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Highland Conquest by Alyson McLayne (3)

Three

Lachlan squeezed under the MacPhersons’ curtain wall through the ditch he and his men had spent the last fifteen minutes quietly digging out. His heart beat steadily in his ears like a drum that marched him into battle. One of his warriors crawled beside him, their shoulders rubbing, their breath loud in the confined space of the tunnel.

No sounds of battle had erupted yet, so he assumed the other forces—one at the gate and two over the walls on opposite sides—hadn’t been spotted. Or if they had, no one had been able to give the alarm. The plan had been to proceed with stealth for as long as possible, converging on the keep in the center of the bailey and incapacitating as many MacPhersons as they could before the real fighting erupted.

After five years, Lachlan was finally on his way to kill the man who’d murdered his brother and tried to murder him—putting the lives of several hundred men at risk—yet all he could think about was the lad with the violet eyes and soft, amber-colored hair he’d left tied up back in the cave.

Something niggled at him, and he couldn’t figure out what. The lad had somehow gotten under his skin. But how? And why?

Arriving on the other side of the ditch, he raised his head from the hole to see several of his men crouched in the shadows—along with an unconscious MacPherson who’d been bound and gagged. The moon was covered with clouds, and the night was lit with only a few torches. He could hear men on the stone walkway above.

The MacKay warrior beside him exited at the same time he did, and they crawled silently to the shadows.

Once there, Lachlan scanned the wall and saw three men on top. They could shoot them with arrows, but that might kill them, and what if one of them was the lad’s family? Or if the men cried out when they fell and alerted Machar Murray? No, the MacKays needed to go up and bring the men down.

Quietly.

A hay wagon missing a wheel leaned against the stone wall, a rope pooled on the ground beside it. From Lachlan’s calculations, ’twas the same place the lad had crawled over earlier in his bid for freedom. Someone must have either pulled the rope back down from below or kicked it over the top from above.

He signaled Hamish, his second-in-command, to meet him at the cart, then he darted between the shadows and crawled up the hay bales. Three men stood talking and laughing on the curtain wall while another sat propped against the crumbling battlements. Only one of the watch occasionally glanced over the trees and scrubby field below, but he never looked down to where the remainder of Lachlan’s force crouched in the shadows.

Crawling back down, Lachlan met up with Hamish, who waited for him beneath the wagon.

“There’s another guard on top. I’ll need three men,” Lachlan whispered.

“You’ll want a distraction, then?”

“Aye. A quiet one.”

Hamish rubbed his hands together and smiled. “’Tis time for a wee song.” He returned to the other warriors, three of whom joined Lachlan at the wagon, before he disappeared from sight. The men quietly helped Lachlan pile up more hay bales as they waited, high enough so they could jump to the top of the wall together.

From the opposite direction along the walkway came the sound of a bawdy tune, softly sung, the singer a wee bit worse for drink. Lachlan shared a quick smile with his men.

When the guards looked away from them to see who was singing, Lachlan quietly sprang forward, his men beside him. They’d had their knives secured in their mouths during the climb to keep their hands free—but not longer. The farthest Macpherson was Lachlan’s target—a big man with a bushy beard and a hearty laugh. For the first time, he was glad his options were limited—just in case the lad knew this man.

Lachlan dragged him down, one hand over his mouth, the other holding a knife against his throat. “Not a sound, or I swear I’ll cut through your neck to your spine. Do you understand?” The man barely nodded, just enough so Lachlan knew he agreed. “I’m Lachlan MacKay. I’ve no quarrel with the MacPhersons unless they get between me and Machar Murray. When he’s dead, you can go home to your family and help choose a better leader for your clan. One who willna hurt a lad for stealing bread to feed his sister.”

The man relaxed, and Lachlan easily gagged and bound him with the other men who had capitulated. “Someone will come back for you when we’re done.”

After slipping back down the wall, they spread out. The group made their way toward the castle’s interior, incapacitating several more MacPhersons along the way. He’d been hoping to get to the keep before sounds of their invasion erupted, but they were just coming up on the stable when shouts of alarm and clashing swords broke through the quiet night.

Lachlan cursed. “Pick up the pace,” he ordered.

They moved quickly through the stables, opening up the horse stalls just in case a fire erupted. ’Twas something Gregor, who had a love of horses, had taught Lachlan and his foster brothers long ago.

In a back room, they found the stable master snoring noisily in his bed. He woke with a start as he was hauled from his covers wearing only his linen shift. Two frightened groomsmen crouched in an empty pen, and the MacKays dragged all three outside before tying them to the wooden corral post.

Lachlan raised his voice to be heard above the growing din. “I’m Lachlan MacKay, laird of Clan MacKay. If you see any of your people, warrior or not, spread the word that we do not want them harmed. We’re here for Machar Murray only. If they lay down their arms, they willna be hurt.”

The stable master stretched out his fingers to Lachlan. “I’m Osgar, the stable master. Please, doona let them burn the keep. There’s a woman and a young lad in there who need help. They may be in the dungeon.”

“You speak of Ian?”

“Aye, and Amber. The laird may have her in his bedchamber. She couldnae hold her tongue and made him verra angry.”

“Ian is safe. He made it o’er the wall earlier. I promise to look for the woman. Where is the laird’s bedchamber?”

“On the third floor facing west toward the mountains.”

Lachlan gripped the man’s hand. “I’ll do what I can.”

They took off at a steady run toward the keep, which loomed four stories high in the distance. Clearing the area as best they could from the south end of the bailey, they were more focused now on getting to the battle and trapping Machar Murray within the keep. Still, it slowed things down when they had to fight without seriously injuring anyone. But the lad had been right. The MacPhersons laid down their arms once it became clear the attack was on their laird, not the clan in general.

In the bailey, groups of men fought in tight clusters, while many others kneeled in submission. Torches had been lit, and long shadows danced over the stone walls of the kitchens and barracks and stretched across the open, grassy area.

Lachlan saw an old man holding a ring of keys hobble up the stairs to the front entrance of the keep. The steward, most likely. What had Ian called him?

“Niall MacPherson! Hold right there!” Lachlan shouted.

The steward stopped and looked around. He met Lachlan’s gaze as Lachlan marched toward him, ready to do damage, his sword clenched tight in his fist. The old man jumped with alarm and hurried through the door, which banged shut behind him.

“I want a perimeter around the keep,” Lachlan yelled to Hamish as he ran to catch up to Niall, taking the stairs two at a time.

“Lachlan!”

He turned to see his foster brother racing toward him, and though he chafed to get inside, he waited at the door, glad to see Callum was unhurt.

“The west side is taken,” Callum said, gripping Lachlan’s arm in greeting. “We had little resistance and none were wounded. The men hold the quadrant.”

“Aye, ’twas the same from the south. The steward just ran in here. He’ll have information on Murray. The laird is probably inside.”

“Do not rush in. Wait while I arrange for more men. We need to be cautious—sweep through the keep, so we doona miss anything.”

“He’s getting away!”

“Maybe, but you canna go alone. ’Tis too dangerous. And he could easily slip past you.”

Lachlan gritted his teeth, trying to rein in his temper even though he knew Callum was right. He was still too damn hot and making mistakes. Emotion had no place on the battlefield. “Get on, then, you old woman. I promise to wait.”

Callum dashed back down the stairs to the bailey and rounded up several warriors—a mix of MacKays and MacLeans. Once they were at his back, Lachlan yanked open the heavy, wooden door, surprised it hadn’t been barred from the inside. Men went in with their shields raised, followed by archers in case MacPherson archers had been set in place to repel an invasion from above—as Lachlan and Callum would have done.

They moved with care into a large hall, lit only by a dwindling fire in a hearth at the far end—and no guards. Stairs to the upper levels rose against the wall opposite the door. At the top, a balcony circled the hall, an ideal perch for archers, with murder holes cut into the stones that looked out onto the bailey—but it was also empty.

“We need candles,” Lachlan yelled. “I want every corner of the keep lit!”

Several men ran to build up the fire, while others brought candles and placed them in the sconces on the wall. Minutes later, the hall blazed with light. Clean rushes covered the floor, and four worn, but well-cared-for chairs surrounded the hearth.

It was obvious somebody still saw to the keep, even though no thought had gone into its defenses.

“Search behind the tables,” Lachlan said, pointing to the pile of tables and chairs that had been stacked in a corner.

“Clear,” one of his warriors said a moment later.

Lachlan turned to Hamish, who stood beside him. “Hold this room. No one goes in or out without permission. I want two men at the door, three on the balcony, and two more at the top of the stairs while we search this level. Also, send men to search the storerooms below, and keep an eye out for a dungeon of some kind. There may be a woman or other prisoners inside. And reinforce our perimeter. We’ll not be losing Murray again!”

“Aye, Laird,” Hamish said, then assigned the men their positions and headed outside. Darach, Callum, and several others moved away from the hearth to the dark hallway on the opposite end of the great room. A closed door was set in the corner on the same wall as the stairs—the steward’s or housekeeper’s room, most likely.

Lachlan pointed to two of his men. “Guard the passageway while we check the room.”

The men did as asked, and Callum tried the door. “’Tis barred from the inside.”

Lachlan leaned close to the wood. He rapped it with his knuckles. “Niall MacPherson. ’Tis Lachlan MacKay, laird of Clan MacKay. We mean the MacPhersons no harm. Our fight is with Laird Machar Murray. I have a young lad back at my camp by the name of Ian who asked me to see to your well-being.”

He strained to hear a response over the sounds of the ongoing conflict outside. A thump sounded inside, followed by a scraping noise. Maybe a chair being dragged across the floor? “Ian is in the dungeon,” a frail voice finally said.

“Nay, he escaped. He said you helped him to get out. Please, Steward, we need your help to find Machar Murray without hurting any more MacPhersons.”

“The lad, what color is his hair? And his eyes?”

“His hair is the color of amber, and his eyes a most unusual blue.”

“Nay, not blue,” said Callum. “They’re almost purple. Like a violet.”

“Who’s that?” the voice shouted.

“I’m Callum MacLean, laird of Clan MacLean, raised by the great Gregor MacLeod, who has charged us with bringing peace to the Highlands. We mean no harm to any innocents.”

“Please, Niall,” Lachlan asked again. “Open the door.”

A moment passed. Lachlan let out a relieved sigh as the bar lifted and the door swung inward.

A stooped old man with tufts of curly gray hair on his head and a disheveled plaid stood before him, his cheeks damp from tears. “What took you so long, man? I’ve been writing to Gregor MacLeod for years.”

* * *

Amber gripped the old nag’s mane as the mare, who had resisted leaving the castle earlier, now ran full tilt toward it despite the clangs, crashes, and shouts of warfare coming from inside. Most likely the determined pony was deaf and unaware of the danger it ran toward, thinking only to get a meal and warm stall to sleep in.

The portcullis was up and the gates wide open when she reached the curtain wall. Torches lit the night—she’d never seen so many in use before, not even when the old laird was alive. People hurried out of the entrance, mostly women and children.

None who might be Murray’s men, she realized.

Amber jumped down from her pony, trying not to put weight on her sore ankle, but she stumbled as she landed. Pain shot through her foot and stole her breath. She leaned against the stone wall for just a moment, trying to will away the tenderness and work up the courage to take another step.

A lad with hair as black as night ran past her. “Ian!” She just managed to snag his plaid before he was out of reach. “You’re free! Are you all right, lad?”

He spun around, his face dirty and his eyes wide with fright. His expression brightened when he recognized her, and he wrapped skinny arms around her. She squeezed back just as tight.

“Amber, I thought for sure you were dead. Laird Murray was so angry when you called him a thieving toad. They threw me in the dungeon, but then the fighting broke out. Men I didn’t recognize let me out.”

“’Tis the MacKays and the MacLeans. They’re after Machar Murray and his dogs. If they catch him, he’ll be hanged. He killed Laird MacKay’s brother.”

“Verily?”

“Aye. Ian, it’s over. We can take back the castle and the clan. Live without fear that we’ll be dragged from our beds at night. You and Breanna willna have to go hungry anymore. You can come and live with me, if you like, or we’ll find a place for both of you at the castle.”

He hugged her tight again, his body trembling. “Does that mean we’ll have a new laird? One who’ll take care of the clan?”

Amber’s breath stopped as she thought about Lachlan. “I hope so.”

She heard a scream of pain from inside the castle and pushed Ian away. “Run as fast as you can to my cottage and bring back my satchel—the one with my bandages and herbs in it. I’ll need it to help the wounded.”

“What about Breanna?”

“She’s safe. Doona worry about your sister. I stashed her with Nell before I came to speak for you at the castle earlier. Go now—and be careful!”

Ian ran down the path and disappeared into the night.

Pulling her plaid up over her butchered hair, Amber stepped lightly onto her sore foot and limped past the curtain wall. She’d gone barely ten paces and could see MacPherson men huddled together on the ground, when a young warrior in a MacKay plaid stepped in front of her. He held his sword loosely at his side, but she could tell he was alert.

“No one’s allowed in, lass.” His stance was firm but non-threatening.

“I’m a healer. I just want to tend the wounded—MacPhersons and MacKays. I doona support Machar Murray.”

“Aye, ’tis good to hear, but I have my orders.”

She stepped closer and pulled her cloak back while keeping the ends of her hair covered. His eyes widened, and she hoped it would be enough to sway him. “But Lachlan—Laird MacKay—asked me to come. Callum too. Surely you wouldnae want anyone to die because I couldnae help them in time.”

He had to clear his throat before speaking. “Nay, lass. You canna enter. I’m sorry.”

She laid her hand on his arm. “Please. I’d be most grateful. Perhaps even enough for a kiss afterward.” Aye, she’d kiss him, covered in blood and worse, and smelling of death. She’d treated several serious injuries before and knew she wouldn’t look bonnie by the time she was done. The thought almost made her smile—if she weren’t talking about grievous injuries.

A slight tremor ran through his muscles, but still he didn’t move. Curse Lachlan MacKay and his finely trained men. She considered a physical assault, but even if she made it into the bailey, the other guards would soon take her down.

“Malcolm, let her pass. I’ll speak to her.”

“Aye, Hamish.”

The guard she’d been talking to stepped aside, and she recognized the grizzled warrior behind him from Lachlan’s camp—the one who’d told Lachlan that Adaira was in the tree. She quickly pulled up her plaid lest he recognize her too.

He was older than the rest, with hardened eyes and a lifetime of battle scars. Her feminine wiles wouldn’t work on him, she was sure.

“What’s your name, lass?”

“Amber MacPherson. I’m the clan healer. Please, I’ll help your men as well as mine if you let me in.”

“Aye, you will. This way.” He clamped his hand around her upper arm and led her toward the keep. She had to practically run to keep up, hopping a wee bit to lessen the weight on her foot.

“You’re hurt?” he asked, coming to an abrupt halt.

“Just a sprain. I’ll be all right.”

He kneeled in front of her and lifted her injured foot. “May I?”

“Um…aye.”

She couldn’t help being suspicious, and frowned as she watched him unlace her shoe then squeeze and roll her ankle. She bit her lip to stop from crying out.

“’Tis sprained,” he said.

Annoyance made her tart. “Really? I had no idea.”

His lips quirked, then he rummaged in his sporran and brought out a length of narrow linen. Before she could protest, he’d wrapped her ankle up tight and laced her shoe.

He stood and pulled her along again. She didn’t hobble quite so badly this time—he’d done a good job. Almost as good as she would have done.

“We’ll bring you a crutch too,” he said.

“Thank you, but I need supplies—blankets, bandages, old sheets we can cut into strips, needle and thread and some sharp knives. Sticks I can use to set bones if I have to. And I’ll need help. Can you assign me some men?”

“Doona worry, lass. There aren’t as many wounded as you’re imagining, and none dead that I know of. The battle’s winding down as we speak. ’Tis not that bad.”

“By the looks of you, Hamish, you’ve seen many battles. Most hard won, I’m sure. What you consider bad isn’t necessarily what I consider bad, so just bring me the supplies and set me up in the great hall to care for them.”

He grunted, and she thought she detected a wee smile. “Anything else you want while I’m at it?”

“Aye, you need to let in a lad named Ian when he comes. I sent him for my satchel. I have herbs in there that can help with the healing.”

He looked sideways at her, his eyes sweeping over her from head to toe. “My mother was a healer. She always gave me foxglove when I had a toothache. She’d mash up the petals in my tea.”

Amber snorted. “She didn’t love you much, then, did she?”

“And why is that?”

“Because you’d be verra sick, possibly dead, if she gave you that.”

He nodded, and this time his smile was a wee bit wicked. “’Tis true. Have you actually met Laird MacKay and Laird MacLean then?”

She hesitated for just a second. “Of course.”

“Ah, ’tis a story there, I can tell. One I canna wait to hear. Maybe I’ll even put it into song.”

He hummed a few bars, and she knew he was laughing at her. She’d just opened her mouth to rebuke him when she noticed the area they were walking past was not lit up like the rest of the bailey.

“Surely now’s not the time to save on torches,” she said.

He looked at her quizzically, then his eyes opened wide, and he shoved her to the ground behind a crate full of firewood. An arrow flew past her, then a second arrow embedded in Hamish’s forearm, and his sword went flying. He darted behind another crate.

“Stay down, lass!” he yelled just as two more arrows crashed into the crate she hid behind, threatening to topple it over.

“MacKays! MacLeans!” Hamish roared, then let out a sharp whistle. “Archer at the barracks! Hold the perimeter! Hold the perimeter!” He whistled again.

Another arrow hit her crate and broke it apart, sending the firewood down on top of her. She wrapped her arms around her head and curled into a ball, feeling the thud of three more impacts. One arrow poked through just a hand’s span from her face, the head sharp and shiny, and sent panic racing through her.

This was how her father had died. An arrow to the face during a “hunting” accident a week before Laird MacPherson died in his sleep—and Machar Murray took over the clan.

She would not die in the same manner.

She would run.

* * *

Lachlan closed his eyes and inhaled slowly through his nose, trying to control the mix of anguish and frustration that pushed up from his gut and threatened to send him into a killing rage. He stood with Callum, the steward Niall, and two other warriors in the lit passageway by the laird’s bedchamber.

’Twas the last room in the castle to be searched.

He had little hope Machar Murray was inside. Why would he be? The door was locked from the outside; the person on the other side of this door was a prisoner. The woman the stable master mentioned to him earlier, most likely. Probably crouched behind the bed and frightened to come out.

Amber, he’d called her. Another victim of Murray’s greed and depravity.

The battle outside had quieted, the MacPhersons defeated other than a few pockets of resistance—and no sign of Murray or his three friends, commonly referred to as “the laird’s dogs.”

To have come this far and lose the blackheart after all these years of searching, maybe never to be found again—it sat like a burning, lead ball in his stomach. He clenched his jaw so tight he feared it might break, yearning to batter the door down with his bare hands.

Instead, he stood by as Niall fumbled his key ring with shaky fingers, peering at each key in turn with squinting eyes, before finally trying to push one in the hole.

Callum laid a hand on Niall’s shoulder and said, “Thank you. You’ve done enough. If the laird is trapped inside, he may be dangerous. We’ll let you know when you can enter.”

He nodded and stepped back. Callum easily turned the key and pushed the door open.

No sound came from inside the darkened bedchamber.

Still, they moved forward cautiously, weapons raised, eyes sharp. The fire had burned down to embers. They quickly put more wood in the hearth and lit the candles that were on either side of the bed and resting in sconces on the walls. A chair covered in beautiful blue silk with a matching footstool sat in front of the fire, and a shiny silver pitcher with a basin sat beside the bed. On the wall hung a remarkable painting of a laird receiving fealty from his clan.

’Twas obviously the richest room in the keep, and one Machar Murray kept for himself.

Lachlan moved toward the bed, high and well sprung with a draped canopy over the top. The quilt matched the chair other than a pool of orange-gold silk in a pile on top. No, not silk. He reached down and picked up a handful of the long, curling strands that lay on the bed.

Hair.

An astonishing color that gleamed in the firelight, the strands were as long as his arm and twisted in big, springy curls. And the feel. He couldn’t get over how soft it was.

A sense memory came to him. The same silky softness running through his fingers, the same luminescent color, but not in long ropes like this. No, the other had been shorter, jaggedly cut, on a dirty face with startling violet eyes. He found himself holding his breath as his brain sought to make the connection. Then it hit him.

The lad.

He spotted a woman’s dress on the floor and picked it up in his other hand.

“Christ Almighty.”

Callum glanced over from where he’d been peering out the window into the black night. “What is it?”

Lachlan showed him the handful of hair, a fine tremor running beneath his skin, his heart feeling like it might burst from his chest.

Callum frowned as he came over, looking at the fiery tresses. “The lad?”

“Aye, the ‘lad.’”

The one he couldn’t stop thinking about, with the bonnie face and soft body despite how wee he was. The lad who’d been so yielding beneath him, pliant—until he’d bitten Lachlan’s hand and smashed their foreheads together.

The lad whose arse had fit so snugly between his thighs on his horse and in his palm as they’d crawled across the field.

He looked at his palm. Felt his hand tingle, and an answering tingle in his groin that turned into a surge.

She’d felt soft. She’d bitten his hand and smashed their foreheads together. She’d fit snugly between his thighs, her arse pressed up against him, his arms around her waist.

“Nay.” Lachlan raised the hair to his face. Smelled it…so sweet, like lavender. “The lass.”

He pinned his gaze on Niall, who hovered in the door, wringing his hands. “’Tis Amber. You cut her hair, dressed her like a boy. Did you get her out in time?”

By the way his face darkened, Lachlan knew Niall understood his meaning—did Amber escape before Murray raped her?

“Barely. If you hadn’t come when you did, he would have gone after her. He’s…obsessed. Amber held him off for a long time. She pretended to be a witch, as did her grandmother before her. Laird Murray is superstitious.”

“I doona understand. The lass is the lad’s sister?” Callum asked.

“Nay. The lad, with the bonnie face and bright blue eyes, is the lass.”

Callum’s brow lifted as understanding struck. “Of course. How could we not have seen it? That face, those eyes. And they’re more purple than blue.”

“Violet,” Niall said. “Same as her grandmother’s in her day.” He sounded wistful.

“Aye, violet,” Callum said as Lachlan nodded his agreement.

He glanced around the room, looking for signs of another exit. “How’d you get her out?”

Niall dropped his gaze to his key ring, fiddled with it. “Och, surely I doona understand what you mean?”

Callum strode toward a sturdy wooden chest with a shell inlay that sat against the wall by the inner corner. “’Twould be here, most likely.”

“Aye. It would bring her out right by the hay wagon.” Lachlan had just taken a step toward the chest when he heard a sharp whistle followed by, “Archer at the barracks! Hold the perimeter! Hold the perimeter!”

His heart raced again as hope filled his breast. Who else would be fighting them now? Not the MacPhersons. And a bow was Machar Murray’s preferred weapon. “’Tis him!” he said, and strode purposefully to the door.

Callum followed, shouting orders to the men. “Find the passageway and block it off at both ends. Then search for others.”

Lachlan ran along the corridor and down both flights of stairs. He was almost in the great room when he realized he still carried Amber’s hair clenched in one fist, and her dress in the other. He hesitated. He should drop the hair, let it disappear amongst the rushes, but his hand closed tighter, everything within him rejecting the idea. Instead, he opened his sporran and stuffed the hair inside.

As he exited the keep and started down the stairs to the bailey, he held on to the dress too. He’d give it to one of his men to return to Amber at the waterfall. He wanted her to know he knew she was a woman. That he saw her.

He was almost at the bottom when he glanced up and stopped short.

Aye, he saw her all right. Running across the bailey, her plaid hiked up to her knees, her hood back, looking like the devil was after her when she should be tied up and under guard at his camp.

How in the name of all that was holy had she escaped?

A few weapons lay on the ground and spots of blood stained the grass, but considering how crowded the bailey had been not long ago, now it was surprisingly clear. The MacPherson prisoners were tied up together in the barracks, and his men were all either guarding them or on patrol around the castle and keep. Whoever had been in the bailey had most likely run to Hamish’s aid—as Lachlan should be doing now.

Instead, he stepped off the last stair and moved to intercept Amber. No one chased her, so he assumed she’d been allowed in, and mindless panic showed on her cleaned-up face. Maybe the archer had frightened her?

She looked up at the last minute and barely avoided barreling into him. He found himself disappointed, and realized he wanted to feel her against him again, especially now that he knew she was a woman—possibly the loveliest he’d ever seen, even with wood chips in her hair and the cut strands sticking out all over the place.

Her cheeks were flushed and her violet eyes bright, her lips full and rosy. She panted through her mouth as she caught her breath, and he could see a sliver of pink tongue between her teeth. He wanted to move closer and capture it with his own.

His eyes dropped lower to her heaving chest, and the blood drummed hard in his temples. God’s truth, she wasn’t built like a boy in the slightest. Her plaid had fallen back and her breasts pressed against the damp white linen shirt. They were high and lush with pebbled nipples he wanted to roll between his fingers. Better yet, on his tongue.

No wonder she felt soft. He couldn’t believe he’d been fooled.

She pulled the plaid back up around her shoulders, and when he raised his head to meet her gaze she turned even pinker from embarrassment. Still, she lifted her chin just a notch and crossed her arms over her chest.

“Laird,” she said, sounding prim and condemning all at once.

“Lass,” he responded, irritated by her frigid tone. She was a fighter and her spirit was hotter than Hades. He’d seen it. Felt it.

They continued to stare at each other, neither willing to give quarter. He heard Callum snort with amusement from somewhere behind him, and his annoyance heightened.

Then he remembered her dress—and her cut hair tucked into his sporran. Raising a sardonic brow, he fished out her shorn locks and let them drift away in the wind before holding out her dress. “Your arisaid.”

Her eyes widened slightly before she took it. After a moment, she reached in her pocket and held something out to him. “Your brush.”

When he saw the brush from his pack, the dam broke. He scowled at her. “You went through my bloody things, you lied, you stole from me, God knows what you did to poor Earc.”

She scowled right back and placed her hands on her hips. “I didn’t steal anything from you. Adaira gave it to me after she went through your things, and I’m giving it back, you idiotic, interfering—”

“I’m interfering? You almost brought all of Machar Murray’s forces down on us and ruined a finely planned attack. And you better not have hurt my cousin, or so help me—”

“I would ne’er hurt your cousin, although how you could just leave her there barely protected is beyond me. Your guard was too lost staring at my bosom to notice anything was wrong, and Adaira was only too happy to cut through my bonds. What if I’d been a threat?”

“You are a threat! You almost broke my nose and paralyzed my arm.”

“You pulled me from my horse and choked me. Then you tied my hands and dragged me through the rocks and bush like a bag of oats. You enjoyed it!”

“Nay, I was too worried I’d get an arrow in my back because you couldnae stop waving your arse in the air!”

“I had a gag in my mouth. I could hardly tell you I’d ne’er crawled like that before, now could I?”

“You wouldnae have told me anyway. You’re an imposter and a trickster.”

“You’re the one who invaded our castle. Threatened my clan.”

“Liberated your clan.”

“Took us over. Which means you are now responsible for us.”

“What?”

“You chased away our old laird, so now you have to be our new one.”

“Your old laird threw a lad in the dungeon for stealing bread and locked you in his bedchamber to use for carnal pleasure.”

“I didn’t say he was a good laird, but he killed all of the men who could have replaced him, so now Clan MacPherson belongs to you. We belong to you. If you refuse to help us, we’ll be scooped up by the next monster who comes along. What would Gregor MacLeod say if he knew you planned to leave?”

“He’d say: Run, Lachlan! Fast as you can! The clan’s all right, but the lass is as daft as a bat!”

“We need help!”

“Then go petition a laird for protection.”

“I’m petitioning you.”

“Nay, you’re not. Petitioning implies asking. You’re telling!”

She stamped her foot in frustration, then almost crumpled to the ground as she cried out in pain. Lachlan darted forward and caught her before she fell.

“’Tis nothing. A sprain,” she said, trying to push out of his arms. The feel of them around her brought back the secure feeling she had when she’d ridden with him on his horse to the waterfall. A feeling she now knew was false. He had no intention of making sure she and the rest of the MacPhersons were safe.

“How did you manage to run across the bailey like hellhounds were nipping at your heels with a sprained ankle?”

“I doona know. I was scared. Arrows were flying past my head. Are you going to question everything I do?”

“Aye, most likely.”

“Well, if you’re not staying, I doona have to answer. You’re not my laird.”

He grunted, swept her into his arms, and sat her on the steps leading up to the keep. “Stay off it until it heals.”

“I doona have to do what you say, either.”

“Well, I doona have to be a bloody healer to know that if it hurts, you should stay off it.”

She was about to say she was a healer and could make her own assessment, when a horse with a big, redheaded rider galloped into the bailey. The rider carried a child in his arms, her head and arm red with blood.

As he drew closer she recognized Earc, Adaira’s minder, and her breath stopped. Dear God. No!

“Adaira!” Lachlan yelled, disbelief and horror in his voice. He ran toward Earc. “What happened?” Amber hurried after him.

“Men came to the waterfall. Three of them.” Earc slowed and handed Adaira down to Lachlan. “I fought them off, but then I slipped on the rocks and fell into the river. I saw Adaira charge them with a knife as I was swept downstream. I got to her as soon as I could—she’d been stabbed and left for dead.”

Lachlan fell to his knees, Adaira in his arms. “Oh, Christ, no! Not Adaira!”

Amber crouched beside him and felt for the girl’s pulse, faint but still there. “Take her into the keep. We’ll set up the wounded in the great hall.”

“We need a healer! I know you have a good one. Get her now!”

“I am the healer, Lachlan MacKay. And I am good. Now take her into the keep and lay her on one of the tables. I promise to heal her as long as you promise to lead my clan until we can safely lead ourselves.”

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