Read Highland Moonlight Online
Authors: Teresa J Reasor
face then went to his father’s.
Collin’s blue gaze remained bland. “Of course I could not turn away my
son’s men to freeze in the snow, Alexander, nor would Bearach.”
Alexander chose his words carefully. “Having so great an
understanding of duty, you will respect the oath I have given to Anne that she
shall remain under my protection until she decides to take her leave.”
Mary’s hand rested on his thigh beneath the table in silent
communication. Anne’s gaze moved to Alexander’s face and a look of relief
swept her features though she appeared pale.
Collin’s brows drew together in a frown. “Her place is at Lochlan now
she has no guidesman.”
“As she has mentioned herself, now she is a widow, she has no duty
to anyone, but herself,” Alexander said with a shrug. “I have a duty to protect
and provide for her now she is part of my clan, as Mary’s sister. But of
course, you may be able to persuade her differently.”
Collin turned red in the face. “‘Twas not your place to give such an
oath.”
His patience at an end with bating the older man, Alexander
suppressed his irritation with an effort. “Once an oath is given, ‘tis difficult to
rescind. Mayhap you will have better luck persuading Anne to change her
mind, than you did Mary. In any case, I have given my pledge and only Anne
may release me from it,” he repeated, his tone even.
****
became more exuberant as the dancing began. Mary grew restless as the
ache in her back intensified and her chair became more and more
uncomfortable.
“‘Tis grateful I am, Alexander,” Anne offered from close beside her. “Ian
was a good man and a kind husband, but I will not be bartered into
marriage again,” she declared, her tone adamant as her gaze fastened on
her father.
Collin’s gaze narrowed. “‘Tis a woman’s place to wed and bring
bairns into the world.”
“Aye,” Anne agreed. “And I shall wed again and have many bairns,
Collin, with whomever I choose. I have done my duty by you, and your clan. I
owe you nothing more.” She turned away and stalked away from the table to
be swallowed up by the crowd.
Mary bowed her back, her fingers kneading the taunt muscles to ease
her discomfort. Alexander turned to her, concern in his expression. Mary
offered him a reassuring smile. “‘Tis but a wee ache from walking about too
much. I must go to our chamber for a short while.” He rose to accompany
her, but Mary waved him back down. “You must stay and watch over Collin
and Bearach. I do not trust them.”
The pain had eased by the time she reached her chamber. Of late,
she had experienced so many odd discomforts, she shrugged this current
one aside. It would do her no harm to lie down for a few moments.
Removing her shoes, she stretched out and covered herself with the tartan
fabric at the foot of the bed. The music below, though barely discernable,
provided a comforting beat as she drew deep breaths to relax the tension
from her body.
****
said dryly.
Alexander’s attention fell on the rotund man speaking with her, his lips
curling as Anne shook her head in an adamant gesture.
“Nor will David,” Alexander commented. He grew more serious. “The
men have been warned to keep watch over the MacLachlan clansmen’s
movements as well as Collin’s and Bearach’s. “Collin will not be content to
use persuasion now she has openly defied him. We must all keep watch
over her.”
His gaze moved to Tira as she joined one of the village men in a
dance. The May Queen crown of interwoven branches and leaves perched
on her dark head, had his jaw tightening. Because she would be leaving
soon, the villagers had shown their appreciation of her by crowning her May
Queen. Her dark hair swung free about her hips as she circled her partner,
her feet beating a feverish rhythm. Gabriel leaned against one wall watching
her, his expression harsh with a frown.
Alexander’s attention returned to Anne as she purposely avoided
Bearach MacDonald’s grasp on her arm and turned toward David to accept
his hand instead. Her father’s frown boded ill for both her and David, as he
led her forward in the dance. Thus far, neither Collin nor Bearach had
managed to corner her, though both had attempted to several times.
Alexander had become almost amused at their efforts.
Bearach’s attention focused on Tira and he moved in her direction
inspiring another of the MacLachlan Chief’s frowns. Collin started forward,
then pausing, he moved to one side of the room where large casks of ale
had been aligned along the wall. A servant dipped him a tankard of the brew
and he sipped it as he watched the dancers in the center of the floor, his
expression sour.
Alexander’s gaze searched the room once again for Mary. Concerned
by her continued absence, he wound his way through the crowd of villagers
and clansmen to the stairs. The passageway felt blessedly cool after the
heated press of the great hall and the quiet, a restful respite from the festive
music below. Opening the door to the chamber, his gaze settled on his
sleeping wife. Relief brought a smile to his lips and an easing of the
anxious tension along his shoulders and neck.
Of late, he had noticed how easily she seemed to tire and how often
she sought the comfort of a chair to ease her swollen feet and legs. His
gaze followed the rounded protrusion of her belly outlined by her gown. Her
father’s presence had upset her. She needed her rest. He slipped from the
room careful not to wake her.
As he returned to the hall, he noticed Gavin standing to one side
watching the dancers, his arms folded before him, his expression closed.
He had been strangely quiet all evening. Alexander crossed the room to
stand next to him.
“Is Mary ailing?” Gavin asked.
“Nay. Your father’s arrival has tired her, and she has fallen asleep in
our chamber.”
Gavin nodded.
“‘Twould seem Collin intends to press the lass.” Alexander nodded
toward Anne.
“Aye,” Gavin agreed, his tone short.
“Ian was killed at a most opportune time, was he not?”
Gavin’s attention did not sway from his sister, but his jaw tightened.
He wondered if the man was content with his father’s plans or if he
even suspected them. “Is Bearach who you would have for your sister,
Gavin?”
“Nay,” he answered. “You were not who I wished for Mary, either.”
“Aye, I ken that.” Alexander folded his hands behind him. “Does she
seem unhappy to be with me?”
Gavin remained silent a moment. “I do not understand it, but nay, she
does not.”
Alexander studied the younger man’s face. “Do you believe she would
have been as content with Bearach?”
For the first time, Gavin turned his head to look at him, his gaze
searching. “Nay.”
Alexander focused on the lad, his expression purposely serious.
“Having a MacDonald ally has made your father as arrogant now as he was
at Lochlan when last I was there. I would watch over Anne, as well as I tried
to Mary, Gavin.”
The lad remained silent a moment, his gaze once again intent on
Alexander’s face. “Aye, I will.”
****
pain rolled from her back around her mid-section. The muscles tensed to a
tight peak then gradually eased. She waited several minutes, in suspended
anxiety, for another contraction to come. When nothing happened, she drew
a deep breath and clasped her trembling hands between her knees. The
beginning of her labor had started. She had to remain calm.
The distant sound of music below in the great hall became audible to
her. It was late. The candle on the bedside table had melted down to a stub
and the red coals gleamed hot in the fireplace, but no flames were evident.
She rose, put several chunks of peat on the coals, and watched as it
caught. Moving to the chest at the foot of the bed, she removed several
clean sheets and laid them atop the tartan blanket. It would be many hours
before they would be needed. She drew several breaths to calm herself
again.
A tap on the heavy wooden door of the chamber had her moving in
relief to answer it. Just knowing someone was close by eased her fears.
Grace stood outside in the passageway, her hair in disarray, her
surcoat half buttoned. “I told her nay, Lady Mary, but she says ‘tis important.”
Tira stepped forward from behind Grace. “‘Tis Cassidy. He fell into a
blaze and has been burned badly. Will you come?”
Tira’s green gaze held a frantic look and the anxious demand in her
tone had Mary biting her lip. The child had to be grievously hurt for Tira to
come to her for help. Her labor was just beginning and there would be time
for her to tend him until Derek could arrive and take her place.
“Grace, send for Derek and Anabal. I have need of them both.” She
paused, her gaze resting on the girl until the importance of her words
became evident in Grace’s expression.
“You should wait for Derek to come to tend the lad,” Grace said, her
young face creased in a worried frown.
“There is time for him and Anabal to arrive. Send Derek to Tira’s hut
when he arrives. I will return to the castle then.”
Grace curtsied hurriedly and rushed down the passageway.
“Is Cassidy in great pain?” Mary asked as she threw a tartan shawl
about her shoulders and retrieved her basket of herbs and salves from the
bedside table.
“Aye.”
Instead of moving down the passageway toward the hall as Grace had
done, Tira turned in the opposite direction. Mary was once again reminded
of the woman’s familiarity with the castle and her husband. To know the
passageways so well, she must have often slipped unnoticed into his
chamber. Attempting to ignore the thoughts, she drew comfort from the
knowledge Tira would soon be gone.
Mary halted halfway down a flight of stairs as another contraction
struck her. “I must catch my breath, for a moment,” she managed. Tira
stopped several steps below her, her movements impatient. The pain
passed quickly, and she gestured to the woman to continue.
Through a back entrance unfamiliar to Mary, they exited the castle. The
early summer air, damp with frost, felt chilly. A new moon, bright and round,
shown down on them, elongating their shadows as they crossed the
courtyard to the gate. The music from the hall, lively and rhythmic, traveled
on the breeze. Deep masculine laughter came from close by as they
followed several villagers from the castle courtyard.
“We must hurry,” Tira urged.
Mary found matching the woman’s pace difficult.
“‘Tis this way,” Tira said before they reached the village. She turned off
the well-worn path to one that was smaller and harder to follow.
Mary’s steps flagged and she stopped only a few paces from the road.
Derek would not know where to find them. A startled squeak of protest
broke from her as something black was thrust down over her head and she
was grasped around the waist. Panicked, she twisted and kicked at her
attackers. Another contraction struck her and she had to stop to wait out the
pain.
“Tira, what have you done?” a familiar voice demanded from close by.
The sound of a scuffle erupted from behind her and the meaty thud of blows
being struck against flesh made her flinch and cringe away from the person
holding her arms.
“Walk,” a masculine voice ordered close to her ear. She was forced
forward, away from the sounds of fighting, by the painful grip on her arms.
“You whore!” Collin exclaimed. He dealt Tira a vicious backhand
across the face sending her reeling. She fell heavily on the ground and
curled into a defensive posture as he stood over her. “‘Twas Anne I told you
to bring, not Mary.”
Despite her anger toward the woman, Mary flinched at the violence
directed at her. She tugged at the bindings around her wrists with steady
pressure, trying to loosen them.
“I could not seek her out. They are watching her too closely,” Tira
protested.
“Mary is of no use to me,” he spat.
“Hold, Collin,” Bearach said, grasping the other man’s arm, his eyes
on Mary as she sat on the ground before the fire. “If we can put some
distance between the Campbell forces and yours, and join with my men, we
can force Alexander to exchange Anne for Mary and be gone from here.”
“I am laboring, Bearach. I cannot ride a horse. If the babe and I should
die because of this, there is no place in Scotland you or Collin will be able