Read The Daring Heart (The Highland Heather and Hearts Scottish Romance Series) Online

Authors: Carmen Caine

Tags: #historical romance, #scottish romances, #highlands, #medieval, #Romance, #scottish romance novels, #scottish, #mafia, #assassin, #godfather

The Daring Heart (The Highland Heather and Hearts Scottish Romance Series) (18 page)

BOOK: The Daring Heart (The Highland Heather and Hearts Scottish Romance Series)
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Stepping up to the counter, Julian tossed a coin and wordlessly pointed to a mug of ale.

“Aye, my lord, and what have
ye
heard of the English?” the innkeeper asked, sliding a full mug across to him.

“The English?” Julian repeated, taking his mug and moving to a nearby table to stretch out his long legs. He downed half his brew with a hearty swig and wiped his mouth before replying, “I’ve heard thousands are marching.”

The innkeeper’s eyes lit with a morbid thrill. “Vermin!” he said in a tone of vindication and snapped his fingers under the nose of the elderly man. “I told ye! They’re coming just like rats!”

“Aye,” the man grunted in response before downing some more ale.

Finding the scene strangely amusing, Julian suppressed a grin, but then turned his thoughts to the matter at hand.

Had Dolfin arrived yet? The man would usually leave Julian a sign.

Tapping his finger on the table, Julian cast a careful eye about the place. He didn’t spot anything unusual until he spied a small bowl heaped with salt resting conspicuously on the windowsill. Raising a curious brow, he rose to inspect it.

“Ach, dinna touch it, lad!” the old woman near the fire suddenly spoke.

“And what is it for, my good woman?” Julian asked, nodding his chin at the small wooden bowl of salt.

“’
Tis to ward off the nasty Spirit of the Hunchback, lad!” she replied with a huff as though astonished at his ignorance.

Julian grinned with relief. So, Dolfin
had
arrived. The bowl of salt was clearly a sign as well as a tale left by the old man. It was true of every Venetian he’d ever met that they were fair distrustful of hunchbacks.

The innkeeper rolled his eyes and sent Julian a rueful smile. “Ach, ye’ll have to forgive my wee auld mother, lad. She listens to too many a traveler’s tale!”

“He said ‘twas not a tale!” the woman hissed at her son. “Not a tale! Not at all!”

The innkeeper shrugged and began to wipe the top of the counter with a rag.

“He?” Julian pressed softly.

“Ach, some auld merchant’s been filling her head with wild fancies,” the man explained, sending his mother an exasperated look.

She scowled at her son and made a whistling sound between her two missing teeth before she shook a trembling finger at Julian. “A wandering spirit is naught to make light of! Ye can ask him yourself, lad!”

“Aye, mayhap I will.” Julian laughed lightly. “Do ye expect this tale-spinner to return soon?”

“He’s looking after his horse in the stables, lad,” the woman answered and turned back to her pot to taste a spoonful of stew. Smacking her lips, she added, “He’ll be back soon enough!”

“Aye, then,” Julian agreed with a thoughtful smile. It would be amusing to surprise Dolfin. His mentor had surprised
him
many a time over the years. “I shall see to my own horse as well.”

Rising from the table, he finished off his ale and then ducked outside. Adjusting his eyes to the brightness of the sun, he took a step towards the post where he’d tethered his mare and promptly cursed under his breath.

The mare wasn’t there.

Someone had stolen his horse.

Chapter Nine – Blue Fingertips

Julian let loose a string of curses.

The gray mare was a favorite of his, and he’d spent hours training her to come whenever he would call. Still cursing under his breath at the inconvenience, he cupped his mouth and let out a loud, shrill whistle.

He waited.

There was nothing. Not even the faintest whicker in response.

“By the Virgin!” Julian swore louder just as the innkeeper joined him at the door.

Upon learning of the theft, the man shook his head gravely. “Ach, ‘tis the times we live in! I’ll round up my lads and we’ll search the village at once!”

Julian cocked a brow at the line of carts disappearing towards the highlands. “Then have them be swift!” he said with a grim set of his jaw and nodded at the fleeing villagers. “That gray mare is special to me.”

“We’ll find your horse, my lord! And the thief as well!” the innkeeper promised before shouting over his shoulder and disappearing back into the inn.

Julian expelled a breath. He sprinted around the building to do a quick search himself, and whistled numerous times, but clearly his mare was gone.

With his brows knit into a scowl, he watched as the innkeeper and his sons spread out in different directions to begin their search of the village and figuring to use his time well, Julian headed for the inn’s stables to find Dolfin.

The stables were housed in an ancient, half-crumbling building of moss-covered stones and a moldy, straw-thatched roof. The large doors were open, and stepping inside, Julian found the place stuffy and quite empty, save for an old donkey and a very familiar gray-haired man grooming a fine black gelding.

Julian grinned in relief.

It was Dolfin. The old salt spy was safe.

Moving closer, Julian opened his mouth to surprise his mentor when he noticed that the man’s hands were shaking. Drawing his brows in consternation, Julian peered closer, detecting a frailness that he’d never discerned before.

He waited a few moments, and then changing his mind, announced his presence with a gentle clearing of his throat and a soft, “Well met,
Istruttore.”

Dolfin jerked in surprise, but the eyes he turned upon Julian were smiling ones. “We meet again,
caro vecio.”

Greeting him with the customary embrace, Julian’s concern deepened. The old man looked ill. His face was haggard, his long sweeping cloak unusually soiled and mud-stained, and he stood slightly hunched to one side.

“There’s no cause to fret over me.” Dolfin’s sharp eyes lit with amusement. “It is plain on your face that you think me an old dotard!”

“Not so!” Julian protested half-heartedly.

Dolfin slapped his horse upon the rump, and the animal flicked his ears immediately in response. “I was on my way to find you in Edinburgh,” he said. “I’ve tarried here too long.”

It was then that Julian saw the saddle and bags lying on the ground at his feet. He’d nearly missed him. “Then ‘tis glad I found ye,
Istruttore
! Allow me to help ye!”

Ignoring the man’s protests, Julian made short work of hefting the saddle onto the gelding and pulling the cinch tight. And as he buckled the saddlebags, he murmured, “I’ve a matter of mystery to discuss with ye ere ye leave this place.”

Dolfin’s expression brightened with interest, and seeing that his gelding was secure and busily feeding on a bit of hay, nodded towards the outside. Exiting the stuffy stables, the two men moved to a secluded stand of birch trees close by, a place somewhat cooler, and also one in which they would not be overheard.

“Ye’ve men on your trail,” Julian murmured softly as he pulled the Saluzzi leather belt from his sporran and held it out for the spy to see.

Dolfin turned white and staggered back. He would have fallen had not Julian caught him with a steady arm.

“Ye recognize it? Tell me then, what does it mean?” Julian’s brows rose, surprised at the strength of his mentor’s reaction.

“You have figured out for yourself that it is a code, then. What are the words?” Dolfin whispered hoarsely.

Softly, Julian repeated the ominous Latin he had puzzled out before.

“Then even the Saluzzi know!” Dolfin swallowed, instinctively drawing his hood over his face. “And now they seek you as well.” Raising imploring eyes to the heavens, he choked, “What have I done?” Grabbing the belt from Julian, he looped it around to read the words softly for himself, again and again.

His hands were shaking so strongly that Julian felt a ripple of unease. “Are ye ill,
Istruttore?”
he asked with a perplexed frown.

Dolfin straightened. And then in a sudden movement, he crushed the belt in his fingers and said in a horrorstricken tone, “I have brought death upon your head, Julian!”

Julian’s first reaction was to smirk, but he managed to suppress it out of respect. Clearing his throat, he gently asked instead, “Then tell me why I’m to die?”

But the old man didn’t reply. Heaving a sigh, he braced himself against a slender birch and simply shook his head.

It was an obstinate gesture that Julian knew well. One that meant little information would be forthcoming. How could his mentor refuse to talk now? Pulling out the bone-handled stiletto from his belt, Julian offered it to Dolfin hilt first.

“Then mayhap ye’ll speak of this instead?” he challenged with a half-grin.

Dolfin cast him a sideways glance and then his brows rose to his hairline. Snatching the stiletto, he gasped. “Where did you come by this? How? This blade couldn’t have been seeking your blood! It would never have missed!”

“Aye, this blade prevented my abduction and mayhap saved my life in Fotheringhay,” Julian answered with surprised curiosity. “It struck the Saluzzo who wore yon belt.” He nodded at the stretched leather that Dolfin still clutched tightly in his hands.

The old salt spy stared at Julian as if he’d gone mad. “There is no doubt that they saved you! Had the Saluzzo taken you captive, you would not have lived long. But why? Why?” he repeated several times. “Why would they save you?”

“They?” Julian prodded when he fell silent once again. Ach, but the teasing of information out of the old man was proving to be an aggravating task!

And then, handing the blade and the belt back to Julian, Dolfin closed his eyes and murmured, “They must be at war again!”

And the man fell silent once more.

Growing impatient, Julian planted his feet wide apart and crossed his arms. And when Dolfin offered no further explanation, he peered down at his mentor from under his dark lashes and offered, “Then ye speak of the war between the Saluzzi and the Vindictam?”

Dolfin cast him a startled glance. “Already you know too much,” he said in outright concern.

“Then tell me more!” Julian invited with a lopsided grin. “Ach, ye must! If ‘tis already enough to kill me, then to have more can do me no harm,
Istruttore!”

The old man bowed his head, and then his lips parted. “Know that the Saluzzi are to Ferrara what the Vindictam are to
La Serenìsima
. They are both families of powerful assassins, faithful to their city-states,” he whispered. “Their names alone strike fear in the heart of any who hears them. For years, they were sworn enemies, that is, until recently. The families have forged an uneasy truce. But, if the Vindictam has spilled the blood of a Saluzzo, then the truce is broken.”

Julian nodded slowly. He’d already surmised as much. “But tell me, why are the Saluzzi after ye now,
Istruttore
?”

Dolfin shuddered and then confessed in a voice so low that it could scarcely be heard, “I stumbled upon a secret,
caro
vecio
, and for that, the Vindictam exiled me from my homeland. They sent me away from any who would protect me and even now seek my death to prevent this secret from being known.”

“And?” Julian prodded when the silence became prolonged.

Dolfin’s stooped shoulders sagged even more. “’Tis death to hear it Julian, but you have the right to know.” He paused and swallowed several times. “The Dominus Granditer, the Grand Master of the Vindictam, is near death and has finally chosen his heir from amongst his sons. He has made his choice of who will rule one of the most powerful families of Europe. And he has chosen the youngest over the two elder sons, a choice that does not sit well with them, but it is the youngest who is the Electus.”

“Electus,” Julian repeated softly. It wasn’t a question.

As he spoke, Dolfin picked up a stick and bent over to scratch the ground, murmuring, “I have seen his ring, his mark, the mark of the Electus
.”

“Then the Vindictam seek to silence ye afore the Saluzzi can wrest his identity from your lips. And somehow, the Saluzzi have discovered our relationship and seek to use me as bait to loosen your tongue,” Julian concluded. “Then they care nothing for their truce. The Saluzzi seek to slay the Electus.”

“Perhaps,” Dolfin said in a thoughtful tone as he continued to scratch in the ground. “There is unrest in the Saluzzi ranks. Perhaps not all would betray this treaty. This could be the work of few men, but even those few can ignite a bloody war. And if they succeed in slaying the Electus, the very ocean will turn red with blood.”

And then dusting his hands, he rose shakily to his feet, and Julian glanced down at the symbol etched in the dirt.

His brows arched in shock.

He’d seen the mark before—a bold ‘V’ entwined with a crown and a sword. He could scarce believe it.

Liselle’s cousin,
Pascal,
was the Electus? The arrogant, dark-haired youth who had threatened him in Fotheringhay.

“Soon, a new man will control the destiny of the Vindictam,” Dolfin was saying. “And it is vital that his identity remains unknown in order to protect him. The Vindictam has many enemies. They will never stop searching for me,
caro
vecio
. Both the Vindictam and the Saluzzi will see me dead.” And then nodding at the belt, he added, “And mayhap you as well, though why the Vindictam would have saved you … I cannot understand.”

Julian made up his mind at once. Tugging a ring from his finger, he pressed it into Dolfin’s hands. “Then I’ll hinder your journey no longer. But do not tarry in Edinburgh. Get ye gone to Cambuskenneth Abbey straightway and find Father Ulric. Show him this and tell him that I request he provide safe passage for you to Dunvegan Castle in Skye, to a man I know there by the name of Ruan MacLeod. You will be safe there, at least, for a little while.”

Dolfin took the ring, but his face suffused with concern. “But what of you, Julian?”

With a grin, Julian leaned forward and chuckled. “Your Vindictam and Saluzzi dinna know that I am
Le Marin
,
Istruttore
! Ye’ve taught me well. I’ll not come to harm by them.”

The old man winced a little, and his nod was an uncertain one. “But this is like nothing you have ever faced,
caro vecio.
” He paused, and then added in a puzzled tone as if he had just thought of it, “Though why the Vindictam saved your life is a mystery. Something is amiss. Strangely amiss …” he repeated the words several times, still shaking his head.

BOOK: The Daring Heart (The Highland Heather and Hearts Scottish Romance Series)
5.86Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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