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Authors: Karen Marie Moning

To Tame a Highland Warrior (19 page)

BOOK: To Tame a Highland Warrior
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It was nearly dawn when Grimm returned to the Black Boot. Climbing the stairs wearily, he topped the last step and froze as an unexpected sound reached his ears. He peered down the hallway, eyeing the doors one by one.

He heard the sound again—a whimper, followed by a deeper, husky groan.

Jillian? With Quinn?

He moved swiftly and silently down the corridor, pausing outside Quinn’s room. He listened intently and heard it a third time—a husky sigh and a gasp of indrawn air—and each sound ripped through his gut like a double-edged blade. Rage washed over him and everything black he’d ever tried to suppress quickened within. He felt himself slipping over treacherous terrain into the fury he’d first felt fifteen years ago, standing above Tuluth. Something more powerful than any single man could be had taken shape within his veins, endowing him with unspeakable strength and unthinkable capacity for bloodshed—an ancient Viking monster with cold eyes.

Grimm laid his forehead against the cool wood of Quinn’s door and breathed in carefully measured gasps as he struggled to subdue his violent reaction. His breathing regulated slowly—sounding nothing like the uncontrolled noises coming from the other side of the door. Christ—he’d encouraged her to marry Quinn, not to go to bed with him!

A feral growl escaped his lips.

Despite his best intentions, his hand found the knob and he turned it, only to meet the defiance of a lock. For a moment he was immobilized, stunned by the barrier. A barrier between him and Jillian—a lock that told him she had chosen. Maybe he had pushed her, but she might have taken a bit more time choosing! A year or two—perhaps the rest of her life.

Aye, she had clearly made her choice—so what right did he have to even consider shattering the door into tiny slivers of wood and selecting the deadliest shard to drive through his best friend’s heart? What right had he to do anything but turn away and make his path back down the dark corridor to his own personal hell where the devil surely awaited him with an entirely new boulder to wrestle to the top of the hill: the obdurate stone of regret.

The internal debate raged a tense moment, ending only when the beast within him reared its head, extended its claws, and shattered Quinn’s door.

Grimm’s breath rasped in labored pants. He crouched in the doorway and peered into the dimly lit room, wondering why no one had leapt, startled, from the bed.

“Grimm …” The word pierced the gloom weakly.

Bewildered, Grimm slipped into the room and moved quickly to the low bed. Quinn was tangled in sodden sheets, curled into a ball—alone. Vomit stained the scuffed planks of the floor. A water tin had been crushed and abandoned, a ceramic pitcher was broken beside it, and the window stood open to the chill night air.

Suddenly Quinn thrashed violently and heaved up from the bed, doubling over. Grimm rushed to catch him before
he plunged to the floor. Holding his friend in his arms, he gaped uncomprehendingly until he saw a thin foam of spittle on Quinn’s lips.

“P-p-poi-son.” Quinn gasped. “H-help … me.”

“No!” Grimm breathed. “Son of a bitch!” he cursed, cradling Quinn’s head as he bellowed for help.

C
HAPTER
13

“W
HO WOULD POISON
Q
UINN
?” H
ATCHARD PUZZLED
. “N
O
one dislikes Quinn. Quinn is the quintessential laird and gentleman.”

Grimm grimaced.

“Will he be all right?” Kaley asked, wringing her hands.

“What’s going on?” A sleepy-eyed Jillian stood in the doorway. “Goodness,” she exclaimed, eyeing the jagged splinters of the door. “What happened in here?”

“How do you feel, lass? Are you well? Does your stomach hurt? Do you have a fever?” Kaley’s hands were suddenly everywhere, poking at her brow, prodding her belly, smoothing her hair.

Jillian blinked. “Kaley, I’m fine. Would you stop poking at me? I heard the commotion and it frightened me, that’s all.” When Quinn moaned, Jillian gasped. “What’s wrong with Quinn?” Belatedly she noted the disarray of the room and the stench of illness that clung to the linens and drapes.

“Fetch a physician, Hatchard,” Grimm said.

“The barber is closer,” Hatchard suggested.

“No barber,” Grimm snapped. He turned to Jillian. “Are you all right, lass?” When she nodded, he expelled a relieved breath. “Find Ramsay,” he instructed Kaley ominously.

Kaley’s eyes widened in comprehension, and she flew from the room.

“What happened?” Jillian asked blankly.

Grimm laid a damp cloth on Quinn’s head. “I suspect it’s poison.” He didn’t tell her he was certain; the recent contents of Quinn’s stomach pervaded the air, and to a Berserker the stench of poison was obvious. “I think he’ll be all right. If it’s what I think it is, he would be dead by now had the dose been strong enough. It must have been diluted somehow.”

“Who would poison Quinn? Everybody likes Quinn.” She unwittingly echoed Hatchard’s words.

“I know, lass. Everyone keeps telling me that,” Grimm said drolly.

“Ramsay is ill!” Kaley’s words echoed down the corridor. “Someone come help me! I can’t hold him down!”

Grimm looked toward the hall, then back at Quinn, clearly torn. “Go to Kaley, lass. I can’t leave him,” he said through his teeth. Some might consider him paranoid, but if his suspicions were correct, it was supposed to have been him lying in a pile of his own vomit, dead.

An ashen-faced Jillian complied quickly.

Biting back a curse, Grimm daubed at Quinn’s forehead and sat back to wait for the physician.

The physician arrived, carrying two large satchels and dashing rain from the thinning web of hair that crowned his
pate. After questioning nearly everyone in the inn, he conceded to inspect the patients. Moving with surprising grace for such a rotund man, he paced to and fro, scribbling notes in a tiny book. After peering into their eyes, inspecting their tongues, and prodding their distended abdomens, he retreated to the pages of his tiny booklet.

“Give them barley water stewed with figs, honey, and licorice,” he instructed after several moments of flipping pages in thoughtful silence. “Nothing else, you understand, for it won’t be digested. The stomach is a cauldron in which food is simmered. While their humors are out of balance, nothing can be cooked, and anything with substance will come back up,” the physician informed them. “Liquids only.”

“Will they be all right?” Jillian asked worriedly. They’d moved the two men into a clean room adjoining Kaley’s for easier tending.

The physician frowned, causing lines to fold his double chin as lugubriously as they creased his forehead. “I think they’re out of danger. Neither of them appears to have consumed enough to kill him, but I suspect they’ll be weak for some time. Lest they try to rise, you’ll want to dilute this with water—it’s mandrake.” He proffered a small pouch. “Soak cloths in it and place them over their faces.” The physician struck a lecturing pose, tapping his quill against his booklet. “You must be certain to cover both their nostrils and mouths completely for several minutes. As they inhale, the vapors will penetrate the body and keep them asleep. The spirits recover faster if the humors rest undisturbed. You see, there are four humors and three spirits … ah, but forgive me, I’m quite certain you don’t wish to hear all of that. Only one who studies with the zeal of a
physician might find such facts fascinating.” He snapped his booklet closed. “Do as I have instructed and they shall make a full recovery.”

“No bleeding?” Hatchard blinked.

The physician snorted. “Fetch a barber if you have an enemy you wish to murder. Fetch a physician if you have an ill patient you wish to revive.”

Grimm nodded vehement agreement and rose to escort the physician out.

“Oh, Quinn,” Jillian said, and sighed, placing a hand on his clammy forehead. She fussed at his woolens, tucking them snugly around his fevered body.

Standing behind Jillian on one side of Quinn’s bed, Kaley beamed at Hatchard, who was perched across the room, applying cool cloths to Ramsay’s brow.
She will choose Quinn, didn’t I tell you?
she mouthed silently.

Hatchard merely lifted a brow and rolled his eyes.

When Grimm checked on the men the following morning, their condition had improved; however, they were still sedated, and not in any condition to travel.

Kaley insisted on acquiring the wares the men had originally come for, so Grimm reluctantly agreed to escort Jillian to the fair. Once there, he rushed her through the stalls at a breakneck pace, despite her protests. When a blanket of fog rolled down from the mountains and sheathed Durrkesh in the afternoon, a relieved Grimm informed Jillian it was time to return to the inn.

Fog always made Grimm uneasy, which proved inconvenient, as Scotland was such foggy terrain. This wasn’t a normal fog, however; it was a thick, wet cape of dense white clouds that lingered on the ground and swirled
around their feet as they walked. By the time they left the market, he could scarcely see Jillian’s face a few feet from him.

“I love this!” Jillian exclaimed, slicing her arms through the tendrils of mist, scattering them with her movement. “Fog has always seemed so romantic to me.”

“Life has always seemed romantic to you, lass. You used to think Bertie down at the stables spelling your name in horse manure was romantic,” he reminded dryly.

“I still do,” she said indignantly. “He learned his letters for the express purpose of writing my name. I think that’s very romantic.” Her brow furrowed as she peered through the soupy mist.

“Obviously you’ve never had to fight a battle in this crap,” he said irritably. Fog reminded him of Tuluth and irrevocable choices. “It’s damned hard to kill a man when you can’t see where you’re slicing with your sword.”

Jillian stopped abruptly. “Our lives are vastly different, aren’t they?” she asked, suddenly sober. “You’ve killed many men, haven’t you, Grimm Roderick?”

“You should know,” he replied tersely. “You watched me do it.”

Jillian nibbled her lip and studied him. “The McKane would have killed my family that day, Grimm. You protected us. If a man must kill to protect his clan, there is no sin in that.”

Would that he could absolve himself with such generosity, he thought. She still had no idea that the McKane’s attack had not been directed at her family. They’d come to Caithness that foggy day long ago only because they’d heard a Berserker might be in residence. She hadn’t known that then, and apparently Gibraltar St. Clair had never revealed his secret.

“Why did you leave that night, Grimm?” Jillian asked carefully.

“I left because it was time,” he said roughly, shoving a hand through his hair. “I’d learned all your father could teach me, and it was time to move on. There was nothing to hold me at Caithness any longer.”

Jillian sighed. “Well, you should know that none of us ever blamed you, despite the fact that we knew you blamed yourself. Even dear Edmund vowed until his last that you were the most noble warrior he’d ever met.” Jillian’s eyes misted. “We buried him under the apple tree, just as he’d asked,” she added, mostly to herself. “I go there when the heather is blooming. He loved white heather.”

BOOK: To Tame a Highland Warrior
11.12Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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