The Spellbound Bride (12 page)

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Authors: Theresa Meyers

BOOK: The Spellbound Bride
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As he stepped out the door, he realized she was walking away from him.

"Sorcha. The horses are this way."

She shook her head.

"Nay, we cannot pick from the forest if we cannot even touch it. We need to go on foot."

Ian groaned inwardly. Ye gads, next she was going to tell him they had to pray each time they cut a leaf or uprooted a plant.

They walked into the deep green of the wood. Without the gait of the horse and the sound of its clopping hooves and creaking leather to soothe him, Ian began to hear the forest in a new way. The sounds were distinct and easily missed. The rustle of the leaves or the croak of the frogs in the burbling water of a stream seemed to sparkle in the quiet.

Her voice brought him out of his observations.

"Ah, our first find."

He watched as Sorcha bent down to examine a small cluster of yellow flowers among heart-shaped leaves, her cloak billowing out around her. She slid the pack off her shoulder and fished out the small knife.

"Wood violets. These are wonderful to stave off infection." She cut a handful of the leaves and carefully measured and cut a piece of twine to wrap around them.

Her understanding of healing arts intrigued him. He leaned against the tree.

"How did you come by this knowledge of plants?"

"My mother taught us bits when I was young. The rest I learned from the journals she wrote once I learned to read." She stood up, taking the satchel in her hand to a nearby oak tree.

"Your mother could read and write?"

"Aye."

He was astonished. She said it as if it were a common enough trait among women. He liked the idea that she could teach their children such skills.

Their children—the thought came unbidden and made his member surge. Not from the thought of children, per se, but from the thought of making them. The more he came to know of this bride, the more her enchanting spell wove itself around him. All but his heart. That he kept to himself.

Sorcha began to cut at the bark, peeling away small chunks of it into her hand.

"This is oak."

He titled his head to one side as a dog did when it heard words spoken to it, but struggled to understand what was being said.

He snorted. "I ken what it is."

She lifted a brow and stared at him.

"Do you wish to learn or not?"

He coughed. "What is it good for?"

"The powdered bark is used for treating fluxes."

"And all this time I just thought it made sturdy furniture and firewood."

"There’s more than meets the eye in most things we take for granted every day," she chided as she folded the pieces of bark into a cloth.

As they neared the opening of oaks, his inner sense was pricked by a strangeness about the place. As if it had been abandoned or worse. He noticed the blackened pile of rubble nearby.

"What was that?"

Sorcha swallowed.

"Nothing."

She averted her gaze, and her shoulders stiffened. She lied to him. There was something about the cottage that clearly shook her to the bone. He eyed the overgrown pile of rock and charred wood.

"Was that the cottage you spoke of?"

Sorcha spun around and stared at him.

"I do not wish to discuss it."

He pressed her harder. "Tell me what you remember."

Her skin turned ashen as the color slid from her face.

"They died there when I was four. All of them. And it was my fault." The vague stare and waxy look of her skin alarmed him. Instinctively he reached out to comfort her. She shook against him, her eyes tightly shut.

"You were but a child. There is nothing you could have done."

Her head reared up sharply, her eyes narrowed to slits as if she were waiting for a blow from him.

"I started the fire that killed them."

Chapter Eight

 

He tightened his grip on her arms and pulled her back against his chest, peering intently into her eyes.

"You cannot truly believe that."

"I have no reason to believe otherwise. It is the truth. Henna and some of the others were there when it happened."

Ian ground his teeth together as his jaw tightened. His wife held to this belief from childhood as though it would alter the course of history if she did not. As an outsider, he could see there was more to the story, and more to her relationship with Henna than she wanted to admit.

"It is naught but stones and soot. It cannot hurt you. Only you give it the power to control your destiny."

A heavy sigh wracked her body and she seemed to shrink beneath his touch.

"I cannot escape what runs in my veins. It is with me wherever I go. I am blood of the blood. A child of a woman called witch. No matter what, that will haunt me until my last breath."

"Then I shall have to see to it that you have new air to breathe in a place where no one knows what you have been, only what you are."

"Is that what you are searching for?"

"Aye." Ian turned her in his arms holding her in his arms to comfort her. "Do not think on such things, wife. We have enough to do on the morrow without dwelling on the past."

From a thick copse of trees, Henna watched them. Escape indeed. What kind of revenge would that satisfy to know that Sorcha had escaped to happiness with her hapless husband? None.

If she was to have the girl accused of practicing the craft without implicating herself, she’d have to move quickly.

* * *

 

The next day Ian, Sorcha and Archibald rode from early morning on, as they made way to Moray’s estate.

By mid-afternoon Sorcha became weary. Though she had said not a word, he could tell that the journey was harder than she was accustomed to. Her face tightened with fatigue and her back curved with discomfort.

The fact that she plodded on without a word of complaint, spoke plainly of how much hardship she had endured. In some ways her burden of family problems was greater than his own. At least he suffered no guilt.

He turned in his saddle. "We’ll stop at the meadow up ahead." Sorcha and Archibald rode side by side a short distance behind him. Archibald leaned over to Sorcha, and whispered something only she could hear that made her laugh.

Ian twisted away from the scene. He should be the one coaxing smiles and laughter from her. Inside the familiar doubts began to work their dark fingers into his mind. Had she naturally just fallen back, letting him take lead as they rode, or did she prefer the lad’s company? What had Archibald said? Were they planning a tryst?

Ian shook his head to rid himself of the doubts. He was besotted with her and losing his control in the process. It wouldn’t do.

There was no way he could keep them all safe if his mind were occupied by the vexing contradictions she posed. It was best if he put some distance between himself and her until she came to her wits and decided she couldn’t resist him.

They guided the horses to a halt beside a stream, letting the animals have their fill of the cool running water. Sorcha stretched upward, giving Ian a tempting view of her breasts as they pressed firmly against the fabric of her gown.

A movement on the other side of her caught his notice. The young lord was staring at her with the same rapt attention he had himself. Ian bristled. No matter what his wife swore, the lad had more than platonic ideas in mind. What randy youth didn’t? But eyeing a married woman, and one that had been more of a sister to him? He would just have to make sure Argyll knew a claim was staked.

As soon as the Earl of Argyll became aware he was under Ian’s scrutiny, he stalked away to the other side of the horses and retrieved his and Sorcha’s packs.

Ian splashed a handful of cool water on his face and neck and, for Sorcha’s sake, tried to ignore the twisting in his gut.

She beamed as she took the pack from the earl.

"Thank you, my lord." From one pack she pulled out a cloth for them to sit on and began to spread it out, giving him an excellent view of her rounded behind.

He had every intention of exploring those curves for himself.

She settled herself down on the blanket and Argyll quickly joined her.

The blood in Ian’s veins began to pound, not with passion but with barely leashed need to defend what was his. He stared at the pair of them sitting so near together.

Her eyes focused on him. "Aren’t you going to sit down?"

He glanced at the small blanket and determined he’d be sitting in the grass regardless. There was hardly room for his bulk beside the two of them. He turned away and settled himself against a nearby oak.

Sorcha worked at dividing the meal and came toward him with his share.

"Are you sure you won’t join us?"

"There isn’t room," he stated flatly.

She looked over her shoulder.

"I see what you mean. Would you like me to come and join you?"

The concern in her eyes revealed that she was trying hard to smooth over the situation. He was not helping the matter.

He reached out, grasped her hand and gave it a small squeeze to reassure her.

"There’s no need. I’ve been comfortable in my own company for long enough. One more meal shouldn’t matter."

She shrugged, then turned away, walking back toward Argyll. Ian admired the natural, easy sway of her shapely hips and the smooth, fluid lines of her back.

The lad grinned at her and patted at the space beside him on the blanket. Ian held himself in check, realizing what it would look like to Sorcha if he challenged the lordling to a battle out of the blue, and trounced him soundly.

She would be furious with him and any trust he had gained would freeze over quicker than a shallow loch in the dead of winter. She seemed to trust so few people and those, she did, she did blindly. Better for him to keep his cool and think of ways to gain her unwavering affection for himself.

Sorcha took a drink of the cider she had brought to quench their thirst, the sweet taste of it falling flat on her tongue. Hunter must think her blind not to see the throbbing veins in his neck and taunt shoulders. Something about Archibald had him enraged.

Och, what was it with men? Did they not understand the simple bonds of friendship that could exist when a man or woman was closer than your own kin? Hunter abruptly left the edge of the meadow and walked in the direction of stream and the horses.

Sorcha bit into a wedge of tangy cheese and chewed while she let her gaze slip from the boy beside her to the retreating man. Couldn’t Hunter see that Archibald was but a lad? If she needed to step in and protect the earl, she would. She’d not let Hunter’s overwrought sense of protectiveness keep her from helping her one trusted friend.

She smiled at Archibald. "Will there be any ladies in attendance?"

He shifted slightly, his eyes darting to Hunter’s back.

"I cannot be sure. It is a hunting party of sorts."

"Of sorts?"

He gave her a sly grin.

"I’ve a dual purpose in bringing you to Abercariny. We are to pick up your horse, but in truth, it was Lord Bothwell who asked to see you and the Chamberlain of the infant Earl of Moray offered up the estate as a place for us to meet. I saw no harm in the favor when it suited our purpose of getting the mare."

Why should Lord Bothwell be interested in meeting her? She had no important clan connections, save Archibald. Bothwell was a royal by birth, next in line for the throne should James fail to muster enough support from the sharply divided lords of Scotland. What he could possibly want in meeting her was beyond her ken.

Sorcha handed Archibald the napkin with the remaining hunks of cheese.

"Still intrigued by playing at politics?"

"No worse than you," he gibed in return.

She gave him a playful shove, but then her smile faded.

"I never did thank you for standing beside me when, when— " Her throat grew too thick to speak and she cast her glance away to stem the welling tears in her eyes.

Archibald leaned over and softly brushed the back of his hand against her cheek.

"It was nothing you wouldn’t have done for me time and again. Magnus didn’t deserve you anyway. We oddities have to stick together."

She lifted her gaze.

"Still, thank you. You risked a great deal throwing your lot with mine."

He chucked her lightly on the chin.

"You are worth it and more."

Out of the corner of her eye, she spied the tips of Hunter’s boots beside her leg and looked upward at his impressive height.

"If I may break up this tête-à-tête,
ladies
, we must ride if we are to get there before dark."

She sighed and rubbed the small of her back. Her thighs and buttocks were sore already. Another few hours would turn them to pulp. Perhaps she could have a soothing herbal bath that evening to ease the soreness. That one grand possibility made her smile as she began to pack up the remainder of their meal.

They rode for three more hours through field and then woods before they crossed on to Lord Moray’s lands. As they neared the grand country home in the evening twilight, an uneasiness settled over Ian.

The stone house was painted white, its windows dark, soulless eyes, its red door a painted, gaping maw. The sharp corners of the house stood in stark relief against the trees that bordered it.

A chill swept through him. His senses came to full alert. Ian’s sharply honed battle instincts took over.

He scanned the woods that bordered the house. They were thick with shadows and trees, easily hiding soldiers on foot. There were more than a dozen fine horses in the stable that looked to have been ridden some distance, their backs still bearing the marks of saddles. This hunt was not to be a solitary affair.

Ian locked his gaze on the Earl of Argyll until the lad acknowledged him, then Ian nodded in the direction of the horses. The young earl signaled an affirmative in return. They had worked out their signal exchanges the evening before to be prepared should the opportunity to speak not be available. Argyll was a quick study. He may not like the unnatural affection lad seem to possess for Sorcha, but he knew the earl would not risk her safety any more than he would.

He tried to shake off the uncomfortable intuition that plagued him. It was only a stone manor house likely filled with pompous Scottish lords. Merely an empty wood. There would be talk, a hunt and nothing more, he reassured himself, even as his neck prickled.

"We’ll dismount here," the Earl of Argyll called back to Ian and Sorcha as he stopped his mount near the sweeping granite front steps. Both Sorcha and Ian pulled up behind.

Ian then assisted Sorcha from her horse, his hands gentle around her waist. He thought he caught a glimpse of warmth in her eyes, but noted also the weariness in her face from the long trip. He placed her hand in the crook of his arm and handed the reins of her mount to a waiting stable lad. Together, the trio climbed the steps toward the large red door opening before them.

"My lords and lady, welcome to Abercairny," the well-dressed chamberlain stated with a bow of his head. The entrance was opulent, but cold and lifeless, from the shining brass chandelier hung above them to the gray marble floor beneath their feet. It smelled of beeswax and expensive lemon oil, but nothing warm or inviting one would expect in a home.

"Lord Bothwell and the others are awaiting the gentlemen in the great room. Would you care to see your room and refresh yourself, my lady?"

Sorcha fell into step behind a waiting maid as they climbed the sweeping marble staircase and disappeared above the stairs. He hoped that a little solitude might ease her weariness. Ian snapped back from his musing to focus on the situation at hand. He needed to observe and listen, and for that he needed all his wits.

"This way gentlemen," the chamberlain said as he directed them through the doors of the drawing room and introduced them to the group of assembled lords.

"My Lords, I present you Lord Argyll," the chamberlain said as he glanced at the gathering of other well-dressed men in the room. "May I present to you, Lord Argyll, my Lords Bothwell, Erroll, Sutherland, Crawford, Caithness, and Lord Johnstone. They will be taking part in the hunt."

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