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Taran (Immortal Highlander, Clan Skaraven Book 5): A Scottish Time Travel Romance

Page 20

by Hazel Hunter


  “Do you ken what they mean?” Domnall asked.

  “I’ve seen them before, but no.” She reached out to touch the marks, and at the last minute snatched back her fingers. That made his cloak slip from her shoulders and drop to the ground.

  “Be still, lass,” he said when she bent to retrieve it.

  Jenna felt his hand on her back, and then her eyes closed as pleasure spread from the stroke of his fingers along her spine. “What are you doing?”

  “You’ve skinwork here from your neck to your waist.” He traced the pattern for another few seconds before he picked up the cloak and wrapped her up again. “By the Gods. ’Tis the same.”

  “As the tree?” she asked as she turned around, but the big man shook his head.

  He hesitated before he reached down and pulled up the bottom of his tunic, revealing his hard-muscled abdomen. A long tattoo of the glyphs in black ink ran from his collarbone to his waist.

  “’Tis the same as my own.”

  #

  Finding a naked, unconscious female in the very spot where he had awoken twelve centuries past gave Domnall mag Raith much to think on. Seeing she had been inked with the same glyphs as he bore on his chest added to the mystery. That Jenna Cameron could no more remember what had happened to her than he had upon his awakening suggested she’d also escaped the underworld. Yet she offered no more answers than he had when Galan Aedth had brought Domnall and his men out of darkness.

  ’Tis naught more to be done.

  Only Galan knew of the underworld and its ways. Domnall had to take the lass back to the settlement. Behind his back he signaled to the four other defenders watching them from their positions around the ash grove, and faint shuffling sounds answered him as his men retreated.

  To Jenna he said, “I must take you to our headman, Galan Aedth. He’s a powerful druid, and may aid you in remembering.”

  “Okay.” She glanced down at her bare feet. “Did you see my shoes?”

  She’d come to the enchanted forest as naked as the Mag Raith had, and he doubted she could walk in his boots. Domnall didn’t want her pretty feet torn by the rough trek they’d have to make, so he scooped her up into his arms.

  Jenna made a surprised sound, and curled her hands around his neck. “You don’t have to carry me.”

  “Aye, but I think I must, lass.” He’d be hard-pressed to put her down again, too.

  As he carried her out of the grove Domnall thought of his cottage, hidden deep in the woods, and the wide, comfortable new bed he’d made himself last spring. The tribe’s goose tender had saved him enough feathers to line the straw ticking. He imagined her in it, wrapped in one of his blankets, waiting for him. Her slight weight and soft skin pleased him as much as the scent of her, like a rose blooming under the stars. It had been too long since he’d taken a lover, but the sweet, gentle druidesses who offered him and his men relief in truth preferred their own kind.

  What would Jenna offer him?

  • • • • •

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  Glossary

  Here are some brief definitions to help you navigate the medieval world of the Immortal Highlanders.

  acolyte - novice druid in training

  Am Monadh Ruadh - the original Scots Gaelic name for the Cairngorm mountains, which translates to English as “the red hills”

  anneal - heat and then allow forged material to slowly cool to remove internal stresses and strengthen it

  apoplexy, apoplectic - medieval terms for “stroke” and “suffering from a stroke”

  arse - British slang for “ass”

  aye - yes

  bairn - child

  baggie – Scottish slang for “big-bellied”

  banger – Scottish slang for “penis”

  barmy – British slang for “crazy”

  bastart - bastard

  battlements - protective areas on castle outer walls that have regularly-spaced openings used to return fire

  bausy – Scottish slang for something large, fat and coarse

  baws - balls, testicles

  beastly - British slang for something horrible or arduous

  Beinn Nibheis – old Scots Gaelic for Ben Nevis, the highest mountain in Scotland

  besom – Scottish slang for a promiscuous woman

  besotted - British slang for strongly infatuated

  bhean – Scots gaelic for “wife”

  black affronted – very embarrassed, extremely humiliated

  blaeberry - European fruit that resembles the American blueberry

  bleeding - British obscenity, roughly equivalent to “damned” but much more offensive in the UK

  blethering – Scottish slang for talking a lot without making much sense

  bloke - British slang for a male

  blethering - chatting

  bleezin’ -drunk

  blind - cover device

  blood kin - genetic relatives

  bloody - British obscenity, see bleeding

  boabie – Scottish slang for “penis”

  boak, boaking - Scottish slang for vomit, vomiting

  bone-conjurer – a druid who uses the bones of the dead to communicate with their spirits

  boon - gift or favor

  boyo - British slang for a boy or man

  Bràithrean an fhithich - Brethren of the raven

  braw - Scottish slang for “outstanding”

  brieve - a writ

  brilliant - British slang for excellent or marvelous

  broch – an ancient round hollow-walled structure found only in Scotland

  buckler - shield

  bugger - British slang for a contemptible person

  cabbage - British slang for a mindless person

  caber tosser – an athlete in a traditional Scottish field event who throws a large wooden pole called a caber

  cac - Scots gaelic for “shit”

  caibeal - Scots Gaelic for “chapel”

  cairn - a pile or stack of stones

  Caledonia - ancient Scotland

  cannae - can't

  caraidean - Scots Gaelic for “friends”

  centuria – (plural centuriae) a Roman legion detachment of eighty men

  chap - British slang for a male

  cheeky - British slang for slightly disrespectful

  cheesed off - British slang for angry or aggravated

  cherie - French for feminine version of “my dear”

  Cheshire - a type of tangy, semi-hard British cheese

  Chieftain - the head of a specific Pritani tribe

  chuffie – Scottish slang for fat-faced, portly

  chundering - British slang for throwing up

  clachan - Scottish word for small hamlet or village

  clodhoppers - British slang for work boots

  clout - strike

  cock-up - British slang for a huge mistake

  cocked up - British slang for something done very badly

  coddle - pamper

  codswallop - British slang for “nonsense”

  comely - attractive

  conclave - druid ruling body

  conclavist - member of the druid ruling body

  confinement (relating to pregnancy) – childbirth

  cosh - British slang for “hit”

  couldnae - couldn't

  cow - derogatory term for woman

  croft - small rented farm

  crofter - a person who farms a croft

  cross - British slang for “angry”

  crossed - British slang for “opposed”

  cudgel - wooden club

  daft - crazy; Scottish slang for “unstable”

  death oan a prin stick – “death on a prin stick”; Scottish slang for someone who looks deathly sick


  demi - French term for a half-size bottle of champagne; holds 375 ml

  détente - easing or dispelling hostilities between two conflicting parties

  dinnae - don’t

  disincarnate - commit suicide

  does her nut - British slang for having a tantrum

  doesnae - doesn’t

  dru-wid - Proto Celtic word; an early form of “druid”

  eagalsloc - synonym for “oubliette”; coined from Scots Gaelic for “fear” and “pit”; an inescapable hole or cell where prisoners are left to die

  eala - Scots Gaelic for “swan”

  ducat - a gold European trade coin

  ell - ancient unit of length measurement, equal to approximately 18 inches

  epicure - a person who takes particular interest and/or pleasure in gourmet dining and drinking

  fack - fuck

  facking - fucking

  famhair - Scots Gaelic for giant (plural, famhairean)

  fathom - understand

  feart - Scottish or Irish for afraid

  Finfolk – Scottish mythological equivalent of mermen and mermaids

  firesteel - a piece of metal used with flint to create sparks

  for fire-making

  flat – apartment

  fortlet - a little fort

  fortnight - British slang for a two-week period of time

  Francia - France

  Francian - French

  funeral pyre – the pile of wood on which a corpse is burned

  Gaul - ancient region that included France, Belgium, southern Netherlands, southwestern Germany, and northern Italy

  Germania - Germany

  girthie – Scottish slang for fat or heavy

  going to spare - British slang for getting out of control with anger, rage, or frustration

  goosed - Scottish slang for “smashed”

  gormless - British slang for someone with an acute lack of common sense

  gowk – Scottish slang for “simpleton”

  granary - a storehouse for threshed grain

  greyling - species of freshwater fish in the salmon family

  hasnae - hasn’t

  hauchan – Scottish slang for a lump of mucus one coughs up

  Hispania - Roman name for the Iberian peninsula (modern day Portugal and Spain)

  hobble – to tie or strap to keep something from straying; usually a horse

  hoor - Scottish slang for whore

  huddy – stupid

  incarnation - one of the many lifetimes of a druid

  isnae - isn’t

  jobby - Scottish slang for “shit”

  joint salve – topical rub for sore or stiff joints

  jolly good - British slang for “excellent”

  keeker - black eye

  ken - know

  kip - British slang for “nap”

  kirtle - a medieval gown

  knackered - British slang for “exhausted”

  knocked-about - British slang for “abused”

  lad - boy

  laird - lord

  land of the white bear - the Arctic

  larder - pantry

  lardy cake – a rich dessert cake or bread made with lard, spices, currants or raisins

  lass - girl

  league - distance measure of approximately three miles

  leannan - Scots Gaelic for “beloved”

  lochan - a small lakelot - British slang for a group, usually made up of people

  lorry - UK slang for truck

  ma belle - French for “my beauty” or “my beautiful one”

  maidenhood – virginity

  magic folk - druids

  make a hash of it - British slang, to do something badly

  mandrel - a shaped cylinder around which forged metal can be shaped

  manky - British slang for “disgusting”

  mate (nickname) - British slang for “friend”

  máthair – Scots Gaelic for “mother”

  mayhap - maybe

  mead - an alcoholic beverage brewed from honey, yeast and water

  mettle - a person’s ability to cope with difficulties

  mind-move - telekinesis

  minging - stinky

  mojo - American slang for “magic”

  mòran taing - Scots Gaelic for “many thanks”

  morion - a brown or black variety of quartz

  mustnae - must not

  narky - British slang for irritable or sarcastic

  naught - nothing

  night rail – a loose robe worn as a nightgown

  no’ - not

  nod off - British slang for going to sleep

  NOSAS - North of Scotland Archaeology Society

  nutjob - American slang for a crazy or foolish person

  nutter - British slang for a mentally-disturbed person

  on about - British slang for “talking about”

  on the mooch - Scottish slang for spying on someone á la a Peeping Tom

  oubliette - a dungeon with an opening only at the top

  ovate - Celtic priest or natural philosopher

  pike - pole

  plonker - British slang for “idiot”

  podgy – chubby

  portcullis - a strong, heavy gating used to block doorways in a castle

  prattling - to talk for a long time on inconsequential matters

  Pritani - Britons (one of the people of southern Britain before or during Roman times)

  quim - medieval slang for the female genitals

  ramparts - a defensive wall of a castle that has a walkway

  reeks like an alky’s carpet - very smelly

  revenant - a person revived from death, a zombie

  ruddy - a British intensifier and euphemism for bloody

  scarper - British slang for “run away”

  schiltron - a medieval battle formation used to form a living barrier or wall of troops

  scullery - a small back room off the kitchen where the dishes or laundry are washed

  scunner - Scottish slang for an object or person that causes dislike and/or nausea

  sett – the burrow that a badger digs

  shag - British slang for sexual intercourse

  shambles - British slang for an extensive or serious mess

  shambolic - British slang for “chaotic”

  sheshey – Scots Gaelic for “husband”

  shite - British slang for “shit”

  shouldnae - shouldn't

  side ladders - the slatted upper sides on the back of a medieval cart or wagon

  skelf – Scottish slang for wood-splinter thin

  skellum – Scottish slang for rogue or scoundrel

  skelp - Scottish slang for slap, hit or beat

  slee - sly, cunning

  slouster - Scottish slang for kissing in a slobbery way

  Sluath – mythic air-riding demonic immortals who steal the souls of vulnerable or dying mortals

  snaiking – Scottish slang for “sneaking”

  sod (verb) - British slang for “screw”

  sod all - British slang for “nothing”

  solar - rooms in a medieval castle that served as the family's private living and sleeping quarters

  solicitor - British term for lawyer

  soul-sharing – druid term for empathy

  speak-seer - a druid who can communicate with the dead and channel their voices

  spew - vomit

  splitting maul - a type of hammer-ax combination tool

  spredith - Scottish slang for cattle or livestock

  staunch weed - yarrow

  steaming - British slang for angry or aggravated

  stone (weight) - British weight measurement equal to 14 lbs.

  stone lifter – someone who dead-lifts heavy ancient stones kept in various places in Scotland

  swaddled – tightly-wrapped in linen to prevent movement, used on infants

  tanist – the rank name for a Scottish laird’s second in comma
nd

  Tha mi a ‘gealltainn - Scots Gaelic for “I promise”

  ’tis - it is

  ’tisnt - it isn’t

  tor - large, freestanding rock outcrop

  tree-knower - the Skaraven nickname for the druids of their time

  thick with - closely involved, relating to “thick as thieves”

  topped - British slang for suicide

  transom - a weight-bearing support crossbar

  trencher - wooden platter for food

  trews - trousers

  triquetra - a triangular design made of three interlaced arcs or ovals

  tuyere - a pipe through which air is blown into a furnace

  ’twas - it was

  ’twere - it was

  ’twill - it will

  ’twould - it would

  uisge beatha - old Scots Gaelic for “whiskey”

  unbodying – removing a famhair’s spirit from his physical form

  undercroft - a room in a lower level of a castle used for storage

  vole - small rodent related to the mouse

  wallapers – Scottish slang for “idiots”

  wancheery - Scottish slang for “miserable”

  wanker - British slang for a useless person

  wasnae - wasn’t

  watchlight - a term for a grease-soaked rush stalk, used as a candle in medieval times

  wazzock - British slang for “idiot”

  wee - small

  wench - girl or young woman

  went off - British slang for shouting angrily

  whidder – Scottish slang for forcing someone to do something

  willnae - will not

  wouldnae - would not

  wud - Scottish slang for crazy

  Yank - UK slang for “American”

  your head’s mince – Scottish slang for “you’re deeply confused”

  Pronunciation Guide

  A selection of the more challenging words in the Immortal Highlander, Clan Skaraven series.

  Ailpin - ALE-pin

  Alec McAra - AL-eck mac-CAR-ah

  Althea Jarden - al-THEE-ah JAR-den

  Am Monadh Ruadh - im monih ROOig

  Ana Breem - AH-nuh BREEM

  Aon - OOH-wen

  apoplexy - APP-ah-plecks-ee

  Ara Alba - AIR-ah AL-bah

  Aran - AIR-ehn

  Aviemore - AH-vee-more

 

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