Изменить стиль страницы

"What?"

"First, she will try to discredit me, and then she will try to murder me again. Or rather, she'll hire someone."

Isobel expected the same, but still, the blood in her veins ran cold. She nodded. Though she knew not how, given that she was a woman, not a trained warrior, but she had to protect Dirk. Or at least watch his back. She would find out if Maighread was truly the one who'd tried to have Dirk killed or whether it was someone else. How could a mother, a caring friend to Isobel's mother, make a plan to kill her stepson, an honorable man? Did she have a hidden madness?

"How did she try to murder you before? I know you don't wish to speak of it, but I'll feel better prepared if I know more about how she operates."

A pained shadow passed over Dirk's clear blue gaze. He rose and paced from one side of the dim room to the other. He paused at the window and stared out over Balnakeil Bay.

"I had ridden out to the cliffs at Faraid Head with my cousin, Will," he said. "We were about the same age. Da had sent us to watch for approaching galleys. He was awaiting a shipment of supplies from Glasgow. 'Twas summer and we were to stay the night. Will and I were going to take turns keeping watch. But while I was asleep, someone attacked him. I awoke to sounds of sword fighting and Will calling my name. Because of the short nights in summer, 'twas late but still gloaming. Someone—a man—dressed in black shoved Will off the cliff's edge before I could get to them. I was in shock. My cousin was my best friend—like a brother to me. 'Twas too late. There was naught I could do to help him."

"Oh, Dirk." Isobel's heart ached for him. She could only imagine the shock and grief of losing a best friend and family member while also in danger herself.

"The murdering bastard wore a deep cowl over his head and I couldn't see his face in the dimness. I didn't recognize his sword or clothing. He advanced toward me, swinging his sword. I was fairly well-trained with the sword, but he was better. He was a man in his prime—tall, broad of shoulder, much bigger than I was at the time. I fought hard for several minutes. I'd never before seen battle and that was the first time I'd truly wanted to kill someone. But all my rage and determination were for naught. I made a misstep and he disarmed me, flinging my sword away. Just before he shoved me off the edge of the cliff, he said, 'Lady MacKay sends her regards.'"

"How terrible," Isobel said, swiping the tears from her eyes. Her heart broke for him. He'd been so young and vulnerable. "How did you survive?"

"I slid down the cliff and a sharp rocky crag plowed into my back and caught my plaid. I was in so much pain I didn't realize what had happened at first… that I was safe for the moment and alive. I was able to climb onto a rocky ledge. The murderer couldn't see me. I was about fifteen feet down. He must have thought I'd fallen onto the rocks in the sea below, then he left."

"You were fortunate."

"Aye, but my cousin was not. I never saw him again, not even his broken body, but my uncle wrote to me that Will had washed up on shore days later."

She shook her head, imagining him, a youth of fifteen, barely more mature than a child, stuck on the side of a cliff, in pain, mourning the loss of his beloved cousin. Not knowing if he would live or die himself.

"Uncle Conall threw a rope down and pulled me to safety the next morn," Dirk continued.

"How nightmarish," she said, blinking back the burning tears in her eyes.

Showing no emotion himself beyond the reflection of the dark memory in his expressive eyes, Dirk glanced at her for a second, then turned away.

"I think it was canny to let everyone think you'd died."

"My uncle said it was the only way to protect me. He took me just south of Inverness to live with my mother's clan."

"Did they treat you well?" she asked

"Aye. The MacLeries are an honorable clan, well thought of and upstanding. After a couple of years with them, I went to university as is the required custom for future chiefs. My uncle and the MacLeries provided for me until I could make it on my own. I was a paid mercenary for a while in France with Rebbie and another good friend, Lachlan."

"That sounds exciting."

Dirk shrugged. "I much prefer Scotland, despite the colder weather." He stood for several moments in silence, staring out the window, as if some of the memories played out in his head. "Anyway, the point I'm trying to make is that you should be careful around Maighread. Trust her as you would a poisonous viper. I'm hoping that since she and your mother were friends, she won't have any reason to harm you or pull you into her manipulations, but be ever vigilant. She is unpredictable. Who can say how her mind works?"

***

Nolan MacLeod sat leisurely before the hearth fire in the solar at Munrick Castle while Torrin, the chief, paced. His long brown hair, fashioned in a queue, was still mussed from his mantle's cowl. He'd just arrived, an hour after dark.

"Where the devil did Lady Isobel go?" Torrin demanded, his dark green eyes glinting… with suspicion or rage? Nolan had to make sure Torrin knew naught of his actions right before the lady's disappearance. Could Torrin care more for his betrothed than Nolan had suspected?

"If I knew that, brother, I'd go retrieve her for you. She vanished in the night. Ran away, most likely back to her brother."

"Why didn't you and the men go out searching for her?"

"We did. But we didn't realize she was gone until the next morn. She'd had several hours to make good her escape." 'Twas only partially a lie. Nolan had sent out Torrin's men looking for her, but he was not about to go out in the cold, wind and snow himself.

"In the morn, I'll take a dozen men and go out searching for her," Torrin said.

"Och. Almost a week has passed now. She could be anywhere, even in Dornie if she took a galley from one of the ports south of here."

"She couldn't travel so far alone, with only her maid. No guard to protect her. She is more likely dead, frozen to death someplace. Saints," Torrin rasped, shaking his head. His brother had more of a conscience than he did and looked mightily troubled at the moment. "Damnation, I wish I'd been here. Why were you not watching her?"

"I was." Aye, Nolan watched her intently at every opportunity. She was a curvaceous lass, with a slender waist and generous breasts. No man in his right mind could avoid watching her when she was in the room. "But she was cunning. She pretended to retire early, just after supper, and that's when she slipped out."

Torrin scratched the three days' worth of dark stubble on his chin. "I don't understand why she'd want to leave."

"'Haps she feared your terrifying reputation. You are seen by some as a war-loving and harsh chief."

Torrin shrugged, appearing far less than fearsome at the moment. Nay, in fact, he appeared defeated. Nolan wanted to smirk, seeing his strong older brother near brought to his knees with distress over a lass. Nolan didn't envy his brother the chieftainship. Nay, 'twas his success with the ladies Nolan envied. If he could bed some of the lovely lasses Torrin had bedded, he'd be a happy man. But nay, Nolan had botched things when he'd gotten a chieftain's daughter with child and been forced to marry her. Torrin hadn't even tried to help him escape the strangling bonds of matrimony. He'd sided with the lass's father, telling Nolan marrying her was the only honorable thing to do. He still hadn't forgiven him for that.