The Lord's Captive (Border Series Book 2)

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The Lord's Captive (Border Series Book 2) Page 1

by Cecelia Mecca




  Table of Contents

  Epilogue

  Get Border Bonuses

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Become a CM Insider

  If you liked this book

  Also by Cecelia Mecca

  About the Author

  Acknowledgments

  The Lord’s Captive

  Border Series Book Two

  Cecelia Mecca

  Contents

  Get Border Bonuses

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Epilogue

  Become a CM Insider

  If you liked this book

  Also by Cecelia Mecca

  About the Author

  About the Author

  Acknowledgments

  Get Border Bonuses

  Sign up for the CM Insider to receive updates, giveaways, exclusive bonus content and extended previews of the first two books in the Border Series: The Ward’s Bride and The Thief’s Countess.

  CM Insiders also receive a free book, Historical Heartbeats: A Collection of Historical Romance Excerpts with nine sample book previews.

  To Billy and Jena. I love you both.

  1

  Northumbria, England, 1271

  Sir Bryce Waryn wanted to rejoice, but the sight of his childhood home in partial ruins overshadowed his victory. The stench of battle hung in the air.

  “What ails you, brother?”

  Geoffrey, two years his senior, often treated him like a child.

  Not today.

  “This.” He gestured to the carnage in front of them. “I fear it will never end.”

  They watched as a body was removed from the hall of Pele Tower, the center of activity at Bristol Manor.

  “I wish I could disagree. Are you sure you want to inherit this mess?”

  Bryce ignored Geoffrey’s question. “Come with me.” He had no destination in mind—only the urgent need to escape the smell. His brother nodded, and together they walked through the aftermath of a raid five years in the making.

  The battle had started as the sun rose and ended before mid-morn. Thanks to his brother’s men, they’d overwhelmed the usurpers quickly, and they’d spent the better part of the day assessing the damages. Their losses could have been much worse.

  Yes, he wanted to inherit Bristol Manor. Its proximity to the Scottish border guaranteed turmoil for years to come. But it was their home, and home meant something.

  Although it should have been his brother’s inheritance. As a feudal barony, the title was tied to the land. Now that Bristol was theirs once again, the title was his brother’s by rights. But Geoffrey had already bequeathed the manor to him.

  “I do,” he said to Geoffrey. “Though it’s an honor I don’t deserve.”

  Geoffrey rolled his eyes. “We’ve been through this, Bryce. My home is with Sara, in Kenshire. Besides, I’m not doing you any favors here,” he added, gesturing to the brutality all around them.

  New grass attempted to peek through the dirty brown snow of the courtyard. It was a small bit of pleasantness, that bright green. Still, he could not deny the manor was very different from his memories.

  “You do know we won the battle?” Sir Hugh Waryn, their uncle, walked toward them with purpose. His black hair was sprinkled with grey, but though he was past his prime, Hugh still towered over most of the other men scurrying around the courtyard to dispose of the dead.

  Bryce let his more talkative brother answer.

  “We wonder how soon the counterattack will come. You know as well as I do, peace is unlikely at Bristol.”

  Bryce handed his broadsword to his brother’s squire, a young boy who had begged to take part in the battle. The squire doted on his brother, much as Bryce himself had done when they were children. Neither of the brothers had wished to see the boy hurt, but they’d reluctantly agreed to his request, and Reginald had held his own in the battle. They were both proud of the lad.

  He turned his attention to Hugh. “Much needs to be done here. Uncle, I’ve no right to ask you this. You’re newly wed. But—”

  “My wife understands I’m needed at Bristol until it is fortified once again.”

  “I’ll send word to Faye that you’ll be staying with us,” Geoffrey said.

  “No,” Bryce said. “Not us.”

  Both men turned and looked at him. Bryce’s eyes narrowed.

  “I promised your wife you’d return, unharmed, and by God, you’ll do just that,” he told his brother. “I’ve no wish to incur the wrath of Lady Sara. If not for your knights of Kenshire and the men Lord William sent, we would never have seen this day.” For years they had lacked the manpower to take back Bristol. Now they had enough men to secure both the manor and the surrounding area.

  “You’ll need help to secure and restore Bristol,” Geoffrey insisted.

  “Aye, and I have help. Hugh will stay, and I plan to ask Thomas to take a permanent position here. You’re needed at Kenshire.” Bryce looked back and forth between two sets of eyes that matched his own, startling blue and unflinching. His brother had the uncanny and singular ability to make him break eye contact.

  Yet he would not back down, both for the reasons he had given Geoffrey and for others he didn’t wish to share.

  “If you wish.” Geoffrey gripped his arm. “I’m proud of you.”

  His chest constricted, but the feeling did not have time to take root. Geoffrey had already turned away to say something to their uncle.

  Five years they’d sought their revenge. The Scots who’d invaded their home and killed their parents were finally defeated. Driven out. But now that the day of reckoning had arrived, Bryce felt unexpectedly devoid of emotion. He stared at the building in front of them, an old tower at the center of the manor. From the outside, it looked the same.

  He’d balled his fists in anger when they went inside earlier. The manor’s decorative features were now distinctly Scottish. He would rectify that immediately.

  “Excuse me, Uncle. Brother.”

  Walking through the courtyard, Bryce surveyed his land as he looked for his steward. Or the man he hoped would be his steward.

  Built on river basin two days’ ride from the border, Bristol Manor had started as nothing more than a single defense tower and an attached hall. Though it was still no grand castle like the one Geoffrey now occupied, it was a handsome stone structure that had been improved enough
throughout the years to make it worth capturing. Surrounded by a curtain wall, an addition courtesy of Bryce’s father, it was large enough to house the men who’d fought for them that day, but not many more. Bryce’s father had also added the buildings he now passed, including the solar block, storerooms, and stable.

  Finding his right-hand man in the courtyard was easy, for Thomas’s long brown hair and beard made him appear as wild as the bears they had hunted as boys. Bryce, on the other hand, shaved nearly every day. It was a habit from his days as a squire, one of the many quirks he acquired at Huntington.

  “Thomas.”

  Although they had height in common, their resemblance stopped there.

  Thomas clapped him on the shoulder in greeting. “So grim for such a great victory. We lost just one man and Bristol is yours again.”

  “We’ll celebrate once we’ve secured the area and stripped it of the Kerr stench. The hall reeks of Scots.”

  “We can be sure it’s not you.” Thomas leaned in as if to smell him. “I’ve yet to meet a maid that bathes as much.”

  Thomas didn’t have a serious thought in his head. Bryce gave him a look that said as much.

  “Very well.” Thomas abruptly stopped smiling, drew his bushy eyebrows together, and gave him such a deliberately serious look it almost made him laugh.

  Almost.

  “Any news?” Before the raid ended that morning, he’d charged Thomas with scouting the area beyond Bristol in every direction.

  “Aye,” Thomas said, finally offering some useful information. “Most of the men have returned save those who were sent north. The village is secure, and there are no signs of Clan Kerr to the east or west.”

  Bryce frowned, and he watched as Thomas’s easygoing grin transformed into a scowl that matched his own. He knew without asking that they were entertaining the same thought. In all likelihood, the usurpers had fled north, toward the holes from which they’d crawled in the first place. Which meant some ill fate might have befallen their men.

  “The scouts should have returned by now,” said Bryce.

  “Most of that group are from Kenshire,” Thomas offered. “Perhaps they’re unused to the terrain?”

  Both men looked in the direction the scouting party would have traveled. The lush, flat land where they stood gave way to rolling hills. From this distance, with spring finally upon them, the rising slopes appeared green and smooth. The terrain appeared ideally suited for an afternoon ride, but Bryce knew the reality of those mountains from experience. Only borderers could appreciate the stark contrast that was Northern England. One day’s ride could offer wide-open fields, roaring rivers, and treacherous inclines which taxed all but the heartiest of steeds bred for such terrain.

  “Thomas.” Bryce put aside the thought of potential trouble to the north for a moment. Steeling himself for the possibility his friend would deny him, he said, “Will you stay on at Bristol Manor as its steward? I can offer continued raids, battles with our Scottish neighbors, and very likely retribution from Clan Kerr.” He wished he were exaggerating.

  The large knight gestured to the mostly muddy courtyard of the manor they had fought to reclaim.

  “So tempting.” His trademark grin returned. “It would be my honor. Mayhap I can even coax a smile from the Slayer as Bristol’s new steward.”

  Thomas knew he despised that nickname, which was exactly why he’d used it. Unfortunately, it was not a comment on Bryce’s battle prowess, as it sounded, but on his effect on women.

  “Maybe not,” Thomas said.

  “When you’re done joking, can you alert Geoffrey and Hugh? I’m going to find the search party.” He sensed Thomas’s displeasure but knew his new steward wouldn’t attempt to dissuade him.

  “You’ll take men with you?” Thomas asked.

  “Aye.”

  It appeared they may have started celebrating too soon.

  She was going to have one hell of a headache. Father Simon and his penance be damned for using such a word. She hadn’t said it out loud, after all.

  Catrina Kerr had never felt a more intense pain in the twenty and two years she’d been alive. It shot from her head down through her back, which was currently prone on…

  Where am I?

  It hurt to open her eyes even though the sun was nowhere to be seen.

  She heard the sound of trickling water moments before she registered the water penetrating her shoe. The river, then.

  Toren! The raid.

  It all came back at once. The bloodcurdling screams. Her brother’s frantic yells for her to hurry.

  One minute, she had been sitting on a low rock wall behind the manor watching the sun rise—just as she did nearly every morning. The next, shouts had come from every direction. Before the danger could sink in, her clansmen had pulled her from the wall and practically dragged her to the front of the manor house. How could she forget Toren’s gut-wrenching screams as he called her name?

  Where was her brother?

  She had to get up.

  Catrina tried to sit, but her head felt as if someone had taken a war hammer to it.

  Where is everyone?

  Dizzy and panicked, she lay back down and closed her eyes.

  After wasting time in an argument with Geoffrey, who insisted on accompanying him, Bryce finally mounted his horse, ready to lead the small search party north as soon as his brother joined them. But before Geoffrey reappeared from the manor, a band of riders made their way toward them. Dust and mud kicked up everywhere. The thunderous sound of warhorses made further discussion impossible.

  It would appear the impromptu rescue mission was unnecessary.

  But something was wrong. Bryce was sure of it.

  When the search party stopped in front of them, Bryce addressed the knight in the lead. His livery declared him a man of Lord William Thornhurst, vassal to Kenshire and seneschal of Camburg Castle. While Thornhurst himself had not been at liberty to join them, his men had added to their numbers, allowing Bristol Manor to be reclaimed with minimal damage or bloodshed. Bryce would forever be grateful to both his sister-in-law and her vassal for their support.

  “Good timing, I was just preparing…what the devil?”

  “Apologies, my lord, for our delay. As you can see, we ran into a bit of trouble.”

  As he spoke, the man dismounted and turned to help the rider next to him offload a bundle. Bryce approached the men, eager to see what they carried.

  “Is that a—”

  “Aye, my lord. It’s a woman.”

  “Is she alive?”

  The bundle didn’t appear to be moving. Bryce moved closer, attempting to get a better look as they carried her toward the manor. He barely registered that Thomas had dismounted and followed them.

  “Barely. She needs a healer, and quickly.” The young knight rushed to explain. “We were crossing the river on our way back to Bristol when the girl was spotted lying face down on the bank. One of the men thought he saw her move, so we took a closer look.”

  Bryce’s blood went cold as the implications filtered into his consciousness.

  She was a Kerr.

  “She hasn’t woken but clearly breathes. After spending more time than necessary arguing about whether to leave her—” he shot his companion an unhappy glance, “—we decided an unarmed, nearly dead woman posed no threat.”

  “She’s a Kerr.” Bryce didn’t hide his displeasure.

  “Most likely,” the other man replied. “But alone.”

  “You should have left her.”

  Everyone stopped at his words. Thomas, no longer grinning, had the sense to agree. “Who thought bringing the enemy back to Bristol was a good idea?”

  The man carrying her turned, daring anyone, including the new lord of the manor, to refute him. “I did. We don’t know for sure the woman is a Kerr. Also, she has red hair.”

  Bryce looked at the man as if he were daft. “And?”

  “And my sister has red hair. We couldn’t leave her there
to die.”

  That news was enough to snap Bryce’s normally well-controlled hold on the legendary Waryn temper.

  “You’re telling me—” he could hardly fathom the idea, “—we must now play nursemaid to a woman who is likely from the same clan that we just sent back to Scotland? The one responsible for the theft of my home and murder of my parents? Because your sister has red hair?”

  “Bryce,” Geoffrey cut in. Transported as he was by rage, Bryce had not noticed his brother’s approach.

  For the past five and a half years, Bryce had imagined countless variations of this day, and not one of them had included nursing a woman, a Kerr, back from the dead.

  “Bring the woman to a clean bed in one of the private chambers,” Geoffrey ordered.

  As the men hurried to comply, Bryce and Geoffrey squared off in the center of the hall. Modest in size but appointed with plenty of trestle tables to feed their retainers, the hall also boasted a large fireplace against the wall with a flue that carried away the smoke. An arched timber ceiling spanned two floors high.

  “We’re not butchers of innocent woman, Bryce. Besides, we don’t know for sure that she’s one of them.”

  Bryce looked at the man who could be his twin. With the same jet-black hair and clear blue eyes, the only difference between them was a slight scar running down Geoffrey's cheek. And his brother’s easy smile.

  “Perhaps her clan should have taken better care of her. Abandoned to be captured by the enemy. Sounds like a Kerr to me.”

  A small crowd gathered to watch the two overly large men, both highly trained warriors, exhibit a rare discord.

 

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