The Accidental Highland Hero (6 page)

BOOK: The Accidental Highland Hero
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Niall drew taller and furrowed his brow. “Is she?”

“She doesn’t appear to be. But you have no idea who she is. What if she were a Dunbarton?”

Folding his arms, Niall’s already dark eyes grew black. “You have a point, my lady. As to James, I will engage him in a bout of archery before the meal. If I let him beat me, mayhap his mood will improve.”

“Aye, ‘twill be good when he has chosen his bride and mopes no more about it.” His aunt motioned to the bed. “We will call her Marsali until we know her name.”

“Pearl. Sounds appropriate since we plucked her from the sea. Until the meal.” He glanced at the healer. “If you have a moment, you might take a look at the nick or two I received in battle.”

Tavia tucked a loose dark curl back into her braid, glanced at him and gave him a funny, wee smile. “’Tis naught more than a scratch, I fathom, but aye, I will have a look at them if Lady Akira gives me leave.”

Lady Akira nodded.

He gave a bow to his aunt, then smiled at Tavia, whipped around, and took his leave with the healer hurrying after his long stride.

His aunt faced the shipwrecked lass. “Niall had better not beat James at archery, considering the foul mood James already is in, but knowing my nephew, he will not give in a breadth of a hair. I must see to the meal, Marsali, and will check on you afterwards. Your own will be brought to you shortly.” The lady patted her shoulder in a motherly way, and she imagined her own mother being as kind.

Which brought a wave of grief crashing over her. Had her mother been on the ship?  Drowned with the others?  If not, would she worry that her daughter had been lost at sea and grieved for her?  Her head pounded with the new concern.

Marsali, for want of her own name, closed her eyes, unable to keep them open any longer. They burned like they were on fire, as did her skin, although a pretty maid attempted to cool her forehead with a wet cloth. But when she tried to shove the blankets aside, the maid thwarted her time and again. The struggle wore her out, and before long, she dreamed of a glen and mountains, of the blue waters of a tranquil loch, and heather blooming.

She could almost smell the sweet floral fragrance when a woman shrieked outside her chamber, making her heart jump.

“Quit tickling me. The chamber is not occupied by fair Catriona, you knave, but by another young woman.”

“The room was to be readied for the Lady Catriona. Who ordered it otherwise?”

“Lady Akira. She still runs the castle until Laird James chooses a wife, ye know.” She giggled, and the footsteps scurried away.

 The healer had returned and was tending to Marsali. Her long brown braids dangling over Marsali, Tavia leaned over the bed and placed another cold wet cloth on her feverish forehead. Marsali tried to push the clammy cloth away. ‘Twould make her cold again.

“I think you be a Dunbarton,” Tavia finally said, her dark brows raised, her tone of voice accusatory. “You looked quite stricken when Master Niall mentioned it. Are you from the enemy clan, a Dunbarton, lady?”

****

So many concerns wormed their way into James’s thoughts. Although he had little stomach for it, he tried to make the most of the afternoon meal. The boar seemed too dry, the brown bread too hard, even the butter slightly rancid. Naught appealed.

The news Eanruig and Niall brought him about being waylaid by Dunbarton’s men made his blood run hot. And where were his brothers and their Viking friend, Gunnolf, when he’d asked for their assistance?  ‘Twas unlike them not to send word. Unless they’d had more trouble escorting Lady Anice to her castle than they could manage. James shook his head.

This business with Lady Anice and the misfortunes that had befallen her staff worried him. ‘Twas not like he and his brothers could not handle the sword play if that’s where it led. But he wished them home to help him with his border squabbles. When Dougald sent him a missive warning Malcolm was growing overly fond of the Scottish lass, James could not believe it. King Henry desired her wed to a Norman baron loyal to his rule, since she was his wife’s favorite cousin. James hoped Malcolm’s head would not be on the chopping block next if he took his relationship with the lass too far.

Sighing deeply, James reminded himself it was Dougald that got into the most mischief with the ladies. Malcolm would not get himself into trouble.

With all his heart, James had given his younger brothers his enthusiastic thanks for all their support when he became the current laird of Craigly Castle and best wishes to make their way in the world, but…

He missed their hearty wit, their rows, the way they fought together, watching each other’s backs in the thick of battle.

 He glanced at his cousin Niall, who’d been raised like a brother with the rest of them, when his parents had died of the fever. Niall grinned back at him. Except that James beat his cousin fair and square at archery, that was the only good thing that had happened this day. The feat was not easily accomplished, and as usual, Niall tried his hardest to best him. James’s seneschal caught his eye.

Eanruig had been curiously avoiding him all afternoon. Even his mother had managed to stay clear of James. He snorted under his breath. He had heard the whispered rumors, that he was acting like an ogre, but who would not under the circumstances?  ‘Twas a trying business, choosing a wife…

Sometimes he wondered if it would be easier to let Malcolm, the next oldest of his brothers, run the clan as chief, and let
him
choose a wife from the insipid choices he had. Only Catriona sparked James’s interest. The others had been too young, or too boorish, or too timid.

What he needed was a hardy Scotswoman like his mother, who could bear his bairns and survive the harsh winters. Someone who had not just come from the cradle or acted too afraid to speak in his presence. He tossed the chunk of dry bread back on the plate. And his clansmen had the gall to wonder why the lassies did not appeal?

They were all pretty, aye, but there had to be more to them than that.

The times he’d been with Catriona, he found her attractive, willing in bed, and able to carry a conversation without being overwhelmed by his position. He thought she would do.

“You say the chamber is ready for Catriona,” James said to his mother, unable to get his mind off Catriona’s impending visit.

His mother’s eyes widened a bit.

James leaned back in his chair. What was the matter with everyone?  Did they fear he would reject Catriona also?  There were no others, save a distant cousin he could inspect in a month or so afterwards if circumstances were such that he had to. “My lady mother?”

“Aye.”

But the worried look on her face said otherwise. “Are you certain?”

“Aye, aye, you need not fash yourself over it. ‘Tis my business to manage the household, my laird.” She quickly looked to her meal.

“I agree, although you seem uncertain.” He frowned at her. “You seem bothered about something. Even Eanruig, who normally pesters me throughout the day, has avoided me.” He turned and slapped Niall’s shoulder. “Even my cousin asked me to try and best him at a game of archery, and he has not asked that of me in ages. Whatever troubles everyone?”

Tavia hurried into the great hall, her face ashen, her brown eyes as round as the goblets sitting on the trestle tables. She wrung a wet cloth between her fingers and headed straight for his mother, who was getting ready to bolt from the table when James caught her wrist. “What is going on, Mother?”

“A lady is ill. Tavia was taking care of her. She must be worse. I will return soon.”


Tavia
serves as our healer. Why would you need to see to the matter?”  He frowned. “Which lady is ill?”

His mother looked from him to Niall. James grew increasingly suspicious. “Catriona has not arrived early and is ill?” he asked, his heart thundering.

“Nay, nay, my son. ‘Tis naught like that. I will be but a moment.”

“I will attend you.” James rose and motioned to his people. “Eat.”

“I will go with you,” Niall said, also rising.

James shook his head and strode out of the great hall with his mother and Niall, but the maid seemed even more distraught than before. Tavia wrung her hands, her eyes cast downward as if she were inspecting the rushes littering the floor.

“Out with it, Tavia,” James said, wondering why Niall wished to see the woman, but suspecting he knew all about her already. The latest of his string of conquests?

“I wished to speak to Her Ladyship alone first, my laird,” Tavia demurely said.

James stopped and faced the petite woman. “Why?”

“I…I said something I ought not, and she left.”

“What?” His mother’s word was stricken with concern.

“Who is the lady, where was she staying, and what is this all about?” James ground his teeth, his face hot with annoyance.

Niall cleared his throat like he always did when he’d been up to mischief. “Eanruig and I found her on the rocks after her ship sank. We saw the sun glinting off a brooch she was wearing and after nearly wrecking the boat on the rocks, we managed to pull her from the sea, slightly battered.”

James stared at him in disbelief. Normally it was his good fortune his clansmen always kept him informed no matter how trivial the concern. So what was the problem now?  “Why did you not already say so?  I asked if there were any survivors.”

“Nay, you asked if there were any men who survived,” Niall corrected him, but his tone was conciliatory.

James raised his brows. “Man or woman, I would not think I would have to be so explicit. Why did no one think to mention this to me?  Was the lass the only one who survived?”

Niall nodded. “She was thrown upon the rocks in a bad way. When Eanruig and I reached her, she was unconscious. She is staying in the chamber next to yours where Catriona was to reside.”

In utter disbelief, James glanced at his mother, now seeing why she had been nervous when speaking of the chamber.

She shrugged a shoulder as if it mattered not. “Catriona delayed her journey for a fortnight.”

James clenched his teeth and controlled his language then stormed toward the chamber. “And what, pray tell, Tavia, did you say to upset the woman?”

“I called her a Dunbarton. She got out of bed, and when I tried to confine her, she fought me. I could not stop her and came to tell Lady Akira at once.”

James’s blood instantly boiled. “You gave Catriona’s chamber to a Dunbarton?” James asked his mother, unable to curb his angry tone of voice. “Our staunchest enemy?”

 

 

Chapter Three

 

Unable to find her own plaid brat in the guest chamber, Marsali dashed into the adjoining bedchamber. Grabbing a green and blue plaid from the foot of a massive bed dominating the room, she threw the wool over her shoulders. With naught to fasten it, she held tight to the cloth, hiding the thin chemise she wore beneath it. Would be unseemly to dash through the unfamiliar castle barely dressed, yet her only concern should be to escape from the enemy’s midst.

Was she a Dunbarton?

She couldn’t remember, only the name seemed too familiar, and she feared she was. Not that it was a bad thing, only that these clansmen thought so.

The men constantly squabbling over their borders was not her fault. If she were King Alexander’s queen, she would rule there would no longer be any fighting amongst the clans. Although he reigned only over the land between Forth and Spey while the land south of Forth was entrusted to his younger brother David—so James did not come under either’s rule. Not even King Alexander could stop the continuous bickering between the clans in his dominion nor could the clan chiefs elsewhere. Which brought to mind a stranger question. Why did she know her king’s and his brother’s name and not her own?

BOOK: The Accidental Highland Hero
3.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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