All Things Merry and Bright

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All Things Merry and Bright Page 16

by Kathryn Le Veque et al.


  And no horse? No coin? The fool clearly had not thought the entire thing through.

  As much as Lachlan was tempted to burst through the bushes and drag Mariote back to the keep, his good sense told him to wait. Mayhap this was an attempt at a kidnapping, for sure as hell it was not two people in love attempting an elopement. Who knew how many men were lying in wait.

  His blood boiled as he watched and listened. No matter what was afoot here, he would take great pleasure in gutting the man who had convinced Mariote to leave her home like a thief in the dead of night. The man’s lack of horse and coin proved he did not have the good sense God gave a goat. And he most assuredly did not have Mariote’s health or wellbeing at heart.

  Were it he who had perchance won her heart, he would have gone to her father and asked for her hand, as any good man would have done. If by ill luck her father had refused, he would have waited and proven himself worthy of the girl’s hand. Then, and only then, would he have considered running away with her. And if it had come to that? He most assuredly would have been better prepared.

  He and Willem watched in silence, waiting until the couple had left and were out of earshot.

  Looking to Willem, he said, “That is no’ Conner MacGavin.”

  “I ken that,” Willem whispered, “but who the bloody hell is he?” Slowly he got to his feet. “And why is he pretending to be Conner?”

  Lachlan shook his head as headed for the horses. “I do no’ ken,” he said. “But I intend to find out.”

  Willem stopped him from gaining his horse with a hand on his shoulder. “I think it best we wait.”

  “Wait fer what?” Lachlan asked, his brow furrowed into a hard line.

  “If this be a way to kidnap her, there might be more MacGavins lyin’ in wait,” Willem explained. “Mayhap far too many fer us to take care of on our own.”

  Lachlan thought long and hard before asking, “What do ye suggest we do? Stand idly by and watch her be taken?”

  Willem frowned and shook his head. “Nay, I be sayin’ we find out if the lad be alone or if he has company. If we find he is alone, then we will act. But if there be dozens of MacGavins with him, we risk not only losin’ our own heads, but Mariote’s as well.”

  While Lachlan knew Willem’s idea made a good deal of sense, he still wasn’t fond of the idea. In the end, he had to agree. “But at the first sign of trouble, we will kill the bloody bastard.”

  Willem chuckled his agreement. “Aye, we will kill the bloody bastard.”

  They decided to keep to the forest, walking their horses so as not to be seen. “He was wearing the MacGavin plaid,” Willem said as he grabbed the reins to his steed.

  “But that does no’ mean he is a MacGavin,” Lachlan said.

  They remained quiet and well-hidden in the forest, carefully watching Mariote walk away with the stranger.

  Lachlan knew she was in danger. The only question was, what kind? Was this a ploy to get her as far away from their lands as possible in order to kidnap her? Or was there something far more sinister at play? Either way, it made him angry to think Mariote was foolish enough to fall prey to such tactics.

  “Ye ken her better than I,” Willem said. “Are ye certain she never mentioned Conner MacGavin?”

  “I told ye, no!” Lachlan shook his head, befuddled.

  The Mariote he knew was a logical, practical lass. She never wiled away the hours daydreaming about romance, husbands, kisses, or the making of bairns. Were they not as close as two people could be without being married or related by blood? Had he not shared every secret with her? Every dream?

  Nay, he had not shared everything. There were some secrets—all of which revolved around her—that he’d kept as closely guarded as the king’s jewels. Either ’twas cowardice or the fact that Willem was like a brother to him that kept him quiet about any feelings he might have toward Mariote. She loved Willem, plain and simple.

  Even if Lachlan believed her love was misplaced. He knew Willem better than anyone. His friend was not the marrying kind, and that was something Mariote wanted: marriage, a family of her own.

  All at once, clarity dawned as bright as the morning sun in summer. Mariote had grown tired of waiting for the love of her life to ask for her hand. ’Twas the only reason she would accept a proposal from the first man who asked. Above all things, she wanted a husband and children of her own.

  Bloody hell.

  Chapter Five

  The sun was beginning to lose its battle of hide and find with the clouds. And Mariote was beginning to lose her battle with her conscience. The farther away from the keep she went with Conner, the guiltier she felt.

  They had been walking for a full hour and thus far, Conner hadn’t said more than two words to her. He hadn’t offered her his hand, hadn’t offered to carry her satchel for her, and had not once asked how she fared.

  Mayhap he was simply in a hurry to get to Inverness. Snow was definitely heading their way. There was also a strong possibility he was keeping quiet so as not to alert anyone to their presence. Though who in their right minds would be out at this early hour, in this frigid weather?

  Rarely did she see him scanning the land on either side of them. Nay, he kept glancing back, over his shoulder, beyond her.

  Many times over the past few years, Lachlan had taken her on long walks so that she could find herbs and plants to be used for healing. He was ever vigilant in keeping a watchful eye out for any marauders or raiders that might have made it onto their lands. Thinking of him, of their deep friendship, sent another pang of guilt jolting through her stomach. Not only was she betraying the trust of her family by leaving like this, she was also betraying her friendship with Lachlan.

  Her mother and sisters might understand why she was doing it. Even her father might eventually come around to the idea. But Lachlan? Nay, he would probably never forgive her. Why did that thought hurt so much?

  Conner came to a halt at the edge of the meandering stream. Ahead, across a small burn, she could see smoke billowing from a chimney, but naught else. “Wait here,” he told her. “And give me yer coin.”

  Perplexed, she studied him closely for a brief moment before asking, “Why?”

  “There be a farm ahead,” he said as he once again glanced behind her. “I be tired of walkin’ and would like to purchase a horse from him.”

  “Why can I no’ go with ye?”

  He offered her a warm smile. A smile that she realized was not quite reaching his eyes. “When yer family discovers ye missin’, they will send out a search party, aye?”

  Mariote nodded.

  “They will be lookin’ fer ye, no’ me,” he said. “If I take ye with me …” He let the words fall away as he waited for understanding to settle in.

  In truth, she was tired of walking. Her feet were frozen, the hems of her skirts crusted with snow, and she had lost the feeling in her fingers half an hour ago. A horse would be a far more delightful way to travel. “Verra well,” she said as she reached into her pouch and pulled out three sillers and handed them to him.

  “Be this all ye have?” he asked incredulously.

  “Do ye no’ have coin of yer own?”

  There was that flash of anger in his eyes again. Only a flash before he replaced it with a smile. “We will need my coin for Inverness.”

  That made sense, she thought. She pulled out another few sillers and handed them to him.

  “Wait here,” he said. “I shan’t be long.”

  Exhausted, she found the remnants of an old tree and sat down. Oh, how she wished she was sitting beside a roaring fire right now. She also longed for a hot bath, followed by climbing into a warm bed and drawing furs up to her ears.

  Rubbing her hands together, she watched as Conner crested the hill, then disappeared. She could not help but wonder why he was so very different from the man in his letters. The letters had been filled with beautiful prose, words from a man who was very much in love. The only thing that made any sense was that he
was nervous. Nervous and worried they’d be caught before they made it to Inverness. Mayhap he was better at expressing himself with the written word than with the spoken. Was that not a likely possibility?

  Aye, she assured herself, that was it. He loved her with all his heart. She knew that because he had written it so many times. She was the only reason he climbed out of bed each day. The only reason he took one breath after another. She was, according to his letters, his only reason for living. Aye, in his letters, he was a hopeless romantic. Mayhap, after they were safely married, some of that might come through when he spoke to her.

  It did not take long for him to return, and with a horse. Hurriedly, he came down the hill, leading the mount behind him. He did not look happy. The horse looked just as thrilled. ’Twas an old work horse, gray, with an even grayer mane and a swayed back.

  “What be the matter?” she asked as she jumped to her feet.

  With a frown, he replied, “The auld farmer wanted every bit o’ coin I had.”

  She almost asked Ye gave him all our coin for that? But from the fierce glare on Conner’s face, she decided it might not be the best thing to say at the moment.

  As soon as he reached her, he grabbed a fistful of mane and pulled himself onto the horse. Once he was comfortably seated, he held out his hand. “He did no’ have a saddle,” he told her. “And if he had, he likely would have asked fer me soul to pay fer it.”

  Doubt began to plague her good senses. Why did he not seem the least bit concerned over her wellbeing? She was beginning to feel more and more uneasy about the man who had convinced her to run away with him. Nay, she told herself. He is just nervous and worried, as are ye. He loves ye, ye ken he does. Why else would he have written all those beautiful letters filled with so much love and adoration?

  Dismissing her concern as nothing more than being nervous over their current circumstances, Mariote chuckled as she took his offered hand. He pulled her up and sat her behind him. ’Twas not easy climbing up with her satchel, but she managed. She had to put it between herself and Conner before scooting closer to hold onto his waist.

  “Ye might no’ have procured us a gallant steed,” she said as Conner clicked his tongue and turned the horse around. “But ’tis preferable to walkin’, aye?”

  He replied with a curt nod and they began to ride north and east.

  Not only was their mount old, ’twas also quite apparent he was not used to being ridden. At least not for long distances or at any pace faster than a trot. Unaccustomed to riding without a saddle, Mariote kept slipping to one side or another. Her arms were beginning to ache from holding onto Conner so tightly, her legs to grow sore from trying to keep from falling off.

  They had ridden a few hours—in complete silence—before finally finding sunshine and more even terrain. The snow was not quite as deep, but the air was just as cold. Her cheeks and ears were wind-burned and beginning to sting. Mariote was not about to complain, for she did not want her future husband to think her weak.

  Finally, she swallowed her pride and asked him to stop. Begrudgingly, he pulled rein. “Do ye need to piss?” he asked.

  Not only was she embarrassed by his question, she found his tone off-putting. It was not as if she were unaccustomed to such bluntness, for the McCullums were quite blunt. But she had hoped that her betrothed would have found a more gentile way of asking the question. “Aye,” she murmured softly.

  He grunted, nodded his head, and threw one leg over the neck of their mount. Sliding to the ground, he took her satchel, but only after she asked him to. That sense of dread she had pushed away came roaring back to life when he turned his back to her and walked away.

  Where was the man’s compassion? Where was the gentle, sweet man who’d been so evident in his letters? Letting loose a breath, she had to scoot forward, grab hold of the horse’s mane, and let herself down.

  Her feet stung when they hit the cold earth. Holding on to the side of the horse, she counted to ten and moved her toes inside her boots.

  “Do no’ tarry long,” Conner said as he stretched his arms out wide.

  She wasn’t sure which upset her more. His silence or his gruff tone when he finally did manage to speak. Swallowing back her anger, she left him in the small clearing and headed toward a copse of trees for some privacy.

  Once she was alone, she let the tears fall. This is no’ at all how I imagined ’twould be.

  It had to be close to the nooning hour, for her stomach was growling. Freezing, tired, and hungry, she cried, her mind filled with doubts, guilt, and longing for home.

  Mayhap this had not been the right decision. Mayhap Conner could only be kind and romantic in his writings. Mayhap she was seeing the real Conner for the first time: a rude, uncaring individual. If that was the case, she did not like it at all. Her anger was quickly replaced with a sense of heavy trepidation. No matter how badly she wanted a husband and bairns of her own, it was not worth being married to a man like Conner.

  But how to explain it to him? Ye be no’ one to shrink from anything, she told herself. Ye have learned over the years to stand up fer yerself and to speak yer mind. She was simply going to have to discuss the matter with him, and now, before they were married.

  With her mind made up, she dried her face on the sleeve of her cloak and took a deep breath before heading back to the clearing.

  He was already mounted and looking perturbed. “I told ye no’ to tarry,” he said gruffly.

  She stopped dead in her tracks. “Let us get one thing perfectly clear, Conner MacGavin,” she said as she stomped toward him. “Ye will no’ be orderin’ me about like some bar wench.”

  Apparently, that was the wrong thing to say. He slid down from the horse and stomped toward her. His cloak billowed open and he looked furious. She stood her ground as he approached.

  She saw it then: his blood-soaked tunic.

  Fear rose in the form of bile, for she was quite certain ’twas not his own blood.

  “I be no’ orderin’ ye about,” he said as he stopped in front of her. “We simply can no’ tarry. We must get to Inverness as soon as possible.”

  She could not take her eyes off the bloody tunic. When he caught her staring at it, he quickly drew his cloak around his chest.

  “Where did that blood come from?” She whispered the question because she felt as though the wind had been knocked from her lungs. Instinctively, she knew he was going to lie to her.

  “I scratched myself on a tree branch,” he said. “Come, we must leave now.”

  With her feet firmly planted in place, she shook her head. “Yer tunic was no’ bloody when we first met,” she told him. Tearing her gaze away from the sight, she looked him directly in the eyes and waited.

  “’Tis an auld wound,” he said, doing his best to look as innocent as he could. “I was injured a few days ago, whilst trainin’. The branch merely opened it again. ’Tis naught to concern yerself with.”

  A tic was forming in his jaw, his eyes … there was something off about his eyes, but she could not quite describe it. Her heart was pounding in her chest, her mind warning her to proceed quite cautiously.

  “If we do no’ hurry,” he said as he took her by the elbow, “we shall be found out, each of us sent home, and I will be forced to marry Margaret.”

  She froze in place. “Margaret?” she asked.

  Mariote’s heart filled with dread that turned to white-hot anger. As best she could, she kept that anger in check. ’Twas all a lie. She knew it then, as certainly as the sun would set this night, he was lying. Every word of every letter he’d sent her was a lie.

  He tried pulling her along, but she dug her feet in. “Margaret?” she asked once again.

  Conner said nothing as his face began to turn an ugly shade of red. For the first time, she was seeing him through clear, logical eyes. What she saw terrified her.

  “In yer letters,” she said, yanking her arm from his grip, “ye referred to her as Claire. Then earlier, ye called her Je
an. Now ye say her name be Margaret. How many women does yer father wish ye to marry?”

  “I misspoke is all,” he said, trying to cover his lie with a smile.

  “I shall have the truth,” she challenged. “I will no’ leave this place without it. The truth about Claire, or Jean, or whatever ye will call her next, as well as the blood on yer tunic.”

  The tic in his jaw increased as he clenched his teeth. “Ye bloody well will leave with me, and we will be leavin’ now,” he said harshly as he grabbed her arm and pulled her toward the horse.

  “Let go of me!” she screamed as she struggled against his firm hold. “I am no’ goin’ anywhere with ye!”

  She had not been prepared for his wrath. He spun around and with a closed fist, struck her cheek.

  Mariote fell to the ground, stunned, angry, and terrified all at once. The pain radiated from her cheek to her eye and ear. Bright white lights danced in front of her as her stomach roiled. The last man who had struck her thusly ended up dead. But this time, Muriale was not here to come to her aid.

  Stunned into muteness, with her ears ringing, her world began to spin. Only a rapid heartbeat later, she heard a loud roar similar to that of a charging bear.

  Lachlan’s blood boiled as hot as a blacksmith’s forge. So much so that he saw red.

  Letting out a loud, thunderous roar, with sword drawn, he tore across the clearing, hell bent on killing the man who had just struck Mariote. The imposter looked up; his eyes grew wide with fear. A heartbeat later, he was running as fast as he could away from Mariote and Lachlan.

  Lachlan did not stop to see if Mariote was well, for he knew Willem would tend to her. He was focused solely on the fool who had just mounted the old farm horse and was trying to get away. Lachlan whistled for his horse, which came running immediately. As he ran alongside the horse, he reached up, grabbed the saddle and all but flew atop his fine steed.

  Neither the farm horse nor the man he was intent on killing were a match for Lachlan. In no time at all, he was riding beside the imposter. With a strong arm, Lachlan unseated the fool and sent him hurling to the cold earth.

 

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