by Aileen Adams
“You make a good point,” the earl agreed, nodding slowly. “You seem to understand her motivations rather well, I notice.”
Brice merely shrugged. “I do not believe so, begging your pardon. It merely seems to make sense that she might need to breathe the night air prior to retiring. That is all.”
“And you just happened to hear her out there?”
“I was not sleeping.”
“Oh?” Remington raised an eyebrow, smiling. “Did you not find your sleeping arrangements comfortable?”
Brice was reminded of a cat playing with a mouse it knew it intended to kill. Drawing out the experience for its own amusement. That was what Remington was doing with him. Having a bit of fun, drawing out the uncertainty of what this meeting might bring.
“I was answering nature’s call,” he replied.
Remington laughed. “I see. Then, it’s fortunate you happened to answer the call at the right moment. Or else there is no telling what might have occurred.” His eyes took on a sharp look. His laughter was mirthless.
He did not trust Alana. He might not even have liked her.
This did not bode well.
“If ye do not mind, then, I would like to get what little sleep I still can,” Brice suggested, intent on telling the others of this meeting and the impression he got of the man.
“Do that, and be gone by the time my wedding ends.” Remington bent, retrieving a small sack from beneath the table, dropping it onto the surface. It landed heavily, the coins inside rattling prettily against each other. “I trust you will find this amount satisfactory. It compensates the four of you for your troubles—travel, accommodations, both to and from. If you and your companions know what is good for you, you will take it and be grateful to have it.”
It was as though he’d gone from being one person to being an entirely different man, just that quickly. Gone was the offer of hospitality—he was barely behaving in a civil manner.
“We were led to believe we might be allowed to stay for more than a single night,” Brice murmured, reaching for the sack.
“You were misled.” That was all the explanation he would receive, it seemed. “My men will be outside the door, waiting for you to emerge. They will lead you to the courtyard. You will rest as much as you like through the morning, but you will not be anywhere in or around the castle by the time I’m through with my wedding ceremony. And I will have my men search for you. You can be certain of it.”
He motioned to the door with a wave of his hand, dismissing his guest.
Brice retrieved the sack—it was heavy, speaking to the earl’s generosity—and made haste in leaving Remington’s presence. He did not wish to breathe the same air any longer.
Guilt plagued him as he followed the men out to the courtyard.
No wonder Alana had been willing to run away on foot.
He might have, if he were in her place.
Rodric stirred on Brice’s entrance, rubbing sleep from his eyes as he sat up. “Where were ye?” he asked before spying the canvas sack.
“Collecting payment.” He tossed the bag Rodric’s way before sitting down with his back to the stone wall.
“Before sunrise, or nearly? Why?” Rodric opened the bag, his eyes widening when he saw all that was inside.
“She was trying to escape again.”
“She was?” Rodric chuckled, shaking his head. “I must give her credit for trying. She does not know when to stop.”
“Aye, and I’m beginning to understand why.”
Rodric grunted a sleepy warning. “It’s none of our affair. We were not paid to convince the lass of Remington’s finer points.”
Brice snorted. “Nay, and we’d have been hard-pressed to find any if that had been the case.”
“He’s that sort of man, eh?” Brice nodded. Rodric sighed. “I’m sorry to hear it. She’s a nice lass.”
“He wants us out of the castle by the time the wedding ceremony is through. His men will search the place for us to be certain we’ve gone. I do not think he likes us overmuch.”
Rodric looked around at their sparse accommodations with a grin. “What gave you the first hint?”
Brice did not see the humor, dark though it was. He tapped the back of his head against the wall, anxious and irritated and seeing truly how useless he was to Alana. Would that he could knock himself senseless and allow sleep to overtake him
He would merely dream of her, like as not.
“There is nothing we can do to help her,” Rodric reminded him.
“As though I needed you to tell me this.”
“I thought it best to speak it aloud, just the same. I know how much you wish to help her. So do I. But we are not involved.”
“I know.” Brice stretched out on the straw, pulling a blanket up to his shoulders and closing his eyes. It would be easier to feign sleep than it would be to continue answering questions.
All the while, that sack full of silver weighed on his conscience. Was that all a lass’s life was worth?
27
The day dawned bright and sunny, a gentle warmth in the air which spoke of summer’s final days. There was hardly a cloud in the sky. The River Eden sparkled and danced, like an endless flow of jewels which moved past Alana’s window.
It would have been the perfect day for a wedding.
For anyone else’s wedding.
Rain would have felt more appropriate for hers.
She stood at the window, wearing her mother’s dress. A lovely thing, pale blue silk. Plain, no embellishment. Just as Elizabeth Stewart had worn it. While her family had once been well-off, as Edward had pointed out, their fortunes had changed dramatically. They hadn’t the wealth necessary to order the creation of a fine, embroidered masterpiece.
Alana ran her hands down the front, smoothing the delicate cloth, wondering if her mother had been as terribly frightened prior to her vows.
The gown which Edward wished for her to wear—much finer, sky blue velvet with exquisite gold embroidery around the sleeves, neck, and train—was on the bed as it had been placed for her that morning once her ladies in waiting had left her alone.
She would not wear the thing. She needed in some small way to feel close to someone who had loved her.
She was not a child. She understood the nobility did not wed for love. But she had not been raised as a noblewoman. Her clan was not even the largest or most prosperous in the Highlands—hence the need to marry her off to someone with a great deal of wealth.
It was unthinkable, the idea of sharing her bed with a man she did not love or even like. In fact, she loathed Edward Remington. There was something about him which made her skin seem to crawl, as though tiny insects ran along it.
She would be his bride in a matter of hours. Then came the feast, then the bedding.
Her mouth twisted into a snarl as her stomach churned.
The flowers she wore in her hair—tiny white buds whose name she did not know, as it was a species specific to England—gave off a charming scent when the breeze blew through the room from the open window.
It reminded her of her days on the road, riding the little gray mare from home. The countryside had been thick with heather, sometimes as far as the eye could see, and the breeze had blown the scent her way time and again.
It made her think of Brice. Then again, so many things did and likely always would.
The thought of bedding Brice did not disgust her as did the thought of bedding her soon-to-be husband. For she knew what it meant to be near him, to wish for nothing more than the pressure of his lips upon hers.
She had almost bedded him at the inn and would have if he hadn’t stopped in time.
Her body responded favorably to the memory. No, being with him in such an intimate manner would be no hardship. She might even have enjoyed it, as he would undoubtedly have been good and gentle with her before sweeping her up in the fullness of his embrace.
He’d always been good and gentle with her, after all. Even whe
n he was anything but gentle, even while he shook her or threw her over his shoulder or accused her of being difficult and argumentative, he’d been good to her.
He’d only done what he felt was best for her.
He had even returned her to her chambers out of concern for what Remington would do to her if he found her missing.
She saw him in her mind’s eye, his bushy hair, and beard, his twinkling eyes. The way they had only to exchange a look to know what the other was thinking. His almost shy smile when they’d presented her with the mare.
The calmness of his voice when he’d spoken to her in the woods, when she’d nearly been attacked by the boar. The sense of relief which had washed over her like a soft, spring rain when she knew he was going to make everything all right again, somehow.
A single tear overflowed her eye, running slowly down her cheek as dawn broke in her heart and mind, the rising sun illuminating what had been there all along.
She loved him.
And she would never see him again.
“Brice!” she breathed, turning and dashing from the room with only one purpose in mind.
She had to see him, had to tell him. Even if nothing were to ever come of her admission, he would at least know she had loved him. That he was the only man she’d ever love, no matter how many viscounts she was forced to bear by another.
The castle was in a near uproar, bodies moving to and fro, hardly any of them taking notice of her though she was the bride. She did not know any of them, naturally, making it easy to slip between and through groups of them.
She loved him! That knowledge alone made her feet feel light, her head a bit dizzy. She loved him, and she thought he might love her, too.
Or at least like her very much.
She burst from the entry, her head swimming, the sunlight almost alarmingly bright. She looked around at the stable boys and servants, the maids and butchers carrying great sides of pig and lamb to the pits behind the kitchen.
He would be in the stables, of course, and she lifted the hem of her gown to prevent it being ruined before hurrying that way. Would that he were alone…
He was not alone.
He was not even there.
“Brice?” she whispered, not daring to speak his name any louder for fear of someone getting the wrong notion—or, rather, the correct notion which would get her into quite a bit of trouble.
There was no answer. None of them were there. The horses they’d ridden all the way from Scotland weren’t in any of the stalls, either. They had left for good.
A cry of grief escaped her. It was over. All of it.
He was gone from her life forever.
She walked from the stables on much heavier feet, wandering in a daze. Once again, no one seemed to notice her presence, merely rushing around her.
Was that the way the rest of her life would proceed? Would she be invisible to all those around her? Except for her husband, who would take her when he wanted her and otherwise leave her lonely?
She went to the gates which opened up to the road and looked down its length, down to the emerald forest below, wishing harder than she ever had that she might have been able to escape that morning. Being there, even with the animals and the cold nights and no food, would have been a step up from where she was just then,
Even dressed in silk, waiting for her wedding to take place.
Her heart leapt into her throat when she recognized four riders on the road, so far from the castle that she’d almost missed noticing them. Brice’s hair stood out from the others. She had only just missed him.
Oh, how she wished she could call out to him, to beg him to return and take her along. She bit back a sob and the scream which would undoubtedly follow it. He was leaving. She couldn’t stop him.
Perhaps it was a matter of her being fanciful, but…
He heard her. Or, he heard something or felt something which made him turn back. Whatever the reason, he looked up to where she stood.
She lifted a hand in silent acknowledgment, wishing most fervently that she could do more. It would have to be enough.
He lifted his hand in return—then, he rode on with the others. What more could either of them do?
“What is the meaning of this?”
Edward’s accusatory tone brought her back to the present moment and to the truth of her situation. She turned, already searching about for the right excuse. “I wished to bid my escorts farewell, but I see they have already been on their way.”
“Yes,” he agreed. “And a good thing, too, as I warned them to make haste.”
“Why?” she asked, perplexed. “It seemed as though they were welcome.”
He took a step closer, overwhelming her to the point where she flinched away. “Because I wished it that way. Haven’t I warned you, Alana, about questioning me? Did I not already tell you I would have none of it?”
“Aye, I mean, yes, of course. I was merely curious.”
“I have no time for your curiosity.” He stepped away, smoothing down the front of his velvet tunic. Blood red seemed to be a favorite color of his. Gold buttons decorated the front, matching the embroidery at the collar and along the black fur cape he wore.
He must have noted the way she took in his garments, for he did the same to her. “What are you wearing? What is this rag?”
Her face flushed more out of anger than shame. “It was the gown my mother wore during her wedding.”
“It is hideous. Some Scottish garb, no doubt. Barely fit for the peasantry.”
“It is silk,” she whispered. “Far too rich for peasantry.”
“What did you say?” he hissed, closing the distance between them once again. “Are you hard of hearing, my wife, or simply daft? When I only just reminded you of the ill-advisedness of contradicting or questioning me.”
“This is the gown I wished to wear, as it was worn by my mother. My English mother,” she added with a defiant glare.
He spoke not a word.
He simply slapped her so hard, a light flashed before her eyes.
She staggered back, falling to the ground, dirtying her precious gown when she landed. One hand cupped her throbbing cheek.
Her eyes met his and found nothing. Not even contempt.
“Go to your chambers and change into the gown I chose for you,” he ordered. “There is not much time before the ceremony begins.” With that, he returned to keep where his guests awaited him.
He had not bothered to help her to her feet—and, naturally, none of the servants in the courtyard paid her so much as a cursory glance.
They left her alone.
Sitting in the dirt in a ruined gown. Holding her stinging face in one hand and wishing the boar had done its worst.
28
Brice would carry the sight of her in his heart always. Standing there at the top of the hill, the castle walls to her back, wearing her blue silk. The most beautiful creature he’d ever seen, even from a distance.
Would that he could fool himself into believing her life would be a happy one, or even a long one.
“We’re better off leaving now, at any rate,” Fergus announced, trying to lighten the mood around him. That was normally a task taken up by Brice, but he did not have the strength for it just then.
“Why do ye say that?” Rodric asked.
“The sooner we leave, the sooner we return home. I would enjoy resting a short while.”
“Aye, and ye deserve it more than any of us, after nearly losing an arm.”
“Och, it wasn’t nearly so serious as that,” Fergus snorted. “Though I would not mind overmuch if ye were to tell tales of my bravery. Particularly while in the presence of a comely lass.”
Three of them laughed.
Brice did not.
There was a heaviness in him, something terrible enough to make him question whether he would ever be the same. If there would ever be a day when he did not awaken with her face at the forefront of his thoughts. If he would ever stop questioning what wa
s happening to her, how she was faring as a countess. Whether she was at least content with her lot in life, perhaps with a few wee bairns to take her mind off her troubles.
She had changed him, no question.
“I’ve made a decision,” Rodric announced with a glance in Brice’s direction. “With the silver from Remington, we have more than enough to keep ourselves comfortable for a while. I believe it would be best to winter with Padraig and the rest. I was stubborn. I apologize.”
This managed to work its way through even Brice’s dark mood. “Truly, now? What changed your mind?” he asked.
“I’ve had time to think about it, is all. It isn’t charity to accept an offer from a brother. It is good sense. Especially when my wife is expecting.”
“Her name is Caitlin, isn’t it?” Fergus snorted, raising his wounded arm as a defense when Rodric glared his way. “Ye would not hit a man you only just called a hero, would ye?”
“I don’t believe I called ye any such thing,” Rodric smirked.
Even Brice had to chuckle along with them.
Life would return to its natural state. They would go on as they had, spend a long winter at the Anderson house, then take to the road again in the spring. All would be well.
It was for the best, leaving Alana behind. That was the job they’d been paid for.
The woods thickened around them, casting them in semi-darkness. It was peaceful there, quiet, the only sounds those of the animals scurrying through the brush and their voices.
It was almost possible to believe they were already back in Scotland, back where they belonged. Would that it were true.
The more ground he could place between himself and Remington, the better. At least he would never have to set eyes on the brute again.
Hooves pounded the road behind them, causing the four of them to split off to either side in anticipation of what was to come. “Who might that be?” Quinn asked as they waited.
“Whoever it is, they’re in a terrible rush,” Fergus observed just before the horse came into view.
A brown mare with a white star on its forehead.
“Oh, gods,” Brice muttered, bringing his gelding about in hopes of stopping the creature. It was riderless, merely running at full speed through the woods. If anything, it would kill itself before long.