by Allie Mackay
The woman ran away faster than he would have believed.
“Aidan, please. That was just a camera. She liked you and wanted to take your picture.” Kira put a hand on his arm. “You can’t do things like that here. Times are different. You’re scaring people.”
He closed his eyes and drew a deep breath, trying to ignore the way the foul-smelling smoke from the tour bus tainted the pure, Highland air.
“I am sorry, Kee-rah,” he said, the words costing him much. “I-”
“You aren’t sorry you’re here with me, are you?” She looked at him, the worry in her eyes, lancing him. “Or mad at me?”
“Ach, lass.” He rammed the sword back into its sheath and grabbed her, crushing her to him and slanting his mouth over hers in a ferocious, demanding kiss that would surely set the gawkers’ tongues wagging.
Not that he cared.
Releasing her at last, he straightened his plaid and tossed back his hair. “Sweet Kee-rah, where’er you are, is where I need to be. I am no’ sorry, nor wroth. Just….”
Terrified.
He couldn’t say the word, but he saw in her face that she knew. Her eyes filled with the tears she was always swearing she never shed, her whole expression softening as she slid her arms around him, pressing close.
“It will be okay.” She leaned into him, her voice thick, husky. “You’ll see. But we can’t stay here and I don’t think it’s a good idea to go to Wrath. Not yet, anyway.”
Aidan nodded, his own throat tightening.
Hearing the name of his home spoken aloud in this strange place that his beloved Scotland had become pinched his heart more than was good for a man.
But he was a man. A fine, braw one, he hoped. So he drew another deep breath of the odd-smelling air, then braced his hands on his hips and looked round, once more assuming his chiefly airs.
“So-o-o, Kee-rah!” he boomed. “Where shall we go?”
She considered a moment, then beamed. “I think south to Ravenscraig.”
“That MacDougall nest?” His brows snapped together until he remembered she’d told him a Douglas now lairded it there. “To your friends?” he amended, silently thinking a journey to people she knew would be wise indeed.
“Yes. To Mara McDougall Douglas and her husband, Alex.” Still smiling, she looked down and opened her travel pouch with one of those infernal zip-hers. She plunged her hand inside, rummaging about until she withdrew a tiny gold piece of parchment.
A thin, bright and shiny thing that she waved at him.
“My credit card,” she announced, clutching it as if it were made of gold indeed. “It will get us a rental car. I think there’s a small local agency somewhere here in Spean Bridge. Maybe Roy Bridge. If not, I’ll find one in Fort William and ask them to deliver the car.”
Aidan nodded again, trying his best to look sage.
Truth was, he hadn’t understood a word she’d said.
Unfortunately, he did have a very unpleasant suspicion that getting to Ravenscraig – near distant Oban, by all the gods! – would entail a journey in one of the smaller tour-bus-looking things crowded so thickly across the Spean Bridge Mill’s busy courtyard.
He certainly didn’t see any stables about.
Indeed, horses didn’t seem to exist in her world. Which left his original notion.
The one that he didn’t care for at all.
Needing to know, he put back his shoulders again and cleared his throat. “Ahhh, Kee-rah, lass,” he began, pleased by the strength of his voice, “this rental car you mention? Would it be anything like these small tour buses sitting about here?”
To his dismay, she nodded. “Yes. Those are cars.” Then, starting forward, she added, “There’s a call box just down the way. I’ll phone Mara and let her know we’re coming. I don’t have a cell of my own with me. The battery died and then before it could charge-” She broke off, reached to squeeze his arm. “Never mind all that, it’s not important. I’ll just find us a car. Don’t worry, please. We’ll be on our way before you know it.”
Aidan nodded again, beginning to feel like a head-bobbing fool.
But he dutifully followed her down the road, away from the frightful Spean Bridge Mill and its horrors.
Hoping worse ones weren’t awaiting him.
If the speed of the rental cars whizzing past them on the road gave any indication, the journey to Oban would be a nightmare.
Something he became absolutely certain of when, a short while later, she stopped beside a tall, bright red metal and glass container, and opened its door. Popping inside, she punched at tiny numbers on a metal plate, before speaking rapidly into a strange silver contraption she pressed to the side of her head.
Just watching her made his head throb and ache.
When two earth-shaking, ear-splitting flying machines zoomed past just overhead, he knew for sure this modern Scotland was not for him.
“They were RAF military jets,” Kira told him, stepping out of the red-and-glass box at last. “They fly over like that all the time. Even in the most remote parts of Scotland.” She smiled. “Just ignore them.”
Aidan gave the most casual shrug he could. “I scarce noticed them,” he lied, glad his knees hadn’t buckled when they’d sped across the sky.
“Anyway, we’re all set.” Looking pleased, she leaned up on her toes to kiss him. “Mara and Alex are delighted we’re coming and they can’t wait to meet you.”
He grunted. “And the rental car?”
“It’s called a ‘hire car’ here, and we’ll have to go back to the Spean Bridge Mill to wait for one,” she said, hooking her arm through his for the walk to that awful place. “Someone will bring the car from Fort William shortly.”
Aidan harrumphed this time, having never heard of Fort William either.
“There’s just one thing you should know.” She stopped just before they reached the large courtyard with all the tour buses and rental-hire cars. “I’m not very good at driving on the left.”
“It doesn’t matter, Kee-rah,” he lied again.
Something told him driving on the left might be very important in this place.
Not that he was in a position to do much about it.
Instead, he did what he could.
He walked proud and curled his hand around his sword’s ruby-red pommel, taking comfort in the blade’s name.
Sooner or later, he would surely be able to convince himself that he was just as unshakable.
Chapter Fourteen
A surprisingly short while later, considering how long such journeys took in his day, Aidan decided he liked Fort William even less than the Spean Bridge Mill. Regrettably, he was also quite sure he’d prefer walking the town’s crowded, strange-looking streets to spending much more time trapped inside Kira’s rental-hire car.
She hadn’t been exaggerating when she’d claimed she wasn’t very good at driving left. Indeed, he strongly suspected she might even have similar difficulties driving right if such a possibility existed.
He had no idea and didn’t care to know.
For himself, once they were settled wherever that might prove to be, he would secure himself a fine and capable steed. Perhaps even a whole stable of them. Cars, tour buses, and the rolling nightmares Kira called recreational vehicles were not for him.
From what he’d seen of her RAF military jets, he knew without doubt that flying machines would disagree with him even more.
But for now, he had other worries. Another huge, square-shaped recreational vehicle was heading straight at them and he didn’t need to sneak a glance at Kira to know she’d spotted it, too, and was fearful.
Each time one of the monstrosities approached, she gritted her teeth and tightened her hands on the thing she called a steering wheel. Even more alarming, he was certain she also shut her eyes at the critical moment when the horrors thundered past them. Considering the narrowness of the road, he understood her distress.
Sadly, her ill ease only worsened his own.
>
Frowning, he wished Invincible had fit inside the car rather than having to be stashed in the storage area she called the trunk-boot. He felt naked and vulnerable without the great brand at his hip. Aye, to his mind, there weren’t many advantages to this driving.
No matter how quickly the rental-hire car might get them to Oban.
If they even arrived alive.
Something he wasn’t all too sure would be the case.
Casting a cautious glance at his lady, he wriggled his jaw as unobtrusively as possible. He’d been clenching it since they’d left the Spean Bridge Mill and his teeth were beginning to ache. His head ached even worse. Truth was, even though Kira had taken great pains to explain her world and tried so valiantly to ready him for her life before he’d landed in her time, none of those details and descriptions could have prepared him for what he was facing now.
He doubted even Tavish would have been pleased by Kira’s Scotland.
Much as the lout declared his eagerness to see it.
Thinking of his friend made his heart hurt, so he fixed his attention on the road ahead, regretting it immediately when he spotted another recreational vehicle in the distance. As with the other such abominations, it was heading determinedly their way. Dreading Kira’s reaction as much as the coming encounter, he looked down at the wee bit of tartan cloth clasped so tightly in his hands.
An eye mask Kira had called it.
She’d plucked it from her travel pouch and offered it to him when he’d balked at being strapped into the rental-hire car. Naturally, he’d refused to use it, preferring to see death coming than hide behind such a fool thing.
Even so, if they didn’t soon reach their destination, he might reconsider.
“Why don’t you put that in your new sporran?” Kira glanced at him and he immediately ceased fiddling with the bit of tartan frippery.
Driving left was danger fraught enough without him distracting her. But apparently it was too late to worry about it, because her gaze dipped briefly to the eye mask.
“If you haven’t used it by now, there’ll be less need soon,” she said, blessedly returning her attention to the road. “We’re almost to Ballachulish now. After the bridge, we’ll leave the A-82 for the A-828, the coast road that’ll take us right down to Ravenscraig Castle. That road won’t be as busy.”
Aidan harrumphed.
He wasn’t at all sure driving left on a less-traveled coast road would prove any less harrowing than constant encounters with recreational vehicles on a busy one. Coast roads presented other hazards as even he knew.
Things like cliffs and sharp, hair-raising turns.
He frowned. If either one caused Kira to shut her eyes as she did each time a recreational vehicle or tour bus whizzed past them, he would insist she halt immediately. He would then wisely proceed to Ravenscraig on foot, whether she laughed at him or nae.
“I thought you liked the sporran?” She reached over to flick one of the scrip’s tassels, clearly misinterpreting his scowl.
“I like it fine.” He hoped the quick answer would get her hand back on the steering wheel.
Relieved when it did, he looked down, admiring her gift. He did like it. Indeed, he was more than pleased. Never had he seen such a fancily fashioned scrip, all fine leather and fur and decorated with flashy silver-beaded chains and tassels. It even boasted the MacDonald crest. Had he possessed such a treasure in his time, he’d have been the envy of every other chieftain in the Highlands.
A notion that pleased him.
“So you do like it?”
His frown returned. “To know I smiled means you took your eyes off the road again, Kee-rah.” It was high time to warn her about such things. “A mighty fine gift, it is. I am proud to wear it.”
“I wish I’d been able to give it to you at Wrath.”
He swallowed. He would’ve liked that, too. But there wasn’t any point in being sad about something they couldn’t change. So he forced a smile, aiming for a wolfish one.
Just in case she was peeking at him again.
“If your friends at Ravenscraig give us private quarters, I shall show you exactly how much your gift pleased me, Kee-rah. How much you please me.” He glanced at her, deliberating deepening his burr. He’d learned fast how much she loved what she called his ‘sexy Scottish accent.’ Employing it now, he let his gaze flick over her. “Truth is, lass, a man might think this time-traveling business makes a body ravenous.”
“Is that so?” Kira’s heart flipped to hear him sound himself again. Another, entirely different part of her tingled. She knew just the kind of hunger he meant and couldn’t she wait to indulge him.
After all, she craved him just as badly.
“Don’t make me think of such things while I’m driving,” she said, only half meaning it. “I might pull over and demand you take care of that hunger now. But we’re almost there and Mara said they have a big surprise for us, so we’d best keep going.”
“As you wish, my lady.” He sat back, her tartan eye mask still clutched in his hands, his white-knuckled grip letting her know how much his bravura cost him.
Kira bit her lip and drove on, pretending not to notice.
With any luck, Mara’s surprise would be something special enough to take his mind off all he’d left behind. Make him less sad and help him adjust better to her world. From Mara’s excitement on the telephone, she could almost believe that might just happen.
Then, about an hour and a good stretch of lonely coast road later, Ravenscraig Castle’s double-turreted gatehouse finally loomed ahead and she did believe it.
A large banner stretched across the gatehouse, welcoming them with the traditional Gaelic greeting: Ceud Mile Failte!
A Hundred Thousand Welcomes!
Aidan snorted. “The MacDougalls have grown friendlier since my day.”
Kira glanced at him. “I told you, they are friendly. To everyone.”
But the greeting made her smile. Even if she suspected the banner remained in place all summer, there to greet the scores of MacDougalls and others who visited Ravenscraig from all over the world, eager to enjoy One Cairn Village’s Brigadoon-ish charm, or to take advantage of Mara’s state-of-the-art genealogical center.
The welcome banner wasn’t the surprise.
A cluster of signposts lining the drive and the large placard in front of the rhododendrons flanking the gatehouse had to be it. Bold and colorful, the signs announced the second annual Ravenscraig Highland Games.
Not that they wouldn’t have discovered the day’s significance the instant they drove beneath the gatehouse’s raised portcullis and through its dark, tunnellike pend. The castle came into view as soon as they did, but only the tall, parapeted towers.
Everything else was blocked from view, the entire expanse of endless, emerald green lawn crowded with colorful tents and tartan-draped platforms. Rows of refreshment booths and trinket stalls lined the perimeter, as did a large U-shaped area of bleachers.
Chaos reigned with competing pipe bands standing in tight circles everywhere, playing their hearts out, while solo pipers stood on the scattered platforms, giving skirling accompaniment to young girls performing the Highland fling.
On the far side of the lawn, the kilted heavies were already in full swing, throwing hammers and weights, and tossing the huge, telephone pole-like caber. Closer by, more kilties engaged in a fierce tug-o’-war, much to the delight of the female spectators. From their flushed faces and laughter, Kira suspected they were more keen on catching beneath-the-kilt flashes than watching to see which team of huffing, straining tuggers actually won.
Kira beamed as she drove past them, slowing to a snail’s pace as she followed the parking instructions of a young, freckle-faced lad in a kilt. Beside her, Aidan was silent, but she caught a suspicious gleam in his eye when he clambered out of the car.
A gleam that was getting brighter by the moment. So she held her silence, not wanting to embarrass him by saying anything he’d have to com
ment on. Not until she was sure he’d caught himself.
Her throat was thick, too.
Pipes always did that to her. She also knew that such games went back well over a thousand years. That medieval chieftains like Aidan used the competitions to select the clan’s strongest and fastest men. Those with the most stamina and the greatest hearts. Men who became the chieftain’s personal tail, or bodyguards. His most prized fighting men.
Trusted friends.
She shivered. The medieval games must’ve been full of pageantry and color. Things she was certain Aidan was remembering now. She could tell by the way his hands shook just a bit as he refastened his sword belt, then smoothed his plaid, his head held high.
Looking proud.
And so out of place against the backdrop of milling T-shirted, sneaker-footed American tourists that she could have sat down and wept.
“Aidan, my love.” She reached for his hand, lacing their fingers. “We can leave now. No one yet knows we’ve arrived. We can go back-”
“You call me your love.” He looked at her, his gaze going so deep, she’d swear he’d brushed her soul. “Am I, lass? Do you love me as much as I love you?”
Kira’s heart burst. He’d never yet mentioned love, but she’d guessed, hoped. “Oh, Aidan, you know I do.” She slid her arms around him, squeezing tight. “I love you more than there are sands on the shore. More than all the stars in the night sky. I have always loved you. I think since that very first day.”
He nodded, taking her hands and kissing both palms. “Then all is good, Kee-rah. We shall stay here and visit your friends. After that, I cannae say. But we are no’ going back to Wrath. No’ so long as Conan Dearg breathes and a faceless enemy threatens you in my own bedchamber.”
Kira looked down, nudging at a pebble on the graveled path. She’d almost hoped he’d say they would go back to Wrath. Her world felt funny to her, too, now.
She was already homesick for the fourteenth century.
“Nae, lass.” He shook his head, almost as if he’d read her thoughts. “We are here now and shall make the best of it.”
“And if-” She broke off, her jaw dropping.