Read Highland Moonlight Online
Authors: Teresa J Reasor
broke off a chunk from one end and settled on the ground to eat the meager
meal.
Believing she would be on foot for some time, she had taken only what
she could carry. Now with the horse to carry the burden, she wished she
had attempted to escape with more of her possessions. It was too late and
too dangerous to return for them, so the small supply of food and clothing
would have to do until she reached Lorne.
Her eyes followed the gentle rolling hills in the distance. It would take
two days of hard riding to reach the castle. Two dangerous days. She would
have to be constantly alert to the threat of robbers. She had dressed as a
lad to disguise her gender, for that in itself was an invitation to harm. Taking
her father’s mount had been a mistake. A fine saddle would be a temptation
to every Scottish highwayman for miles.
Thoughts of her father had her drawing an uneven breath. She had not
been fooled by his concession for her to go to the abbey. Eventually, he
would find a way to use her or the bairn against Alexander and his
Campbell kin. Or worse, he would separate her from her bairn and give it
away as he had his own. Without a husband to protect her, he could force
her into some other odious union as well. The threat of Bearach MacDonald
came to mind. She would never allow that to happen.
Even with a man who professed some small hint of affection for you,
the joys that went with such a joining could be used against you. Used to
make a woman feel less than what she had been before. Collin had made
certain she understood that with every lash he had delivered.
Her father needn’t have bothered. Alexander’s actions had shamed
her before three clans, and he had readily admitted that he had done so
deliberately. The pain of his betrayal twisted like a blade between her ribs
every time she thought about it, and every time she experienced the pain,
she knew how little he thought of her.
Never again would she allow a man to treat her in such a manner.
Never again would she lower her shields with such abandon.
Rising, she caught the horse’s reins, determination in every step. She
would ride to Castle Lorne and petition Laird Campbell himself for
protection and shelter until the birth of her bairn. And if he refused—if he
refused, she would do whatever she had to protect herself and her babe.
Mary pushed her mount as hard as she dared. Exhausted by late
afternoon, she stopped to rest atop a craggy hillside scattered with trees.
She nibbled another crust of dry bread to ease the sickness that plagued
her, but could not eat the meat she had saved from her evening meal the
night before. She decided to rest for a wee bit, and lay on the ground.
A short time later, she awakened to the warm moist breath of the
horse as he nuzzled her neck. She laughed at his amorous attentions and
raised a hand to stroke the velvety softness of his nose. The queasiness
had eased and the short nap had rested her. But as she struggled to her
feet, she nearly groaned aloud for her muscles had stiffened and protested
every movement.
She straightened with difficulty and turned to check the horse. “The
saddle is growing heavy no doubt.” She patted his sleek neck. “Let us be on
our way and we will soon stop for the night.”
Traveling the road was dangerous. Cutting across country strange to
her could prove more so. Mary decided to stay on the rocky stretch of road
for a while and swung herself gingerly into the saddle.
Several times she thought she heard the beat of horse’s hooves
behind her and sought cover to wait for them to appear. After the third delay,
she decided her fears were playing her for a fool. Lest she saw the
brigands on her tail, she would not stop again.
It had grown dark before she came upon the widening slopes of the
valley that opened to Loch Awe. In the dusky light, the hills appeared to rise
to mountainous proportion in the east. The purplish black expanse of the
loch stretched before her. The rising moon reflected on the breeze-rippled
surface of the dark water, like the myriad dance of fireflies.
The valley narrowed and the mountains to the east hugged the banks
of Loch Awe like some mythical beast come to drink from its waters. She
found shelter in the glen beneath a small canopy of trees nestled at the
base of a steep hillside.
She lit a small fire to hold the animals at bay then turned to see to the
horse. It took all her strength to drag the heavy saddle from his back and
place it close to the fire to use as a backrest.
“‘Tis sorry I am that I have no oats for you, for you have toiled hard for
me this day.” She spoke to the horse as she wiped him down with the tartan
pad beneath the saddle. The animal nickered in reply, bringing a smile to
her lips. Suddenly, tears burnt her eyes and she rested against the warmth
of the animal to draw fresh strength from its closeness. Since discovering
she was with child, she seemed to swing between tears and laughter with
irrational regularity.
“If ‘twas that men showed half so much affection or care for their
women folk as they do their horses, I would not mind so much being bound
to one.” She stroked his nose then turned to guide him forward to the edge
of the water to drink. “You are used, but you are valued. Not so we lasses.
We are just possessions to be used, without a word of kindness or
affection. ‘Tis that I can not abide. ‘Tis better to be alone for all eternity than
to live in such a way.”
She sat on a flat stone next to him and dipped the cuff of her sleeve in
the water to bath her face. “Men have fought these many years against a
tyranny they can not abide. Then they turn their own tyranny against those
weaker than themselves. Do you not believe that those who bear their
young and ease their hurts deserve better?”
The animal tossed his head, as though in agreement, and she smiled
again. A memory of tender, sweet kisses and heated caresses made her
smile falter and her anger with it. A hollow ache that had little to do with
hunger throbbed beneath her breastbone. It had meant nothing to him. For
a moment the loss was almost more than she could bear.
Swallowing against the tears, she straightened her shoulders. She
would one day learn to dismiss it as nothing as well. Wiping her face with
her shirtsleeve one last time, she grasped the reins and led the horse back
to the fire. She hobbled his front hooves so he would not stray while he
grazed on the lush grass growing close to the water.
The meat, she had been unable to eat earlier, and another small
chunk of bread barely stayed her hunger. If she did not reach Castle Lorne
by midday tomorrow, she would have to take the time to hunt. Exhaustion
weighted her movements as she curled close to the fire. Using the bowed
seat of the saddle as a pillow, she fell asleep in moments.
****
camp. Their movements stealthy, they each found a place well covered by
brush to stand watch.
If Mary wished to travel to Castle Lorne on her own, Alexander saw no
purpose in interfering with her, as long as he could keep her safe.
From his position several feet away, he could see her features clearly.
Against the dark fabric she wore as a liripipe to cover her hair, her skin
glowed creamy and warm in the firelight. From a distance she could pass
for a young lad. On closer view, her face appeared too delicately wrought to
be anything but feminine. Her lips, full and finely shaped, were parted, her
features relaxed in sleep. She looked very young curled on her side with her
hand tucked beneath her cheek
The memory of how she had grasped the tartan about her to hide her
nudity from her father’s men rose up to smite his conscience and he drew a
deep breath. He had known they would be coming, but had not offered her a
warning. Her virgin blood had been smeared bright red on the sheets and
between her thighs for all to see. He had spared her nothing. Nothing.
He had not just taken her innocence when he possessed her body, he
had crushed it beneath his admission of betrayal. He remembered how the
color had leached from her skin as though she had received a mortal blow.
Shame and regret brought a hollow feeling to his gut. He had been a
warrior too long. He had known nothing but fear and death, blood and
ruthlessness. But even when he killed in the name of his king and his
country, he had believed himself to be an honorable man. But that night, he
had not behaved as one. His belief that his actions would force Collin to
honor the betrothal contract had given him an excuse to act with as little
honor as the Mac Lachlan Laird. And he had done so. He hadn’t wanted to
lose her, but his own actions had insured he would.
Raking his fingers through his hair and pushing against his temples
with the heel of his hands, he bit back the warrior’s yell of frustration and
pain that built inside him. There had to be something he could do to make
amends. Regaining some control, he folded his arms across his chest.
His attention moved back to Mary. It was a miracle she had conceived
so easily. It would take another for him to win her back.
“If I had to bock as often as she, and you were the cause of it, I’d hate
you myself,” Duncan whispered. “She has spent more time in the brush
than she has upon her mount this morn.”
Alexander flashed Duncan a warning look. He could see for himself
how ill Mary was and how miserable because of it.
“‘Tis the way of it sometimes in the beginning, Alexander.” Derrick
Campbell said from behind him. “‘Twill ease in time.”
Reappearing from the brush, Mary leaned against her horse for
support. She filled her mouth from the water bag then spat it on the ground.
With obvious effort she dragged herself atop the gelding.
“Should she fall from her mount, she could bring harm to herself and
the bairn.” He voiced a concern that had plagued him since she had gotten
sick the first time.
Like distant thunder, the rapid rumble of horses approaching from the
south sounded. As they appeared from around a bend in the road, the pale
gleam of Collin MacLachlan’s hair came into sight. Mary whipped the reins
against the haunches of her mount, sending him forward with a leap.
Alexander swore and crashed through the underbrush in quick pursuit.
“Slow them, if you can,” he yelled to his brother.
****
her with each steady stride. She swung away from the road and charged up
a steep slope, then veered to the left, following the winding trail of a well-
used path. The pursuing horse’s hooves pounded behind her with the
same furious beat as her heart’s. She urged the gelding to a faster pace.
Dogs bayed nearby, drawing her attention and she turned her horse in
that direction. The path became a rain gully running downward. The horse’s
footing uncertain, they slid down the bank to a flatter plain. The smell of
damp vegetation hung strong in the air. The creek bed proved marshy with
only a narrow trickle of water running down the center. The horses splashed
through, sending up clots of mud, and then bound up the bank and across
a field.
The open spaces allowed her to give her horse full rein. Hazarding a
glance over her shoulder, she found the black horse trailing by only a
length. Recognition of the man on his back urged her to panicked
recklessness. She sawed back on the reins with such force it caused her
horse to rear and almost fall.
Alexander prevented the two animals from colliding as he swerved
past with only inches to spare.
Turning the gelding into a gully between two rock-strewn hills, she
rode back toward the trail and the loch. On the road, the larger group
rounded a bend behind her. She grabbed the bow secured on the saddle
horn. Turning her mount to face the on-rushing band of horses, she aimed
the bow above the heads of the men and loosed the bolt. They scattered for
cover on either side of the road.
She turned her horse and kicked it forward and nearly rode into
Alexander, as he turned his mount to face her. Whipping past him, she
encouraged the horse to stretch out into a full, unfettered run.
They rushed upon a village of stone huts roofed with thatch. Geese
and cocks, pups and goats, scattered as they wove with dangerous haste
through the stone strewn trail curving down the valley.
Castle Lorne perched atop the center of a narrow strip of land jutting
out into Loch Awe. The bare limbed trees surrounding it clawed at the sides
of the gray stone structure. She had only seconds to acknowledge the