the hard packed earth and stone beneath her sodden boots. The sides of the passage seeped moisture like open wounds. Neil bent low not to knock his head on the
ceiling but none of them were compelled to crawl on their hands and knees.

  Thank God. She despised tight spaces. This tunnel barely allowed passage of one man at a time. Being smaller than a man, she could turn if need be, but only just.

  One blessing, a devilishly large male would never enter the castle by this route. The Red MacDonald was such a beast. At least she needn’t fear encountering him quite yet.

  She’d removed the sacred vial from the leather bulla and tucked it inside her corset to warm the chill glass against her skin. No risk of cracking the fragile vessel with the lighter Fergus spoke of. Above the small bottle hung the silver cross, both shielded beneath her plaid wrap. She’d sooner die than lose either one.

  Both Neils would perish if she failed in her mission. Acute awareness of Neil’s imminent peril, his connection to Niall, and the swift passage of each vital second drove her to near hysteria. She gulped back the cries rising in her throat.

  So much depended on her now. Neil had said so, and not for a moment did she doubt the truth of his words. She battled to calm her wildly beating heart and keep her wits about her—muffling a scream when a long tailed rat scurried across her toes. Spider webs stuck to her hair and draped her face. Flailing with her hands, she tore at them.

  Another rat squeaked across her murky path. She clapped web coated fingers to her mouth and stifled a cry.

  “It’s all right, Mora,” Neil panted from behind.

  But it wasn’t. Dear God, it wasn’t.

  How long they were actually in that narrow tunnel, she had no idea, but it seemed forever. Despite the danger awaiting them in the chapel, she was vastly relieved when Fergus came to the end of the black passage.

  He handed her the torch. “Shine this where I can see.” Reaching overhead, he pushed up on the stone slab that secreted the entry into the crypt. Face contorted, eyes bulging, he grunted with the strain. His thin arms shook in his wet coat sleeves.

  Would the stone give way?

  The grayness overhead didn’t budge. Not a wee bit.

  She gave the torch to Neil. She possessed more strength than he did now, and the tunnel was so narrow, he couldn’t pass her to lend what support he could muster, unless he crawled over the top of her. Sagged against the side of the passage, he feebly directed the beam as she reached her hands up beside Fergus’s.

  The rock blocking entry into the crypt was heavy. Too heavy. Only the brawniest man or two men could shift it.

  But they must! They could not turn back now.

  Lord, let the strength we need be given us now, she petitioned, and heaved for all she was worth.

  Fergus did the same, but Mora was too distracted by her own fight to heed his grunts.

  With a scraping as dear to her ears as angels’ trumpets, the slab moved to the side. A faint light shone from the crypt, a candle mayhap or torch, slanting through the crack they’d forced in the floor.

  Gulping in dank air, she fell to again, Fergus alongside her. More grating and the shaft overhead further widened, like a sliver of moon.

  She paused to catch her breath and leaned on Fergus, equally spent. Chests thudding, they gasped together.

  She nudged Fergus. “Listen. I hear no one overhead.” The torment that so afflicted Niall and consequently Neil had seemingly halted.

  “True—” Fergus panted. “If any of the MacDonald men are keeping watch they must have dozed off.”

  A worse thought assailed Mora, that Niall had faded from this world and his guards departed.

  No! He couldn’t have died, not when they were so near. The guard must intend to return. A light still shone, didn’t it? Niall could not be dead. She willed him to hold on, willed them both not to let go.

  Again and again, she and Fergus put their whole being into sliding that rock aside, like the seal to a tomb. And it would be, if they didn’t shift it. The crevice must be wide enough to allow each of them passage into this hated chamber. And though she’d rather be most anywhere else, she’d move heaven and earth to gain entry. Truly, they’d stormed the gates of Hell.

  A final groan from the grudging stone, and it slid far enough to the side to allow a man through. Who to go first?

  It must be her, lifted up onto Fergus’s shoulders. She was the lightest. Fergus next. Then together they’d pull Neil up, all the while watching for any MacDonald men, and—

  “Mora,” Neil summoned, his voice little more than a shadow, “anoint me now.”

  Terror shot through her. She turned toward him. He laid prone on the earthen floor, gripping the torch, his face so pale, his eyes closed. As she watched fearfully, his eyelids drifted open, fluttered and shut again.

  “No man remains above,” he whispered, “they locked me in the chamber and left me to die.”

  Me? Were he and Niall one now in approaching death? Pray God the two would be united again in new life!

  Mora curled her fingers around the hallowed vial nestled inside her stays and drew it out from beneath her mantle. The iridescent blue green color caught what little light there was in the peculiar beam. With the aid of the minute tool Fergus called a screwdriver he painstakingly pried the seal from the ancient vessel.

  She held her breath.

  Nothing spectacular happened. It seemed just as any unstopped vial of enormous age might, but this one was like no other.

  Faith, she assured herself, feeling anything but.

  Fergus passed her the sanctified bottle and she knelt beside Neil. His eyes remained closed, his face ashen. Fergus crouched by her and held the light while she bent over her beloved. Tears streamed down her cheeks as she made the sign of the cross on his chilled forehead.

  Praying the tears of the blessed Virgin would work a miracle, she murmured, “We fly to yer patronage, O holy Mother of God, despise not our petitions in our necessities, but deliver us from all dangers. O ever glorious and blessed Virgin. Holy Mary, mother of God, pray for us sinners now and at the hour of our death.”

  A faint smile touched Neil’s lips. “Go now, Mora fair. Finish the task.”

  “I cannot bear to leave you here alone.”

  “You must.” His voice was faint.

  She pressed her lips to his cold mouth. “I will come back,” she promised, willing it to be so.

  “We won’t leave you in the dark.” Fergus slid the torch into Neil’s weak grasp. Then he stood, pulling Mora up with him. “Come on. We have seconds to do this. Pass me the glass to hold, while you climb through.”

  He secured the vial in one hand and half boosted, half helped Mora scramble up onto his shoulders. Skirts draped over him, she climbed through the opening and into the crypt.

  “What do you see?” he hissed after her. “Anyone there?”

  By the light of a flickering torch on the stone that comprised the walls, she ran her gaze over the heavily shadowed room. It wasn’t an especially large chamber, but neither was it a hole. The pervasive chill defied all warmth, all hope, all love. And she sensed it had been thus time out of mind…beyond remembrance.

  Overhead, the twisted forms and agonized faces carved in gray stone circled the room, souls in purgatory warning of the flames to come for the unrepentant. A reminder for mourners grieving their departed as those sealed here had already expired. Fortunate dead, spared the ghastly sight. Painted on one wall, a mural of knights on horseback rode to eternal judgment with lances and shields bearing the Holy Cross. In the arch above the door, leading, she assumed, up the stairs to the chapel were carvings of more gruesome figures with skeletal heads and bodies, as if she required any further admonition of the torment that might well await them all if she failed.

  Cowled monks chanting prayers for those in agony would be fitting if this were a monastery. It wasn’t. In the center of the crypt on a raised dais was an intricately carved reliquary, the fine wood painted with crimson, blue, and gold. The ornate lid was open and its contents removed from the box. Here was the original resting place of the holy vial.

  That the MacKe
nzies had taken it was unarguably wrong; the horror committed to Niall in no way justified. Nor could she return the treasure now. They had infinite need of it.

  At the other end of the modest sized chamber she spied a heavy door set in the wall. Shut and locked. It was behind this barrier that Niall must lie. All haste!

  She didn’t dare call out and alert him she’d come for fear of summoning his tormentors. Rather, she crouched by the opening in the stones and hissed to Fergus. “’Tis as Neil said. No one’s about.”

  “Yet. Take this and put it in a safe spot.”

  She closed her fingers around the vial he extended, then set it down on a recess in the stone. She bent over the hole to grasp his hand and pull while he hoisted himself up over the side. He scrambled to his feet, and glanced around.

  Fergus widened his eyes. He wrinkled his nose. “Charming. If I were to build a crypt, this is exactly what I’d have in mind.”

  His sarcasm was lost on her. Slipping her hand back beneath her arisaid, she lifted the crucifix. Not trusting her trembling fingers, she whispered, “Please undo the clasp and get the key.”

  Again the tiny tool came to their aid; Fergus sprang open the nub. He took the key, and she held the consecrated vessel. Together they darted across the stone floor. Let the demons sneer at them from the shadows. They were on a holy quest. She and Fergus, not the Red MacDonald, had the key and vial.

  Mora was almost to the heavily timbered door when she heard, “Weil, I see ye’ve brought me back m’ treasure.”

  A scream ripped from her pounding chest. The MacDonald strode into the crypt from the chapel. His tall figure cast a long most unwelcome shadow.

  “Mora!” Fergus tossed her the key. “Go!” He dashed between her and The MacDonald. “Keep away from her!”

  Once again, Fergus faced their nemesis. But his head reached below shoulder level of the big Scotsman. He could in no manner defeat the mighty laird alone. Even if he held a sword which he didn’t. But Fergus might hold him off for a vital moment.

 

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