Love Beyond Dreams (A Scottish Time Travel Romance): Book 6 (Morna's Legacy Series) (20 page)

BOOK: Love Beyond Dreams (A Scottish Time Travel Romance): Book 6 (Morna's Legacy Series)
8.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“Ye are no married, ye say? Ye must come from a fine family if yer cousin has married a MacChristy son. My Drostan is in need of a wife.”

I swallowed so the ale I had in my mouth wouldn’t come up my nose. Before I could panic and respond even more inappropriately, Callum reached over and grasped onto my hand, stepping in to take care of the situation for me.
 

“No, she is no married, but she is betrothed.”

Laird Macaslan’s face changed once more, his stern lines setting in, his smile evaporating in a second. It reminded me of one of those terrifying mimes that can change their expression as they wave their hand up and down over their face. It was truly unsettling.
 

 
“Betrothed? To who?”

Callum didn’t release my hand. Instead, he raised it to his lips and kissed my fingers gently, winking at me in a clear plea for me to keep my mouth shut.
 

“To me.”

CHAPTER 32

 
Orick’s return to Fionn and Shona’s was a somber one, but this time instead of an unwelcome glare, Shona greeted him with ale and a tender hug. He suspected Fionn had warned her to be kind.
 

“Did ye find the lass? Were ye able to help her?”

He followed Shona inside and gratefully accepted the ale and food she offered him. He didn’t know if he’d ever been so weary in his life.
 

“Aye, I found her. While I was no able to save her, I did offer her comfort in the last moments of her life.”

Shona sat down beside him and patted his hand gently.
 

“’Tis all any of us can ask for in this life—someone to sit with us as we leave this earth. Who was she to ye? How did ye know her?”

Fionn stepped from the corner of the room to join them while he chided his wife.
 

“Shona, canna ye see how tired the man is? He knew the lass. He may no want to speak of her so soon.”

“’Tis alright.” Orick lifted his head and managed a small smile. His heart did hurt for Maidie or Marion as he knew her in the end, but more than that, he was grateful they found one another before it was too late.
 

“She was my sister, though the last I saw her, I was twelve and she no more than sixteen.”
 

It was true enough. The true story he didn’t have the strength to tell. Fionn and Shona weren’t owed it anyway.
 

“Ach, man. I’m verra sorry for yer loss. How did ye know ’twas her when I spoke of the lass?” Fionn reached for his cup and refilled it.
 

Orick shrugged. His fatigue seemed to make the small lie easier to tell.
 

“’Twas a feeling.”

 
“Aye? Well, take heart in knowing ye were there for her at the end.”

Orick smiled and nodded as he stood from the table.
 

“Aye, I do.”

Shona stood and walked with him to the doorway of his room.
 

“Ye are welcome to stay as long as ye like. Mayhap, ye need some time to mend from yer loss before ye carry on?”

He didn’t need time. Idleness didn’t heal loss, and it wasn’t what Maidie would have wanted from him.
 

“No, though I thank ye. I’ll leave come morning.
 

*
 
*
 
*

Once he finished eating, Laird Macaslan left quickly, making it very apparent to everyone that he was in no hurry to release Lennox and Griffith. It didn’t take long for Callum and Adwen to follow after him, leaving Jane and me alone in the room with Drostan.
 

A few long awkward minutes followed. Then, just as Jane stood and I followed suit, Drostan spoke. He had orange-colored hair and yellowish skin that made him look ill. He was short, fat, and frankly, rather repulsive.
 

“’Tis a shame ye are already betrothed. I believe Da wanted ye as my bride.”

I coughed uncomfortably and moved around the table next to Jane for comfort. My mouth had already gotten me in enough trouble. Luckily, Jane’s tongue no longer seemed tied.
 

“Yes, such a shame, but you heard Callum, she’s already taken. Goodnight, Drostan. Would you have someone show us to our rooms, please?”

Jane didn’t give him a chance to answer or send us assistance before she had me by the arm and pulled me from the room.
 

CHAPTER 33

“That is exactly why I told you not to say anything.”
 

Jane’s voice rose at least three octaves higher than normal as she slipped into the bedchamber assigned to me and screeched like a banshee.
 

I whirled on her, giving her every bit of frustration right back. I’d already reached my limit for the day as well.
 

“No way. Don’t do that. This isn’t my fault. What was I supposed to say to him? I wasn’t the one who lied. That was Callum. Why would he say that?”

Jane exhaled, leaned against the door, and pinched her thumb and forefinger together against her nose. I stayed back and allowed her the time she needed to cool down.
 

Eventually, she spoke more calmly, her tone much less high and squeaky.
 

“You’re right. It was Callum. He did it so that Laird Macaslan wouldn’t mention the very thing Drostan just did in the dining hall. But it doesn’t matter. As soon as Lennox and Griffith are released, we can be back on our way home, and this entire thing will be forgotten.”

Something clanked loudly in the hall outside my bedroom, followed by a loud hushing sound from Adwen before Jane stepped out of the way to allow him and Callum to enter. I could tell by the tightness of Callum’s jaw and the shade of his face things with the laird hadn’t gone well.
 

“What?” I asked the question as Jane sat herself down on the floor and answered for them.
 

“He still hasn’t released them.”

Callum spoke between gritted teeth. “Damn the bastard. He doesna have the right to keep them, no now that their debt is paid. Though the truth is he has them, and there is precious little we can do to force his hand, no with just the two of us.”

Jane leapt up to her feet and started pacing the room as if she were looking for a weapon. “Well, how long is he going to keep them? He can’t keep them forever, can he?”
 

Adwen spoke from the shadows of the room, his voice calmer than the rest of us.
 

“No, he canna, but he can keep them for far longer than we can allow him to. He has made Callum a proposal. ’Twould result in their immediate release.”

Jane nodded and held her hands up question. “Okay, great. That’s wonderful. What is it?”

Adwen stepped into the candlelight. His aggravated expression made me nervous.
 

“Ye tell her Callum. I doona have the heart for it. ”
 

I laughed uncomfortably, hoping he meant to tease me unnecessarily.
 

“Don’t have the heart for what? Come on guys, one of you just spit it out.”

Callum stepped away from the door and neared me, reaching a hand out to touch the side of my arm.
 

“He wishes for us to get married here, lass. Tomorrow.”

“Ha.” I did laugh then, a full, hearty laugh that Jane had to shush with her hand before I had the opportunity to wake up the whole castle.
 

Once I regained control of myself, I spoke again.
 

“No way. Just tell him
no
. Tell him that we wish to get married at Cagair. Extend a damn invitation if you want to. And then, demand that he let your father and brother go. After we are gone awhile, send him a letter and tell him we broke up.”

Callum squeezed my arm as if he expected that to soothe me. I jerked away from his grip.
 

“’Tis no so simple, Gillian. Ye doona understand Laird Macaslan. He is no a man to be toyed with. He doesna make idle threats. If I wish to have my da and brother released by year’s end, ’tis the only choice I have.”

“It’s the only choice you have?” I repeated myself for good measure as my panic rose. “Isn’t this my choice, as well? Why did you even tell him that in the first place? I met you less than twelve hours ago.”

I heard a growl from the corner of the room and looked over to see that Adwen looked just as displeased about the idea as me.
 

“Ye canna do this, brother. For Orick’s sake if naught else.”

Callum stepped away from me and turned to face Adwen while Jane came and stood next to me in comfort. She waited until I looked at her then scrunched her nose and shook her head as if to say, ‘
don’t worry’.

“Will the both of ye no wait and allow me to finish? I’ve no intention of marrying the lass, no really. Part of the agreement was that he would release Da and Griffith so they can attend the ceremony. Once they are free, we will all make our escape before the ceremony. I’ve no wish to steal Orick’s lass. I just dinna wish to see the lass forced into a marriage with Drostan.”

I wanted to weep with relief.
 

“So no wedding. Orick’s not going to show back up here and find me married to you?”

“No, lass. I swear to ye. Though ye shall have to go along with the ruse until just before, aye?”

I nodded. I’d spent my fair share of time pretending it was my wedding day as a young girl. I could do the same tomorrow with no problem.
 

“Sure, you got it. I will play along and be the happiest bride in the world tomorrow. As long as I don’t end up standing at the end of the aisle across from you.”

Callum laughed and made his way to the door.
 

“I will try to no take offense to that, lass. Doona worry, ye willna end up married to me. No unless he holds a knife to each of our throats and forces the ceremony to go forward. And even Laird Macaslan is no as cruel as that.”

CHAPTER 34

Macaslan territory didn’t lie far from Shona and Fionn’s. Orick left before sunrise and reached the edge of Macaslan’s land by midday. He couldn’t wait to see everyone, but it worried him to see Adwen riding toward him alone even before he reached the castle.
 

Orick called out to him as they met. “What’s the matter with ye?”
 

“I told Callum ’twas a fool’s plan. Laird Macaslan has seen to make trouble with us long before this day. They’re all in the chapel, and he has Da and Griffith still in chains no to be taken off until Gillian and Callum’s wedding vows are said.”

“Gillian and Callum? What the hell did ye allow to happen over the course of a day?”

Orick took off at a gallop toward the chapel as Adwen hurried to keep up.
 

“Orick, ye need to slow down so we can talk of a plan of action. ’Twas no Gillian’s doing. I swear the lass is but a moment away from reaching for the nearest sword and running Callum straight through. He told her it wouldna come to this, but there she is now, standing at the end of the aisle with him just exactly where he swore to her she wouldna be.”

Orick reluctantly slowed his horse and spoke to Adwen in a voice so disgruntled he could hardly recognize it as his own.
 

“Ye need to tell me what has happened here. I still doona know how any of this has come about.”

Adwen reached across the expanse between their horses and whacked him so hard across the back he struggled to stay on his horse.
 

“Canna ye see that I doona have time to tell ye anything unless ye wish to allow Gillian to marry my brother?”

“No.” The very thought made Orick’s skin hot with rage. “I doona wish for her to marry Callum.”

“Aye, I know it. ’Tis why I snuck away to meet with ye. There is no one inside the chapel save Laird Macaslan, Drostan, Callum, Gillian, Jane, and a few guards with Da and Griffith. I doona think ’twill be difficult to take the guards. Laird Macaslan and Drostan willna raise a sword, for they know they willna win a fight. Laird Macaslan has others fight his battles and always has. We can stop the wedding and get Da and Griffith back with no bloodshed, so doona hurt a soul.”

Orick pulled on his horse’s reins outside the chapel, dismounted quickly and walked toward the chapel with his hand near his sword.
 

“I will no hurt the guards nor Laird Macaslan and his son. If Callum falls on my fist, I canna be blamed for it.”

Adwen laughed as they neared the doorway together.
 

“I’d say he deserves it. Are ye ready?”
 

They pushed the main doors of the church open together.
 

*
 
*
 
*

I understood that Callum had no choice now that Laird Macaslan had lost his mind and was set on forcing this absurd marriage on us, but it didn’t make me any less angry with him. I didn’t know if there’d ever been a bride with such a pissed off look on her face in the entire history of the world.
 

Other books

Heart of Ice by Carolyn Keene
The Miscreant by Brock Deskins
The Mussel Feast by Birgit Vanderbeke, Jamie Bulloch
Almost Never: A Novel by Daniel Sada, Katherine Silver
Three-Martini Lunch by Suzanne Rindell
Royal Bastard by Avery Wilde
Shake the Trees by Rod Helmers