Graham looked at MacLean in disappointment. “Because Campbell has as much to lose as ye do if the English proceed as they have been. Because for once Scotland and its chiefs need to unite against a common enemy instead of fighting amongst ourselves for petty offenses.”
And so the Tèarmannair was formed, a mixture of chiefs who were allies and enemies, friends and foes, but who all swore to protect the defenseless and who all possessed Highland pride.
Chapter 1
They were still two days’ ride from home, and Brice was itching to get back. He’d been gone far too long for his peace of mind. There were too many things to get done and, as usual, not enough time to do them. As he’d been doing since Graham’s meeting, he was trying to decide which men he could sacrifice for Graham’s Tèarmannair.
Brice would have liked to discuss Graham’s plan with MacLean. But MacLean had ridden off in the direction of his land immediately after the meeting. Maybe they could split the duties and Brice would have to supply men only half the time. ’Twas worth looking into.
His mount sidestepped and tossed its head, pulling Brice from his thoughts and causing him to yank hard on the reins to remain seated. Damnation, but he needed to keep his head about him, especially with English soldiers patrolling these roads.
Brice spotted the cause of his mount’s fright: a pile of rags lying in the middle of the road. The hairs on the back of Brice’s neck prickled, and he held up his fist in a silent command to stop the line of warriors behind him.
Brice quickly glanced up and down the path, pulled his broadsword, and dismounted. Immediately behind him were the sounds of swords being unsheathed and pistols cocked.
Using his broadsword, he poked at the rags. They were disgustingly filthy, caked with mud and what looked like blood and any other manner of muck that he didn’t want to contemplate. And they stank. No wonder Galad wouldn’t step over them.
But what was odd was that they were lying in the middle of the road. It wasn’t even really a road. A wide path would be a better description.
Lachlan, Brice’s second in command, stepped up beside him and peered down at the refuse. “ ’Tis nothing but rags. Let’s move on.”
Brice bent down and pulled at the rag. Beside him, Lachlan gasped and Brice shot to his feet with a curse. ’Twas no pile of rags but a body.
“Saints above,” Lachlan said. “What the hell is this?” He crouched down and peered closer. “A woman.”
“The hell ye say,” Brice growled.
“My lord.” Calum, one of his youngest warriors and still in training, came running up from behind the line, breathing hard. “Redcoats,” he said, fear in his eyes. “Coming up behind us.”
Lachlan began ordering the men into the trees while Brice made a fateful decision. He picked up the pile of rags, shocked by how little the girl weighed. Why, he had dogs that weighed more than she did.
Clucking to Galad to follow, he hurriedly made his way into the trees and crouched behind a boulder. He slapped Galad on the rump, and the horse trotted off into the forest. His men fanned out behind him, finding cover where they could while Brice held the woman close. He was fully prepared to cover her mouth should she awaken as the soldiers were passing.
Saints preserve him, but if he’d just stepped into a trap, he would be mighty displeased. He had no ready excuse as to why he was riding with a retinue of men. That alone was enough for the English to stop him and possibly arrest him.
He looked down at the lass. Her face, caked with dirt and grime, was pressed against his chest. Her nose was small, her eyes…well, they were closed, so he couldn’t tell much about her eyes, but her brows were nicely formed and her lashes fair and delicate. Her hair was an indeterminate color, matted and covered in more filth. Her stink reminded him of his dogs when they rolled in something they’d found on the ground.
The English soldiers crested the hill, riding in a straight line, their red coats and gleaming silver buttons too bright against the muted colors of the forest. Just more proof that the English were a blight upon the Scottish landscape.
There were only six of them. Brice and his men could easily take them down, but to what end? To be hunted by more soldiers? It wasn’t worth the trouble. Best to let them pass. Brice just prayed that the lass wasn’t a trick to trap him.
They were joking, talking about the women they’d been with the night before. Their language was crude, their descriptions despicable, and it made Brice’s stomach turn. Beasts, all of them. They cared not for anyone but themselves.
He grit his teeth and controlled the urge to put the woman down, pull his weapon, and step out from behind the boulder. That would be something MacLean would have done. Impulsive and deadly. Brice didn’t wish to be dead this day.
The soldiers passed out of sight, but Brice and his men remained unmoving, giving the soldiers plenty of time to put distance between them.
Lachlan appeared at his side and looked down on the woman with a frown. “That was risky,” he said.
“I couldn’t leave her on the road. Ye heard them. They would have misused her.”
“They were so unaware of their surroundings, they would have stepped right over her,” Lachlan said in disgust.
Brice grunted his agreement. The British soldiers would have been dead if Brice had had the inclination to kill them. They had not been vigilant, and that could have been a fatal mistake. Did they realize how close they had come to death?
“What are ye going to do with her?” Lachlan asked.
Brice carefully laid her on the ground. Her head turned to the side. One hand fell lifelessly to the dirt while the other rested on her stomach. She was wearing something that looked like it was once a gown. A fine gown.
In the English style.
Brice quickly looked at Lachlan to see if he’d noticed what Brice had seen. He had.
“Put her back,” Lachlan said flatly. “We don’t need that kind of trouble.”
He was right. The last thing Brice needed was to be caught with an Englishwoman who no doubt had been ill used.
He looked more closely at her. Her shoulder bones were prominent. Her neck looked too fragile to support her head. Her wrists were small and delicate and covered in raised scars, as if she’d been manacled. But the scars were old, healed over. He touched one with his finger, trying to imagine what scoundrel would clap manacles on a woman.
He well knew the abuse that the Scottish women received from the English soldiers, but he wasn’t aware that the English treated their own women the same way. If she was English. But how else would she come to be wearing an English gown?
Lachlan stood and wiped his hand on his kilt. “We need to keep moving.”
Brice kept looking at the woman. She hadn’t stirred at all. If not for the shallow rise and fall of her chest, he would have thought her dead.
“My lord,” Lachlan said with a note of warning in his voice.
“I know.” He stood and picked up the woman.
Lachlan’s eyes widened. “Ye can’t think to take her with us. She’s a Sasannach.”
“Ye do no’ know that.”
“She’s wearing Sasannach clothing. If those soldiers backtrack and ye’re caught with her…”
“Look at her, Lachlan. She’s dying. I canno’ let her die alone.”
Lachlan looked at her. Her skin was pale, thin as parchment, her veins easily seen. Brice felt for the beat of her pulse at her throat. It was barely there, too faint and too erratic. She was starved, and it would be the death of her.
“So ye take her with us and put us all in jeopardy,” Lachlan said.
“Leave. Take the rest of the men and head home. I’ll take a different route.”
Lachlan stared at him in disbelief. “Ye canno’ be serious.”
Was he serious? He looked down at the lass, at her delicate features, at the bruises and scars and lacerations, and he knew one thing. He couldn’t let her die alone. If anyone knew this terrain, it was he. He knew wher
e to hide and where to go for sanctuary if need be.
“Go,” he said. “Ye’re wasting my time arguing.”
“I can’t let ye go alone,” Lachlan said. “It’s too dangerous.”
Brice raised a brow. “Do ye question my authority?”
Lachlan’s lips thinned. “Of course no’, but…”
“Go. If I’ve no’ returned home in three days’ time, then send scouts out for me. I’ll keep to the less used paths.”
“This is insanity,” Lachlan stated.
Brice looked him in the eye. “Some bastard left her on the road to die. If this were yer sister or yer wife, would ye want her to die alone?”
Their gazes clashed until Lachlan looked away. “Very well,” he said. “But if ye’re no’ back in three days, I’ll look for ye myself.”
Lachlan took charge of the men, and with one last look at Brice, they left. They didn’t question the decision, although a few of the younger ones looked at him oddly.
It wasn’t until Brice was alone that he cursed himself and the damn chivalry he felt for this wee lass who hadn’t even opened her eyes to look at him. But what he’d told Lachlan was the truth. Only an animal would leave a starving woman to die along the side of the road. Someone had left her here. He would do what was right and see her the rest of the way to God.
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The Reluctant Duchess Page 26