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Brandon spun away and met Charles’s slashing charge. Sparks flew as sword met sword in the glaring sunlight. The crowd hushed; even the children grew still. Every eye was riveted on the terrible conflict. Suddenly Charles feinted right and Brandon drove his rapier through the left opening in his cousin’s defense a fraction of a second before Charles could carry out the same maneuver.
Charles was jolted backward by the force of the blow. He looked down in disbelief at the scarlet circle forming on his white shirt. His eyes widened, and his mouth opened and closed in silent protest. He staggered backward and crumbled to the ground.
Brandon stood over him for a long moment, then turned back toward the shocked throng spilling onto the field. “Leah,” he called. Brandon swayed from loss of blood.
Men clustered around the fallen Charles.
“Leah,” Brandon repeated. He passed a hand across his face and sucked in a deep, ragged breath. His blue eyes were dazed. Leah’s heart went out to him as she ran toward him. Brandon saw her, stopped, and grinned crookedly. “Leah.” Her name emerged as a whisper.
Only yards separated them now. Her feet flew across the trampled grass. Then from the corner of her eye, she saw Charles raise up on one arm and pull a pistol from another man’s belt. He lifted it and took aim at the center of Brandon’s back.
“He’s got a gun!” someone shouted.
Sword in hand, Brandon whirled around, protecting Leah with his body.
“No!” Lady Kathryn screamed.
Leah dropped to one knee and drew back her bowstring, knowing all too well that her arrow would fly too late to save the man she loved. A gunshot sounded as she released the feathered shaft.
The arrow flew true, piercing Charles’s chest, but he was already dead when the point struck. Cameron moved from a knot of men and stood over the body, a smoking pistol in his hand.
Leah dropped her bow and flung herself into Brandon’s arms.
“It’s over,” he whispered, crushing her against him. “Charles is—”
“Dead,” she finished. She had no need to examine Charles’s still form as others were doing. Her anger and hatred had drained away when her father’s bullet had halted his final attack on Brandon. “Come now, Brandon mine,” she urged. “Let us leave this field of death.”
“The first arrow,” Brandon said. “When you shot him through, the thigh . . .” Uncertain, he looked down at her. “Men will say a woman saved me.”
“Aye,” she agreed, “they may say it. Would ye rather they said ‘She let him die’?”
“No.” He lifted her chin and kissed her lightly on the lips. “You have a different way of looking at things, chit.”
“Practical,” she replied. “I am practical. If Charles were a Mohawk, I’d have put that first arrow through his heart. I dinna have patience with English rules that would let a man like you die at the hands of a man like him.”
Her father appeared beside her. “How bad is Brandon hurt?”
She smiled through tears of joy. “He’ll live to be a trouble to me, I’m certain.”
Brandon smiled at his father-in-law. “I owe you thanks.”
“Any time,” Cameron replied. “It does my heart good to rid the earth of scum like that.”
“My son! Where’s my son?” Lord Kentington’s demand rumbled above the commotion. “Bring me my son!”
“My father,” Brandon said.
“Hardly the voice of a dying man,” Cameron quipped.
Kentington shoved aside the high sheriff and threw his arms around Brandon’s neck, kissing both his cheeks soundly. “Proud of you, Robert,” he said. “Your form needs some improvement, and you hold your rapier like a plowman, but there’s hope for you yet.”
Leah eyes glowed with amusement. “’Tis good to see ye on your feet, father of my husband.”
“Damned physicians! Heads full of manure, the lot of them.” He turned and bellowed to the nearest servants. “God’s wounds, you maggot-brained louts! Bring my carrying chair! Would you see my heir bleed to death while you scratch your lazy arses?”
“I hardly need to be carried,” Brandon protested. He shrugged off his father’s arm.
Leah moved to support her husband’s other shoulder. “Will ye take my help?” she asked softly.
He grinned. “Whenever I can get it, love, for I’d not have you for an enemy—not for all the world.”
 
Three weeks later, Leah, Brandon, and Cameron stood on the deck of the schooner,
Jenny D.,
and watched as the last vestige of England vanished over the eastern horizon. Leah linked her arms through her father’s and her husband’s and inhaled deeply of the clean salt air. Overhead, seagulls wheeled and squawked above the snapping canvas sails, and beneath her feet Leah could feel the movement of the wooden ship.
“Regrets?” Cameron asked Brandon.
“No.” He shook his head. “Mother will get over her vapors, and I’ll wager Father will live long enough to put his own affairs in order.”
“You’re leaving a lot behind,” Cameron said.
“Not as much as I’m taking with me. It’s a new land, and a new life. Somehow, I think I’ll find this one more interesting.” He leaned down and kissed Leah’s forehead. She smiled up at him with her heart in her eyes.
“And you, daughter?” Cameron stepped away from the lovers. “Will you miss England?”
“Nay,” she replied, “not England, but there is one thing I regret.” She rubbed the warm gold of her amulet.
“And what’s that?”
“That I never got the chance to meet my English sister.”
Cameron chuckled. “But you did, child.”
Confusion clouded her dark eyes. “Who? I . . .” Unexpectedly, understanding flooded through her. “Anne?”
Her father grinned and turned away.
“Father!” she protested. “How could ye . . .”
Whistling a Highland air, hands thrust deep in his pockets, Cameron strode off down the deck with a seaman’s rolling gait.
“Your Anne,” Leah murmured. “Did ye know?”
Brandon shook his head. “I had no idea, but with him nothing would surprise me.”
Leah’s lower lip quivered. “Well, I dinna like such surprises. Did she ken, do ye think? Nay . . .” She sighed. “He is a contrary man—as ye be, Brandon mine. Ye have talked your way onto my boat, and ye have talked your way into my bed—“
“And a fine bed it is, too. And us with so little to do on this long voyage but test the softness of our mattress.”
“Enough of such goose feathers,” she declared. “I have given ye time and time again. How, my husband, do ye expect to solve our problem once we get to America?”
Brandon grinned and pulled her close. He kissed her left eyebrow and then the right. “I will make a bargain with you, love,” he said huskily. He kissed the right corner of her mouth and then the left. “If you will live with me on my plantation from the time the geese fly south to the Chesapeake until the Shawnee plant spring corn, I will be content. You can then take the children—all our children—and live with the Shawnee as you wish. You can spend your summers with your people in the wilderness and the winters with me. That way our children will know both cultures.”
“Ye will not mind, truly?” she whispered.
“Damned right I’ll mind, but we’d both have our heart’s desire part of the time, wouldn’t we? And I can always visit your wigwam if I get too lonely.”
“I dinna—”
“Say,
yes,
woman.”
“Yes, woman.”
Brandon’s mouth covered hers and his arms tightened around her. Leah leaned against him and let the happiness lift her spirit high above the rocking ship. She was going home—
they
were going home. And no matter what happened, she would always be secure in his love.
“Englishmanake,”
she whispered.
“Aye, wench, what is it now?”
“I think we should test that mattress to see if it be too hard.”
Laughing, he gathered her up in his arms and carried her toward their cabin and a lifetime of loving.
Please turn the page for an exciting sneak peek of Judith E. French’s
HIGHLAND MOON
 
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Prologue
London, England
February 2, 1723
 
T
orrents of rain poured from the gray skies and soaked Ross Campbell’s feathered bonnet and his
breacan-feile,
the full-belted plaid that swathed his tall, broad-shouldered frame from his chin to the tops of his high fringed Shawnee moccasins. The icy wind raised gooseflesh on his sinewy, scarred arms and drove needles of freezing rain down the back of his neck. He swore a foul Gaelic oath and reined his mount closer to an overhanging building, hoping to shield the stallion from the force of the storm.
The big horse flattened his ears against his head and turned into the wind. Snorting, he bared his teeth and raised one iron-clad hoof to paw impatiently at the slippery, mud-covered cobblestones. Muscles rippled beneath the stallion’s sleek black hide as he arched his powerful neck and shook his sweeping mane and tail.
Ross swore again in English and peered into the deluge. The figure of a man appeared through the mist at the entrance to an alley. Ross transferred his reins to his left hand and smoothly drew his broadsword with his right.
“Colonial?” The man’s voice was thin and so heavily accented with London street cant, Ross could hardly understand him.
“Aye.” The stallion wheeled to face the man on foot, gave a fierce squeal, and reared on his hind legs. Ross threw his weight forward and tightened his knees around the animal’s sides. The horse’s front hooves struck the stones, and he danced sideways, fighting the bit.
The Londoner darted forward and held out a scrap of paper. Ross clenched the stallion’s reins in his teeth and grabbed the missive. Without another word, the messenger turned and ran.
Sheathing his sword, Ross again took the reins in his right hand. He spoke soothingly to the agitated horse as he unfolded the damp paper and tried to make out the scrawled words.
Noon. Saint
was clear enough. The ink had smeared on the third word. Ross struggled with the unfamiliar handwriting.
M-a-r.
Was the next letter a
y
or a
g
? The next few letters were nothing more than a blot, but . . . “Saint Mary . . . Saint Mary-le-Wood.” Ross grinned wolfishly. “Saint Mary-le-Wood.” He leaned forward in the saddle and clicked to his horse. He had the hour and the church. Now, all he needed was the lady.
Chapter 1
As long as the moon shall rise,
As long as the rivers shall flow,
As long as the sun shall shine,
As long as the grass shall grow.
Native American promise
The Church of Mary-le-Wood
London, England
February 2, 1723
 
A
nne Fielding Scarbrough, the Marchioness of Scarbrough, stood wet and utterly miserable before the church altar. Her gold and silver chine silk gown was water soaked and splashed with mud; her eyes were red and swollen from weeping, and her right cheekbone bore a purplish-green bruise that paint and powder could not hide.
Her stepfather, Lord Langstone, stood unsmiling on her left, gripping her arm as though he thought she would pick up her skirts and fly over the top of the assembled guests to freedom. Her mother, Barbara, sat in the first row, splendid in her cherry-colored Watteau gown and red jeweled high-heeled slippers. Barbara’s blond hair was curled and twisted into a fashion statement, her hands heavy with rings. Not a drop of water marred her coiffure or her satin gown. Trust Mother to look her best, Anne thought, but then she’s not been locked in a tower for five months or dragged through the rainy streets to her wedding in an open carriage.
Anne unconsciously fingered her antique gold necklace as she stared at the shriveled clergyman in his musty crow-black robes. His wrinkled face showed no trace of Christian charity. His bleary, colorless eyes were filmed with cataracts, his thin lips drawn down at the corners of his mouth. Did he know she was being forced into this marriage? Would he care if he did?
To her right stood her betrothed, Baron Murrane. Stubbornly, Anne would not look at him. She could smell the damp wool of his cloak; she could feel his small blue eyes boring into her, but she’d not give him the satisfaction of meeting his cold gaze. Colonel Fitzhugh Murrane . . . the butcher of Sheriffmuir. He was twice her age and as heartless as a Tyburn hangman. She’d had her choice of suitors. Dozens of men, young and old, rich and poor, had courted her since Lord Scarbrough had passed on, leaving her a rich widow. Any of them would have suited her better than Fitzhugh Murrane.
Anne’s chest felt tight, and her head was pounding. She swallowed the lump in her throat and blinked back tears. She would not shame herself by losing control in front of all these people, and if she started to cry, she knew she wouldn’t be able to stop. She glanced down at her hands. The nails she’d always been so vain about were bitten to the quick. She tucked them out of sight under her lace-covered prayer book.
Murrane’s heavy hand closed about her shoulder and pushed her roughly to her knees. Bewildered, Anne looked up at the minister. He scowled at her and continued his droning litany. His words seemed nothing more than a jumble of meaningless chant.
Anne fixed her gaze on the floor and tried to keep her teeth from chattering. She was cold . . . so cold. She didn’t want to be here. She didn’t want this crude soldier for a husband . . . but no one seemed to care. What was it Barbara had said?
You’re making much of nothing. Marry the man Langstone’s chosen for you. Murrane may be only a baron, but he’s strong enough to protect you and your fortune. Give him use of your body, and when he walks out the door, take a lover. It’s what I always did.
Anne was vaguely aware that her stepfather had released her arm and moved away. His footsteps on the stone tiles echoed in her ears. Murrane coughed and cleared his throat. Behind her, she heard the rustle of petticoats and the shuffling of shoes. It’s happening, she thought. I’m taking marriage vows for the second time, and I’ve never known a man’s love. Never known passion except in a dusty book of poetry. Sensible, meek, shy Anne. Better I had been a feather-heeled jade like my mother. At least I would have known the joys of bedding a man of my own choosing. The fingers of her left hand tightened around her amulet. If only it were magic, she wished. If only—
“Anne !” Murrane leaned close, and she caught a whiff of smoked mackerel on his breath. “Answer!”
She blinked. What?
“Do you, Anne, take this man to be your lawful husband?” the cleric repeated.
She pursed her lips.
Murrane’s hand dropped to her elbow, and his gloved fingers dug into her flesh until she winced with pain. “Answer,” he growled.
She drew in a ragged breath. Tears blurred her vision. “What?” she murmured dumbly.
Murrane swore softly.
“Ah-hemm.” The minister sniffed in disgust. “Do you, Anne—” he repeated.
“She does, she does,” the bridegroom flared.
The cleric ignored him. “Do you, Anne, take this man to—”
The roar of a flintlock rocked the church. Women screamed. Murrane let go of Anne’s arm and whirled about, scrambling to his feet. Anne turned to see a howling wild man on a giant black horse charging down the center aisle directly at her. The rider’s long black hair fanned out around him from under a feathered Scots bonnet, and his black eyes flamed like the coal pits of hell.
Murrane reached for his sword, swearing a foul soldier’s oath when his hand came up empty. He darted off to the left out of Anne’s line of vision. The minister heaved his Bible toward the terrible apparition, tried to run, and tripped on his own robes. He toppled backward and lay thrashing about on the floor with his feet tangled in Anne’s gown.
Anne froze, facing certain death under the flying hooves of the madman’s horse without uttering a sound. She stared helplessly as the marauder gave another spine-chilling whoop and threw something into the far front corner of the church. The object exploded in midair with a cloud of smoke and fire. The wedding guests panicked and began to scramble for the doors.
Anne didn’t move. She watched as horse and rider thundered down on her. Her heart was pounding erratically, her knees were locked, and her muscles felt as though they were made of whey. She willed her lips to offer a dying prayer, but her tongue seemed glued to the top of her mouth.
For an instant it seemed to Anne that everything was happening in slow motion. She could taste the fear in her mouth . . . She could smell the acrid scent of black powder . . . She could hear the shrieks of the frightened cleric . . . She was acutely aware of the cold, hard stones beneath her knees. And most of all, she was conscious of the colors around her: the ebony hide and the startling white of the horse’s eyes and bared teeth; the intense blue and green of the horseman’s plaid; the flurry of scarlet, azure, and gold finery of the fleeing crowd.
In the last seconds before the black horse reached her, Anne found the strength to stand. I’ll not meet my end on my knees, she thought, raising her chin in a hopeless show of defiance.
A heartbeat before she would have been crushed under the animal’s hooves, the rider yanked back on the reins and the stallion reared, pawing the air above her head. The madman’s heathen black eyes stared into hers. “Be you Anne?” he demanded in a deep steely voice.
“Yes,” she squeaked.
“Then it’s ye I seek.” He wheeled the big horse and leaned from the saddle to snatch her up in his arm.
“No!” she cried. Realization struck home as he dragged her up in front of him. Belly down across the horse’s withers, her skirts and hoops askew, she kicked and screamed and lashed out with balled fists.
Laughing, her abductor pinned her in place with one hand while he drew his sword with the other. The blade flashed over her head, and her ears rang as sword struck sword. She caught a glimpse of Murrane’s angry face before the mad Scot threw another bomb. Anne clenched her eyes shut and buried her face in the horse’s hide.
“Hii-yii-yii-yiee!” the horseman screamed.
Anne felt the stallion’s muscles tense and then explode beneath her. She gasped as the wind was knocked out of her by the force of the plunging animal. Iron-shod hooves thundered across the stone floor and down the aisle out of the church. Someone shouted, and Anne felt the horse rise into the air. She opened her eyes to see the top of a man’s head as they flew over him. The stallion landed running. Rain and wind tore at her hair and exposed skin as they galloped wildly down the street with a yelling mob in hot pursuit.
“Let me go!” she cried in desperation. Her captor’s only reply was another burst of savage laughter.
Men and women scattered before them. Anne lifted her head to see a wagon full of hay blocking the intersection. She gave a frightened squeal and covered her face with her hands. When she looked again, the wagon was gone, but she wasn’t certain if they’d gone around it, over it, or under it.
“Hold tight, hinney,” her kidnapper ordered. His voice held a strange accent, one she couldn’t place.
“Please,” she moaned. “I’m not—”
“Not now, woman!” She heard the grate of steel as he drew his sword and hacked his way past two city watchmen wielding oak staffs. The horse gave a quick burst of speed, then stopped so suddenly her stomach lurched.
Anne knew she was going to be sick. She gagged and choked, but nothing came up. She felt as though she were being jolted in two.
The Scot backed the big horse into a deserted coal yard and shoved the gate shut. In a flash, he was out of the saddle and lifting her down. She dropped to her knees in the mud and was sick again. This time she choked up a mouthful of bitter liquid.
“Hist now, hinney,” he said gently. “’Tis sorry I be for your discomfort, but there was no time to make things easier for you.”
She wiped her face with the back of her hand, and it came away streaked with paint and powder. Her hair had come loose from its pins and hung around her face like a dockside trollop’s. Slow, hot anger pushed back her awful fear, and she turned her head and glared at him through the pouring rain. “If it’s ransom you want, I can pay it,” she spat, “but if you mean to kill me, have the decency to do it now before I drown!”
His deep laugh was a rumble above the rain. “Nay, lady. Ye need have no fear of me. I’ll not harm a hair on your head.” He grinned. “And I want no ransom, although I admit my fortune could use it. My name is Ross Campbell. I’ve come from your sweetheart, and I’m sworn to deliver ye to him safe and sound.”
She staggered to her feet. “What?”
“Your betrothed. He hired me to rescue you.”
“You tried to cut my betrothed’s head off with your sword in the church,” she accused.
“Not him,” Ross said. “Your true sweetheart, Bruce Sutherland.”
Anne tried not to dissolve into hysteria. “There’s been some . . . some mistake,” she said between chattering teeth. “I don’t have . . . have . . . a sweetheart, and if I did, it wouldn’t be Bruce . . . Bruce Sutherland. I’ve never met the man.”
“Ye know each other well enough, I vow. There’s nay need to be coy with me. Bruce told me all.” Ross untied a second plaid from a waterproof bag behind his saddle. “Wrap this around ye.” He draped it over her shoulders. “We must make a run for the city gate. Ye’ll need to get rid of those hoops an’ such.”
“Get rid of . . . of my . . .” Anne clutched at the thick wool and backed away. Mud oozed over the tops of her jeweled slippers, but she was so cold and wet it didn’t matter. She was at the mercy of a madman. “Please,” she reasoned. “I can pay you. I’m rich. If you’ll just take me to my house—”
“Don’t make a fuss, hinney, and cover your head, do. Your hair’s all elf-locks. Fair to say, ye look like a drowned partridge. I’ve no wish to deliver ye to your love frozen solid.”
“I told you, I don’t know any Bruce Sutherland. You’ve made a mistake.” Her words were carefully enunciated, as though she were speaking to a slow child. “I can pay whatever you ask, but I can’t go with you.”
He grinned. “Ye mean I’ve taken the wrong bride.”
She nodded. “It appears so.”
“Ah, I see the right of it now. There was another Anne at the church. I overlooked her and picked you.”
“Yes, that . . . that must be what happened.”
He pulled off his Scots bonnet and wrung the water out of it. “Do ye know many colonials, m’lady?”
Her eyes widened in bewilderment. “No,” she admitted. “I . . . I know none at all.”
“Good. I was afraid you’d met a flock of clod-skulled Yankees and had a bad impression of Americans.” He shook out his bonnet and put the soggy hat with its dripping wet feathers back over his drenched mane of night-black hair. He set one moccasined foot on a bag of coal, folded his arms over his massive chest, and stared at her with the arrogance of a landless German prince. “I’m half Scot, half Delaware Indian, and half wolverine,” he proclaimed. “I can outride, outshoot, and outdance any mother’s son on this little island. I’ve got the fastest horse and the most gall you’ve ever laid those bonny gray eyes on. Women have called me rogue, but they’ve never called me stupid.”
Anne blinked. She felt light-headed, as though she was going to faint.
“What I’m trying to tell ye, hinney, is that my daddy never raised no fools. Ye make a poor liar. You’re Bruce Sutherland’s Anne, right enough. You’ve doubtless taken a long look at that rich bastard back at the church and changed your mind about who ye want to wed. But that’s not my affair. Ye can take that up with Bruce when I deliver ye to him.” He glanced up at the downpour and grimaced. “The weather’s against us, mistress. We’d best ride and take our chances with the storm.”
“God’s wounds!” she cried. “Are you so thick you cannot realize what you’ve done? I don’t know who you’re looking for, but I’m Lady Scarbrough. I’m a marchioness. You’re in very big trouble, Master Ross, very big trouble indeed.”
He grinned again, and Anne’s breath caught in her throat. There was something very dangerous about that smile.
“Will they hang me, do ye think?”
“After they draw and quarter you!”
He scratched his head. “It sounds painful. Mayhap we’d best be certain they don’t catch us.” He took a step toward her.

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