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The Scot's Bride by Paula Quinn (40)

Scottish Highlands
Early Spring 1712

A thin layer of mist from the Moray Firth drifted through the cold, still forest. A fine dew settled on the still, russet leaves of downy birch and ancient rowan and clung to the underbrush.

A lark soared above the canopy, but made no sound to disturb the serenity of silence around the man peering down the length of his arrow.

As still as the roebuck a few feet away, the only sign of the hunter’s presence was his breath against the morning air. His hooded plaid of dark and light green and brown blended in well with the forest. His bowstring made no sound as he pulled it back, the muscles in his arm bulging. His gaze was steady, his breath unchanged. It wasn’t until he thought about all the food the beast would provide did the buck lift its head.

It was too late. The arrow found its mark. The deer fell and the man finally moved.

The buck was large and would be heavy but the hunter’s shoulder was the only way to get it back.

He looked down at the fruit of his labor and was grateful for the deer’s sacrifice. During his station in the Colonies, an old Iroquois chief had taught him that every life had a purpose.

The buck’s purpose was to provide food—at least it was today. He often wondered what was his?

He bent his knees and with a solid grunt from his belly, he hefted the animal over his shoulder. He stood, steady on his hide-encased legs, and then took off running.

His boots crushed the leaf-carpeted ground as the sounds around him grew. Birds burst from the treetops at his disturbance, smaller animals scurrying out of his path.

He was in no hurry to get back to his life in Avoch, but the way he chose to live it required that he keep fit.

By the time he broke through the forest, his thighs burned and his breath came hard.

He ran past the harbor, giving no greeting to the men loading their fishing nets and no notice to the screaming gulls above. He didn’t slow, hoping to be gone before the rest of their families awoke.

His body nearly spent, he finally slowed his pace when he reached the sleepy village of Avoch. A cock crowed at the breaking dawn. He quickened his gait and pulled his hood farther over his head, hiding his face, lest he be recognized by anyone leaving his cottage to take his morning piss.

Just a little farther. He looked up at Avoch Castle perched at the top of the hill, its dark, jagged turrets piercing the gossamer mist that surrounded it. Built in stone nearly two centuries ago, the castle had many ghosts, but it was the last two to arrive who haunted him. Though it was in no state of disrepair, for he had made certain to fill every hole in every wall and maintain his privacy, the castle looked uncared for and deserted set against the bleak backdrop of a gray March sky. A shell, as lifeless as the man who lived in it.

Determined to his task, he kept moving and collided with a lad appearing out of the settling mist. The hunter’s solid form knocked the boy on his arse.

Watching the figure go down, he wondered if he should drop the buck and help. He maintained his position as the bucket the lad had been carrying in one hand hit the ground and rolled away. A younger lass, whose hand he held with the other, did the same.

The hunter’s dark eyes fell to her. She looked to be about six summers—the same age Annabelle would have been. Belle’s nose might have been as small as this one. He blinked and looked away.

“Look where ye’re goin!” the lad shouted at him. “Have ye no—”

His tirade came to an abrupt halt when a ray of light from the rising sun broke through the thick clouds and settled on the hunter’s face beneath his hood.

The lass gasped while the lad scrambled to his feet on shaky legs.

“Laird MacKenzie! Fergive me! I didna see ye, though I’ll admit ye’re difficult to miss.” The lad looked to be roughly nine, mayhap ten, and seemed to be bent on getting his master to smile at him. “I’m William. I was just fetchin’ water fer—”

Lachlan MacKenzie, Dragon Laird of the Black Isle, thought about removing his hood. The full sight of his scarred face usually silenced flapping tongues, but he’d already frightened the girl.

With a will of their own, his eyes fell to her again. She was staring up at him, her round face tilted—

“That’s Lily.” The lad moved toward her and bumped his elbow into her arm. “Lily, quit starin’.”

Lachlan stepped around them and continued on his way.

“D’ye need help with that buck? What are ye goin’ to do with all that meat?”

Lachlan wasn’t about to tell him, though William would discover the answer this eve. He scowled at the ground as he walked. He didn’t want the villagers to know any of the food he sometimes provided had come from him. He had no need for friends, or family. He’d already lost everything he had ever wanted.

For the most part the people of the Black Isle were self-sufficient. As earl there was little to do but attend stately gatherings from time to time. As laird, he was bound to his tenants and he did what was required of him.

He stepped through the short outer wall and turned to make certain William wasn’t following him. The wall should be higher. He’d work on it, he thought and stepped up to the thick, carved doors.

He didn’t think about his life beyond this point. He simply lived it, alone in a castle with twenty-two rooms.

He pushed open one of the doors and stepped inside, ignoring the ghostly cry of the wrought iron hinges and creaking wood. He pushed the door shut with his heel. The resonating boom stirred the empty halls and then died.

He carried the buck to the enormous kitchen, one of only three rooms in the castle in which he kept the hearth burning, and dropped the carcass on the carving table. He bent backward to crack his back and then unclasped his bodkin and removed his plaid. He picked up a large knife.

Butchering had stopped making him ill years ago. He’d learned how to hunt and prepare his kill during his time in the Royal North British Dragoons. It was how he’d found the men who’d killed Hannah, his wife, and their daughter, Annabelle, two years ago and put an end to them.

He scowled when a knock came at the front door. William. The lad needed to know that his laird wouldn’t stand for being bothered by anyone.

With his knife in his hand and his hands and shirt covered in blood, he went to the door and swung it open.

It wasn’t William.

“What can I do for ye?” he asked the man standing across the threshold. His unexpected visitor was several years older than Lachlan, and shorter by at least two heads. He wore a clean, un-tattered plaid and bonnet. One of the neighboring barons? Lachlan had never seen him before.

The stranger trembled once, and deeply in his polished boots as his pale eyes took in the sight before him.

Lachlan hadn’t become so unrefined that he couldn’t comprehend how he must appear. He thought about wiping his hands but there was little of him clean.

“Lachlan MacKenzie, Earl of Cromartie?” the man asked, backing away from him, his eyes fastened on the lacy scar marring the left side of Lachlan’s face. “I am…ehm…I am Robert Graham, emissary to Ranald Sinclair, Earl of Caithness.”

Caithness? What the hell did they want with him?

“Might I come in?” he asked, looking like he’d rather be anywhere else. “There is a matter of great urgency I need to discuss with you.”

“I dinna concern myself with things so far off,” Lachlan told him. “Whatever Sinclair wants with me, my answer is no.” He stepped back to close the door.

The emissary held his hand up to stay him. “You’ll not want to say no to this.”

Curious by the man’s certainty, Lachlan stepped aside allowing him entry and tucking the knife into his belt. “This way.” He led his guest to his study. There was blood everywhere else.

Lachlan watched Graham look around, surprised by the books lining dozens of hand-carved cases, all softly lit against the light of a dozen candles and the deep hearth.

“Have a seat.” He offered the only chair in the room, placed close to the fire.

“You live here alone?” Graham asked while he sat.

Lachlan took hold of a poker and stirred the embers in the hearth. “Why does Sinclair disturb me?”

“He sends you an offer, MacKenzie.”

Lachlan thought about picking him up, carrying him to the door, and throwing him out. What offer was urgent? What kind of offer did this little worm think Lachlan could not refuse?

“What is it?” he asked, returning the poker to its place and coming to stand over the chair. He took no mercy on the emissary when Graham shrank back.

“Lord Sinclair…needs you to bring someone to him,” Graham sputtered. “For your trouble he will pay you something priceless.”

Impossible. Whatever was priceless in Lachlan’s life was gone. But his curiosity had been piqued.

“Why doesna he go fetch this person himself?” he asked, folding his arms across his chest. “Why is he making this offer to me?”

“You’ve been a Scot’s Grey for almost a decade, a colonel with—”

“That ended two years ago.”

“Aye, but you gained renown for your great brute strength and deadly proficiency with any weapon. Getting hands on this person requires a man of your expertise.”

“Why?” Lachlan asked. “Who is it?”

“She is my lord’s beloved, Miss Mailie MacGregor, of the MacGregors of Skye. Her father has refused Lord Sinclair’s offer of marriage, though she cares deeply for my lord.”

Lachlan smiled but his gaze was hard as the rest of him. “Sinclair wants me to kidnap a lass? A MacGregor lass? He thinks me a fool.”

“He thinks you are a man with nothing to lose,” Graham corrected him, looking a bit more confident since Lachlan hadn’t killed him yet. “And if rumor is correct, and that is the blood of game covering you, you are an excellent hunter. You can grab Miss MacGregor and be away before you are discovered. She is on her way to Inverness with a small party as we speak. She should arrive sometime tomorrow. After that, she returns to Camlochlin and any chance we had will be gone.”

“Will Caithness not be the first place the MacGregors look fer her since Sinclair was refused her hand?”

“They might, but she won’t be there.”

Lachlan unfolded his arms and clenched his fists. “Would ye like to walk oot, or be tossed?”

“MacKenzie.” Graham leaped to his feet, choosing to walk, though he was daft enough to open his mouth again. He spoke quickly. “As payment Sinclair will give you the name of the man who has your daughter, Annabelle.”

Lachlan took a moment to replay over in his head what he’d just heard. When he was sure his ears hadn’t deceived him, he grasped the smaller man by the collar and yanked him close. “Ye enter my castle and dare speak of my daughter? Ye dare speak her name?”

The older man gasped and looked about to faint. “My lord, hear me please!”

Lachlan wanted to snap him in two, but flung him back into the chair with a warning. “Take care what ye say next, emissary. If it is to deceive me, ye and Sinclair will discover why I’m called the Dragon Laird.”

“There is no deceit here,” the emissary vowed, clutching the arms of the chair. “Lord Sinclair has recently discovered the whereabouts of your daughter. Anna— She is not dead.”

When Lachlan moved for the chair again, Graham squeezed his eyes shut and cringed. “Sinclair will give you the location and the names of the people who have her!”

Lachlan hated him for making him say it. “My daughter is dead. I saw her body, killed with her mother and burned by a band of rogue Jacobites who were angry that I didna fight fer James Stuart.”

“That’s what they wanted you to believe, my lord.”

“Who is they?” Lachlan grounded out. “—and it had better be good. I am close to killing ye.”

“The people who have your daughter. The ones who paid those Jacobites to take her and kill your wife.”

Lachlan’s head was spinning. Why was he listening to this? Was he so desperate for any spark of hope that might bring his life back? Why would his enemies want his daughter? Why would they go to such lengths as to kill another child to trick him into believing Annabelle was dead? He wanted to laugh, but the memory of his discovery was too devastating. “My daughter was there with her mother. I saw her body.”

“No.” Graham shook his head. “It wasn’t her.”

The idea that any man, or group of them, could do such a thing to not one, but two children made him glad he’d slaughtered them all. They were in hell, where they belonged.

“Your daughter is alive.”

Could it be true? Could Annabelle be alive? It was too much to hope for. He wouldn’t let himself. He ran his hand through his dark mane and fought to control the beast welling up inside of him. If this was some kind of trick, he’d kill everyone involved. He’d seen her body. He closed his eyes as if that would somehow vanquish the memory of carrying her from the flames.

“Who has this child and why does Sinclair believe she’s my daughter?”

“Sinclair had heard rumors at the time of the tragedy that these people had arranged it,” Graham told him. “He recently paid them a visit and met her. He said she looks to be the age of six or seven, with long dark hair, which she uses to cover the scars on her arms.”

“Scars?” Lachlan hated himself for falling for this tale.

“Burns from the fire—like yours. It appears she tried to hold onto her mother when they took her.”

Lachlan leaned on the chair for support. His belly burned with flames he knew could never be quenched. He didn’t want to go back to that day and Sinclair’s emissary was forcing him to. “I’m going to kill ye if what ye’re telling me is untrue.”

“It is all true,” Graham assured him. “When my lord asked for her name, she gave it. Annabelle, a fostered child of her captors.”

Annabelle. His heart thumped hard in his chest “That doesn’t make her my daughter.”

“Are you not curious?”

Aye. Aye, he was. “Who are they?” Lachlan bent over the chair. “I’ll go to them and see fer myself.”

Graham offered him a quavering smile and held up his finger. “I don’t know who has her. Do you think Sinclair would send someone from whom you could torture the information? Only Lord Sinclair knows and he will be glad to tell you.”

Lachlan stared at him. “Sinclair will tell me where the child is, who he thinks is my daughter, on the condition that I kidnap the daughter of a Jacobite warrior.”

“’Tis not a condition, MacKenzie, but a favor, a gesture of thanks for reuniting you with your daughter.”

Lachlan’s smile was deadly. “Tell Sinclair I’m coming to Caithness for him. I’ll get the name withoot kidnapping a woman.”

“He is not in Caithness,” Graham let him know. “He thought you might feel this way. He is no fool. The MacGregors will suspect him so he cannot be in Caithness when she is taken. You will keep her hidden until things settle a bit. I will return to Caithness with news of your agreement and have word sent to him. He will then agree to meet with you.”

Lachlan plucked his knife from his belt and stepped closer to the chair. “I should kill ye and send Sinclair your head. Do ye think my answer to his offer will be clear enough?”

The emissary bolted out of the chair and ran for the door without giving him an answer.

Alone, Lachlan fell into his chair. He wondered if Sinclair was in Caithness or not. He’d like to go there and kill the bastard for giving him false hope.

His daughter was alive. As if it were possible. But what if it was? His heart raced. Shouldn’t he do whatever was necessary to find out? He hadn’t given up finding the men he believed had killed her. If there was any chance that Sinclair was being truthful and there was a girl who could be his daughter, he had to find out.

But kidnapping a lass from her family…her MacGregor family was not something he looked upon lightly. Besides that, they’d kill him if he were caught.

Memories of Annabelle’s face, her soft voice, her scent rushed through him.

He wouldn’t let himself get caught.

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