Read Highland Escape Online

Authors: Cathy MacRae,DD MacRae

Highland Escape (5 page)

I wonder if being female will keep me out of the dungeons
. Likely not.

A loud commotion marked the return of the laird and his beloved daughter as they entered the keep.

“Worry not, lass, all will be well. Ye have my word.” Duncan leaned closer so his words reached her ears alone.

They dismounted, handing their horses to stable lads, and Duncan led her through the door of the keep and into the main hall. A number of trestle tables and benches stood prepared. Massive hearths at both ends of the hall provided heat for the entire room. A raised dais with a well-appointed table and chairs marked where the laird and family dined.

Continuing toward the back of the room, they strode down a long corridor ending at a thick, locked door. Duncan gently placed his hand on Anna’s upper arm, guiding her toward the heavy door. She jerked away as if burned. Something in his touch affected her, though she fought not to acknowledge it. He scrunched his brow, scowling at her. Judging by his reaction, whatever passed between them he experienced as well.

On the other side of the portal stood four cells with stone walls and iron-reinforced doors. Small, barred windows high on the wall allowed the waning sunlight into each cell. Every door had a barred window looking into the hallway. Apparently this would be her home for the foreseeable future. As she entered a cell, Anna glared a challenge at MacGregor which he did not match. In fact, she swore regret lurked in his eyes. It mattered not. It was an unforgivable fact—they held her prisoner after she’d rescued the laird’s daughter.
Barbarians.

* * *

Duncan knocked before entering his father’s solar.

“Is she secured?” Kenneth asked, briefly glancing up from the parchment on his desk.

“Aye,” Duncan replied. Disapproval colored his tone.

Kenneth shook his head, taking a deep breath. “Spit it out.”

Duncan shot his father a defiant glare, his body stiff. “Ye dinnae know what ye ask.”

“Aye, I have some idea. Say it.”

Duncan held his father’s gaze as he dropped into the chair across the desk from him, hands gripping the ornately carved arms. “I believe ’tis wrong to imprison the lass. She has earned our trust, not imprisonment.”

Kenneth rubbed a hand across his mouth and chin before answering. “We do not know why she is alone. A lass, even as able as she, does not travel alone unless in trouble. I dinnae want her problems brought here. She cannae cause harm if she is locked up.”

Duncan sprang to his feet, pacing the floor, his hands boldly punctuating his words. “Then confine her to one of the smaller chambers. She should at least be allowed the same courtesies we would offer a guest.”

Kenneth shook his head. “Did ye not see what I saw? She cut through six Highlanders without hesitation. Afterward, she defeated Shamus with very little trouble using
two sticks
. We could claim the MacNairn are not good fighters, but we both know Shamus is a capable warrior. How do ye keep someone like that confined in a guest room?”

Duncan stopped his pacing. He attempted to wrest his temper into control by dropping his eyes, lowering his voice. “Post a guard or two, bar the door from the outside.”

“Nae!” Kenneth bellowed, a hand cutting across his body.

Duncan grabbed the back of his chair, using the tension in his grip to launch his next volley. “She saved my sister,
yer
daughter, from rape or murder! ’Tis not right!” Lost to his anger, he rose on his toes, his fingernails biting into the wood of the chair.

“Enough! As long as I am laird my word is law. This discussion is over.” His father’s voice descended into a growl.

Duncan gritted his teeth, wheeled about and stormed from the room.

* * *

Anna shifted her gaze from the fresh straw and blanket in one corner to the well-worn but clean chamber pot in another. The room measured approximately ten by ten with a stone floor. She placed her cloak and plaide on the floor next to the blanket and removed her armor. She quietly considered her fate, realizing she hadn’t allowed herself to grieve the loss of her village, home and family. Tears spilled as misery rent a hole in her heart.

I am so sorry, father, Edrick
. Misery choked her as surely as a pair of strong hands, leaving her breathless. After some time, her tears ran their course, leaving numbness in their wake.

Later in the evening, someone brought a bowl of more foul-smelling stew, a small piece of bread and pitcher of water.

“Blessed Virgin, how do they stand this fetid fodder?” she muttered crossly. Abandoning the stew, she ate the bread and drank some water, saving the rest for later.

She unwrapped the bandage and checked her wound. It was healing, though the jagged edge interrupted the flowing blue pattern given to her last year by the clan elders. It reflected a symbol of status and coming of age as a warrior, signifying the battles she’d fought. The lines of ink swirled about her shoulders, across her upper back, followed her collarbones and peaked at the back of her neck.

Legend said the intricate swirls and interlocking patterns were unique to ancient Pictish women warriors. The design had taken several sittings to complete and she was proud to wear the blue woad ink, signifying her place among their warriors. The flowing design would be with her as long as she lived, a reminder of who she was—a visible connection to her clan and the past.

By nightfall, cold had crept back again. She coiled her braid around her neck and wrapped up in her cloak and plaide. Burrowing as deeply as she could in the straw, she stared at the deep blue-and-wine pattern of the wool. She closed her eyes, remembering the life left behind at the border, reliving the terrible day of death and fire.

She woke at dawn in a chill. Exercise was the only way to warm herself, and she needed activities to focus on, a schedule to spend her days. She went through conditioning routines to warm her body, then spent a time in meditation. Chilled again, she practiced fighting patterns, routines Master Zhang had drilled into her and Edrick without ceasing. Finally exhausted, she recited Holy Scripture and poetry in English, Gaelic, Latin and French as she drifted off to sleep. She repeated the pattern again that afternoon, ending the day with meditation and reflection.

I did not know I would use this one day, but I thank you, Master Zhang
.
I will not fall prey to sickness and madness.
Though he’d refused to share the particulars of his four years in captivity, Zhang stated his experience taught him that every warrior must be prepared for such a possibility.
For all the games of prisoner Edrick and I played, no matter how uncomfortable, no matter how difficult, I know I will survive, and be strengthened by this.

The ache in her heart at the loss of her mentor, brother and father would provide the motivation she needed to stay alive, to remain herself. She would not waste her time wondering what plans the barbarians had for her.

Much to her vexation, her thoughts kept returning to her captor, and Anna cursed her lack of self-discipline. She’d managed to live a score of years without a serious thought for any man—why could she not banish thoughts of the barbarian who held her captive? Zhang once spoke of forging a bond of sorts with one of his captors. Mayhap she experienced something similar.

I certainly do not fancy him
, she protested, shaking her head at the thought.
Blessed Mother! That would be the height of madness
.

The next day was the same. The stew was unbearable. She wrinkled her nose.
Do they use meat beginning to spoil?
She sighed.
I will make do with the morning’s oat porridge and the evening bread and water. Eating this offal would only make me sicken
.

She peered through the small barred window in the door as she placed the foul-smelling bowl of stew on the floor. A guard always stood outside, watching the cells. For what purpose, she knew not, as there were no other prisoners.

What I do know is I have not grown used to this cursed cold, damp air.
She rubbed her arms vigorously.
I wake cold, go to sleep cold.
Resolutely, she turned from the door and began her exercises again.

At last warmed and tired, she turned her observations to the behavior of the men guarding the cells. None approached, nor attempted to speak to her. At night, a leering beast of a man kept watch. The way he stared at her left an unsettling feeling. He usually fell asleep around matins, his chair propped against the back wall.

On the second night of her captivity, the guard’s snoring jarred Anna from sleep. She tossed a few small pieces of stone into the hall. He didn’t stir. She tapped lightly on the heavy wooden door, then louder. The snoring continued. She smiled. He was a deep sleeper.

The midday meal was another bowl of the greasy stew. Anna poked at the chunks of meat floating in the broth, watching the fat congeal on the surface as it cooled. She touched the soft grease thoughtfully. Dipping her fingers in the slippery fat, she slathered it across the hinges of her cell door.

Night fell on the third day. Waiting until the guard fell asleep, Anna took her blanket and pushed it out the barred window of the door until it hung past the lock. Carefully, she withdrew the two steel throwing darts hidden in her bracers, and inserted them in the lock. She worked quickly, one eye on the guard, the wool of the blanket muffling the sounds.

Within minutes, she eased the door open. Creeping into the hall, she stared at the enormous guard, each snore a thunderous boom. Cat-like, she padded to the door leading into the next hallway. Not hesitating, she slowly raised the bar and peered down the hall. Meeting no sign of activity, she moved stealthily along the corridor leading to the great hall. Careful inspection of the large room showed no movement and no sound. The great hall, usually the center of activity, lay as quiet as the bottom of a loch.

At the door to the bailey, she pulled up short, scanning the yard.
The gates are secured for the night. I cannot fetch Orion and leave until dawn and the gates are opened.
She glanced about for a place to hide in the lingering darkness.

The moon loomed overhead, almost full, flooding the vacant bailey with light. Men walked the curtain wall, keeping watch, their attention turned outward rather than into the yard. Sticking to the shadows along the wall, she slipped into the stables without a sound.

* * *

Unable to find slumber yet again, Duncan strolled the curtain wall as he had on other sleepless nights. Only a pair of hours till dawn and he’d yet to get the lass out of his mind. ’Twas well beyond frustrating. Never had a woman affected him this swiftly, this absolutely. Each time he thought of her, lust, possessiveness and an overwhelming urge to protect her filled him. She had the body of a
leannan sith
and the heart of a warrior, a mystery constantly prodding his peace. He traveled the same mental paths over and over again, wondering who she was and replaying the arguments with his father, leaving no room for sleep.

A slight movement drew his attention in the yard.
No, it cannot be. Could my thoughts have summoned her?
He squatted in the shadow of a crenel and watched for the movement again. He closed his eyes and scrubbed his face before looking once more to make sure he wasn’t seeing things.

The shadow moved again. A cloaked figure made its way around the perimeter of the yard toward the stables. Duncan’s lips flexed into a smile as he remained motionless, watching. He wanted to see how much success this hooded padfoot would gain.

Certain of the identity of the brazen sneak, he couldn’t fathom how she’d broken out of her cell, past Alain, and then out of the hall without attracting attention. Glancing at the men on watch, he noticed they only scanned the grounds outside the keep. This would be an enlightening experience indeed. His smile curved further in anticipation.

She slipped into the stables as silently as she had out of the keep and around the yard. Duncan abandoned the wall and made his way to the gatehouse to speak with the gate master. Taking up a position atop the barbican, he had full view of the narrow gateway below. He settled in to wait until the portcullis was raised at first light.

As suspected, at the first grating sounds of the windlass, a hooded form atop a now-familiar charger slowly walked toward the fortified outer gate. He chuckled at the pluck of the resourceful woman and shook his head.

St. Filan’s teeth! What can she not do?

He considered for a moment that he should be angry, but truly he owed her thanks instead. Clearly their security measures were lax. Also, he couldn’t recall enjoying a sleepless night more, thoroughly entertained by Anna’s attempt at escape.

On his command, the gate master dropped the outer portal. Kicking her stallion, Anna raced ahead. Duncan’s heart hurled itself against his ribs and a sick feeling spread through his gut, fearing she’d be crushed under the gate. At the last possible second, Anna jerked her horse to a halt, pulling him back on his haunches as the iron struck the ground before her with a resounding clang like a broken church bell.

Men stood across the entrance to the bailey, ready to draw swords. Under strict orders not to harm her, they blocked the narrow entryway. Stepping from an inner door of the barbican, Duncan appeared at her side. He grabbed Orion by the bridle and smiled.

Chapter 4

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