Read Highlanders Online

Authors: Tarah Scott

Highlanders (9 page)

He sat in the seat nearest her. “You look well, my lady.”

Rhoslyn set her mug on the table. “I am much refreshed.”

He nodded but she noted the uncertainty in his eyes.

“You do no’ look like a man whose quest was fruitful,” Ross said. 

“I did not find him.”

Rhoslyn found herself unable to speak. What was wrong with her? Dayton St. Claire was nowhere near her. But the knowledge didn’t stop the tremble in her limbs. A hand unexpectedly covered and squeezed hers. She yanked her hand back before realizing it was St. Claire’s hand.

“Forgive me,” he said. “I did not mean to startle you. I only wanted to assure you that Dayton will never again come near you.”

She nodded. “Thank ye. I know.”

“I am surprised he is still in Scotland,” Ross said.

“As am I.”

“Will ye remain to search for him while we return to Castle Glenbarr?” Rhoslyn asked.

She couldn’t decide whether she wanted him to stay or return. If he stayed, that gave her time to reconcile herself to the...kidnapping
and
her marriage. But she couldn’t deny the fear that edged through her at the thought of him not being present for the return trip. Stupid, he had a company of two dozen men, and her grandfather had brought men, as well. Nothing could possibly happen.

“I will return with you,” St. Claire said. “I have spoken with the sheriff. If they apprehend Dayton, he will notify me.”

From the corner of her eye, Rhoslyn saw her grandfather enter the tavern. He strode to their table. When he reached them, he pulled her up and studied her. His gaze lingered on the bruise that darkened her cheek before sending a penetrating glance St. Claire’s way. Then he pulled her into his arms and she relaxed into the warmth of his familiar embrace. It took all her will not to break down into blubbering sobs. She was thankful when he declined the morning meal and said he would rather start for home as soon as she was ready to leave.

 

A damp mist hung in the air all day, which fit Rhoslyn’s mood. They stopped twice at taverns for drink and food. She feigned fatigue, but feared her grandfather would guess the truth. As the day wore on, her fatigue became real.

“We should stop for the night,” her grandfather said when the sun dipped in the horizon. “There is a village up ahead. We can take shelter in a barn, if need be.”

Rhoslyn shook her head. “Nay. I want to reach Castle Glenbarr tonight.”

“Lady Rhoslyn,” St. Claire began.

“Tonight,” she said.

He stared for a long moment, then nodded.

Night fell and with it came a light drizzle. Rhoslyn wrapped her cloak more tightly about her, but as the darkness deepened, so did the chill. Her teeth began to chatter, which helped keep her awake.

Rhoslyn woke with a start when she realized she was falling. She cried out and grabbed for the pommel, but found instead that her fingers closed around warm muscle.

“You are safe,” came a male voice.

St. Claire.

His warm thighs beneath her buttocks reminded her of last night when he’d held her. She had fallen asleep and he had pulled her from her horse. Unexpectedly, panic swept her.

She shoved at his chest. “Release me. I can ride.”

“You nearly fell from your horse,” he said.

“I can stay awake,” she insisted.

“We’re two hours from Castle Glenbarr,” he said. “You will ride with me or we will stop and you will rest.” She didn’t immediately answer and he added, “We will rest until I am certain you can safely ride.”

“Do no’ think ye can order me about, St. Claire. I am a grown woman and I can think for myself.”

“Then use your brain,” he said. “If you fall and hurt yourself that will delay us.”

“Ye are no’ as logical as you believe yourself to be,” she muttered. But she couldn’t deny that she had already begun to relax in his arms.

“Take this,” her grandfather said.

Rhoslyn felt a cozy warmth settle around her and realized a plaid had been draped over her. St. Claire tucked the blanket more tightly around her and she burrowed closer to the warm wall of his chest.

* * *

Talbot snapped alert at the pounding of hooves on moist ground.

Seward’s horse let out a snort when the old baron pulled back on the reins. “Ye hear that?”

Talbot slowed beside him. “Two, maybe three riders.” He twisted and looked over his shoulder, but discerned only dark shadows beyond the darkness where their company of men ended.

Seward called out a quiet order for his men to face the riders. “Ride with Rhoslyn,” he ordered Talbot. “I will deal with these men.”

Talbot spurred his horse into a gallop and Baxter joined him with their men riding behind. Rhoslyn stirred in his arms. He felt tugs on the blanket that encircled her.

“What is happening?” she murmured.

The last hour with her rounded bottom pressed snugly against his cock had been torture. Now, her sleep-filled voice made the erection pulse with a vengeance.

“We are nearly home,” he said.

She pushed against his chest to straighten, the shift of her weight pressing down on his erection with such force he had to grit his teeth against the exquisite pain.

“Why are we galloping?”

The force of her body jostling against his groin with the gallop of the horse made him wonder—and almost wish—that he would spend himself in his braies. He hadn’t desired a woman this badly since the age of nineteen. Then again, he hadn’t denied himself having a woman he wanted as he had Lady Rhoslyn this last day

“St. Claire,” Rhoslyn demanded.

“We heard riders approaching from behind,” he replied.

“Surely, ye dinna’ expect your brother to follow us?”

“Nay, but that does not mean we will not encounter robbers.”

“Give me a dirk,” she said.

He snorted. “I have yet to recover from the last time you had a knife while sitting on my lap.”

“I do no’ intend to use it on ye.” She sounded genuinely affronted. “If we encounter brigands, I would like protection.”


I
am your protection,” he replied.

The words were barely out of his mouth when riders shot from the trees onto the road in front of them.

Talbot cursed, and drew his sword in unison with his men drawing their swords. “In Scotland less than a week and this is the third battle I have fought,” he muttered.

“Three?” Lady Rhoslyn said. “I will want to hear the other two tales. For now, give me a dirk.”

“Who goes there?” Baxter demanded as Talbot urged his horse toward the edge of the road and away from the newcomers.

“Prepare yourself,” Talbot told her in a low voice. “If I must push you from the saddle—”

“St. Claire,” someone called, and Talbot paused, “‘tis I, Ralf Wardwn.”

“Ralf?” Talbot nudged his horse past his men to the rider and saw that it was Ralf. “I should send you to your maker. What are you doing rushing onto the road like that?”

“I took a short cut to reach ye. Forgive me, Lady Rhoslyn. I hope we didna’ scare you. There was no other way. I did not want to shout and alert anyone along the way.”

“Including me,” Talbot said.  “Who is that with you?” He nodded to the rider behind Ralf.

“This is Simon. Ingram and two other men are searching for ye on the road behind us. We broke up so that I could search ahead in case we had missed you.”

“You have news of my brother?” Talbot asked. He was sure he felt a tremble in Lady Rhoslyn’s body and tightened his arm around her.

“Nay,” Ralf said. “I wish it were so. I am here to tell you of a plot to accost ye on the road and kill you.”

“Friends of the men in the tavern?” Talbot asked.

“Aye, only meaner.”

“How fortunate,” Talbot muttered. “We are but an hour from Castle Glenbarr. Why wait so long?”

“The plot was hatched last minute, the result of ale and misguided passions.”

“Dayton?” he asked.

“‘Tis what we suspect, but we didna’ hear for ourselves. Once we got wind of the plan we set out after you.”

“You went to a lot of trouble to warn me.”

“Ye know how much I hate an unfair fight.”

“I believe this is a clue to one of the battles ye mentioned,” Lady Rhoslyn said.

“Too long a story for now,” Talbot said. “I wager Ingram is who Seward encountered behind us. Baxter,” he called, “send a man back to see what goes with Seward. I want to get to Castle Glenbarr as quickly as possible. If it is Ingram who caught up with them, invite him to Castle Glenbarr.” Talbot returned his attention to Ralf. “Will you ride with us as well? I can offer food and shelter, and we can talk.” 

“Aye,” Ralf replied. “Glen will come, too.”

“Good.” Talbot started to turn his horse toward home.

“I should ride,” Lady Rhoslyn said. “We can ride faster if I am riding my own horse.”

She was right, but he didn’t like it. “You will do exactly as I say,” he said.

“Beware giving too many orders, English.”

“I will brook no argument, Lady Rhoslyn. You will do as I say or ride with me.”

“What is your command?”

Her voice was calm, but he heard the steel. He had steel of his own.

“At the first sign of trouble you ride with me and Baxter to Castle Glenbarr as fast as possible.”

“The last time I left a fight I was captured by you.”

“Then you need not fear,” he said, “for I am not the one chasing you this time.”

 

They reached Castle Glenbarr without incident, but Talbot knew the trouble had only begun. Seward knew it as well. He and Ingram arrived half an hour later, and they sought out Talbot in the great hall where he sat with Ralf.

“The vows are not yet said, and ye already have enemies,” Seward said in greeting.

“Sit down,” Talbot said, then ordered a waiting lad to bring ale before returning his attention to the old baron. “I had enemies before I ever set foot in Scotland.”

Seward sat down. “Is the wealth my granddaughter brings to the marriage worth living among enemies?”

“A few enemies is paltry in comparison to war campaigns,” Talbot replied.

The old man grunted. “Ye underestimate the Highland temperament. These men have a great capacity for hating you.”

Talbot shrugged. “I would find no less if I lived amongst my own.”

The boy brought two mugs of ale and a pitcher. He set them before the two men, then stepped back, awaiting further instructions.

“Then it must be your sweet nature that makes ye so loveable,” Seward said.

Despite the sarcasm, Talbot detected grudging respect. “About as loveable as you,” he replied. “Only yesterday, Aodh Roberts was ready to send you to your reward.”

“I should have dealt with Aodh years ago, but I grew up with his cousin. They wouldna’ forgive me if I killed him.”

“You are a fortunate man to be surrounded by so many relatives.”

“They are your relatives now, too,” Seward replied.

Talbot laughed. “Do they see me as a relative?”

“They will when they want something from ye. God help you when that happens.”

“I have a feeling that is exactly what is about to happen.”

“Aye. Ye can begin by telling me who your new friends are.” He nodded to Ralf, Ingram, and the other two men who set across from him.”

Talbot recounted the story, ending with, “They tell me that Dayton claims he and Rhoslyn are married.”

“Married?” The old man’s eyes narrowed in anger. “I will kill him for what he did to my granddaughter.”

So Seward had guessed that Dayton raped Rhoslyn. Talbot wasn’t surprised. The man wasn’t stupid. “You will not have the chance,” he said. “I claim the right to kill him.”

“Ye canna’ follow him to England. ‘Tis too dangerous to leave Rhoslyn unprotected.”

“I would think you could protect her while I am away,” Talbot said. “I would also think you would be happy to see me go.”

Seward grunted. “If I thought I could get rid of you
and
the rest of your kind, I would tie ye up, send you to the Far East, then marry Rhoslyn off to Melrose. But your brother’s actions give me pause. Edward will no’ so easily give up the taxes he’ll receive from the Kinsley fortune—and your brother knows it. I wager he gambled that Edward would overlook his methods in ensuring his part of that fortune. If anything happens to ye, Edward is likely to uphold your brother’s claim that he and Rhoslyn are married. If I must choose between two devils, I choose the least evil of the two.”

“I am flattered,” Talbot replied.

* * *

Rhoslyn looked up from the list of goods she was verifying against the wagon filled with vegetables and fruits from the village. Her grandfather and St. Claire approached with determined steps she knew meant they had come in search of her. She had risen early and thrown herself into work in an effort to put the last two days behind her. She didn’t like the united front the two men presented. It couldn’t bode well for her.

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