Read Highland Moonlight Online
Authors: Teresa J Reasor
her sounded loud in the confined space.
The smell of sweat and human excrement became almost
overpowering as they reached the base of the steps. Feeling nauseous,
she covered her nose and mouth with the tartan shawl draped about her
shoulders, to try to dull the stench. How did the men who resided here, and
the ones who stood guard, bear it?
The chamber was little more than a wide passageway. The cell’s wide
oak doors were slatted with thick lengths of wood barring the prisoners
from escape. Alexander led her to one of the compartments. At his nod, the
man who stood guard lifted the heavy bar.
Alexander stepped through the portal first, holding the torch aloft. A
man lay on a pallet on the floor, his eyes glassy with the fever shaking his
body. The dull light reflected off the sheen of sweat bathing his pale face.
Setting the basket she carried to one side, she kneeled on the cold
stone floor beside him.
“I will not have any Campbell bitch laying hands upon me,” the
prisoner said in a slurred tone around the chattering of his teeth.
Alexander stepped forward at the man’s words.
Mary rose to stay him. “Nay, Alexander.” She shook her head. Her gaze
returned to the man’s face half covered by a scruffy beard and streaked with
sweat and dirt. “Is it your wish then to lose your arm or your life for the sake
of your pride?” Mary asked.
A struggle ensued behind the man’s gaze then his features settled
into stubborn lines.
“I will leave you to it then,” she said with a nod and turned to retrieve
her basket.
“Wait—” he croaked as they reached the doorway. “I would be grateful
for your care,” he said, his tone less than gracious.
“I will not be insulted for my trouble,” she warned.
He nodded, his movements weak. “I will not again offer you insult.”
Her gaze rose to Alexander’s face. One heavy brow rose, leaving the
decision to her. She turned back to the prisoner to kneel beside him once
again. She laid bare the arm streaked with red. The injury was not a bad
one, but the color around it had her frowning in concern. “I will need him
moved upstairs, Alexander,” she said as she looked over her shoulder at
him.
His features settled into a frown. “If we must. He will have to be
guarded and I will not allow you to remain alone with him.”
“She nodded and rose to her feet. “Now, there must be something
done about the smell of this place,” she said. “The air is not fit for beast or
man.”
“‘Tis they who have fouled it. One of them may be chosen to empty the
buckets they are using.”
‘Twould do no harm to bring them out one at a time for me to tend their
hurts.”
“Would you kill them all with kindness, wife?”
“If MacLachlan clansmen are amongst them I have met, we will know
for certes one way or another.”
Alexander was silent and a frown drew his auburn brows together.
“Their hands will be secured first.”
“If a small table may be brought down, I will see to them after I have
cared for this man.”
“There is no hurry for you to tend them. They are not going anywhere.
You may see them tomorrow, after the air has had time to sweeten.”
He turned and motioned to the men who stood at the wide entrance.
The men stepped forward to lift the man to his feet. In his weakened
condition, the prisoner swayed unsteadily. The brawnier of the two
clansmen swung him over his shoulder and carried him out of the cell. The
other followed close behind.
Alexander’s hand rested against the small of her back as he urged her
out of the dank chamber. He paused to order that one of the prisoners
empty the buckets.
Mary preceded him up the stairs.
“Derrick is almost healed. Mayhap he can see to them,” he suggested
as they came out of the stairwell into a large storage room.
“All will be well, Alexander. I will not lower my guard about them.”
His frown darkened into a scowl. “If I can not be here, Gabriel is to be
with you at all times.”
She nodded, well pleased by his concern for her safety, or was it the
bairns? There had been times of late she had felt closer to her husband, yet
he did not speak words of affection even in the throws of passion. She knew
he desired her, but what of affections? Would it bring him pleasure to know
of her love? Would he treasure it as something precious, or would he
accept it as his due? Would he return her feelings in some way?
Mary drew a deep breath. Sharing her body with him had narrowed the
distance between them in some ways. It had partially healed the hurt
inflicted five months before, as well. His gentleness over the past months
had done more. If only she could be certain of his feelings for her. Why did
men think it unmanly to show their emotions, yet think women cold if they
did not?
The great hall was filled with men and servants celebrating the sixth
day of the Twelfth Night feast. Mistletoe hung in every doorway and sprigs of
holly decorated the windowsills. Huge Yule logs burned in each fireplace at
the ends of the room. Candelabrums, twelve candles full, had been lit and
placed on the tables. The carved Yule candle she and Alexander had lit the
first night burned on the head table.
Servants carried in great steaming kettles of wassail and placed them
atop braziers on a table against one wall, where the heated brew would be
safe from mishap. Barrels of ale and honeyed mead lined the back wall
away from the fire.
The men were in high spirits, their laughter loud and raucous as they
ate and drank. Musicians, hired for the celebration, played lively tunes
between courses. The music and voices reverberated in the room.
As soon as Mary entered the hall, Fergus sought her out. “I have
placed the man in the chamber Artair was in, Lady Mary.”
She nodded. “Please send my things. I will have a need for some salt,
water, and willow bark and a brazier on which to keep the water hot.”
Fergus nodded and left to do her bidding.
Alexander grasped her arm. “You will share a meal with me first, Mary.”
His tone had a wry smile curving her lips. He sounded very much like
his father when he ordered her about. “‘Twould please me to be asked, my
lord husband.”
His tawny gaze fastened on her face. “Will you not share a meal with
me, my lady?” he asked, his manners at their most courtly.
She smiled and curtsied. “‘Twould please me well, my lord.”
“‘Tis the finest feast I have celebrated in some time, Mary,” Duncan
commented as they joined him at the head table. “You have done well.”
“‘Tis grateful for your praise I am, Duncan, but I could not have done it
without Fergus and the others. ‘Twas their willingness to do their part that
has made it a fine celebration.” She washed her hands in the basin a
servant brought to their table. She watched as Alexander filled the trencher
placed between them with smoked venison, meat pastries, and boiled
vegetables.
The day had been hectic and Mary had found little time to rest. A
nagging pain had settled in the small of her back. Straightened in her seat
to ease the ache, she brushed at the fine wisps of hair teasing her
forehead. The noise and heat of the room pressed in around her and she
longed for a quiet moment in their chamber.
Her gaze rose to Alexander’s face to find him watching her. She
noticed, not for the first time, how the lighter tawny gold of his irises were
ringed by a darker tan and how his thick dark auburn lashes made them
appear even lighter. His hand came to rest against the small of her back as
though he would draw her close. “Is all well with you, Mary?” he asked his
brows drawing together in a frown.
Her gaze dropped to the dark patch of auburn hair visible in the open
neckline of his shirt. “Aye, I am well, Alexander.”
His fingers caressed her cheek drawing her attention to his face
again. “Look up, lass.” He pointed toward the ceiling.
She tipped her head back and spied a large cluster of mistletoe tied to
a thin rope left to dangle directly over them from the oak rafters above. “How
did that come to be there?”
“I climbed up this morn and hung it there.”
She laughed, delighted by the gesture.
“‘Twill give me leave to kiss you anytime I wish,” he teased. He cupped
her cheek and tilted her face up to him. His lips were tender as they
caressed her own.
She found her face growing hot, not with embarrassment, but a desire
to press closer to him and further the contact.
“I may leave it there until it crumbles away,” he said, his gaze alight
with similar feelings.
He didn’t need mistletoe to claim her kisses. Every time he drew near,
she felt a bone weakening rush of desire. With it came a need to hold him,
to smooth the lines of responsibility from his face and give him ease.
Sometimes, she longed for him to do the same for her. Yet, there were
times she held back from him, fearful of the power he had over her body
and her emotions.
“How fares the prisoner?” Duncan asked, making her aware of where
they were.
“His arm is festering and he is feverish,” she answered.
“Let us hope he does not die. We do not wish to foul Campbell soil
with the likes of his MacDonald carcass,” one of the men commented from
down the table.
They would feel the same if the man proved to be of the MacLachlan
clan. Her father had done little to endear himself to Alexander’s people.
Being his kin, she was judged for his actions. The coolness of some of the
women of the village gave testament to the length of the feud between their
clans. The fact she had been a part of the MacPherson clan at the time,
meant little. She still had MacLachlan blood.
Mary’s gaze wandered about the room as she nibbled at the choice
samples of food Alexander offered her and listened to the conversation
around her.
Her attention was captured as she noticed Tira’s interest directed at
their table. The repairs to her hut were nearly complete. She would be glad
to see her leave the castle.
The woman’s insolent green stare settled on Mary’s growing belly and
a smile, almost threatening, curved her lips. Fear and anxiety twisted inside
Mary. The woman was a danger to her and the bairn. Gossip could harm
the bairn’s place in the clan if doubts were cast on his parentage, and she
was certain the woman meant to do everything she could to harm her and
her babe. Worry pressed like a relentless weight on her shoulders.
Mary shifted in her seat once again, this time to ease closer to her
husband and seek comfort from his nearness. Alexander placed a hand
against the curve of her spine and rubbed with nimble fingers against the
spot that ached. Her eyes rose to his face and she forced a smile to her
lips. “Your training as a husband is going well, Alexander.”
His brows rose as his amber gaze looked down into hers. “I have only
begun yours, lass.”
Heat flared in her cheeks and settled in more intimate areas of her
body. Even with the threat Tira represented, marriage to Alexander was
proving a great deal more pleasurable than she had thought it would be
months before.
****
Mary left the table.
“Aye,” he agreed as he watched her climb the stairs to the chambers
above. “She is working hard to be accepted as one of us.” How would his
men react should the prisoners they held prove to be MacLachlan
clansmen? Would they blame Mary for their trespass? Surely not. He would
stand by her and offer her at least as much loyalty as she had given him.
After all, she had done to prove herself, his men would stand with her too.
He had to believe they would.
“Is something amiss with her?” Duncan asked.
“Nay. She seems content enough here.”
“Is she?”
Alexander’s gaze rose to his brother’s face, anxiety tightening his
stomach muscles. Did Duncan know of some doubt voiced by the men?
“She is alone here, Alexander,” Duncan said. “Just as she was at
Lorne.”
Understanding his brother meaning, Alexander breathed a sigh of
relief then frowned. How was he to ease her situation?
“There has been no word from her sister since you were wed?”
Duncan asked.
“Nay.”
“Do you not think that strange, Brother?”
“Aye,” he agreed. “Mary has not written to her either, though I know she
can read and write.”
“Did they have words then, mayhap about the bairn?”
“I do not know. Mary does not speak of her sister to me.” She seldom
spoke of her family at all.
“‘Twas in my thoughts to send an invitation to Anne to visit in the
spring. For certes ‘twould please Mary for her to be here when the bairn