The Viper (11 page)

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Authors: Monica McCarty,Mccarty

Tags: #Romance, #Fiction, #General, #Historical

BOOK: The Viper
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Disgraced, having been declared a rebel, and under suspicion of murdering his now dead wife, Lachlan knew it would be better for everyone--his family, his clan, and himself--if he left. So he'd sailed to Ireland, making his way as a gallowglass mercenary for anyone willing to pay his price.

His shoulders stiffened. Just because he didn't want to lead the party didn't mean he wanted to hear Bella MacDuff pleading for the same thing. "
I'm surprised you're still around
."

Her disdain pricked. She didn't know him, damn it. She
thought
she knew him because of his reputation, but just because he took money to fight didn't make him disloyal. It made him practical. Cynical perhaps, but also honest.

When he agreed to do something he did it. Lachlan might not have wanted to lead the ladies' party, but that didn't mean he didn't intend to get the job done.

God damn it, why did what she thought even matter?

"I'm needed more out west," he said to Gordon. "God knows what kind of trouble MacSorley is going to get in without me watching over him."

Gordon laughed, though Lachlan hadn't meant it as a joke. Erik MacSorley was the best seafarer in a kingdom of seafarers, and he liked to prove it whatever chance he got. As a result, he was always in trouble.

"Hmm. I thought it might have something to do with the countess."

Lachlan stopped what he was doing long enough to level a blank stare on Gordon. "Why the hell would you think that?"

If his voice held the hint of a warning, Gordon didn't pay it any mind. Lachlan knew he was treading dangerous ground. Gordon was beginning to think himself a friend. But Lachlan didn't have any friends. Not anymore.

"I couldn't help noticing that you didn't part on the best of terms last time. You seemed a little ... edgy."

The smile on Gordon's face pricked him more than it should. "A situation I remedied soon enough," he lied. "One pair of velvety thighs is as good as another."

Gordon shook his head. "You have a real gift for the poetic, MacRuairi. If I ever need a bard, I know who to come to."

Before Gordon could ask any more questions about the countess, Lachlan ordered him to gather everyone and meet by the shieling. The king had decided to let the ladies take the few remaining horses. Bruce and the handful of men who would accompany him were taking to the heather and mountains, where the horses would only slow them down.

Lachlan followed Gordon a few minutes later. His anger had cooled, though not completely abated. He was more upset at himself than anything else. He should have more control.

If his reaction after the attack in the forest hadn't warned him, this should. The sight of her naked ... the vision had been haunting him for four damned months. Christ, his body hardened just thinking about it. It had taken everything he had to not react. To not let his eyes gorge on every inch of that creamy naked flesh. One glance had been enough to nearly push him over the edge.

God, those breasts ... sinfully big, perfectly round, and tipped with tight pink nipples. His mouth watered just thinking about them.

Bella MacDuff had been built for men's fantasies. He'd wanted her more than he'd ever wanted a woman in his life. Instinctively, he knew that after years of self-control, he'd met the woman who could break him.

He'd been furious. At himself. At her. So he'd lashed out. Not just with lust, but also, he knew, with something equally unsettling: fear. Seeing her vulnerable in that bastard's arms had chilled his blood.

And now he was jealous, for Christ's sake. What the hell was happening to him? He knew better than to fall prey to that weakness. Jealousy fueled by lust had wreaked enough havoc in his life. The last time people had counted on him he'd let his emotions distract him. His men had lost their lives because of it, and he'd lost everything. Now, when he was so close to getting some of it back, there was no way in hell he was going to travel down that path again. He'd worked too hard to risk it.

He weighed the sack of gold at his waist. Bruce had kept his promise so far, and Lachlan intended to keep his. The first chance he had, this gold would be on its way to the Isles. One more payment on a debt he hoped to pay in full in two and half years' time.

What was it about Bella MacDuff that got to him? Her bold tongue? Her harlot's body? He didn't know. But since he couldn't very well cover her with a sack for the next God-knows-how-long (no matter how much he was tempted), he'd do his best to avoid her.

He suspected he was going to be too damned busy getting the women to safety to worry about one lass no matter how distracting, anyway.

A suspicion that was confirmed a few minutes later when he got his first glimpse of his new charges.

Ah, hell
.

The man known as the most feared mercenary in the Western Isles, meaner than a snake and just as deadly, who'd never backed down from a fight no matter how bad the odds, wanted to walk--nay, run--away.

He'd become a hired sword just to avoid this kind of situation. The king asked too much. No debt, no land, no amount of coin was worth this.

One, two, three ...
three
children, damn it! And more women than he wanted to count.

Jesus
. He felt ill. He didn't need this. How the hell was he going to get them a hundred miles across some of the most difficult terrain in Scotland to safety with half the English army hunting them?

Almost as if she knew what he was thinking, he met the bold, blue-eyed gaze of Bella MacDuff. The hint of challenge there was enough to spur him to action. He had a job to do, damn it, and he'd do it.

But the weight of responsibility sat heavy on his shoulders. He'd had enough death on his watch.

He quickly organized the men, giving them their instructions for the first part of the journey, but it took longer to sort out the horses than it should have, as it turned out a number of the ladies had limited riding experience.

He, in turn, had limited experience commanding a group of women. Hardened warriors didn't have tender feelings, and they sure as hell didn't look like they were about to burst into tears when you snapped an order or two.

When one of the ladies balked at getting on the big war horse with MacKay, his frustration nearly got the better of him. He was half a second away from tossing her on the horse himself--or telling her she could wait for the English to arrive to escort her if she didn't get on the damned horse--when he found relief from an unexpected source.

The countess put her hand on his arm. He stilled, a fierce swell rising inside him. The gentle touch had an instant calming affect. She looked up at him, and for a moment he was lost in a sea of blue.

Beautiful
, he thought. With lashes as long and feathery as the wing tips of a raven.

"Perhaps I might be of some help?"

He'd forgotten how husky her voice was. How it spread over his skin and seeped into his bones.

When she looked at him like that--with kindness and understanding--it felt as though his chest had suddenly grown too tight. The unfamiliar reaction rattled him. Lachlan had survived this long by an acute sense of danger, and right now every instinct flared with warning.

Hell, he liked it better when all he could think about was swivving her.

Not wanting her to guess the force of his reaction to her, he managed to nod, more grateful for her help than he wanted to admit.

After some encouraging words from the countess, the woman was on the horse with MacKay a few moments later. As she seemed to have a good idea of the relative riding strengths of the rest of the ladies, he welcomed her suggestions as to the other pairings, and in less time than he would have thought possible they were on their way.

One queen, one princess, two countesses, five lady attendants, a young sister to a king, two earls--one only four years old--and a young knight anxious to prove himself.

Five members of the Highland Guard were all that stood between them and the army of the most powerful and vengeful king in Christendom.

Lachlan gave no acknowledgment of the sense of doom that came over him, but it followed them like a dark, maleficent shadow into the forests and hills of Atholl.

Five

Bella didn't know how much more of this she could take. Three days of evading the English, while trying to keep more than half their party from falling apart in a panic, had taken its toll. She'd been stretched to the breaking point.

She told herself it was the ever-present fear of what would happen to them if they were captured, the pressure of keeping everyone's spirits up--especially the children's--and the bone-weary exhaustion of riding all day and being too scared to sleep well at night.

Her frayed emotions had nothing to do with the man who led them.

"I'm tired," Lady Mary Bruce said.

Bella's heart squeezed as she gazed at the girl riding beside her. Every time she looked at Mary she thought of her daughter. The girls were so close in age, even if they were nothing alike in temperament or appearance. Joan was as quiet and reserved as Mary was bold and outspoken, and although both girls were dark in coloring, Mary, at a year older, had already developed a woman's body. The constant reminder of her daughter caused her pain, but she also felt a fierce protectiveness toward Robert's youngest sister.

"I know, sweetheart, I know." They were all tired. But they had to keep pushing toward Kildrummy. When they reached the castle they would be safe. She hoped. "Do you wish to ride with Magnus for a while?"

Bella, Queen Elizabeth, Robert's sister Christina, and the queen's lady-in-waiting were the only four women who'd been given mounts of their own. The other women and the children were being shuffled around, at times riding on their own, at others riding with one of the men.

After so many hours on the road, certain preferences in riding companions had developed. The four-year-old Earl of Mar, Christina Bruce's son with her first husband, had taken to riding with her new brother-in-law, Sir Alexander Seton. Christina's second husband, Christopher, had been missing since Methven, and the fear of what had happened to him hung like a dark cloud over them all. He was one of the greatest knights in Christendom.

Robert's ten-year-old daughter Marjory by his first wife had been taken under the protection of one of the most intimidating-looking warriors Bella had ever seen. Robert Boyd hailed from the Scottish Marches, and she doubted there was a man on either side of the borders more formidably built. If sheer brute strength counted for anything, the princess was in the best hands. Like Sir Alex, Boyd's brother was also missing and feared dead.

Mary rode with Magnus or, at times, Lachlan--who seemed willing to share a horse with everyone except Bella. Not that she noticed.

Mary shook her head. "I'm fine. For now." Bella knew who she was waiting for. She feared Mary had developed a young girl's
tendre
for their disreputable leader. Big, anxious dark eyes looked up at her. Her voice came out in a near whisper. "Do you think something happened to them?"

Bella shook her head vehemently. "No," she said firmly, hearing the fear in the girl's voice that mirrored her own. "No."

But where were they?
They'd been gone so long.
Too
long. Lachlan had ridden out with Sir James Douglas and William Gordon after they broke their fast to scout for enemy soldiers or other war parties. It wasn't just the English after them; their own countrymen were hunting them. The men were constantly taking turns scouting, but they'd never been gone for so long.

"Shouldn't they be back by now?"

Bella heard her own thoughts echoed in her cousin's voice. Though Margaret was riding behind them--the narrow mountain pass barely accommodated two--she was close enough to have heard Mary's question. Her cousin, too, looked worried. And also, Bella thought with a touch of uncharitable resentment, very fragile and scared.

It was exactly how Bella felt, though she could never show it. The other women and children needed someone to be strong, and that someone had turned out to be her. They were looking to her, and she would do whatever she had to do to keep them from falling apart, even ...
lie
. "I'm sure they'll return soon," she assured her cousin. "The captain said they would be gone most of the day."

Mary gave her a look that suggested she was not as believing as her cousin, but neither of them pointed out the day was quickly fading. That it was the heart of summer was one of the only positives about their bleak situation. Unlike her last journey, there was little rain, and the nights in the mountains were cold but not unbearable.

The sound of approaching hooves forestalled any more conversation. For a moment she wasn't sure whether it was friend or foe. Her heart drummed in her frozen body. The remaining warriors fanned out in front of them to provide a barrier. But with only four of them, Bella knew their journey could well be at an end.

Dear God, what will become of us?

When three men rounded the bend ahead of them, Bella's eyes immediately landed on the one who rode in front. She closed her eyes, relief crashing over her.

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