Highlander's Heart

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Highlander's Heart Page 33

by Amanda Forester


  Isabelle strolled around the great hall, speaking to a few people, happy and laughing. David wished to go to her, but dared not stand lest his brothers take it to mean he had finished his meal and decided to march them up to his bedchamber.

  Presently, Isabelle returned with a knowing smile.

  “Ye’ve done something,” Campbell whispered to Isabelle from the side of his mouth.

  Isabelle nodded and smiled.

  “Some daft thing, no doubt.” Campbell put his arm around her shoulders. “I am glad ye are on my side.”

  Sir Dragonet, the former minstrel, stood from his place at the high table next to the Duke of Argitaine. “I would be glad to play for the happy couple and wish them many prosperous years to come.” The French knight walked around the tables to the center of the hall with his lyre.

  “Nay, ’tis right for her kinsman to entertain the bride first.” Captain Corbett and Isabelle’s guards stood and also strode to the center.

  “I’m sure you are a very entertaining diversion, but we are in the presence of his grace, the duke. He prefers more accomplished talents.” The minstrel’s voice rang through the hall and people quieted to hear the growing confrontation in the middle of the room.

  “’Tis so like the French to arrive unannounced, uninvited, and expect preferential treatment. Well, not tonight, Frenchie.”

  The minstrel knight laid his lyre on the table behind him, out of harm’s way. “You insult me! I demand satisfaction.”

  “I’m right here, if you are man enough.” Isabelle’s guard stood with five of his mates, giving him an unfair advantage, or so it must have seemed to the French soldiers accompanying Argitaine who now stood and jumped over tables to join the fray. The minstrel knight ran forward, throwing the first punch and was soon swallowed up in a sea of bodies. The French joined in, followed by the Scots who picked their own sides. David’s brothers, not ones to avoid a fight, jumped from their table and joined in the chaos.

  “Come now,” whispered Isabelle to David.

  “What? What is happening here?”

  “A diversion, make haste.”

  Isabelle and David slipped from the hall and ran up the circular stairs toward his chamber.

  “Merciful heavens, ye arranged a brawl so we could escape?”

  “I did not hear any better ideas from your quarter,” retorted Isabelle.

  “I’m no’ angry. I’m impressed.” They reached David’s room and dashed in, closing the door behind them. David caught Isabelle around the waist and drew her close. “Ye’re a devious wench, but ye’re mine.”

  “How long before they note we are gone?”

  “Soon, I warrant. I’ve trained my brothers no’ to start fights, but they ken how to end one.”

  “We must go somewhere they won’t find us.”

  “My chamber is the first place they’ll look.”

  “Yes, yes, I know that much. Where can we hide that they won’t find us?”

  “I’m certain ye’ll think o’ something. Ye always do.” David’s eyes danced. “Only not a pickle barrel.”

  Isabelle glared at her new husband. “Pray tell, when are you going to let me forget that?”

  “Ne’er.” David tried unsuccessfully to squelch a grin. “When we reach the end o’ our days, I will lie on my deathbed and gently take yer hand and whisper, pickle barrel.”

  “Your deathbed may be sooner than you realize.” Isabelle drummed her fingers on his shoulder, a slow, malicious smile creeping across her face. “I know just the place we can go. A place they will never find us.”

  ***

  “I apologize most humbly and sincerely. I regret my words and anything else that may have caused ye pain or embarrassment.”

  “Too late for that now,” said Isabelle, dragging her husband forward with one hand, holding some blankets with the other.

  “I beg your pardon a thousand times over. I swear I’ll never mention pickles ever again, or even eat a pickle. Pickles will be banished from my domain. Anyone found wi’ a pickle will be flogged. Please, can we go back now?”

  “You are not considering the consequences. Would you rather go here or face your brothers?”

  “Brothers. Most definitely I choose my brothers. They at least, winna kill me.”

  “I am not going to kill you.” Isabelle tugged him up one more step.

  “So ye say, and yet ye keep pulling me higher.”

  “We are almost there.”

  “Nay, no’ one more step. Ye ken how I feel about heights.”

  Isabelle stopped a few steps away from the top of the tower. “Yes, and so do your brothers. They will never search for you here.”

  “That’s because they know I’d rather die than go up here.”

  “Would you rather they find me and strip me—”

  “Come on then, up ye go.” David stomped past her and pulled her up to the top of the tower. The waxing moon was nearly full, and the sky twinkled with stars. Atop the highest tower, they could see all around, the black water of the loch, the torches in the courtyard below, small and flickering like a mirror of the stars.

  David swayed and fell to his knees, one hand on his head, the other on the stone floor.

  “Swooning for me, my love?” asked Isabelle, blinking three times.

  “Aye, I’m fainting for ye, I am.” David closed his eyes and lay down on his back. “I must be a fool in love wi’ ye to come up here.”

  Isabelle said nothing. The breeze whipped her hair around her face. She laid out the blankets, making a cozy nest.

  “Why are ye so quiet?” asked David.

  “Is that wrong?”

  “Nay, but for ye ’tis a wee bit peculiar.” David propped himself up on his elbow. “Did I say something to upset ye?”

  “I still do not know your feelings for me.”

  “I should think they were readily obvious,” said David with a smile.

  “Not to me.”

  David took her hand in his. “I love you. It is what I said that night in the mist, and what I declare to ye now that I have the right to speak the words.”

  “Truly?” Isabelle’s voice was small, she focused on spreading out the blankets before sitting on them.

  “Truly. I love ye, Isabelle. Now and forever.”

  Isabelle met his gaze, her eyes wet with tears. “I love you too.”

  “There now, no need to cry.” David sat up and slid over to sit with her on the blankets. He wrapped her in his arms and smoothed her hair with his hand. “Ye are what I’ve been wanting all my life. Ye are the wife I thought I would never have. I am so blessed to have ye. By the saints…” David released her and lay back down, his hand over his eyes.

  “What is wrong?”

  “I can see over the wall when I sit up. Please let us go back down,” David’s voice was tight.

  Isabelle lay next to him and put her hand on his chest. His heart pounded and he had broken into a sweat. “Do not fear, it will be all right.”

  “That’s what a man is supposed to say to his wife on their wedding night,” complained David. “Are ye nervous at all?”

  “Should I be?”

  “Nay.”

  “Then I’m not.” Isabelle rested her head on his shoulder, keeping her hand on his chest.

  “I wish it was that easy for me.”

  Isabelle unpinned the broach that held David’s plaid to his shoulder and slowly unwrapped it. She paused a minute at his belt, then unbuckled it.

  “What are ye doing, lass?”

  “When my legs were paining me, you distracted me until I felt better. I thought I would do the same for you.” She pulled up his linen shirt and slipped her hand under to feel his muscular chest. “Is this helping?”

  “A-aye. Dinna stop.”

  Isabelle ran her hand
over his chest and down to his taut stomach. Tension was building inside her and buzzed in her ears. She let her hand travel lower. David inhaled sharply. Her hand went lower still, until her heart was beating as wildly as his. Tentatively at first, then bolder and more daring, Isabelle answered the age-old question of what Highlanders wear under their kilts.

  David groaned, long and slow. With a growl, he sat up and tugged at the ties holding on her gown. In a quick movement, he pulled her gown and chemise up over her head, the sound of ripping cloth an indication of his haste. David removed the remainder of the plaid from around him and spread it over them. He rolled onto his side taking Isabelle in his arms. He held her close, and Isabelle pressed her face into the softness of his neck. He smelled of wood smoke and wine and sweat. Their legs intertwined.

  David slowly caressed up her back, and threaded his fingers into her hair at the nape of her neck. He snuggled down until his lips claimed hers. He moved with slow, purposeful movements, deepening the kiss. Isabelle held on and pressed him tighter, wanting more.

  The buzzing in her ears grew louder and her whole body hummed along with it. Vibrations coursed through her, tingling her skin, curling her toes. A thrumming tension was building deep inside her. She ran her hand up and down his back, pressing him to her, rolling him on top of her. She needed him closer. She needed him. Husband and wife, joined forever.

  He responded with slow determination, ignoring her urgency, caressing her body with long, smooth strokes. Isabelle’s head fell back and she grabbed him tighter, he was driving her mad. Cruel man. The humming became a throbbing, a tension coiling within her, demanding release. She feared she might be torn asunder by the force of what was building inside her. She cared not, she wanted more.

  Isabelle arched upward with her hips, and this time David’s response was not measured. He growled low and hungry and quickened his pace and power. David’s muscles flexed and rippled under her fingers, his skin slick with sweat. The throbbing became pounding, tense, reaching, stretching, until shock waves radiated through her and she shattered into slivers of light. Weightless and floating, she was one with the stars. She was in heaven… until her husband collapsed on top of her.

  “David… can’t breathe,” gasped Isabelle.

  “Och, sorry, lass.” David rolled off her and wrapped his arm around her, pulling her to him. “I apologize to ye. I so much wanted to make this good for ye… different than, well, but I lost control. I’ve ne’er wanted anything the way I wanted ye. Next time I’ll try harder not to let my base nature get the best o’ me.”

  “David Campbell, you take that back or I’ll never let you in my bed again!”

  David blinked and stared at her. “So ye were no’ displeased?”

  “Foolish man, ye rarely get anything right… except that.”

  “Well… well then.” David closed his eyes, a happy smile on his lips.

  “You are mine. Now and forever,” said Isabelle.

  “Ye keep stealing my lines,” complained David, without opening his eyes.

  Isabelle smiled a warm, sleepy grin. “I beg your pardon, sir. Do continue.”

  “Ye are mine. Now and e’er.”

  “You are right. I like it even better when you say it.” Isabelle snuggled into her husband, laying her head on his chest. She closed her eyes, unable to hold them open.

  “Aye, I’m right. Now ye’re sounding like a proper wife.” David braced himself for her retort, but Isabelle was already asleep. “My wife,” he murmured and breathed deep.

  ***

  Isabelle jerked awake to the loudest howl she had ever heard.

  “Arrrgghhh!”

  What was that? Isabelle sat up. Before her was an unexpected sight. David Campbell stood stark naked in the middle of the tower. His eyes bulged from his head, his face was frozen in fear. He started screaming again.

  “Hush!” Isabelle stood, but realizing she was in much the same attire as he, dropped back down to grab a blanket. “Hush now, you’re fine. You’ll be waking the dead now.”

  “W-what. Why am I here?” Campbell started howling again.

  “Oh hush now!” Isabelle just got his plaid around him when his brothers rushed up the stairs and burst onto the tower. “Help me get him down.”

  “Why is he up here?” asked Dain, his mouth open wide.

  “We were desirous of our privacy; could you help him down?”

  “I canna believe ye got him up here,” said Gill.

  “Truly amazing,” said Finn.

  His brothers surrounded him, and gradually edged him down the tower stairs and into his chamber. David spent much of the journey with his hands over his eyes.

  “Thank you for your assistance,” Isabelle told his brothers as they moved to leave.

  “How did ye do it, m’lady? How did ye get him on the tower?” asked Hamish.

  “As I said, we wished for our privacy.”

  “He must feel for ye something fierce to go up to the tower.” Dain shook his head. The brothers stood staring at her.

  Isabelle felt herself blush under the scrutiny of David’s brothers, becoming painfully conscious that she wore nothing under the blanket wrapped around her.

  “I’m glad ye decided to be on our side, m’lady.” Dain bowed low.

  “M’lady.” Gill and Finn bowed as one. Hamish too, paying his respect.

  Isabelle smiled. They had accepted her. Life was good.

  Epilogue

  Alnsworth Castle

  Two months later…

  “Well,” said Isabelle. “’Tis a shame, to be sure.”

  “What’s that, my love?” asked Campbell, reclining near the hearth, his feet propped up on a stool by the dancing flames.

  “I’ve been banished from England.” Isabelle stared at the parchment as if to make the words change their meaning.

  “Good news to ye! I always knew ye was a Scot.”

  “I am in earnest, the king has taken a severe dislike to me and this marriage.”

  “Your once and former king does’na dislike ye, ’tis me he despises, which is only fair since I return his regard in full.”

  “But I find it very likely that he will mount an attack against us, to win Alnsworth back to the English crown.”

  “Aye, he may at that. But soon he will be fighting on many fronts when the Scots attack in the north and the French continue to harass him from the south. He may have better things to do wi’ his troops, but if he comes, the harvest is in. We are ready.”

  It had been one month since Campbell and a small force had taken Alnsworth. Despite the loss of Simon, Alnsworth Castle was well-defended. It would have been a long siege had Isabelle not shown them the secret entrance. It was over in less than a few hours with very little effort or bloodshed. Campbell stretched back in his chair. His duty now was to maintain the keep and see to his wife. It was important that she bring a child soon, so as to seal their marriage. He was a man devoted to his duty.

  “There is another message from the courier, this one from Cait.”

  “How much does she want?” Though Campbell had insisted that Cait and Andrew stay at Innis Chonnel where his clan could keep an eye on them, Cait was in frequent communication with Alys regarding the state of the McNab clan and had fully embraced her status in that clan, taking their cause as her own.

  “Cait is doing well. She writes that Andrew is training with your brothers and he plans to join the French in their war against the English. Many other clans are joining in their cause. Swayed by French coin, I warrant.”

  Campbell gave her a lopsided grin. “The Scots have ne’er needed much excuse to go to war wi’ the English.”

  Isabelle shrugged, a habit she had picked up from Campbell. “True enough.”

  “What does Cait want now?”

  “Are you not concerned with her welfare? W
hat makes you think she only writes to ask for something?”

  “Isabelle, how much is it this time?”

  Isabelle scowled. “Thirty chickens and forty head sheep.”

  “Thirty chickens! Forty sheep! Is she daft? I dinna ken what’s possessed the lass.”

  Isabelle smiled, knowing Campbell would loudly deny and bemoan the request, and then quietly comply with much of what Cait asked and send the goods to help the McNabs. “You’re a good man, David Campbell.”

  David paused in midcomplaint and took a deep breath. He rose and walked to Isabelle, taking her hand. “’Tis nice o’ ye to finally notice the truth o’ it. Time for bed, my love.”

  Isabelle yawned.

  “Hardly the response I was hoping for,” Campbell said dryly.

  “I beg your pardon, I do not know why I am so tired. I am sleepy all the time.”

  “Tired or not,” Campbell said with a grin, “’tis our duty to get ye breeding. And I am no’ a man who shirks his responsibilities.”

  “Ah, if that’s all you want, you can let me rest. Your task is completed.”

  Campbell raised an eyebrow. “I dinna ken.”

  Isabelle smiled at his befuddled face and took both his hands in hers. “You have completed your responsibilities to me. I am with child.”

  Campbell’s face broke into a look of wonder. “Truly? We are going to have a wee bairn?”

  “I’m not sure about a ‘bairn,’ but I hope to give you a baby.”

  “Isabelle!” Campbell grabbed her and twirled her around, laughing. “Och, nay, I forget myself.” He put her back down awkwardly and held her gently. “I love ye so, my Isabelle.”

  “I love you too, David.” Isabelle rested her head against his shoulder, feeling his warmth.

  “I am afraid I lied to ye,” said Campbell.

  Isabelle jerked her head up. “About what?”

  “I dinna bed ye just to get ye wi’ child.”

  Isabelle lay her head back down. “Oh, that.”

  “I’m sorry to say I enjoyed every minute.”

  “I guessed as much.”

  Campbell kept one arm around her waist as he guided Isabelle to the door leading to their bedchamber. “So how tired are ye?”

 

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