Authors: R.L. Mathewson
channeled the asshole within. She honestly wasn’t sure if she could have handled another
minute of bickering.
“Ye didn’t have to be so rude about it,” one of the men grumbled.
“Apparently I did,” Tristan said dryly before adding, “Can we get to the point of your
visit without the bitching?”
“I don’t know how Shayne put up with you for all these years,” came the muttered
response, which piqued her interest enough for her to open her eyes and chance the world
spinning out of control. There was a little dizziness, but nothing like she’d experienced
before. A long, loud suffering sigh had Tristan muttering under his breath and her attention
shifting to Shayne.
“Some days were harder than others,” Shayne said solemnly.
“He always was a mean little bastard,” the man to Shayne’s left said with a sigh.
“Mmmhmmm, just a right mean bastard,” the man to the right said with a firm nod.
“Enough!” the man sitting in the large overstuffed black leather chair that didn’t go with
the rest of the furniture snapped, sounding pissed and reminding her of a certain someone
that was glaring at Shayne.
“Let’s get this over with,” the man said quietly, his tone and words instantly replacing the
light mood in the room with a sense of foreboding.
Tristan reached down and took one of her hands into his. He gave it a gentle squeeze,
letting her know that everything would be okay. She knew that he would never let anything
happen to her, but that didn’t stop her from worrying. She didn’t want to lose him. Kick his
ass? Absolutely. He had a lot of explaining to do and once he’d properly groveled, she
would consider forgiving him for hiding this whole thing from her.
“We should give ye a proper introduction,” the man sitting down in the chair that she’d
really like to get rid of, said. “My name is Liam.”
“And ye already know Shayne,” Liam said flatly, gesturing to Shayne who threw her a
wink.
Shayne nodded towards the man that was still lying on the floor, whimpering pathetically.
“And I believe ye’ve already met Finn,” he said cheerfully.
“And my poor, misunderstood precious balls,” Finn muttered, shooting her a pout that
would have made her feel bad if he hadn’t added the over the top lip quiver.
“I’m Quinn,” a warm, deeply masculine voice said, drawing her attention to the back of
the couch where the man with the thin scar running halfway over his bottom lip and down
to his chin stood, holding a blanket.
“It’s nice to meet you,” she said, feeling herself blush as he shook the blanket open and
laid it over her.
“The pleasure’s all mine, lass,” he said with a small, almost sad smile as he stepped away
and walked back to the doorway.
“I’m Declean,” a man said, drawing her attention to the far left corner where a handsome
man with a roguish smile stood. “And before ye ask, aye, I was always yer favorite.”
“She couldn’t stand ye,” Finn said, getting to his feet before he hobbled over to the wall
and leaned back against it, taking great pains to look pathetic and making him appear almost
sweet and innocent. Since he’d tried to use an obscene amount of charm on her upstairs to
try to persuade her to do what he wanted, she doubted that there was anything innocent
about the man.
“She adored me!”
“Uh huh,” the large man in the far right corner said dismissively before he added, “I’m
Aidan.”
“And that’s Fergus pouting in the back,” Finn said, gesturing to the man standing near
the windows with his arms folded over his chest and what appeared to be a permanent
scowl on his face.
“We shouldn’t even be here,” Fergus said evenly.
“And what do ye expect us to do then, Fergus? Are we supposed to sit back on our asses
and watch them die?” Quinn demanded, sounding irritated as he glared right back at his
brother.
When Fergus’ glare landed on her, she felt a chill spread down her spine and when he
answered his brother, she felt like her world was about to crumble down around her.
“Aye.”
Chapter
31
“Why don’t we cut the shit and get right to the point?” Tristan said, realizing that he’d
never regretted anything more in his life than not locking Marty’s ass up and keeping her
out of this.
She was frightened, but instead of admitting that, she was doing her best to hide it,
determined not to miss a single syllable of this bullshit. She didn’t need to be here. This was
his problem and he would take care of it. He knew that she wanted answers and he would
give them to her, but he didn’t want to do it like this.
He didn’t know what these men wanted or what they were going to say and he didn’t
want one of them scaring her again. She was doing her best to hide it, but he could feel the
slight trembling of her arm. The death grip that she had on his leg also clued him into the
fact that Marty wasn’t taking this whole thing as calmly as she would like them to believe.
“Why don’t we start from the beginning?” Liam suggested, sounding as though he wasn’t
sure that was a good idea.
Tristan looked around the room, his fingers continuing to lightly caress Marty’s arm, and
took in the stoic expressions of the other men. When his gaze landed on Shayne, he wasn’t
too surprised to find him standing there, trying to hide his worry behind a small forced smile
that told him everything that he needed to know.
He was truly fucked.
“We were all born in-“ Liam began, but Tristan cut him off, refusing to allow one more
second to pass without finding out about the only thing that mattered to him.
“Are you here to harm my wife?” he demanded, ignoring Marty’s startled gasp and the
few muttered curses that exploded around the room, keeping his eyes locked on the man
that he’d already determined to be the leader of this group.
“No,” Liam said, sighing heavily as he shifted back in the chair. “We’re here to protect
her and the boy.”
“What boy?” Marty asked, moving to sit up, but a gentle touch from Tristan had her
lying back down. There was no doubt in his mind that if she tried to sit up right now that
she would either pass out or make herself sick. She was ghostly white, her skin was cool to
the touch and she couldn’t seem to stop trembling even with the thick blanket tucked in
around her.
Biting back a grimace of pain, he leaned over and grabbed the blanket folded on the back
of the couch and pulled it over Marty. She sent him an annoyed look even as she grabbed
the edge of the extra blanket and pulled it up to her chin. He was grateful when several of
the men suddenly appeared around the couch and started fussing over Marty, adding a third
blanket and tucking her in. When they were done they disappeared just as quickly as they
had appeared and returned to their respective spots in the room.
“We’re here to ensure that ye and yer son get the chance to live a long and happy life,
Macha,” Liam explained softly.
Marty’s grip on his leg tightened past the point of pain, which was a blessing since it took
his attention away from the agonizing pain shooting down his arm. “What about Tristan?”
she asked even though she probably already knew the answer. He knew Marty well enough
to know that she needed to hear it before she could accept it.
After a slight pause, Liam confirmed his suspicions. “He can’t stay, Macha.”
“Stop calling me that!” she snapped, her voice cracking and this time when he tried to
stop her from sitting up, she shoved his hand away.
“Marty, relax,” he said, putting his good arm around her and pulling her against him. She
tried to fight him, but she was too tired to do anything more than to shove weakly at him.
Once he had her tucked into his side, she gave up and simply curled up against him, her
head on his shoulder as she laid her hand against his chest, careful of his old wound.
“They’re not taking you,” she said stubbornly, her voice breaking as she tried to stay
calm, but this was too much for her.
“I’m taking you upstairs,” he said, fully expecting her to put up a fight so when she
merely nodded against his shoulder he was a little surprised, but apparently the other men in
the room weren’t.
“Ye can’t escape, lass,” Quinn said with a shrug.
“There’s no use in trying, lass. We’ll just find ye,” Finn added softly.
“If ye leave without our protection, ye won’t last another night, Lass,” Declean
explained.
“I-I wasn’t going to try and run,” Marty said, but Tristan knew her well enough to know
that she was lying her beautiful ass off.
“Every time we have this talk, ye always try to escape,” Fergus pointed out.
“And it never works out well, lass. So do us all a favor and just let Liam tell ye what ye
need to know,” Quinn said, gesturing lazily to the man.
“How do you know that it’s a boy?” Marty asked, changing the subject, but not letting it
go. There was no doubt in his mind that she was even at this moment trying to figure out
how they were going to get away from these men.
They weren’t
Well, at least he wasn’t. The first opportunity that he had, he was sending her away and
Shayne, the betraying bastard, was going to take care of her. He didn’t know how he was
going to do it yet, but he’d figure something out.
“I think that it would be best if we started from the beginning,” Liam said in a hard tone
that let them know the time for asking questions was over. Knowing that they didn’t have
much of a choice and needing time to figure out a way to sneak Marty out of the house,
Tristan nodded.
“As I’m sure ye’ve figured out, we’re all brothers,” Liam began and Tristan didn’t need
any clarification to know that Liam included him in that group, but he added it anyway. “All
of us are yer brothers, Tadgh.”
“We were all born in Ireland a long time ago,” Liam continued only to be interrupted by
Marty.
“How long is a long time ago?” she asked, shifting until she was snuggled up tightly
against his side. She sounded calm, but the slight trembling of her voice gave her away. She
was terrified and it killed him that there was absolutely nothing that he could do about it.
“We’re not entirely sure of the date,” Shayne admitted with a shrug.
“For several generations our family managed to rule our own lands and live in relative
peace without drawing the attention of our king,” Liam began as Tristan noted that all the
men but one either looked down at his feet or looked away as if the action would save them
from this conversation. Shayne kept his gaze locked on Tristan, looking terrified and
resigned to the fate that awaited Tristan as the story continued.
“Our Da’ died shortly before ye were born, Tadgh, leaving it up to us to protect ye and
Ma and do whatever it took to keep our lands. Things were different back then and it
wasn’t unheard of for a lad to take over the job of a man.”
“By the time Da’ died, most of us had already been doing a man’s work and using a
sword to protect our land, but we were still just lads. That attracted a lot of unwanted
attention by men that would do anything to have what we had. Without that land we would
have had no way to provide for ye and for Ma so we did what we had to do to keep it.”
Shayne smoothly cut in, taking over. “When we weren’t taking turns patrolling our
land or working, we were training. Sometimes we’d get lucky and we could barter with a
trained soldier needing to cross our lands or needing a meal in exchange for more training.”
“But that wasn’t enough,” Declean explained, taking over. “We needed to keep our
people loyal and that was difficult to do with only a handful of lads left to protect them so
we each took a turn selling our oaths to whichever king was willing to pay and train us to be
mercenaries.”
“Three of us at a time would leave and go train while the rest would protect the
land, our people and ye and Ma. When we were done we’d share what we learned and
switch places,” Finn said, taking over and sounding as though he were reciting a well-
learned part in a play. “By the time that ye were becoming a man our reputation alone
protected our lands.”
“No one dared to cross us or try and take what was ours,” Fergus bit out before
Liam once again took over.
“We used our skills and coins to expand our lands and make sure that our people
never went a day without food. We were well respected and feared throughout the lands.
As long as we minded our own business, we were left alone by our king.”
Liam looked directly at him, a sad smile curving his lips slightly as he said, “But that
all changed when he learned about ye, lad.”
“What did Tristan have to do with it?” Marty asked softly as he struggled to wrap