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Brennus (Immortal Highlander, Clan Skaraven Book 1): A Scottish Time Travel Romance by Hazel Hunter (4)

Chapter Four

ALTHEA SAT IN a corner of the primitive barn and plaited a few pieces of straw onto the braided cord she was making. She hadn’t worn a belt, and if her jeans got any looser they’d fall around her ankles. She’d finally figured out how to brush her teeth with a frayed twig sprinkled with salt from a packet in her bag, but her hair hung lank and grimy down her back. Being dirty didn’t bother her as much as the horrifying moments that still flashed through her head—moments she still couldn’t quite comprehend.

It had happened. She’d been taken. But why? And how had they pulled off the unbelievable way they’d taken her?

Her stomach still clenched whenever she remembered those first, horrifying moments. Like an oversize mole, some creature in the shape of a man had come out of the ground to grab her from behind and pull her into the earth. Then he’d dragged her with him as he’d somehow tunneled beneath the surface. Cuts and bruises still covered her from being hauled through a mass of exploding soil, rocks, and roots. He’d shoved her up into more brutal hands, which had jerked her back into the air. Choking and struggling, Althea had fought for her life, only to be hurled into a tunnel of thrashing, swirling tree branches. But she hadn’t landed on roots. Instead she’d fallen into a dank abyss. The gnarled boughs had swept past her until they blurred, and the sense that she’d fallen for far too long overcame her. That was all she recalled before blacking out.

Waking up here, in this barn, made no sense. Neither did finding four other traumatized women imprisoned with her.

After a week of captivity, Althea had formed and discarded a dozen theories. She was fairly sure they were still in Scotland. The disagreeable odors of sheep and manure had stopped bothering her, but not the cold. The lunatics responsible for this nightmare hadn’t given them any blankets or extra clothing. At the moment she could see her breath, but she couldn’t feel her nose, ears or fingertips anymore. Soon she’d have to get up and walk around to get warm, but that was only a temporary solution.

If she didn’t try to escape and get help, Althea felt convinced they would all die here.

Despite the horrible conditions, she and the other four women taken prisoner had managed to survive well enough. To keep warm during the frigid nights they slept huddled together in the mound of hay by the empty stalls. They’d also managed to get water for drinking and washing from a deep trough well, although it had taken hours to figure out how to work the long pivoting rod to lower and lift their only bucket. Twice a day their guards tossed in some bags containing hard oat cakes and overripe pears, but everyone divided the starvation rations fairly. With the exception of one woman they’d all discussed their situation.

None of them knew what to think about their captors, who were definitely odd and seriously crazy.

The older Scottish couple who seemed to be in charge had talked freely in front of them, so Althea knew all about their delusions. Murdina and Hendry believed they were immortal medieval druids. They believed that she and the other four women were somehow like them, what they called “druid kind,” and had the power to allow them to time-travel. They’d been brought to what they claimed was fourteenth century Scotland.

Althea actually had no idea where in Scotland they were. From what she’d seen through the cracks in the barn walls, they’d been brought to a highland forest at the base of a very large mountain. Aside from some white birds, red deer, and a wandering herd of very dirty sheep, the area appeared completely deserted. Althea hadn’t seen a single person, car, truck, utility pole or road sign. No aircraft had passed over them in a week. None of their phones could get a signal. The other thing she couldn’t explain preyed on her like hungry teeth.

The huge, strange men who had taken all of them might not be human.

“You got any drugs in that thing?” a harsh voice demanded.

Althea looked up at the scowling, dark-haired woman standing over her. Dimly she recalled that her name was Rowan, and that she worked as a carpenter. She’d been taken with her older sister, a lovely, timid dancer who looked and acted nothing like Rowan.

“Drugs?”

“Perrin is sick.” She used the toe of her boot to prod Althea’s carryall. “You said you were a doctor, right? So, you got aspirin? Ibuprofen? Anything that can help her?”

“I’m sorry, no. I’m not that kind of doctor,” she admitted. “Ph.D., not M.D.”

“Oh, so you can lecture us while my sister’s dying. Fantastic.” Rowan made a rude sound indicating the opposite. “We’ll call you if someone needs a test graded.”

Wishing she really was made of liquid nitrogen, Althea pushed herself to her feet and walked over to where they slept. There Emeline, the black-haired nurse from Aberdeen, sat pressing a damp rag to the unconscious woman’s brow.

She crouched beside her. “Do you know what’s making her sick?”

“I’ve no clue,” the nurse said tiredly. She sat back on her heels and took hold of the dancer’s wrist. “Her temp and pulse are normal. Her only injuries are the same bruises and lacerations that all of us have. No signs of infection. I simply can’t wake her. It could be an allergic reaction–”

Perrin’s dark blue eyes snapped open and fixed on Althea’s face. Something had made them turn opaque, as if she had gone blind. “Save the raven or we all die.” She blinked, and the opacity cleared. “Ro?”

“I think she’s back,” Emeline said and directed her pen light at Perrin’s eyes. “Lass, are you an epileptic? Do you take medication for that or anything else?”

“No and no,” Rowan said as she shouldered Althea aside and bent over her sister. “Rise and shine, Big Sis. I swear, you are the laziest chick on the planet.” She looked over her shoulder. “Give me your coat.”

Althea didn’t realize the carpenter was speaking to her again until she got a dark glare. “Excuse me?”

“She’s shivering and sweating, Dr. Useless, so she needs the coat more than you. Unless you’ve got a blanket stashed in that bag?” She thrust out a pretty hand marred by small scars and calluses. “Come on, hurry up.”

The carryall only had a few days change of clothing, and nothing that would fit Perrin. Quickly Althea shrugged out of her coat and handed it to Rowan, who used it to cover Perrin’s shaking upper body. Althea felt startled when the fifth prisoner came to stand beside her. An athletic blonde who had stayed curled up in a corner and hadn’t yet said a word to anyone, she took off her long white uniform jacket. Leaning down, she draped it over Perrin’s long legs and tucked it in like a blanket. Althea recognized the ship emblem embroidered on the jacket’s left side. The silent woman worked for a British cruise line.

“Thanks,” the carpenter said and stretched out beside her sister and held her as a mother would a sick child. “I’ve got you, Perr. You’re going to be fine.”

Emeline gestured Althea to come away from the sisters and went with her to the other side of the barn. “Don’t take that personally. Rowan is just anxious.”

“Sure,” Althea said. Rowan was aggressive, hostile and terminally snide, and had been since day one. “Some people can’t handle being imprisoned, I guess.” She noticed the dark circles under the nurse’s eyes. “How are you holding up?”

“Like everyone else. Almost feart out of my wits. Also starving, although that’s nothing new.” She glanced down at her curvaceous figure. “I’ve been dieting for two months for my best friend’s wedding. Which was either yesterday, or not for another seven centuries.” She rolled her eyes. “Did I mention this was my first vacation in five years?”

The blonde woman joined them. “Then I won’t whinge about hating my first shore leave in six months,” she said, croaking out the words as if she were sick, but with a distinctly British accent.

“Hi,” Althea said, relieved. She’d been convinced the fifth prisoner had completely lost it. “That was nice, what you did for Perrin.”

Emeline nodded her agreement. “Do you have a sore throat?”

“Lost my voice. No,” she tacked on when the nurse stepped closer, and cleared her throat with a rasping sound. “It’s fine. It’s coming back.”

Instead of insisting, Emeline nodded and took a step back from the blonde. “Let me know if that changes, ah…”

“Lily Stover. I was a sous-chef on the Atlantia Princess, which is probably halfway to the Bahamas by now.” She looked at Althea. “If you want to escape, you’ll have to be quick. How fast can you run?”

“When motivated, like the wind,” she assured her, and frowned. “How did you know I was–”

“I know the look. Plus, you spend a lot of time in the back stall, where those wood planks have rotted out.” The British woman nodded toward the doors as the sound of scraping wood came through them. “Wait until dark. They’re slower at night.”

The doors flung open as two of the guards came in carrying worn, dirty sacks. Emeline drew Althea and Lily back against the nearest wall, while Rowan shot up and stood between the men and her sister.

Seeing them made Althea feel panicky and sick at the same time. While they appeared to be two towering, heavily-built men, they moved like puppets being jerked by too-loose strings. From a distance no pores, wrinkles or hollows appeared on their faces, giving them a smooth, almost plastic look. Up close an almost imperceptible craquelure webbed their flesh like crazing on old porcelain. All of the guards had cropped hair and wide-set eyes in different shades of brown, but so flat and dull they looked painted.

“Food.” The larger of the pair tossed the sack at Rowan’s feet, and then eyed Perrin. “Why cover that one? She dead?”

Emeline folded her arms tight around her middle, and Althea knew exactly why. The grating sound of the guard’s voice matched that of broken fingernails dragged across splintering wood.

“She’s alive,” Rowan said and tilted her head back as the guard came to her, but otherwise didn’t move. “We covered her because she’s freezing, genius.”

“We’re all pure cold,” Emeline said quickly. “If we could have some blankets–”

“Use the grass,” the guard said and bent his head to peer into Rowan’s dark eyes. His thin lips peeled back from his yellowed tombstone teeth. “If I want the skinny one, I shall take her. You cannae stop me.”

“You don’t want her. She won’t fight you.” The dark woman leaned in closer. “But I will. Come on. Give me a try, Ugly.”

The guard made as if to grab her, but the other one dragged him back.

“Go, Coig,” he said as he thrust the bigger man toward the doors. He shoved the sack he held into Rowan’s hands and waited until the other guard left. “Dinnae challenge us. You shallnae survive it.”

“You mean if we’re nice to you, we live?” Rowan said and uttered a short laugh. “Right. Kill me now, Shorty.”

“You call me Ochd.” The guard started to reach for her himself, and then backed away. He bobbled his head around to look at Althea and the other women. “Eat. Sleep. Make trouble, and Coig comes back. Coig likes hurting.” He nodded at Lily. “She ken.”

Althea swallowed some bile as Ochd went out and slammed the barn doors shut. “Lily, what did he mean?”

“That bloody bastard, Coig, took me from the market where I was shopping. He lugged me out by my neck.” The blonde tugged down the high collar of her shirt to show the huge, dark bruises mottling her slim throat. “And he bashed in the skull of a farmer who tried to stop him.” She met Althea’s gaze. “With one fist.”

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