by Lily Baldwin
She had to admit it was all very satisfying. The women chatted while they worked. Catarina laughed outright when Aileen, Mary’s daughter, told them that her wee brother, Finn, had woken up as an eagle that morning.
“I tell ye, Katie. He climbed up onto the roof of our cottage and after sticking a foot through the thatch, he leapt off, his arms spread wide, a look of pure joy on his wee face.”
Catarina’s dough-covered hand flew to her mouth in alarm. “Did he sustain an injury?”
“Nay,” a young woman of around seventeen years named Jennie chimed in, her golden, brown hair shimmering beneath the bright summer sun. Earlier, Catarina had found herself staring at Jennie while they had worked. Her beauty was captivating. When she laughed, her whole face lit up.
“Sloan heard us hollering for Finn to get his wee arse down,” Jennie continued. “And he arrived just in time to break Finn’s fall.”
“Who is Sloan?” Catarina asked.
Jennie blushed crimson and suddenly seemed very occupied with the herring she dusted in flour.
“He’s one of our finest warriors,” Mary said. “And not bad to look at either with his blond hair and bright green eyes.”
“He is that,” Aileen laughed. “Although, ye might not have guessed as much had ye seen him flattened to the ground with Finn squawking on his head and a pile of steaming cattle shite under his rear.” Aileen’s laughter rang out. “I told him he’d better clean up or nary a lass would dance with him tonight.”
Catarina’s belly cramped from laughing. “Where is your son now, Mary?”
“I told him he had to help the womenfolk with the baking, but he refused. Apparently, eagles are no good at mixing dough or turning spits.” Mary started flapping her arms like wings, her round face brimming with humor. “On account of the feathers, ye see,” she said to Catarina. “So I sent him to gather St. John’s wort and verbain. He should be along soon enough.”
Aileen laughed. “He’ll carry the sack between his teeth, I’d wager.”
Sometime later, a young lad did race up to the table where Catarina worked with Mary. He had a large sack stuffed to the brim with yellow and purple flowers gripped tight in his hand, and about his head was a crown of oak leaves.
Mary scooped him into her arms. “Where has my eagle gone?” she said, pushing Finn’s long chestnut colored hair away from his freckled face.
“Quinn made me Oak King,” Finn said, his dirty face smiling proudly.
“Did he now?” Mary laughed.
Curious, having heard Quinn’s name, Catarina moved closer.
Finn nodded. “He saw me trying to pick verbain with my beak and that’s when he told me about the Oak King. He said that someone had to bring sunshine to the land. I told him an eagle could, but he said it would burn my feathers. Then he put the leaves on my head.”
“Ye’re a fine Oak King for certain,” Mary said, placing a kiss on his mussed hair. Then she turned to Jennie. “Take him down to the spring, love, and give him a bath.”
Finn started to complain, but when Jennie opened her arms for him, he gave no further protest. Catarina smiled, thinking even Finn was not unaffected by Jennie’s remarkable beauty.
Mary sighed. “His wee heart will break when Jennie’s family at last comes for her.”
Catarina looked up from the carrots she was chopping. “Jennie is not a Sinclair?”
“Her mother was,” Mary said. “Lara and I were the best of friends in our youth. But her father married her off to a MacKay.” Mary’s eyes welled with tears. “Their cottage caught fire when Lara’s husband was off raiding the MacLeod.” She swiped at her wet cheeks. “Lara and her wee son were trapped beneath a fallen beam, only Jennie survived. Poor thing had nightmares for years.”
“How did Jennie end up here?” Catarina asked.
“Her father, Dearg, brought her here. She was but seven at the time. He said he didn’t ken how to raise a lass, but I knew it was really because he couldn’t handle the sight of Jennie. She is the very image of Lara, and I watched him tear up every time Jennie spoke one word to him. Anyway, he said he’d be back when he married again and could give her a new mother.”
“But that must be ten or more years ago,” Catarina said.
Mary nodded, sadly. “Aye, ten years come the winter.”
“Do you really think he will ever return?”
“Nay, I do not,” Mary said. “But Jennie does.”
Mary stood then and wiped her hands on her apron. “Enough sad talk. ‘Tis St. John’s Eve after all.”
Catarina smiled and crossed to where Aileen sat weaving flowers into crowns and bunching stems together for hanging. Copying Aileen’s movements, Catarina piled finished bunches together. While they worked other clanswomen joined them, and soon there was a merry group chatting and laughing. The younger lasses jested about for whom they wore their St. John’s crowns. Mary plopped on the ground next to Catarina. Breathing hard but smiling brightly, her cheeks looked like big, red plums still in need of ripening.
“Mary, you have been toiling without stop since before I rose this morning, I would wager,” Catarina said, squeezing Mary’s hand.
Mary chuckled. “Since it was I who woke ye, love, ye must be right. But don’t fash over me. I’ll just sit for a spell. Then it will be time for us all to clean up and make ourselves ready.”
A moment later, someone pressed a kiss to her cheek. She looked up shielding her eyes from the sun to see Quinn smiling down at her. “Come,” he said, offering her his hand. “There is something I want ye to see.”
Catarina turned to Mary, seeking permission.
Mary’s plump fingers patted her hand. “Ye’ve done well today, love. Run along and be with yer man. We’ll see ye when the fires are lit.”
Her hand nestled in Quinn’s, Catarina turned and started to walk away, but then Mary called to her.
“Katie, come back, love.” She held out one of the flowered wreaths and several bunches of verbain. Catarina sniffed at the small, purple flowers. “They’re not for smelling, lass. Leave that for the fairfolk. And don’t go putting that wreath in yer hair. Be sure to hang it on yer door. Ye must guard against roaming spirits.”
Catarina frowned. “Roaming Spirits?”
“Aye, ye heard right,” Mary said. “Do as I’ve told ye, for the doors between worlds will be wide open tonight.”
She glanced at the other women. They all nodded in support of Mary’s warning.
Catarina cleared her throat. “Alright then, I will be sure to take every precaution.”
As they walked away, Quinn wrapped his arm around her waist and pulled her close. “They’re right, ye know, about the spirits. But don’t worry,” he said with a wink. “That’s what the bonfires are for.”
He led her beyond the village defenses. Rolling moorland stretched to the west while to the east the sea could be seen in the distance. He pointed to where men hauled massive piles of stick and brush. Dusting off a wide, flat rock, he helped her sit, and together they watched the men work. At length, the laird himself walked toward the first mound with a flaming torch in hand. He said something in Gaelic.
“Do you know what he said?” she asked Quinn.
He shook his head. “I speak Latin and French. The only Gaelic I know would be banished from tonight’s festivities.”
She laughed and rested her head on his shoulder, sleepy after a day of labor.
“Now they are going to walk the cattle around the fire,” he said, pointing to the line of cows.
“Whatever for?”
“To keep the evil spirits away.”
“What mischief do these spirits cause?” Catarina asked.
“They wreak all manner of havoc and ill fortune. They have been thought to poison springs, rile the spirits of animals, even steal the souls of children.”
Catarina chewed her lip. “Mayhap, we should heed, Mary’s advice.”
Quinn scanned the sky. “We should hurry. The sun is sinking. And
trust me—this is one festival ye do not want to miss.”
*
Catarina threw her head back and laughed as she snaked around the throng of Highlanders, trailing behind Aileen and Jennie, dancing a fierce reel. The pace of the drums quickened and so too did their feet. Then suddenly the drums stopped, and the aching sound of a lone piper filled the night.
The single instrument commanded the attention of the clan. Catarina held her breath as the notes seemed to drip from the pipe, slow and heavy. The sound was hungry, filled with longing. It was primal and touched something deep within her, beckoning her. A large hand slipped into hers, causing her breath to hitch. Wildness and turmoil filled her soul to bursting. She dared not look up and meet Quinn’s gaze, not when she was filled with so much that she did not understand and had no words to describe. She felt his thumb beneath her chin, forcing her to meet his gaze. He pulled her close, pressing her body flush to his, and then they started to move to the ethereal sound. Lady Catarina would have thought their dance vulgar. Katie thought it primal.
“Kiss me again,” she whispered, meeting his black eyes.
“I cannot,” he answered.
Rejection smothered her breath. She stiffened and cast her eyes to the ground. But he cupped her cheeks and brought her eyes back to his. “If we kiss again like we did this morning, ye become mine, my lady.”
Her stomach fluttered. She wrapped her arms around his neck. “I am not your lady.”
He arched a brow at her. “Nay?”
She shook her head, then rose up on her toes, bringing her lips just a breath from his. “I am your lass,” she whispered.
His hands came beneath her arms, and he lifted her into the air, straightening his arms to the sky. She flung her head back as he spun her around. And then he lowered her, her body sliding down his until they were face to face. “Say it again,” he said, his voice strained and husky.
“I am your lass,” she whispered.
A growl fled his lips before claiming hers. He swept her into his arms, and her feet did not touch the ground again until they were in their beautiful hovel. He kicked the door shut with his heel. Then he set her down on her feet and turned around, pressing her back into the door. His hands dug into her hair while his lips claimed hers. She wrapped her arms around his neck, pulling him close. Fire scorched her body, and she gave herself over to the heat. Her hands gripped the sides of his tunic, pushing it high. He pulled it the rest of the way over his head. She stepped back, raking her eyes across his strong chest. Then he seized her arms and raised them over her head. She felt the caress of fabric brush her skin while he tore off her tunic and kirtle. Her hands moved instinctively to cover her body. She had never stood naked for a man.
“Do not hide from me,” he said softly. His thumb crooked her chin, forcing her to meet his gaze. Then he slowly lowered his lips to hers. She closed her eyes and wrapped her arms around his neck. His tongue coaxed her lips apart while he lifted her into his arms. He laid her down, the soft blanket beneath her. His hard body moved over her. She arched her back when his hands cupped her breasts. Hunger gripped her. An ache burned deep within her, craving fulfillment. Her hands rushed over his shoulders when his warm breath teased her nipple. She seized just as his tongue flicked out, sending currents of pleasure rushing between her thighs. She groaned, spreading her legs wide. He moved his lips lower, across her quaking stomach to the very heat of her. She threw her head back and cried out. It was more than she could bear.
Quinn shifted over her, settling himself between her slick, hot thighs. He swiftly entered her. Her body held his in a tight grip. Slowly, he thrust, savoring her every whimper and groan. Her legs wrapped around his waist. With every thrust, he sunk deeper and faster. She cried out beneath him, her warm climax surrounding him, pushing him higher and higher until he seized as wave after wave of pleasure coursed through him.
*
“I cannot imagine you as a thief,” she said to his surprise as she rested her head on his chest.
He stroked his hand down her back. “Well, I am and a terribly good one at that.”
“What do you do?” she said, rolling onto her stomach and looking up at him.
He scrubbed his bristled jaw with his hand. “Well…we…ye know.”
“No,” she smirked. “I really do not know. Tell me.”
He knew to deny her would be futile. “Well…we wait in the woods on any of the roads north into Scotland.”
“What do you wear?” she chimed in.
He smiled. “We dress in black, and our faces are covered in black hooded masks.”
She made a show of shivering. “Quite sinister.”
“We wear large wooden crosses given to us by the Bishop Lamberton himself. And we call each other by our saint’s name to ensure our true identities remain secret.
She smiled knowingly. “And your name is St. Augustine.”
He smiled. “Naturally.”
“Augustine was a great philosopher,” she said. “The name suits you.” Then she cleared her throat. “And did you only robbed English lords?”
He rubbed the back of his neck. “Nay, not exactly. We also robbed ladies such as yerself…need I apologize?”
She shook her head. “I understand your anger. I have no love for my king, not after Berwick, not after so many lives were taken, and so many more ruined.” She stroked her hand down the hard ridges of his stomach. “Anyway,” she said, laying her head back down on his chest and continuing her exploration of his strong physique. “I am not a lady anymore, remember?”
He threaded his fingers through her hair. “Aye, that’s right. Ye’re my lass now.” He kissed her long and hard and proceeded to show her again exactly what it meant to be his lass.
Chapter Eighteen
Rupert scanned the crowded tavern with unconcealed disdain. Residing in the lowlands of Scotland was bad enough. If it were not for the wealth and esteem of Ravensworth Castle, he would have quit those lesser borders long ago for his family’s fortress in London. But having to journey north into the Highlands was intolerable. The tables were filled with unkempt men clad in plaids and little else. It was barbaric and so was there speech. The harsh Gaelic hurt his head. He turned to Stephen. “Hurry up so we can get out of this hell.”
Stephen nodded and stepped deeper into the room with his hands raised high. “Men and women of Cariad, hear me,” he called.
Rupert’s scowl deepened as the Highlanders ignored his brother’s call for attention. At last, Stephen climbed onto a chair and cupped his hands around his lips and shouted, “Silence.”
The room quieted and all eyes turned toward Stephen.
He cleared his throat. “We have reason to believe that my deceased brother, Lord Henry Ravensworth, may have been sent to his grave at the hand of his wife, Lady Catarina Ravensworth.”
Rupert growled and grabbed Stephen by the arm and yanked him to the floor. “Listen to me,” Rupert demanded, his eyes raking the crowd, looking as many men in the eye as he could. “My own brother is dead, murdered by his whore of a wife. I happened upon them, the poker which she used to smash his skull still in her hand and dripping with his noble blood as she hovered over him laughing while the last breath fled his body.” He had their attention now. “She killed him in cold blood. His life was cut short by her vile ambition.”
“The ambition was yours.”
Rupert whirled, his heart pounding. He had heard Henry’s voice in his ear as clear as his own. Sweat beaded his brow while he scanned the faces. He knew it was impossible. Henry could not have been there, yet still, he could not doubt his own ears. “It cannot be,” he muttered.
A large man with broad shoulders, though not as broad as his own, stepped in front of Rupert. “Why are ye telling us, Englishman?”
The man’s face blurred. Rupert closed his eyes and shook his head. He opened his eyes again and the man’s face came into focus. He remembered the fight, the fight over Catarina. It was her fault. “It is her fau
lt,” Rupert said aloud. He felt hot. The room wreaked of beer and sweat.
“So ye’ve said,” another man chimed in, coming forward. He had blond hair and bright green eyes. “But why are ye telling us?”
Rupert felt a hand grab his arm. He jerked around. It was Stephen. “Are you unwell?”
Rupert wiped the sweat from his brow with the back of his sleeve. “Finish here then catch up to us,” he muttered before motioning to the rest of his men to follow him out the door.
*
Sloan stood by and watched the English lord hastened out the tavern door. “Good riddance,” he said, motioning to the bar maid. “I’ll take another if ye please, Mary.”
“A moment more of your time.”
Sloan turned around. The younger man who had first spoke stood once more upon the chair. Sloan scrutinized his dark, intelligent eyes and the frown turning down his lips. Whoever he was, he took no joy in his task.
“The Lady Catarina escaped Ravensworth castle several weeks ago. She is believed to be traveling with a monk named Augustine and her newborn son, the heir of Ravensworth. My brother has put a price on her head. Whoever returns her to us alive and unharmed will be rewarded three-thousand silver marks.”
Ale spewed from Sloan’s lips.
“Did ye ever hear the likes of that?” he heard someone say. “It would take a hundred lifetimes to earn such a fortune.”
Sloan leaned forward. Like everyone else in the room, the English nobleman on the chair now had his complete attention.
Sweat beaded the young Englishman’s brow. For a moment, his features settled in a pained expression. He seemed conflicted, but for what reason, Sloan could only guess.
“You will know her when you see her,” he continued weakly. “Her mother was not from our shores. She gave her exotic coloring to my lady.”