Malcolm smiled. “Which is why I was keen to show you what we’ve built.”
“Adrian!”
The echo of his name seemed to vibrate the ground beneath his feet as it swirled out of the wood and whooshed down the dirt track between the cottages to wash over Adrian, and he felt a surge of energy in his bones. He lifted his chin, his eyes scanning the black beyond the village as if he could somehow see her in the darkness.
Maighread Lindsey was calling for him. And he could . . . feel her.
Malcolm’s head cocked and he winked at Adrian. “Perhaps another time, though.”
“I’m here,” Adrian argued, dragging his attention back to the king and trying to ignore the vibration in his core that brought vivid red curls and the scent of heather to the forefront of his senses. “Show me now.”
He held up his palms. “The queen calls. It was she who summoned you to Wyldonna, so it is she you must obey.”
“She’s not my queen,” Adrian bristled. “I shall wait for her to join us so we might both know your plans in full. Surely if you wish to reveal to a stranger the secrets of your offense, you have considered putting to rest this feud with your sister—one who shares the goal of saving your people from this threat.”
Malcolm shook his head. “Maisie doesna think me capable of saving Wyldonna. She isna interested in my plans, else she never would have betrayed us to Felsteppe and taken the throne for herself.”
“I’m not certain that’s true,” Adrian hedged. He had no interest really in helping two stubborn siblings remedy their quarrel; he only wanted to bring the truth to light. It was all Adrian ever wanted to do.
“I am,” Malcolm said solemnly.
Before Adrian could comment further, the crowd gathered around the fire rose from their seats and turned en masse back toward the cottages.
“Come on, then,” Malcolm said with something akin to resignation, repeating the phrase he’d used to draw Adrian into the wood an hour earlier. And once again Adrian felt he had little choice but to follow the bearded man around the balefire.
She was striding down the narrow track when he at last saw the physical manifestation of the summons he still felt thrumming through him, her red curls bouncing behind her, her pale skin gleaming in the mist. Maisie’s arms swung freely at her sides, her cape billowing in her wake, and her green eyes seemed to pierce the gloom as her gaze landed on Adrian.
She stopped perhaps forty feet from the common; as close as she was prepared to come, apparently. The folk to either side of Malcolm Lindsey and Adrian bowed or curtsied deeply, and then, in the next moment, the spaces between the villagers were filled with the tools of their workday, pointed at their queen. Axes and forks and blades all mingled with the mist as a sort of grim expectation descended upon the crowd.
“Come nae farther, Maighread Lindsey,” her brother warned.
“What the bloody hell are you doing?” Adrian demanded, looking around him at the folk who now wore shared expressions of angry distrust. “This is your queen.”
Maisie ignored them all. “I’ve come for what is mine.”
“You thought him dead, did you nae?” Malcolm said, in a tone that was not quite taunting, not quite curious. “You doona truly believe in your own miracle.”
Adrian bristled at the way he was being spoken about, as if he were nothing more than an object to be quarreled over, although Maisie Lindsey’s words caused a resurgence in the zinging vibrations in his bones. Did he belong to her now? By some insane logic, the idea did not sound so impossible.
And if it was true, that he belonged to her, did she not then belong to him?
What was this madness that had seized him?
“You ken as well as I the dangers Wyldonna poses to Outlanders,” Maisie accused. “That you would bring him into the midst of the folk shows your disregard for his safety.” She looked at the crowd. “The safety of you all.” Her eyes landed on Adrian. “He set the afternhangers on you.”
“The afternhangers do what they will,” Malcolm argued. “And I couldna have set anyone upon anyone had the Painted Man nae made himself vulnerable. As it was, he brought them to heel in his own manner. You’ve nae reason to fear for him here. He is free to go where he would.”
As if the beasts were resentful at being reminded of their defeat in the castle yard, they gained their feet and were now crowded together at the cusps of the hills they occupied, staring down hungrily at the red-haired woman on the road below them.
“You doona command him, Malcolm,” Maisie said, but her eyes flicked to the beasts above her.
Adrian had had enough. “And neither do you,” he said, stepping into the space between the queen and the crowd. The feline creatures shrank back from the edges of the hills with angry hisses. “Your brother has offered to show me his plans for turning Felsteppe and his men away. I think you should listen to him.”
Maisie looked at Adrian as if he too had sprouted cloven feet. And then her brows lowered in Malcolm’s direction. “I’m certain he was keen to win you to his side. We will talk about it later. Come with me now, Adrian. Please.”
“I appreciate your concern for my safety,” he began, but then stopped when he realized Maisie was no longer looking at him.
The afternhangers had apparently dismissed Adrian, and they were now crouching over the road again, their long tails swishing through the air. Maisie’s face was going from one group to the other, speaking to them in a language that sounded strongly Gaelic.
To his surprise, the creature closest to the queen peeled its lips back from its black gums and shrieked before replying in the same tongue, its voice sounding dark and scratchy but remarkably human. Adrian felt his legs go rubbery.
Malcolm leaned toward him so that their shoulders touched. “I believe ’tis you who should be concerned for her safety, lad.”
Then Maisie took a sudden step back on the road, her eyes going from cliff to cliff, her already pale face seemingly devoid of all blood now. One by one, the afternhangers leapt from the rocks to land silently on the dirt road, separating Adrian from Maisie. The bold one in the lead—had it been the very creature that attacked Adrian?—spoke again, and the pack of beasts began to growl as if in anticipation.
He had frightened away the monster earlier. But could he deny a score of the hellish things? Why weren’t Maisie’s own brother or the other folk doing anything to prevent the impending attack on Wyldonna’s queen?
Whatever the reason, Adrian had no doubt that the vicious beasts would strike the defenseless woman and possibly kill her before him and the crowd. Someone had to do something.
Wasn’t that the reason she had brought him to Wyldonna in the first place? To do something?
“Stop!” he called out, raising a hand and striding toward the rear of the pack. Behind him, he heard the crowd gasp again. “Leave her.”
The afternhangers paid him no heed though, and so as he reached the slinking monsters nearest to him, he swung his raised hand and landed a slap to a sleek rump. The blow met the animal’s flesh with a crack, and to Adrian’s astonishment, the afternhanger tumbled over into its neighbor like a stone rolled down a hill, sending three of the beasts kicking and sprawling in a heap. Adrian’s palm felt as though it had just seized a hot coal.
The rest of the pack swung on him with furious shrieks, and all the hair on Adrian’s body tried to stand up. But they were slinking back from him to either side of the road, even as the bold one spoke to Adrian.
“You presume to touch us?” Its black tongue flicked the English words easily, and its whiskered cheek pads flinched away from its fangs as it added contemptuously, “Man?”
“I have no quarrel with you as of yet, save for the loss of my belongings,” Adrian said, coming to stand between Maisie and the apparent leader of the Cat Sìth. “But if you harm her, you will answer to me.”
The beast hissed, like a breath of laughter. “The only thing Man is good for is killing. Stand against us again, Man, and you wi
ll learn.”
“I stand before you now,” Adrian taunted, his blood heating where once alarm had chilled him. He stepped toward the beast, even as he felt Maisie Lindsey’s fingers trail down the skin of his back, as if trying to stay him. “She brought me here and I will not allow you to harm her.”
The afternhanger continued to slink away as its brethren leapt back onto the rocks of the hillside.
“You’ll not be protected forever, Man,” the beast warned with a snarl.
Adrian let the threat hang in the air unchallenged as the creature turned and crept into the shadow of the rocks. And then he looked to the crowd who were watching him with something akin to bewildered horror. All except Malcolm Lindsey, who kept his enigmatic smile.
“You will not share your plan with me now?” Adrian asked.
The bearded man shook his head. “We yet have time,” he said. “I’d wager you’ll seek me out when you see that you must. I’ll be here when you’re ready.”
The answer sounded enough like the afternhangers’ threat to anger Adrian, and so he turned without answer and began striding back up the road between the cottages, seizing Maisie Lindsey’s hand as he passed and pulling her along with him.
He paid no heed to the cumulative gasp of the crowd behind him.
Chapter 14
Maisie let Adrian Hailsworth lead her up the dirt track until they reached the fringe of wood beyond the last cottage, her heart in her throat. Several trail heads led into the forest here and Adrian slowed.
Maisie pulled her hand from his grasp as she passed him, feeling as though the chill in the air had increased twofold at the loss of his touch. Another moment of his skin on hers and Maisie feared she would have turned fully into his arms, begging him to hold her and kiss her and tell her she would be safe.
“It’s this way,” she said instead, hitching up the front of her skirts with both hands and mounting the steep trail without needing to mind her step.
How many thousands of times had her feet traversed this path since she’d learned to walk, scampering to and from the village to play with her friends and visit the folk, participating in woodland games or digging in the coarse sand of the beach below? Those journeys had been filled with smiles and happy shrieks and breathless laughter.
Now she climbed toward the castle with tears of humiliation and hurt in her eyes. She had no friends on Wyldonna anymore, save the unfathomable, shirtless Englishman who traversed the path with her.
By the time she emerged from the wood onto the castle yard, Adrian Hailsworth close at her heels, Maisie’s eyes were dry. She was thankful for that as she saw the hulking black outline of Reid against the torch glow from the open door behind him. He appeared to be holding Adrian’s ruined belongings in his huge hands, and they hung between his fingers like scraps.
Seeing the shredded shirt and leather bag reminded her that Adrian Hailsworth could have died that evening. By all rights, he should be dead at that very moment. But not only was he marching behind her, shirtless, his black marks camouflaging him in the night, he had shown himself superior to the most deadly inhabitants of Wyldonna—the afternhangers. He had more likely than not saved her from their claws. Her own brother had not even raised a finger to defend her.
Adrian had made a grave enemy tonight in having the audacity to strike one of the creatures. Maisie’s stomach tumbled at the idea that he had made such a risk for her alone.
“My queen,” Reid greeted her as she neared, his deep solemn voice betraying his concern. “Is aught amiss? When I found you not within—”
“I’m sorry to have worried you,” she said as she swept past him. “My brother thought it a good time to introduce Lord Hailsworth to the folk.” She headed for the castle door without slowing, wishing to lock herself away from the night, the wood, the ones below who now shunned her.
The only place she was safe, and could keep Adrian Hailsworth to herself.
“My thanks, Reid,” Adrian said behind her, and she heard both pairs of feet follow her into the vestibule before the door shut firmly.
Maisie breathed a silent sigh of relief as she came into the hall, even though that long chamber was populated by the puny crowd of servants reluctantly charged to care for her. They were clustered together and looking at her with wide eyes as she entered, Reid and Adrian following in her wake. She ignored them all, heading for the doorway that led to the central corridor.
Malcolm had tried to win Adrian to his side. To turn him against her? Well, fair was fair. And she’d never been very good at keeping cautious any matter.
“Maighread,” Adrian called out behind her.
Maisie stopped and spun around in the center of the aisle, her cape swirling around her feet.
For a moment, he only looked at her, as if he had forgotten what he was going to say. Maisie took that heartbeat of time to appraise him as well, his muscled, slender waist covered with the bold black marks of his magic. He seemed larger now, his body half-bared to her, than when she’d first seen him in the courtyard of Melk in his monk’s robes. His jaw was nearly covered with stubble that was rapidly becoming a beard, his hair curled at his collarbone. He looked as if he could have been born on the island.
Maisie felt her stomach clench with desire. The same desire she recognized in Adrian Hailsworth’s dark eyes.
His saving her had not been a simple act of chivalry—he felt the want of her, too.
“I have questions,” Adrian began again, and she could see him attempting to gain control of himself. “About what just transpired below.”
“And I mean to give you answers,” she replied, not caring if he saw her recklessness. “If you will follow me.”
One of the elfin girls stepped hesitantly from the knot of her friends. She gave a slight curtsy in Adrian’s direction.
“Perhaps Man first desires a drink?” she asked sweetly.
One of the other girls joined her. “Or a bit to eat?”
By the way they fluttered their long eyelashes, one would think them to be afflicted. But Maisie was oddly glad to see that she was not the only one affected by Adrian Hailsworth’s presence, even if it meant her own maids were trying to steal the Painted Man away from her.
Adrian was changing. Wyldonna was changing him.
Reid sent the servant girls a glare that had them scattering back into the clutch of maids. “I will serve Man should he have need. Be gone from here and back to your duties before the queen dismisses the lot of you.”
Adrian had barely glanced at the girls; his attention was for Maisie alone, and it thrilled her. “Where are we going?”
“The library,” she said.
“Library?” He blinked, then cocked his head. “You have a library? That wasn’t on the plans.”
Maisie couldn’t help the ghost of a smile that pulled at her mouth as she turned. She could feel his heightened excitement rolling off him like a wave. “This way,” she said, then swept from the hall, slightly giddy at the sound of Adrian’s footfalls gaining on her.
Adrian could hardly contain his anticipation as he followed Maisie’s slender form down the dim corridor. Her curls streamed behind her in the wake of her swift passing, and Adrian’s nostrils were filled with the scent of her, so strong and vivid it was almost as if he could taste her fragrance. He could not explain the feeling that had come over him since his encounter with the afternhangers and the villagers in the common, but he felt . . . amazing. Whole and powerful and full of life.
And it had taken the greater portion of his will not to seize the queen of Wyldonna and kiss her in her own hall when her eyes had fallen upon his bare skin like a touch. He’d not felt such strong desire for a woman since before arriving at Jacob’s Ford more than three years ago, and now he wanted Maisie Lindsey.
Which was completely foolish and unreasonable. So he busied himself with the idea that his eagerness was not for the woman who led him down the corridor but for the location alone to which she was leading him.
&nb
sp; She stopped at an ornately carved door, and Adrian’s heart skipped as her cape slid behind her, revealing the fit of her bodice over high breasts and flat stomach. But he told himself he was only anxious for what lay behind the door. Volumes and volumes, he told himself. Everything he needed to know. And then he could push the lustful thoughts of her from his mind.
She glanced at him. “Are you certain you want this?”
I’ve come for what is mine.
Adrian’s blood boiled. “It’s the only thing I can think about.”
Her breasts lifted and fell with her sigh. Then she pushed the door open, and he followed her in, actually daring to lay his fingertips along the side of her waist as if to hurry her along. But his hand wanted to slip around her midriff, pull her to him in the privacy of the black chamber . . .
He stepped away into the space properly and felt his eyebrows raise as he scanned the dark corners.
He heard her moving about behind him, and a moment later a yellow glow spilled around his boots as she lit a candle, but it did little to improve his view. Then she was at his side once more.
“I thought you said we were going to the library.”
“Aye,” she replied, raising the candle and gesturing about her. “This is the library.”
Adrian’s eyes took in the windowless stone walls, devoid of shelves, the small square table and single wooden chair—both covered in what appeared to be a hundred years’ worth of dust. In the center of the tabletop rested an odd raised platform, similar to the ones used by the brethren at Melk when copying manuscripts. He had to admit to himself, he’d fantasized at the possibility of taking Maisie Lindsey in the castle library. But—
“Where are the books?”
“Books?” she repeated with a frown. “There are nae books on Wyldonna. There is book.”
“Book,” he said flatly.
“Yes, book. One.” She walked to the table and set down her candle before swiping her palm across the raised square, sending a fall of dust onto the floor. It was then that Adrian could make out the leather cover, it’s embossing filled with packed gray years. “This one.”
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