Read The Campbell Trilogy Online
Authors: Monica McCarty
But he was no longer a callow lad ruled by lust. Whatever power she might wield in that seductive body of hers, it was no match for his iron-clad will.
If he’d needed a reminder of her treachery it had come quickly.
Please, just leave it be.
She didn’t care about right or wrong, about seeing his name cleared. She didn’t want him disturbing the life she’d built on a bed of treachery. Why it disappointed him that her loyalty to her family still outweighed any justice on his behalf, he didn’t know. But he’d come back for one reason only—to prove his innocence. And nothing—certainly not the woman who’d been at the heart of his downfall—would stand in his way.
The healer, a tiny old woman whose wrinkled hands possessed surprising strength and dexterity, finished her ministrations, smearing a thick pungent salve over the wound and then binding it with a clean swathe of linen. For just having been shot, he felt remarkably well.
She left him a posset to drink, which he politely declined, and bade him to rest. He thanked her, and she left. He thought Jeannie was going to join her, but she reached the doorway, hesitated, and then turned back to him.
“Why did you come here, Duncan? Why me, why now?”
“It was time.” That was the simple answer. The truth was far more complicated. His sister Lizzie’s note about the death of Francis Gordon and rumors of Jeannie’s remarriage—possibly to Colin—had sparked an urgency he didn’t want to examine.
“That’s it?” she asked incredulously. “That’s all the explanation I’m to receive after all this time?” Her eyes locked on his, piercing. “
You left me
without even the
courtesy of a fare-thee-well. Not one word for
ten years
and now you suddenly decide it’s time to return?”
The sudden outpouring of emotion surprised him as much as it seemed to her. His brow furrowed. It almost sounded as if she’d cared, as if he’d hurt her unconscionably and not the other way around. She wasn’t acting guilty, she was acting wronged.
You left me.
The accusation echoed inside him. He’d heard the pain in her voice and knew its source. But his leaving was nothing like her mother—he had a reason.
She’d
betrayed
him.
The flash of anger was as fierce as it was unexpected. “What the hell did you expect me to say? Thank you for fucking me so well—both literally and figuratively.”
She flinched at the crudity as if he’d struck her. He’d never spoken to her like that. The look she gave him was filled with emotion so intense he couldn’t even begin to probe its shadowed depths. But it gave him the first prickle of unease.
He took a deep breath. How did she do this to him? In the spate of a little over an hour, she’d managed to pry away years of steel layers to the raw underbelly. With all the subtlety of a nail under his fingertip.
His anger raged, but he tamped it down—an eye on his mission. He was here to prove his innocence not rehash past betrayals. “I said good-bye,” he said. “What more was there to say?”
“Quite a bit, if you’d given me the chance,” she said softly. “But you were so quick to judge me guilty.”
“Then help me find the truth,” he challenged. “Tell me what you know.”
Their eyes met and held. For a moment he thought she was tempted, but in the end she shook her head. “I can’t.”
His face darkened. A small part of him had always wondered whether he’d been wrong. But her silence condemned her. “You mean you won’t.”
She shrugged at the truth, then studied him. “Ten years is a long time. You’ve made a life for yourself—satisfied your ambition.” She motioned to his armor. “Accumulated wealth and earned infamy. I can barely walk past the barracks without hearing about some exploit of the ‘Black Highlander’ and his men. You have everything you’ve always wanted. Why come back, reopen old wounds, and take the chance that you might lose it all again?”
She’d heard of him. The knowledge pleased him more than it should. Aye, he’d satisfied his ambition. At one time he’d thought that was all he wanted. “What is wealth or reputation without freedom, and there is no freedom in exile. The Highlands are my home. And here I’ll live … or die.”
She held his gaze for a long pause—as if she understood—then turned and left him alone.
Alone.
He was used to it that way—even preferred it—but being alone wasn’t the same thing as loneliness. Seeing Jeannie again was a painful reminder of the difference.
Duncan had achieved everything he’d set out to do and more, but it had not come without a cost. He’d never been tempted to marry, to have a family—not since Jeannie—believing his life had no room for domesticity. And there had never been a woman who could make him think otherwise.
He breathed through the sudden ache in his chest that had nothing to do with his wound, wondering at the life he might have had had things been different. Had they not ended up on the opposite side of a war.
Morning had come and gone before Duncan stirred, his limbs and head still heavy with slumber. Were it not for the pain in his belly and the urge to take a piss, he might have slept through the day.
He felt like hell.
But he’d suffered worse. It was always lying down that did it, as if only in repose did pain find its voice. There were days after long bouts of fighting where he’d woken feeling like every inch of his body had been beaten to a bloody pulp. Where his muscles had felt so stiff and spent he couldn’t move. With a bullet wound, the pain was focused—at least in theory. But right now, his entire stomach throbbed with a violent burning sensation.
Gritting his teeth, he sat up. Too quickly. Pain knifed through him and he fought the sudden wave of nausea. The sickness subsided quickly, but the pain lingered, intensifying. He put his hand to the bandage, glad that it was not damp with blood or puss. But the wound hurt more than he’d expected. And it itched like hell.
If there was ever a good place to get shot, Jeannie’s bullet had found it, avoiding the death zones—the places guaranteed to kill you. Still, the ball must have done more damage than he’d realized.
But not enough to keep him abed. He needed to find Leif and Conall and tell them to look around and try to ask a few questions while they were here. His men, foreigners
, would not be in danger, but Duncan knew he had to be careful. There was always the chance someone would recognize him.
He was impatient to be on his way, but he knew it would be foolish to leave like this, and not before he took a look around. Another day or two and he would be well enough to travel.
He stood slowly, the loss of blood having weakened him, and tended to his more pressing needs. Even the small exertion proved taxing and he braced himself against the bedposts to catch his breath. An annoyance he was forced to repeat a couple of times as he went about washing his face and cleaning himself with the cloth and water provided.
He rubbed his chin. The two days growth of beard had begun to itch and he was thinking about calling for the maid to bring him a razor, and a shirt, when he felt an odd tingling sensation at the back of his neck.
He was being watched.
He stilled, and turned around half expecting it to be Jeannie. But there was no one there. “Who’s there?”
Silence.
His gaze slid around the room, taking in the details that had escaped him yesterday. The ambry to the left of the door, the window opposite the bed, the table, chair, and small bed. A trunk for clothes, a pig’s bladder ball in the corner, a crooked stick for shinty, a wooden sword, a handful of shells strung on a string, and a couple of books.
A child’s room.
His heart stopped.
No.
He heard a soft shuffle from behind the door. “You might as well come out,” he said. “I know you’re there.”
Every muscle in his body tensed, steeling himself, but nothing could have prepared him for the blow. For the sheer devastation wrought by the sight of the little girl
who stepped out from her hiding place behind the door. A beautiful lass with dark red hair, pixie features, tiny red lips, and wide eyes.
She was adorable—and devastating. A miniature version of her mother except for the blue eyes and smattering of freckles across her nose.
Jeannie had a child.
The burning in his chest intensified. Why should it surprise him? She’d been married for ten years, she probably had a handful of children. What did he think, that her marriage had been a sham and she’d stayed true to him after all these years? In truth, he hadn’t allowed himself to think about it. But the harsh physical reminder of her intimacy with another man was proof that hers had not been a marriage in name only.
And it stung. More than he could have ever expected.
The lass eyed him warily. He schooled his features, realizing the fierce emotion in his eyes might be scaring her. He was at a bit of a loss of what to do, having no experience with bairns. And sensing the threat, he wanted nothing to do with this one.
“What’s your name?” he asked, realizing he had to say something.
She bit her lip and something hot and tight twisted inside him.
“Helen,” she answered. “Helen Gordon,” she added more boldly. “But everyone calls me Ella.” She wrinkled her nose, her eyes moving above his head to the ceiling. “You are very tall. Taller than my father and he was the tallest man in the Highlands,” she boasted with a heavy dose of Highland pride. “Do you hit your head on beams when you walk?”
“Not as much as I used to,” he admitted, jarred by the sudden turn in conversation. “I’ve learned to duck.” He gave her a hard look, realizing what she was trying to
do—distract him. “And why were you spying on me, Mistress Helen?”
She straightened her back, affronted by the mere suggestion. “I was
not
spying. I was curious.” Obviously there was a difference. “Did my mother really shoot you?” Her brows knitted together across her tiny nose. “You must be a very bad man.”
He held his face impassive, despite the pain in his stomach, fighting the urge to laugh. “I think it depends on your perspective.” She appeared puzzled by his response. “It depends on which side you’re on,” he simplified. “But it was an accident.” I think.
She didn’t look too sure either. “I wanted to see whether you were as big and terrifying as they were saying.”
Duncan’s mouth twitched. “And?”
She frowned. “I haven’t decided.” She studied him carefully. “Why aren’t you wearing a shirt? You are very dark.”
“It’s torn and I spend a lot of time in the sun.”
“You have a lot of scars. But your eyes are blue.” He was having a hard time keeping track of her train of thought, but this apparently was a point in his favor. “I don’t like beards,” she continued. “They’re too scratchy.”
He rubbed his chin again. “I agree.”
She nodded. “Beth said you were very handsome.” She apparently was undecided. “My father was the most handsome man in the world and he never wore a beard.” The mention of her father struck him cold. Duncan would have sent her away, but she lifted her gaze to his and something inside him shifted. “He died.”
She said it matter-of-factly, with a challenging tilt of her chin, but Duncan could see the sadness shimmering in her eyes. “I’m sorry, lass,” he said, despite the urge to keep his distance.
The little girl nodded, accepting his sympathy with a
maturity that belied her years. A thought struck him with the force of a lightning bolt. She didn’t look old enough, but …
“How old are you, Helen?” he asked, suddenly unable to breathe.
“Almost eight. I was born on midsummer’s day.” His mouth quirked.
Almost.
It was still the last days of October. “My brother”—Duncan stilled, clenching his fists at his side until his fingers turned white—“says I’m short, but he’s wrong. I’m petite. At least that’s what my father said and he assured me there’s a difference. Isn’t there?” Duncan nodded, still reeling from the knowledge of a brother, but she wasn’t listening. “
Petite
is a French word,” she clarified. “It means ‘small and dainty.’ ”
She expected him to be impressed and he didn’t want to disappoint. “Ah,” he said, nodding.
She sat down on the trunk at the foot of the bed, apparently having decided he wasn’t much of a threat. “But Dougall is just jealous. I swam across the river Dee when I was only six and three quarters and he didn’t do it until he was seven and a quarter.”
“That’s quite an accomplishment. How old is your brother?”
He was being ridiculous, but everything inside him tensed until she answered. “He just turned nine on Michaelmas.” September 29. Duncan ticked the months back in his mind. She must have conceived in January. He’d left Scotland in mid-August—almost five months earlier.
The vise around his chest loosened. He didn’t know whether to be relieved or disappointed. He’d never thought … He’d been so caught up in his own anger he’d never thought about the possibility of Jeannie being with child. But both children were too young to be his.
Ella hadn’t noticed his distraction. Rather, sensing
an appreciative audience, she beamed, her adorable face growing even more animated as she chattered on about the many things girls could do that were not appreciated by older brothers. Apparently, there were a lot of them.