And that was that.
Bess and Alec were watching from behind a corner, and Sorcha’s face grew hot. Their looks were looks of wonder and suspense. And then, Caden released Sorcha and dove after his staff, finding it all-too-easily, leaving her standing alone, and wondering what it was he was thinking.
She saw Alec and Beth peer curiously at one another as Caden turned and walked away, and then both hid their faces.
“Let’s go get your jars into the sun,” Caden said, once again thwacking his staff vindictively against the floors and nearby walls.
Anger bubbled up inside her because Sorcha felt as though she’d been tried and found wanting. Cailleach help her, she longed to go out and break every one of those bloody damned jars.
Days passed since Caden had demanded to “look at” Sorcha’s face, and for all she knew, he was displeased with what he’d discovered. Now, unless she was applying her tinctures, or serving him tea, he no longer tolerated her near him. She had half a mind to feed him the smallest nip of juniper to make him feel as miserable as she was feeling. She thought perhaps it was all in her head, but every time she tested him, he gave some silly excuse and fled the room—as though he were disgusted by her now.
Sorcha loathed to confess it, but the thought of him despising her aggrieved her far more than it should. Why did she need him to want her? Simply because he’d appeared to all along? Sorcha was hardly an ogre. Hadn’t Graeme often complimented her?
At any rate, she looked like Lìli, and Aidan and nearly every man that had ever laid eyes upon her sister claimed Lìli was the loveliest woman in all of creation. Simply by power of reason, that must mean Sorcha must have a modicum of her appeal. Shouldn’t that be true?
Despite everything, and despite Caden’s visual handicap, he did, indeed, appear to be returning to his normal self, taking charge of the caisteal and joining the planning for the upcoming festival on the fifteenth day of May—less than a fortnight away.
Too bad she was beginning to like the old Caden better—and nevertheless, he was still blind, even despite her growing suspicions. For all Alec’s faith in her, with less than a fortnight left before she would be forced to leave, Sorcha had yet to restore Caden’s sight. She didn’t know what more to try.
“There are five more sacks of barley,” Afric announced, catching Caden before he left the hall. “Would ye ha’e me give them all to Bess or should I offer some to the alesman?”
“Four to the alesman, one to Bess,” Caden said without hesitation. And although he couldn’t see Bess’s face, the woman’s eyes lit up. She clapped her hands together like a happy child and rushed away, quite pleased with the laird’s edict. She wasn’t proud of it, but Sorcha spied on them through the door of her workshop—the workshop she would be forced to abandon, as well.
It was a bitter pill to swallow.
Not only must she leave the only man she’d ever felt a kinship with, but she must also leave the workshop she’d always longed for. She couldn’t decide which of the two upset her most. Certainly, she could find a workshop someplace else … but she felt certain there would never be another man like Caden. She was long past the age to be wed—four and twenty now. If she gave up this chance, if she left, she might never get another opportunity to wed a man she liked—not that he’d said he would wed her. In fact, he’d barely spoken to her. But regardless that she couldn’t claim to love him at this point, she liked him so much it ached to think of leaving.
Considering all this, and more, she had been working all afternoon on yet another batch of tea, and none of it seemed to be doing any good. Caden’s mood was deplorable. And now even Sorcha’s mood was deplorable.
Perhaps she was doing something wrong? Or mayhap, the boy who’d given her that flower was sorely mistaken? Perhaps Biera wasn’t Una? And worst of all, wasn’t it possible there was simply nothing Sorcha could do to restore Caden’s sight?
Or win his heart?
In the meantime, she was blinding herself with feeling. She was growing to care for these people—not simply Caden. She was getting to know the children, and she talked more oft with Bessie than she ever had with any of her sisters. These people took more interest in Sorcha than any of her kinsmen ever did. Back in Dubhtolargg, everyone had their own purpose, and only now that Sorcha considered it, she realized she’d never truly had a role to play at all. She was merely Sorcha, the wee one. Sorcha, the tag-along. Sorcha, the apprentice.
Oh aye, everyone adored her, but they were far too busy to bother with her, and the sad truth was that without Una in the Vale, Sorcha was lonely. But, for the briefest time, while she and Caden had been friendly, Sorcha hadn’t been lonely at all. If she returned to the Vale, she would live her life precisely as she always had—serving her kinsmen, for little reward, because they didn’t need her. However, these people did need her.
Ach, was she destined to visit her brother and Lianae in Ailginshire to see Graeme, only to feel that quickening beat of her heart? A sensation that, by the by, was not at all the same as what she felt around Caden.
Confused and overwhelmed, Sorcha slipped outside for a breath of fresh air. But then, she kept walking, toward the place she knew Liusaidh liked to graze. Only after she was halfway up the hill, she spied both horses standing close, nuzzling one another. Diabhal laid his black head on her snow-white rump, and within another instant, they had their backs to one another, dancing in a circle. Sorcha knew that mating dance, and she froze, watching with a growing sense of horror, as Diabhal moved behind her sweet mare, burying his muzzle between her haunches. And then, before her eyes, the stallion reared up and her sweet, beautiful filly did naught to dissuade him. She’d allowed him to sniff her, and then she put her arse in his face! Horrified, Sorcha spun about, and walked away—not the least for which, she realized … horses were exactly like people.
Chapter Twelve
“What the devil were ye thinking, Alec? That girl is no servant! She’s a nobleman’s daughter!”
Not to mention that, from what Caden could tell, she was young and lovely, as well. Alec had brought them a world of trouble. And most significantly, Caden was growing fond of the lass, and he would have no choice in the way it would end. She would be wrenched away, as swiftly and violently as Wee Davie’s head. “Ha’e ye no sense?”
At the instant, they were ensconced in the storehouse, positioning sacks according to their use, with Alec directing him like a simpleton. “This. Here. Four Steps. Against the wall.”
Caden felt like a minion, good for little more than hauling things about. But that was not what had him most riled. He’d managed to save all his questions—and all his fury—for the moment when he could get Alec alone.
“That auld woman—”
Caden interrupted him. “Since when do ye listen to auld biddies?”
Alec scratched his head. Caden heard the sound, and knew precisely what the gesture meant. Alec was feeling tense. It was a telling gesture, to be sure, and he had no need to see it with his eyes to know it with his ears. “Well, laird, since we ain’t never had one before,” Alec argued. “I did the best I could. And ye dinna ken. That auld woman arrived here without a ship. Explain that i’ ye will?”
“Surely, the lot o’ ye were half in your cups. Ye only missed it.”
“Nay, Caden. That was you.”
It was not spoken as an insult. And it was true. Caden had been sotted for most of the past six months, leaving Alec to fill his shoes. So then, in truth, if there was blame to be cast, it lay squarely at his own feet.
“I swear on Cailleach’s good eye, I ha’ena touched a dram since ye awoke from your fever after the yule and I knew ye would live.”
Caden felt duly chastised, whether that was Alec’s intention or not.
“And what about that star?” Alec persisted.
“What about it?”
“Ach, Caden, ye canna see it, but I’m here to say ’tis unnatural. That auld woman claimed it would appear by day, bright enough t
o sail by, and there it be.”
“Gobshite. We’ve seen bright stars before.”
“Not like this one, Caden. She said the last time a destiny star came near, a bairn from some clan called Bethal Ham was visited by outlanders bringing him gold, frankincense and myrrh.”
“That’s the Christ’s tale, knucklebone! D’ye ne’er listen to the priests?”
Once a year, on the anniversary of St. Ronan’s death, they celebrated the Christian foundations of their isle, and although the great majority of his people were not true believers, not a one of them e’er dared spurn a sermon, just in case. As for the ship, it was a quandary, to be sure. It was simply not possible for anyone to approach the isle without being seen. Rònaigh was at the farthest point in the North Sea, far, far from the mainland of Scotia, and nearly as far from the Isle of Skye.
“Aye, well, what about this? She told us where to find Sorcha and then she was precisely where Biera said she would be, dressed as she said, and traveling with that same mare. Everything was precisely as she said.”
“And where, precisely, di’ Biera send ye to find her?”
“Lochinver.”
Caden inhaled sharply. “So ye took a girl from Lochinver? Devil take ye, mon! There are MacLeods there, as well, and if not MacLeods, someone else will come to claim her. For love’s sake Alec, I hope ye considered that, as well? For the time being, King David has left us be, but for all your idiocy, ye might have bargained us a war.”
“Well, y’ see, that’s the point,” Alec argued. “That auld woman said—
“Never mind what the auld woman said, Alec.”
“But, Caden, ye dinna ken. Biera says her Da will come to claim her, and once he does—”
Infuriated, Caden hurled the sack he was holding. He heard it split over the force of impact, spewing grain all over the floor. He turned and slammed his palm against the wall, somehow sensing it was near, cursing roundly. “Ye mean to say ye knew who would come for her, and ye took her anyhow?” At the heart of Caden’s outrage was a terrible sense of helplessness. He had no way to help anyone now—not even Sorcha. Alec had put the matter into good light. For all that he made his way about the keep with so much greater ease, he was still a man ill equipped to fight, and were he not, he would pound a modicum of sense into Alec’s fat head.
“Caden … please … calm yourself …”
“For Cailleach’s sake, Alec! I dinna need eyes in my head to see you’re a fool!”
“Caden, but listen—her da, you see, he’s a devil. And now that ye know the puir lass, would ye ha’e me leave her to the man’s mercy? He raped her minny! Ain’t no telling what he would do to her. Biera said—”
“Shut your gob, Alec! And dinna speak to me another word about Biera!”
In truth, Caden would strangle any man who meant to harm Sorcha. But, clearly, he was naught but a blind man, leading blind men. He leaned against the wall, resting his forehead against the cold stone, pulling himself together. Hell itself would descend upon the isle, and they had no men or means to defend her. Rònaigh was well and truly lost. And, so would be Sorcha if what Alec said came true. For all this, Caden was hapless to protect her. And now that he had a care for her, the worst part of it all was that, despite his blindness, he’d had a wee glimpse of a life he might enjoy … with a good woman by his side.
Mired in his dark and brooding thoughts, he gave Alec a chance to speak, so Alec defied him, rushing on to say, “Biera swore she could help, Caden. An’ now ye canna fault me taking a chance. Rònaigh will be lost without you. And, in the meantime, we could help the lass as well …”
Caden inhaled a breath. He lifted his head from the wall, turning about wearily. “Help? And how is that?”
“Well, you know the girl’s a healer—”
“Aye, Alec, I bloody well ken she’s a healer. She’s been slathering me for days with that stinking tincture. What I want to know is how we can help her, when half our men are already dead and I am blind to boot—and by the by, still blind, after all this time, despite that I stink to heaven and above.”
“Yes, laird,” Alec agreed, a bit more formally, and his voice was distant when he spoke. “But, here now, I tell ye, everything Biera said came true, and ye dinna meet her, Caden. I did. She had a way aboot her that put me in mind to the Gods. She was not ordinary, I tell ye. And …”
“And what?”
“She said she knew Conn.”
Caden rolled his eyes. “The ramblings of an auld hag, stranded by the Minch. She only told you a tale you were aching to believe, and she conned you into taking her by boat to the Isle of Skye. Am I right?”
Silence.
“Am I right?”
“Nay! Ye’re no’. She returned with us to Lochinver. And now ye listen well, Caden Mac Swein, because if what she claims is true, then we shall see the arrival of three ships in less than a sennight.
“Three? Like those three wise men, who came to gift the Christ child? What bollocks, Alec?”
Whatever Caden thought about such gibberish, Alec clearly believed it. “The first of the three ships will bring more supplies than Rònaigh has ever seen—enough to get us through two winters and more. The second will bring her brother—”
“Ach! Someone else to worry about?” Caden shook his head, beside himself with worry, but he let the man continue.
“The final ship will bring her Da. And on May Day—”
“By Christ’s holy rood! Ye’re mad!” Caden exploded, and to that Alec had only one more thing to say.
“An’ ye see it for yourself, Caden Mac Swein. If it does not transpire as the auld woman foretold …”
“Then what?”
“Then, tis true; we are doomed. Although if it does, an’ ye find yourself holding an axe, ye’d best well swing! And if ye have a care for the lass, ye’ll never allow that monster to claim her.”
“We are not her keepers,” Caden reminded him. “We are her abductors, in case ye dinna recall. All this time, we’ve managed to stay out of the King’s affairs, and now, look what ye’ve gone and done …”
In answer, he heard something in Alec’s voice he’d never heard before; disappointment. “And when di’ ye e’er back down from a fight for what’s right? I see your face, whenever she’s near, and I know ye’ve grown fond of the sweet lass, as we all have. If ye dinna fight to defend Sorcha, ye’ll leave me little choice but to do so myself.”
Caden grumbled his displeasure. “A fine job ye’ll do if he brings an army aboard those three ships,” he countered, but Alec was gone, leaving him alone with his fury. “Di’ ye hear me, Alec?”
Silence.
“Alec!”
No one answered, and Caden shouted and cursed at the top of his lungs. He tripped over his cane as he sought out the spilt sack of grain, and then, after he found it, he kicked it with all his might. And, then, when he was done, and he could think a bit more clearly, he reconsidered everything Alec had told him. Given what little he knew of Sorcha, he would rather die defending her honor than stand by and allow any man to take her against her will. And once Caden confessed as much to himself, he went in search of Alec.
Sorcha heard the shouting through stone walls.
Although she couldn’t hear precisely what was being said, she knew to whom the voices belonged—and more, she suspected the subject might be her. Her fears were confirmed.
A door opened and slammed. After a moment, Alec burst into the alcove. He spied her in the workshop, and spun around, hovering in her doorway, both hands gripping the frame, his expression worried. “If ye’ve a mind to leave before May Day’s eve,” he told her. “I’ll take ye to Skye myself.”
But Sorcha didn’t want to go, not yet. She shook her head. “I made you a bargain,” she said. “I intend to keep it.”
For a long moment, Alec merely stared at her, as though he wished to say more. “There will be a reckoning to come,” he warned. “I’d not leave you here to witness it.”
 
; Sorcha hadn’t any inkling what it was he was speaking about, but she wasn’t afeared. In fact, if these people needed defense, she was as capable as any man. She knew how to use a bow and sword. The day the Earl of Moray attacked her brother near Dunràth, Sorcha had been the first to know it, and she’d fled to his rescue, felling more than a few men and shielding Keane from de Moray’s blade. “I will take my chances,” she maintained.
“Ach, lass.” He shook his head, desperate, so it seemed. “If you stay, you may face the devil you flee.”
“So be it,” Sorcha said, and, after a moment, Alec nodded, and he went away, leaving Sorcha to her tinctures and her herbs. But, it was that terrible look of turmoil in his eyes as he left that haunted Sorcha well into the day.
“You may face the devil you flee,” he’d said. The only devil Sorcha knew of was her sire. And if that be the devil he spoke of, she would relish the opportunity to skewer him through.
And if it was not her Da, well then, she would still stay, for she had an affinity for these people she couldn’t easily explain. And even if she didn’t care what happened to them, there were more children here on Rònaigh than there were adults. What kind of monster would Sorcha be if she abandoned innocents to save herself?
In truth, she had so much to say to Una, if, in fact, Una still lived, but Sorcha no longer felt such a fierce drive to seek her against all odds. For the time being, she was needed here, and if by chance there was evil to come, she would stay to help these good folks through it.
Maiden from the Mist (Guardians of the Stone Book 4) Page 12