A Highland Knight's Desire (A Highland Dynasty Book)
Page 2
He stopped inches away. “I am Lord Percy, the Earl of Northumberland,” he said with an air of arrogance. “And you are my prisoner.”
She would not allow his English title to impress her. She’d lived in the castle of an earl her entire life. Meg willed herself to steel her nerves. “Why?”
“Let us just say your father had something to do with your unfortunate state of affairs.”
That is madness. “My father has been deceased for fifteen years.”
“Mercifully, he has.”
How dare he be disrespectful? “You are a barbarian speaking of the dead with such disdain.” She tried to slip aside, but his arms shot out and pinned her where she stood. “Where am I?” she demanded, staring at a ruby in the center of his medallion suspended from a heavy chain.
He pinched her chin and forced her to look up to his cold steel-blue eyes. His smug sneer made Meg shiver. She took an instant dislike to his gaunt face, made longer by a twisted English nose. “I beg to differ, my sweet. Scottish swine are not fit to dine at English tables.”
She jerked her chin from his grasp and her head hit stone. Meg ignored the pain jarring her skull. Lord Percy hadn’t answered a one of her questions. “Please.” Perhaps being polite would gain her more information. “Will you at least tell me where we are?”
“Alnwick.”
She gasped. She’d heard the stories. Her father sacked this castle in 1462. “Whatever it is you want, my brother can pay handsomely.”
Lord Percy dropped his arms and laughed, not a warm laugh you might hear at a Yule feast, but a grating cackle, filled with scorn. “Do you think I’m seeking financial gain?”
Meg took advantage of the gap he’d opened, and scuttled toward the empty hearth. Dare she ask? “Then what is it you seek to gain by kidnapping a woman?”
He ambled toward her. “Ruination.”
God, no. Ruined, she’d never be accepted as a novice. She’d be a burden to her brother for the rest of her days. Then the deadly glint in Lord Percy’s eyes brought on another chill. “Do you aim to kill me?”
“Not yet. I’ll use you first. ’Tis not your ruination I’m seeking—I want complete destruction of the Earl of Angus and George Douglas’s spawn. I want to meet all of Scotland on the battlefield and watch them bleed. When your brother marches an army across the border, he’ll break the truce and pull our nations into war.” He spread his arms wide, with a sickly sneer on his face. “And it will all be blamed on him. The fool-born Earl of Angus will then know what it feels like to lose lands and title and have his name soiled throughout the kingdom.”
She’d be the cause of a war? Her family’s ruination? Meg’s gut heaved, and she clamped a hand over her mouth to keep from vomiting all over his long, pointed leather shoes. “You’re mad.”
“I’ll have my revenge. My title was stripped because of your father. Do you have any idea what it cost me to have it reinstated?”
Meg could only imagine the cost, but groveling to his peers would have been involved. Humiliated men would stop at nothing for vengeance. What if Arthur did lead an army across the border? He won’t. Her brother was as shrewd as he was the Earl of Angus. Besides, she could not be the cause of war.
Her own death would be preferable to the senseless slaughter of Scotland’s fighting men. If she could convince Lord Percy his tactics were in vain, he might just kill her now and be done with it.
Boldly, she held out her left hand—the claw—a cleft consisting of a healthy thumb and a pointer finger fused to a stumpy, malformed nub. “Do you honestly believe my brother would risk leading an army against England merely to rescue a deformed sister?”
She didn’t miss the flash of doubt in his eyes, quickly covered by a frown. “He’ll come.”
She squared her shoulders and stepped into him, an aggressive move. “What makes you so certain?”
Lord Percy crossed his arms. “I left my calling card. No hot-blooded Scot can resist a challenge, especially a Douglas.”
Meg whipped around and faced the empty hearth. The earl did know her family well. For centuries, all factions of Clan Douglas had earned their reputation for hot temper and hot blood. Though she fought to control it, she was woven from the same cloth—but she wouldn’t give him the satisfaction of seeing it now.
Who knew how long she’d suffer the hospitality in Northumberland’s dank tower? “I may be your prisoner, but I’m no criminal.” She pointed at the hearth and faced him. “I need wood for the fire to take the edge off the cold, and I insist upon being granted leave to visit the chapel.”
He stepped into her, his hot breath on her neck. “How is it you see fit to make demands when I hold your life in my grasp?”
“You said you need me alive.” She narrowed her eyes in challenge. He’d said he would use her for leverage—that gave her some room to make a few small requests. “What good would I be if I succumbed to the cold—froze in the night? Must I remind you ’tis the dead of winter?”
His gaze dipped to her breasts. “I’ll allow a fire, but you can pray on your knees in this very room.”
Meg crossed her arms and opened her mouth for a rebuttal, but Lord Percy spun on his heel and marched out the door. Before she could dash across the floor, the hinges creaked and it slammed with a boom that shook the chamber. She pounded her fist on the hard wood. “Are you afraid to keep me, a mere woman, from Sunday mass—from compline, from vespers? Have you no decency? Are you to be damned to the fires of hell?” With every word her voice rose and echoed through the tower. “I thought the English prided themselves on their manners, my lord.”
She took a deep breath and leaned against the door. With any luck, her shouts were loud enough to be heard all the way down the tower stairs. Heaven help her, he’d disgustingly stared at her breasts. She shuddered down to her toes. If he tried to take her virtue, Arthur would seek vengeance for certain. She could never allow that to happen.
What chance of escape would there be? If she could convince Lord Percy to allow her to the chapel and perhaps a turn on the wall-walk, she’d devise her escape. Could she take a guard into her confidence? Meg paced. There had to be a way out. She must keep her wits and think.
Listening to the woman’s tirade, Henry Percy’s neck prickled. He’d nearly drawn his dagger and slit the vixen’s throat when she showed him her hand. In no way had he expected a cripple. Was she a witch? She certainly spoke bile. Did the Earl of Angus want to be rid of her? No. All Douglas spawn had a sharp tongue. Obviously, Lady Meg was no different. He would not allow doubt to sicken his mind. His plan was sound. Meg’s beauty far outshone her deformity.
Henry trusted his spies. He’d spent months waiting for his chance to steal the Earl of Angus’s youngest and, according to his informant, most beloved sister. Henry’s trusted men had followed discreetly while she made her pilgrimage to Melrose. Half the distance to Alnwick, the opportunity was too fortuitous to let pass.
Isaac, his scar-faced man-at-arms, followed Henry down the winding tower stairs.
“See to it she has wood for her fire. If she dies and word gets out, our cause will be lost.”
“Yes, my lord.”
“Escort her to the chapel each night after compline. I’ll not be judged by God because I refused to allow the wench to pray.”
“As you wish.”
Henry stopped and shook his finger under the guard’s nose. “Do not allow her out of your sight.”
Isaac chuckled, stretching the jagged scar on his right cheek. “My men will guard the slip of a girl with weapons drawn.”
The earl held up his fist. “Do not mock me.”
“Never, my lord.” Isaac held up his palms. “Where would she hide within these walls? There’s no escape.”
“Women are conniving enigmas. One never knows what their little minds are scheming. I bid you keep a tight rein on her, and never allow Lady Maud to see her. The last thing I need is for my wife to become involved. She might sympathize with the guttersnipe
.”
Again Isaac chuckled.
Henry slid his hand over the pommel of his sword. Isaac’s grey eyes always made him uneasy. “You find me amusing?”
“Pardon, my lord, but guttersnipe is the last word I’d use to describe Lady Meg. She’s anything but a wastrel.”
A ping of desire shot through the tip of Henry’s cock, followed by a flame of hatred blasting in his chest. “Keep your mind out of your braies. If anyone lays a hand on the woman, it will be me. I’ll tug up her skirts, bend her over and defile her in front of Angus—and not before. I want her brother to hear the virgin scream when I tear through her maidenhead whilst he watches.”
Isaac’s jaw twitched.
“Not to worry. You’ll see it all, standing beside me while you hold a dagger to the bastard’s neck.”
Along their journey south, Duncan had two days to think about how they’d slip inside Alnwick Castle. They stopped on the bank of the River Aln, about a mile west of the village. He eyed his men, the best fighting warriors in the Highlands—in all of Scotland, truth be told. Each man had been handpicked by his father, Lord of Glenorchy, and trained since the age of four and ten.
His brother, John, had the sharpest mind but abhorred fighting. He had a daft dream to enter the priesthood. Damned waste of a stealth warrior.
Robert and James Robinson were cousins on his mother’s side, allied with the Struan dynasty. Archibald Campbell, a cousin, heir to the Earl of Argyll. Sean MacDougall and Eoin MacGregor were both heirs to neighboring lairdships.
Together, this band of six noble knights made up the renowned Highland Enforcers, continuing the legacy of Black Colin, Lord of Glenorchy, Duncan’s legendary father.
Robert trotted his horse toward them, returning from surveillance in the village. A frown turned down the knight’s mouth. “It isn’t going to be easy to enter. The castle gates are kept closed all hours. Word is the earl has refused to hear supplications.”
Duncan glanced at his brother. “Looks like we’ll need to pay Alnwick Abbey a visit.”
John arched a brow. “Oh? That’s not like you. Planning to pray our way through the curtain walls?”
Duncan never prayed his way through anything. “We’ll borrow some vestments.”
John ran his fingers down his brown beard. “I didn’t think there was any hope for your soul.”
“There’ll be time enough to pray for me after you take up the cowl.”
“Aye. If I should live so long.”
“You’ve nothing to worry about—especially if we can discover the name of the castle’s priest.” Duncan drew his dirk and dropped to one knee, the others following suit. “John and I will walk in through the front gate—tell the guard we’ve business with the priest.” He drew a circle in the dirt. “In the town square stands the Alnwick Market Cross. There’s enough trade going on there, you lot can blend in without causing suspicion.”
“Four knights won’t create a stir?” Archie asked.
Duncan shook his dirk at him. “You’ll hide our armor first. Then I want you milling about, learning all you can about Lord Percy without making yourselves suspicious.”
“How are we supposed to do that?” For an intelligent man, Archie asked too many questions.
Duncan flicked the tip of his dirk into the dirt. “Stay sober at the alehouse. Listen. Guaranteed, Percy’s men will be on our trail before we make it to the town’s border.” Duncan skimmed his hand through the air. “Who is Percy’s man-at-arms? How powerful is his army? Will they follow us into Scotland—or will Percy send a mob of heathens like us to sniff out our trail?”
“How do you plan to spirit Lady Meg out?” Sean asked.
“I’ll figure a way.” Duncan pointed to the MacDougall heir. “Purchase another mount for her.”
The big man spread his palms. “With what?”
Duncan flipped him a gold sovereign. “This should more than take care of it.” He then turned to Eoin. “Watch the castle gate. Keep the horses nearby, but out of sight.”
“Aye? Ye aiming to take a Sunday stroll out the barbican with Lady Meg on your arm?” Archie asked.
“Something like that. Have the horses waiting when we need them.”
Eoin smirked. “I’ll summon a bolt of lightning to strike down the bastards on your tail.”
Duncan had more faith in Eoin’s intuition than the MacGregor heir did himself. “Just have them saddled and ready to ride.” He eyed them all. “The rest of you, too. Gather what information you can and be at the edge of the tree line by dark.”
Dressed in a brown monk’s habit, cinched around his waist with a rope, John grumbled, “You should have let me wear the priest’s vestments. Did you ever even read your Bible passages?”
Duncan smoothed his hands over his black priest’s robes—hardly more lavish than John’s. “You know I did. Besides, I’m leading this charade. Put up your hood.” He walked with his brother through the wooded path linking the abbey to Alnwick Castle.
“I’ll be glad when we finish with this task.” John ran his fingers along the inside of his collar and stretched his neck. “England doesn’t agree with me.”
A tic twitched above Duncan’s eye, as it always did before he stepped into peril. “Nor me.”
It was dusk after they passed through the barbican and neared the gateway of the castle. With two octagonal towers on either side, Duncan studied the fortifications. Four guards stood at the top of the towers, armed with arrows and pikes. The curtain itself was immense. Twice the size of Kilchurn Castle, the fortress sprawled in every direction like a mountain range. Cannons lined the curtain walls—must have cost the earl a year’s worth of income. Three arrow slits loomed as dark caverns on each side of the gatehouse.
An impressive stronghold in anyone’s eyes, yet a Scottish army had laid siege to it only sixteen years past.
Duncan and John wore only hauberks and chausses beneath their robes. His armor left tied to Archie’s saddle, Duncan felt naked without his claymore strapped to his back. He wasn’t walking into Alnwick unarmed, however. His dirk was hidden beneath his vestments, though all Duncan had to do was reach through an opening at his waist to grasp it. As always, for added protection, he and John both wore daggers lashed to their calves and arms.
As they approached the gate, the sentry lowered his pike across his body, pointing the razor-sharp lance at them.
Duncan leaned into John. “Let me do the talking.”
“Do I not always?”
The tic above his eye twitched again. “Nay.”
John emitted an exasperated cough as they stepped up to the guard.
“Stay back.” The man trained his pike between them. “State your business.”
“We’ve a meeting with Father Chamberlain,” Duncan said in a practiced English accent. He’d “borrowed” the robes while John chatted with a monk and learned the name of Alnwick’s resident priest.
The guard eyed them both from beneath his conical helm and raised his chin. “The priest didn’t notify me visitors would attend him.”
“How could he?” Duncan asked. “We’ve been sent with a message from the abbot.”
The guard hesitated and glanced over his shoulder. “Have you any weapons?”
Duncan spread his palms to his sides. “We’re men of God.”
The guard inclined his helmed head toward John. “What about you?”
Duncan made a show of speaking in Latin to ask John to hold up his hands. Only then did he obey. His younger brother couldn’t affect an English accent for his life—sounded as Scottish as the Highlands, even when he spoke Latin.
Duncan offered a thin-lipped smile. “Brother Julius has taken a vow of silence.”
The guard upended his pike and tapped the staff on the cobblestones. “I’ll allow you to pass this once.”
“My thanks,” Duncan said. He grasped John’s elbow and pushed ahead—straight through the gates of hell.
Chapter Four
“Slow you
r pace,” Duncan whispered. Without his armor, he could have floated through the castle grounds.
Entering the inner courtyard, he quickly took in their surroundings. A five-story keep to the east. The grey stone walls of the chapel loomed directly across. Once they found her, the direst part of their escape would be exiting the gateway and the long trail within the walls to the outer barbican.
“Now we’re inside, how do you plan to leave?” John asked.
Duncan headed toward the chapel. “The same way we always do.”
“Fight?”
“Brother, for a religious man, you have little faith. I aim to walk.” Duncan elbowed John’s arm. “Why are you doubting me?”
John slid his hands inside his sleeves—checking his weapons, no doubt. “I’ve never seen you in a priest’s robe or without your sword. God will strike us dead for our deception, as sure as I’m standing.”
Duncan cared not for a naysayer, even if he was blood kin. “Remember your vow of silence, Brother Julius.” He didn’t like dressing in holy garments either, but this was war. Besides, so far his ploy had proved brilliant. How else would they gain entry to the fortress without causing a stir?
He grasped the cold iron latch and quietly opened the heavy door—until the hinges screeched. The priest paused his Latin incantation. Duncan tugged John into the shadows of the vestibule. On his knees, a richly dressed man turned and frowned—undoubtedly Lord Percy kneeling beside his wife. Unfortunate, Duncan would have preferred to avoid the Earl of Northumberland altogether.
They waited until compline ended. With his wife on his arm, Lord Percy sauntered toward them. “What is so urgent, you intrude on my worship?”
Duncan bowed deeply. “Forgive me, my lord. We’ve a matter of the cloth to discuss with Father Chamberlain. I heard not the mass until I opened the door.”
Lord Percy sniffed, a distrustful glint in his eye. “Where do you hail from?”