Wicked Highland Heroes
Page 90
He cocked his head, listening. “There is fighting in the center of the village.”
He paused at the corner of the building and peered around the edge. A Robertson warrior lay dead between the cottage they hid behind and the one opposite it. Another man’s legs stuck out from the back of the far cottage. Iain pushed away from the wall and strode past the dead man. Bran glanced at the man and frowned.
“I am sorry,” Iain said.
“No need,” Bran said.
“You knew him?”
“Enough to know I did not like him.”
They reached the back of the cottages. Iain halted, leaned against the wall, and slowly looked around the corner. Men fought some distance down the lane.
“Bran,” Iain pushed away from the building and glanced over his shoulder at the boy, “come—” the words died at the sight of a Robertson warrior behind Bran, sword lifted.
“Bran!” Iain grabbed Bran’s arm, yanking him clear.
Iain lunged forward and swung his axe, slicing a furrow across the warrior’s midsection. Blood spilled from his gut. The man faltered, but continued the descent of his sword toward Iain. Iain swung again, his axe opening the man’s chest. Cool air met the warmth of his innards and steam rolled in large gusts from the warrior’s body. He fell onto his face, showering spurts of blood onto Iain and Bran’s boots. “Thank you,” Bran said as another Robertson flew around the corner. He bumped into Bran, bouncing off his large body. “Rory,” Bran growled. “I never liked you either.” Bran lunged, thrusting his sword through Rory’s belly. The man fell to his knees.
“Christ,” Iain said. “I pray you never have reason to dislike me.”
Bran gave a vicious kick below Rory’s jaw, sending him flying onto his back. Bran jumped forward and plunged his sword through the man’s heart.
Iain caught the look of bloodlust in Bran’s eyes as the boy leapt over Rory’s body and started at a run
toward the sounds of fighting. The shackle’s chain jangled as he followed.
Chapter Twenty-Five
Victoria distinguished muffled sounds of battle before the cottage door flew open. She gripped her skirt in readiness to run while David Robertson scanned the dark room. He took a few paces into the shadows that protected her and she dashed for the door. As she tore past him, a hard yank on her hair brought Victoria to her knees, wrenching a cry from her. In one quick motion, David wound a handful of hair around his hand, jerked her to her feet, and brought the back of his hand across her cheek. She reeled, stopped from being thrown back by his hold on her.
“Is striking a woman universally practiced among cowards?” she hissed.
He gave her hair another vicious yank. Despite the flash of light that blurred her vision, Victoria laughed. A foreign taste seeped into her mouth. She spat, realizing it was blood. David released her hair. Gripping her arm, he dragged her out into the night.
Victoria caught sight of the horse he was headed for. She twisted, kicking at him, but her intention to break away was halted by the fighting she glimpsed between the cottages. “MacPherson plaid,” she whispered. Curling her fist, Victoria swung as hard as she could at David Robertson’s face.
“Bloody—” David’s oath died as she shoved away from him.
His grasp slipped downward and closed around her sleeve. A yank was followed by a ripping sound and cold air rushed across her back. David’s fingers tightened, catching the tender flesh of her arm and pinching hard.
He jerked her to him. “Try that again and you will find yourself with naught but rags to cover your body.”
“Preferable to being your prisoner.”
Victoria spat in his face and reared back to swing at him again, but he brought the back of his hand across her mouth in another brutal blow. Pain shot through her. Her knees weakened, then gave away altogether, and she slumped against him as darkness washed over her in a crushing wave.
“Coward,” she mumbled, vaguely aware rough hands had grasped her waist and lifted her from the ground.
She twisted, seeking soft flesh to sink her teeth into, but a final blow across her jaw left her with the memory of the arms that tightened around her like a vise.
* * *
Iain scanned the room for the hundredth time that morning, looking for any clue as to what had become of David Robertson. The cottage, larger than the rest and modestly furnished, was lavish in comparison to the other cottages. Just the sort of abode a man like Robertson would insist on even as an outpost.
Since discovering the disappearance of David Robertson and Victoria last night, they had combed the village and surrounding area a dozen times. Iain fought back panic. This situation was nothing like the dream when she’d fallen by Edwin’s sword. He would find her. Iain forced his thoughts from the memory of Victoria falling lifeless into his arms and focused on Edwin Hockley.
“I warn you, Sassenach, if you know anything about the whereabouts of this dog or my wife…” Iain pinned him with his good eye.
The earl’s expression turned patronizing. “If I knew where she was, would I not be there as well?”
“I am certain,” Iain put in savagely, “you had no intention of being caught here.” He shrugged.
“You are sure this is the cottage David used?” Iain asked again.
“Quite sure,” Hockley replied.
“And you have no idea where my wife was held?”
He shook his head. “They separated us.”
“I am still at a loss as to how you allowed that.”
A slight smile curved one edge of his mouth. “I would imagine, very much the same way you left her to find her way home alone from a meadow.”
The two men glared at one another, and Iain caught the smallest flicker in the earl’s eyes. “It is your choice, Hockley.” Iain hadn’t stripped the Englishman of his sword.
He regarded Iain, then said, “Death is not what you fear most, is it, MacPherson?”
Iain clenched then unclenched his jaw. “Death is the very thing you should fear.”
Thomas stepped through the door, shifting Iain’s attention from Hockley.
“Well?” Iain demanded.
“No sign of her,” Thomas reported.
“You are sure the Robertson men spoke the truth?”
Thomas exhaled. “We were very persuasive. At this point, I think they would have little reason to lie.”
“You searched the other cottages again?”
Thomas nodded. “But it would not matter which one she had been kept in, she is not there now, and for all the evidence she never was.”
“His men have no idea where Robertson has taken himself off to?”
“There were not many left after the battle,” Thomas said. “It is possible those who knew either ran like the rats they are or were killed.”
“I will have Carrigan sent for,” Liam’s voice came from the doorway. Iain shifted his attention onto him.
“He is the finest tracker I have.”
“Good,” Iain said. “Meanwhile, we will begin our own search.”
* * *
Pain seared through Victoria’s consciousness. Up, up, her mind swam, past the deep throb that worked against every stroke she took toward full awareness. Muddled understanding wove a slow course through her mind and she shifted on the saddle.
“Do not move a muscle.”
The rough voice recalled her to a vague sense of danger. Victoria squinted, looking up past the trees at the stirrings of dawn. Another moment brought full memory, and she was unable to stifle a small cry.
David’s grunt reverberated through her body. “So you remember,” he said.
Nay, she hadn’t forgotten and sat still as stone with the recollection. Her heart pounded against her chest. When had they left the barren hills for the lush foliage they now rode through? David Robertson had the horse at a canter. Had they ridden at that pace throughout the night? No. He would have ridden hard at first in an effort to put as much distance between himself and the MacPherson for
ces. She closed her eyes. Had Thomas found Iain and, if so, was he dead or alive?
Half an hour later, the sun broke over the horizon and shafts of sunlight streamed through the trees. A lone rider shot out of the trees onto the path in front of them. Victoria gave a cry and David jerked back on the reins, narrowly averting a collision with the stranger. She blinked at the bearded rider who wore a wide-brimmed turban and sat atop a steed as black as night.
A rumble forced her attention from the man and onto an ornately painted wagon emerging from the forest behind him. David pulled back on the reins, backing the horse up several steps. His muscles tensed when at least two dozen men rode into sight behind the wagon. Another wagon followed, then another, and yet another.
“Egyptians.” The word from David Robertson held the slur the name entailed.
A tingle ran through Victoria. Gypsies. The memory of her singular encounter with the Gypsies on that first trip to Fauldun Castle surfaced even as the small door behind the seat of the lead wagon opened, revealing an exquisite woman. Dark hair cascaded down strong shoulders, and Victoria looked into eyes she knew had seen far too much of the world. A corner of the woman’s mouth curved upward almost as if she’d read Victoria’s mind.
Victoria bolted upright from David’s chest. “Help me! This man has kidnapped me from my husband—”
David’s hand clamped over her mouth, wrenching her head back against him. “Silence wench,” he hissed.
Her heart pounded harder when David turned his horse’s head and it looked as if no one would help her. But before he turned, the man who had cut them off made a clicking sound with his tongue and his steed lurched forward, barring their path.
“What does the woman speak of?” he demanded.
“Do not stick your nose into something that does not concern you,” David warned.
The man’s attention shifted to Victoria, who pleaded with her eyes while struggling to pry David’s hand from her mouth.
The man returned his gaze to David. “What crime has she committed?”
“The worst crime a woman can.”
Victoria ceased struggling. The voice had come from the woman in the wagon. She stepped to the ground.
“Or nearly the worst.” The woman laughed as she approached.
“Aurari.” The man glanced over his shoulder.
“Do not bother telling me to mind my own business, Evan.” She stopped beside him, her eyes on Victoria. “The woman speaks the truth. This man has stolen her from her husband.” Aurari canted her head. “And he has no intention of returning her.”
The words, spoken matter-of-factly, sent fresh alarm through Victoria.
“Be about your business,” David growled. “The world will not miss a few more Egyptians.”
Aurari’s attention never left Victoria as she said,
“It is time.”
David shifted abruptly and Victoria realized he was reaching across her for his sword. His grip on her loosened and she bit down on the edge of his palm. David stiffened, but still slid his claymore from its scabbard.
Evan urged his mount close and jammed the point of his sword against the back of David’s neck.
“Release her.”
David eased his weapon back into place. He gripped Victoria’s shoulders. Too late, she comprehended his intention. His fingers bit into her flesh, and she was hurled to the ground. She landed on her side. A sudden high neigh rang out, and David’s horse reared. Victoria watched the powerful hooves of the stallion hang motionless in mid-air before beginning their descent toward her.
“Move!”
Aurari’s shout broke the spell. Victoria rolled away an instant before hooves met solid ground. She lay unmoving as Evan’s sword pierced David Robertson’s neck. In one great spasm, David keeled forward, then dropped to the ground beside her with a sickening thud, blood pooling under his neck.
In the chaos that followed, Victoria was lifted from the ground and carried to Aurari’s wagon. The Gypsy women chattered as they patted her shoulder, offered her tea, and pointed to the high bed in the back of the wagon. Victoria didn’t miss the fact that Aurari slipped out the door. Victoria stood and, despite the loud objections, stumbled through the door and down the steps. Men had already begun digging a grave alongside where David Robertson’s body lay where it had fallen.
“What sort of fool are you?” a loud male voice riveted Victoria’s attention onto the man talking to Evan.
“Manouche,” Evan said in a calm voice.
Aurari glanced over her shoulder at Victoria. “That one is a fool.” She pointed at Manouche. “He believes helping you was a mistake.” Without waiting for comment, Aurari strode to the two men and said, “Leave this old woman to his babbling. He should join the other women, hiding in the wagons.”
Manouche looked at Aurari. “This is a grave error.”
“Manouche,” Evan began again, “Aurari has never led us astray.”
Manouche’s lips pursed. “She is wrong this time. We should not return the Englishwoman to her husband. You know as well as I do the Gajikane will slaughter us in payment for our kindness.”
“Coward,” Aurari said with a low snort.
“Aurari,” Evan admonished. “You should not speak to him in that manner. His father will not like it.”
Her mouth twisted with derision. “I care not if he is chief tomorrow. I will never bow to him.”
“You will do more than bow to me.” Manouche looked at Aurari as a man would a possession. Victoria expected him to deal Aurari a blow just as David had her, but instead Manouche turned back to Evan.
“You allow beauty to influence you in matters where it has no place.” With that, Manouche strode away.
Evan sighed. “You will someday regret your actions, Aurari.”
“Perhaps.” She tossed her hair in a manner that said she had little faith in Evan’s prediction.
* * *
Victoria spread the MacPherson tartan across her shoulders and looked at the sun, sunk low in the sky. She closed her eyes, her body rocking with the slow rhythm of the wagon. Not one night had yet passed since her rescue. Many days of travel still lay ahead. How was she to deal with not knowing if her husband lived or died? A chill ran through her. What if it was Edwin who discovered him first? Would Iain have allowed Edwin to walk away alive? Had Edwin kept his word and freed Iain? The wagon swayed. Victoria opened her eyes to see Aurari swinging up onto the wagon next to her.
“I woke you?” Aurari asked.
“Nay,” Victoria replied. “I feel as though I will never again be able to sleep.”
They lapsed into silence, and Victoria fell to studying the men who rode before them.
“You find my people interesting?” Aurari broke the silence. “Aye.”
“But still somewhat odd.”
There was no question in her words, and Victoria didn’t pretend ignorance. “You are foreign to me. But
I am not such a fool to think it bad.”
“And not such a fool to accept it as good.” “I have seen nothing terrible.”
Aurari’s mouth twitched. “You have seen us kill a man.”
“Indeed,” Victoria answered, “and for that, I offer my gratitude.”
There was a flicker of something in Aurari’s eyes. Curiosity, Victoria thought, but the Gypsy woman turned her attention forward again.
“The men will be hungry soon.”
Victoria glanced up at the first stars in the evening sky. “We are far north. The journey is nearly a week.”
Aurari’s face showed surprise. “You read the stars?”
“I have found it…useful.”
A laugh, throaty and full, came from the Aurari.
“Ah, a woman who has lived by her wits?”
Heat crept across Victoria’s cheeks. “Perhaps, but such secrets are better left alone.”
Another lusty laugh followed by Aurari giving her own knee a hearty slap. “I never knew the English possessed such wit. You
need not worry, I am no mind reader.”
Victoria studied her companion for no more than an instant before concluding the Gypsy woman was not above stretching the truth.
As if reading her mind, Aurari’s eye twinkled. “Mayhap there has been a time or two I have seen inside another soul, but it is the darkness that reaches out to me.” She opened the lower half of the door behind their seat. “Come, we will begin the night’s meal.”
Aurari dropped through the door onto the floor of the wagon with Victoria close behind. Bent low, Victoria took two steps until she cleared the overhead bed. Aurari opened a cupboard located next to the rear door and retrieved a bowl, then placed it on the top of the wood-burning stove sitting a few feet away against the right wall. The stove’s ventilation pipe went straight up and out the top of the wagon.
As Aurari pulled flour, salt, and sugar from the cupboard, Victoria made a closer inspection of the surroundings her mind had barely registered earlier. Her gaze fixed on the long wooden seat built into the side of the wagon. Wine colored velvet cushions covered the seat, leaving the finely crafted back and sides waxed and buffed to a shine.
Two more seats with a high counter between them sat to the left of the seat. She studied the S shaped ornamentation carved into the wood and realized it was the same as that on the front door, which stood to the right of the seats. Victoria turned to the large bed in the rear. Beneath the bed, and on each side, were tall, narrow chests of drawers. She ran a hand over the coverings of the bed.
“Fantastic. I had no idea.”
“What?” Aurari said. “That because we travel, we still live like civilized people?”
“It had never occurred to me. But had it, I would not have conceived of such beauty.” She traced the S pattern carved into the drawers. “It is just—” she stopped to find Aurari looking at her. “Just what, mistress?”
Victoria started to deny what she knew her fleeting glance at Aurari’s shabby clothes had given away, but stopped herself.
“Our men are skilled traders,” Aurari said. “It is their task to acquire our homes. Our women, however,” she glanced down at her worn clothes, “are not so accomplished.”
“Surely you have other skills?”