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Love in the Time of a Highland Laird (A Laird for All Time Book 3)

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by Angeline Fortin




  My special thanks to my fabulous critique partners, Jody Vitek, Joyce Proell, and Terri Schultz. Thank you so much for adding me to the group. Also to my editor Lea Burn for all her hard work.

  Most especially to Esther M. Soto for the endless encouragement she’s given me over the past couple of years. It was so great having you just a block away, to pick your brain at any hour. To eat with and drink with…

  but then you abandoned me to move to Florida…you B@!*# :P

  Chapter 1

  Spokane, Washington

  Early 2013

  “Oh, no. Not again.”

  Allorah Maines gaped in horror as a man—yet another man—pitched through the mouth of the open portal. This one was quite unlike the first, wearing the crimson and blue uniform of a pre-Revolutionary British solider. His rows of brass buttons catching the light, he staggered to the side and fell, sprawling facedown on the lab’s pristine stainless steel floor. The clatter of his long, bayoneted musket skidding across the floor was audible even through the glass barrier separating the control room from the inner chamber.

  This wasn’t at all how it was supposed to be. When she’d signed on to work this project with the noted astrophysicist Dr. Roy Fielding at Mark-Davis Laboratories, all she’d imagined was the glory of scientific discovery. Making unprecedented strides in the creation of a stable wormhole.

  Making history.

  Achieving the impossible.

  While they had managed the impossible, it had come with a most unexpected side effect.

  Often… too often, what was on the other side of the wormhole they’d created found its way through.

  “Fuck, fuck, fuck!” Fielding was a bit more vocal in his dismay, slamming his clipboard forcibly against the console again and again. “Shut it down! Shut the fucking thing down!”

  Marti and Todd, two of Fielding’s other lab assistants, shared a glance before beginning the slow process of safely tuning down the whirling vortex.

  Al was too concerned with the man on the floor to be as worried about the success or failure of their project and by extension, their jobs. There was a man in there. Not just a stray animal, but a human being who’d been cast through the portal and was now lifting himself up, his expression one of confusion and horror as he rolled onto his back.

  He wasn’t the first to look so bewildered.

  Nor was he to be the last.

  She cried out in shock as another man followed the first, this one not clad in the bright red of the soldier but in a full Scottish kilt. His heavy jacket was torn… no, sliced in several places. Darkened by blood. His leg bleeding profusely.

  And he was armed with a wickedly long sword.

  Her distress had everyone else lifting their heads as the huge Scotsman lurched dizzily, clearly disoriented. His furious howl echoed through the chamber. Even muted by the walls between them, the sound curdled her blood.

  He tripped over the other man’s feet and fell on top of him, the sword between them as he collapsed. A muffled scream of pain followed, she wasn’t sure from which one.

  There was so much blood. Al rushed for the chamber door and lifted the handle.

  “Al, no!” both Todd and Marti yelled.

  “They’re hurt,” she shouted back. “We have to help them!”

  “You can’t go in there,” Marti insisted, grabbing her hand. “The portal isn’t closed yet.”

  “They’re people.” Al shook her off. “I can’t just stand here and watch this happen. Not again.”

  Both of her co-workers appeared startled by her vehemence. Well, why shouldn’t they? She wasn’t one to ruffle feathers. She wasn’t normally the one to bear the standard for revolution but this had gone too far.

  She would fight for what was right.

  “Ms. Maines,” Fielding barked, “I’ve had enough of your bleeding heart. You go in there and you’re fired, you hear me?”

  “Then fire me!” she shot back, surprising him and herself. “This is wrong and you know it. You’ve completely screwed this project up.”

  Yanking open the door, she rushed into the chamber, ignoring the whine of the alarms and yawning whorl of the still open portal. She dropped to her knees next to the two fallen men. As she did so, the kilted man rolled to the side and heaved himself to his knees.

  But for his dazed expression, it seemed like he would live. The red-coated soldier didn’t look like he would be so lucky. He moaned piteously, blood oozing around the sword blade embedded in his chest.

  “Fuck it all!” Fielding barked from the doorway. “Will someone call security, for God’s sake?”

  Marti rushed to do his bidding.

  The sterile clean-room couldn’t be called that any longer. Blood seeped from one while it spurted from the other. Life was doing the same. Cursing under her breath, Al probed the wound, wondering if it would be better to remove the sword or leave it there until he got medical attention.

  “Maines, get out of there. That’s an order.”

  Or perhaps it would be better to let him die now than subject him to the fate she knew awaited him. They’d gone from scientists to jailers already.

  It tore at her heart every time she had to…

  A huge hand wrapped around her arm and with a start, she turned to stare into the bluest eyes she had ever seen. Blue eyes sharp with pain and confusion.

  “What is this place?”

  “I…”

  The maelstrom of the wormhole easing, a security team rushed into the chamber. The kilted man wrenched his sword from the other man’s chest and pushed her protectively behind him, as if he sought to protect her from the quartet of armed men rushing them.

  But he shoved too hard and the unexpected move sent her stumbling toward the shrinking portal. It was closing but not closed enough.

  Her cry of alarm was lost to the vacuum of the black hole.

  Chapter 2

  The Drumossie Muir

  Near Culloden, Scotland

  April 16, 1746

  Such a bloody waste.

  It was all Keir MacCoinnich could think of as he watched the battle from the relative safety of his position on the rise overlooking the Drumossie Muir. A bloody waste of human life.

  And there was plenty of blood. The blood of his countrymen, his clansmen soaking into the highland soil. He’d never witnessed anything so terrible.

  So pointless.

  He was not a religious man. He didn’t feel compelled to do anything simply because God or King demanded it. Only his father could have compelled him to take part in such a futile endeavor. He already regretted giving into the summons prompting his return, calling him to this place.

  Cannon fire from the Hanoverian army whistled like perverse birdsong through the air before crashing through man and earth alike, raining bits of dirt and body parts down like a burst of fireworks.

  The loss of life sickened him As it might in any war but more so when the cause was a fruitless one. The Hanoverian army woefully outnumbered the Jacobite regiments, made up of mostly Catholic Highlanders intent on restoring the Stuart line to the British throne. But whatever support Bonny Prince Charlie might have roused among the Highland chiefs, it obviously wasn’t enough to make a successful stand against the Duke of Cumberland’s superior forces. Not an hour into battle, and nearly a thousand of his countrymen had already washed the green moors red with their blood.

  While he might mourn the loss of life, he felt no sadness at the loss of the cause. In fact, he felt not much more than disgust for that. It was the loss of his people. His clansmen. His countrymen.<
br />
  Such a bloody, fucking waste.

  The mount standing alongside his own horse shifted restlessly and Keir glanced at his cousin Hugh Urquhart, the Duke of Ross, seeing the same impatience in the man as in his mount.

  Unlike himself, Hugh was a poet. An idealist. He would view the massacre below with far more passion than Keir. He would hear the battle cry of their clansmen with his heart and soul rather than a logical mind. All he saw were men too tired, too hungry, and too outnumbered to make any sort of impression on the well-rested and well-supplied Hanoverian army.

  “Your Highness, we must retreat.”

  Keir rolled his eyes. Leave it to the Prince’s adjunct general, O’Sullivan, to make the plea to his liege to abandon the fight when it was O’Sullivan’s fault they were in this position to begin with. It was he who had chosen this wretched stretch of moorland between the walls of the Culloden enclosure to the north and parkland to the south. His senior commander, Lord Murray, had attempted to protest the unsuitability of taking such an open position on soft ground against the Duke of Cumberland’s heavy artillery but the Prince had upheld O’Sullivan’s choice.

  And look at them now.

  For an instant, it had been a splendid visual. The Highlanders charging, banging their spiked shields and shouting out their clan’s war cries.

  Then their advance was forced to veer to the right around a previously unnoticed bog, leaving the far left regiments under Glengarry, Keppoch, Ranald, and Chisholm almost unusable in the battle.

  Leaving the men on the right ripe for slaughter.

  He ground his teeth in frustration. Even Hugh’s jaw clenched at the words, but he knew his cousin well. Hugh would never give over to surrender, even if it were the only sane choice.

  No, Hugh was a romantic. He would take it upon himself to be the avenging angel of his clansmen and swoop in to save them all.

  Even as the thought crossed Keir’s mind, Hugh unsheathed his mighty claymore and dug his heels into his horse’s sides.

  “Nae, cousin!” he shouted as the beast surged forward. “Ye dinnae hae tae!”

  “Aye, Keir, I do.”

  “Bullocks,” Keir cursed before he, too, drew his sword and followed his cousin into the fray with the battle cry of Clan MacCoinnich on his lips. If a man had to die, it was a fine spring day for it.

  Hungry and weary from days of marching without adequate supplies, the Jacobite army still rallied for this last charge. Into the guns and bayonets of Cumberland’s army. Many of them raked by cannon fire and grapeshot before they even reached the enemy. They gave it every last ounce of heart they possessed, taking down as many of the enemy as they could.

  Despite his lack of devotion to the actual cause, Keir was intent on supporting his clansmen in battle to the best of his ability. He attacked aggressively, working his way deeper and deeper into the foray until the enemy surrounded him. With a grim smile, he sent redcoat after redcoat to meet his Maker. It wouldn’t be enough though. It couldn’t be. They were weaker than their enemy, outnumbered.

  It couldn’t last long.

  The scream of a horse drew his attention and he saw Hugh go down, rolling away to escape being crushed by his injured mount. Knowing his cousin had no hope of survival on foot among the overwhelming odds and long reach of the enemy’s bayonets, Keir kicked his mount into motion. Slashing his way through a sea of redcoats, he made his way toward Hugh.

  Such magnificent valor, he thought with a grin of admiration. Hugh continued to fight the enemy with his every fiber. He towered over them all, twice the man any of them were. Giving twice the fight.

  Then one of the cowardly Sassenachs struck Hugh from behind and Hugh dropped to one knee. Fear for his cousin’s life surged through Keir. He was just close enough to see that his cousin had been pierced in the leg by a bayonet. Judging by the angry expression on Hugh’s face as he turned to face his attacker, the spineless Sassenach didn’t have much time remaining in his life. The redcoat turned tail and ran like the coward he was. Despite the injury to his leg, Hugh gave chase, working his way through the battlefield with but one target in mind now.

  The fight in the Jacobite army diminished now and their slaughter assured, the horns ultimately sounded for the Jacobite retreat. Still, Hugh kept after his prey, chasing him across the open moors to the south and through the rubble remaining of the park wall, which had been destroyed to make room for the Highland dragoons to advance.

  Finally breaking free from the fringes of the fray, Keir kicked his mount into motion to follow, determined to save at least one life that day.

  It was with some amusement that he realized his cousin was far more fleet of foot than a man of his size should be. He gained on his quarry far quicker than Keir was gaining on them. Hugh would get his man shortly, then Keir would take him up and together they’d leave this place before the Hanoverians began taking prisoners.

  The red-coated Sassenach looked back over his shoulder in terror. Hugh was but an arm’s length away, however, before Hugh could grab him, the Sassenach fell out of sight, swallowed by a gaping hole.

  He yelled for his cousin to beware. Hugh skidded and stumbled, trying to stop his forward charge, but it was too late. With a shout of alarm, he too fell out of sight.

  Shaking off his shock, Keir kicked his horse into even swifter motion but as he neared the breach, the animal spooked and reared, tossing its rider before sidestepping nervously away. Cursing the animal, he scrambled the few remaining yards as the cavity began to shrink. Calling frantically for his cousin through the curious blackness.

  He was as spooked as his mount. He’d never seen such an oddity before. A chasm that appeared from nowhere. So black that he couldn’t see into its depths. Could not see his cousin below. Or hear him over the whipping wind shrieking around its mouth.

  Gathering his nerve, he thrust a hand into the void, hoping a hand might clasp his own, but there was nothing within. He felt nothing beyond an odd tingle stretching up his arm before he yanked it back.

  “Hugh!” he called again, frantic now. “Hu—”

  He scrambled away from the shrinking precipice when a white bundle sailed from the hollow, landing with the soft thud not far away as the gap closed.

  “Hugh!” he yelled one last time, pounding a fist against the now-solid earth. Confusion ripped through him. He fisted his hands in the stiff grass, pulling it from its roots.

  What had just happened?

  Where was Hugh?

  “Oh… Oh, no.”

  At the soft feminine moan, Keir spun around and gawked at the tiny woman unfolding herself from the ball of white the crater had spewed forth. Light blue eyes blinked up at him.

  And widened.

  Her surprise could be no greater than his own.

  Chapter 3

  Rough hands grabbed Al’s shoulders and lifted her, shaking her hard. The hard jolt rebooted the slow ebb of the nausea her trip through the portal had prompted. Blinking against the bright sunlight, she glanced up into a blue gaze almost identical to the one she had met moments before in the lab.

  But this was not the lab. Nor was this the man she’d seen there, though he was dressed almost identically.

  He surveyed her in surprise and glanced down at her bloody hands before shoving her away. His eyes narrowed menacingly as she landed on her bottom. He pointed another of those long swords at her, bringing it closer and closer until Al’s eyes nearly crossed.

  “Where is Hugh?” he snarled in a harsh brogue. “What hae ye done wi’ him, ye bluidy wee witch?”

  Speechless, she stared at him, torn between awe and terror. Mostly terror, though he was the most magnificent looking man she had ever seen or imagined. The living, breathing manifestation of the untamed Highland warriors she so loved in her favorite novels. Black hair, a wild mass of tangles and curls, surrounding a granite-sculpted face that one never came across in real life. And those riveting eyes!

  But those eyes weren’t warm with the desire she’d
read about. No, beneath his dark brows, they were glacial with an anger bordering on murderous.

  Swallowing hard, she tried to find her voice. He came closer, the tip of the sword touching the tip of her nose.

  She could smell of the coppery tang of the blood tainting the metal. Practically feel the frenzied beating of his heart.

  “Speak, ye barmy witch!”

  She jumped at the command. His harsh voice demanded a response though she didn’t have a clue how to answer.

  “Where is Hugh? What happened tae him?”

  What on earth could she say? She didn’t have to think twice about what had happened to him. She knew exactly what had transpired. And how. Fielding’s project had been a comic disaster straight from the beginning. They hadn’t at all achieved what they had set out to do.

  Mark-Davis had taken government funding from UNICOM—U.S. Army Intelligence and Security Command—to develop a way to win the war on counterintelligence and information warfare. Fielding’s idea was to create a passage through space. A covert way of traveling throughout the world to reposition troops, spy, or even assassinate without anyone being the wiser.

  They had succeeded in generating the wormhole but that was all. Their lack of success in controlling the portal’s destination in place, and even more surprising, time had Fielding hovering on the verge of a mental break for weeks.

  No, she knew what had happened.

  The only questions that remained for her were where and when. She couldn’t get those answers from him any more than she could provide the answers this raging philistine demanded.

  “Speak!”

  She wasn’t sure she could manage that either.

  “I-I don’t know,” she stuttered.

  The sword dipped as he neared until his face was just inches from hers. His eyes pierced hers but Al fought the urge to cringe and cower, meeting him steadily.

  “Ye lie.”

  Leaving the grumbled accusation hanging, he pushed away and paced over the place where the churning portal had once thrived. He brought his foot down hard on the spot, even going so far as to stab at the ground with his sword, but that wasn’t going to bring his friend back, nor was it going to help her get back home.

 

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