Morganna (The Brocade Collection, Book 4) (12 page)

“I’m beginning to think I was c
orrect the first time. You are a lass. I
think my brother is blind, after all.”


No law against thinking, is there?” she replied.

“Zander is very anxious to get his future decided. He says he longs for
his house. I don’t know why. The place is a disaster. Not one of his servants
obey. It’s not comfortable.”


I’ve been told,” she replied.

“Why did you pledge yourself to him?”

“I have na’ pledged anything to anyone. I’m bound by debt to him. He
threatened to strip my clothing off me if I didn’t take it off, then when I did, he
tossed it into the burn. I had no choice but to wear FitzHugh sett. I owe him for
that.”

“He’s making you pay for your clothing, after a trick like that? I’ll speak
to him.”

“You’re na’ to do any such thing.”

“Well, someone has to. The woman he just betrothed himself to isna’
going to. She’s the biggest mouse I’ve ever met.”

Morgan stumbled and fell, taking the jolt once again with her knees. The
agony wasn’t as easy to stanch this time. She sat, ramrod straight, with her
hands on her thighs and gasped with it. Not one of the horses seemed to have turned about or stopped.

Then, she noticed the horse at her side, and the man at her elbow. “You
tripped. Here. I’ll help you.”

“Get your hands off
me!” she hissed.

“I know, you’ll probably stick a dozen knives into my gizzard if I don’t.
Fair enough. Flay me. I’ve finished with this farce, anyway. You’re riding with
me. Here. Ugh. You weigh more than you look.”

He had her in his arms and then settled into the front of his saddle and Morgan wasn’t capable of saying anything to stop him. Her mouth was clenched
tight with stopping the scream from his rough handling. Then, he was in the
saddle behind her, pulling her against his chest and murmuring words that
brought tears to her eyes again.

“Zander
is a fool,” he said. “A fool who went
and got himself betrothed not two days ago, regardless of whom he hurt or
whom he stepped on. I don’t know why. Used to be he would have died before accepting a
wife. No matter now. I can’t change it. You probably can’t, either. If you lean
that direction, think it through. He’s lost to you. I’m not. I’m available, still.
My name is Plato. Plato FitzHugh. At your service, Morgan lass.”

She laughed and caught the agony before it made much sound. Another
FitzHugh with a ridiculous name. Their mother must be a sow to force the issue,
and their sire a rabbit. Plato. She was still smiling over it when Zander turned
his head to check on her.

The smile died and then turned to consternation as he motioned for a halt
and then rode back to where Morgan was ensconced in Plato’s arms. She
watched the brothers look each other over.

“You’ve got my squire there, Plato. I’ll not take kindly to this treatment
of my serfs.”

“Allow me to pay off his debt. How much cloth did he get? At what
price?”


How much?” Zander exploded. “Get down off that horse, Morgan, and
keep your claws from my brothers. I command it.”

“I’ll
buy his freedom, Zander. Only quote the price and I’ll send it over.
I’ll even send my serf, Roberta, over to sweeten the deal.”

Zander looked at Morgan, and his midnight
-blue eyes were as cold and
hard as Phineas’ were. “No amount of silver is going to set him free. Ever. I
guarantee it. Now get down off that horse, Morgan. Now.”

She pulled away from Plato, and was shaking as she swiveled her entire
body to make the lunge for the ground easier to take. Plato helped her, though,
putting his hands on her upper arms and lowering her. When he did, he brushed
the sides of her breasts. Morgan sucked in the intake of breath, while Plato’s
expression didn’t change. He didn’t give indication that he’d felt it, at all. He
was glaring straight at his brother.

“You treat Morgan harsh
ly, and you’ll deal with me.”


What?” Zander looked from his brother, down at where Morgan
attempted to remain standing, although she had both hands about his brother’s
saddle horn in order to do so, and then back to Plato. If there was any gentleness to him, it was impossible to spot.


Walk beside me, Morgan. I’ll not come to blows over a piece of spittle
such as yourself. Plato? Keep your tongue and your influence from my
household.”

Morgan held to the horse, Morgan’s, mane, and nearly screamed with
every step forced on her as he loped back to the front of Zander’s column. She was
dying, and wished God would just take her and put her out of her misery. It
would be more merciful of Him. Morganna KilCreggar deserved a small bit of
mercy, didn’t she? She deserved the blessed unconsciousness of the dead, the
silent sleep of eternity. That was what she deserved. She surely didn’t deserve another moment of this.

 

CHAPTER TWELVE

 

Zander called a halt near midafternoon. Morgan’s existence resembled
H
ell, to the point she wouldn’t have known if it was midafternoon, midnight or midsummer. All she knew was the horse stopped and two steps later, so did she.

Since it was impossible to turn her head, she swiveled slowly and looked
back at the group behind her. All the servants Zander had been intent on
gathering were now riding with his clansmen. All, except Morgan. She turned
back, to face forward. How perfectly Zander FitzHugh carried out his creed, and
he didn’t even know it was a KilCreggar he was torturing. Morgan’s back
stiffened. He never would know it, either.

“You’ll call a rest, finally? Your servant looks like he’s taken a touch of
the whip.”

The man speaking was probably Plato, although she didn’t know their
voices all that well, but she doubted the brother named Phineas would care.

‘‘Morgan lad? Surely you’re mistaken. There’s not a more
prideful,
stubborn lad born. He’s simply hungry. We’ll all partake. Sheila and Amelia!
Gather foodstuffs!”

H
e was using his orator’s voice, and Morgan stepped away
from the horse so Zander could heave himself off and see to everything. She wasn’t capable of moving fast or well. She turned slowly to watch as men, lads and lasses headed for the bushes on either side of the dirt path.

“You dinna’ need to relieve yourself, Morgan?” Zander asked at her ear.

She gasped inwardly, although nothing showed, and held onto the stab of pain the movement caused by keeping her teeth clamped shut.

“I’ve no need,” she answered, finally.

“Well, I’ve not your vanity, nor your shyness. I very much need to see to
emptying myself. I’ll not be long. You move from this spot, and I’ll have your
braid,” he answered. “You ken?”

“I ken,” she replied.

It was starting to rain, although only bits and spurts of moisture touched her nose, cheeks and hands, but it felt good. Morgan closed her eyes, settled her
head back the tiniest bit, in order to lick a drop from the skin above her upper lip.

“D
oona’ do that again.”

She was already stiff, but Zander’s quiet command made every part that
wasn’t locked in place, tighten. Morgan lowered her chin slowly and looked
across at him. She didn’t say a word.

He nodded and left her then, and she breathed normally the moment he did so
.
What is the matter with me?
she lamented to herself, but there wasn’t an
answer. There never was.

She heard the sounds of a feast, smelled a bit of bread and pig, even
caught the odor of mustard seed. She kept her eyes on Morgan, the horse, and
forced her belly to calm. She couldn’t eat, because if she did, she’d have to take
nature’s call, and if she did that, she didn’t know if she could get to her feet again. She swayed slightly and reached out for Morgan’s mane.

“You don’t eat, Morgan?”

She looked at her hand on the horse, touched the rough hairs of his mane,
and told her heart to hush. “Nay,” she answered.

“Why not?”

She didn’t have to look to see it, she knew how he’d be standing, resting one hand on his hip, with a hank of bread or meat in the other. She only wished
the pain of her body over-rode that in her breast. “I doona’ have to answer to
you,” she said, finally.

There was silence a moment as he probably swallowed his bite. “You
don’t rest, either.”

“That is na’ true. I am resting.”

“Come then, sit.”

“I do not wish to sit.”

He didn’t say anything, nor was there any sound of eating. Morgan examined
the horse’s mane in her hands.

“You sicken, and I’ll flog you,” he warned.

“I’ll not sicken.”

“I’ll fetch you a carrot, and a bit of boar meat. ‘Tis only fitting, since you
brought it down.”

“A master does na’ serve his squire, I think,” she replied.

“If I could perhaps interrupt?”

“Go away, Plato,” Zander growled.


Methinks it’s you that should disappear, Zander. Yon lad’s face is
etched with pain, and he is na’ sitting for a reason. Probably the same reason he
is na’ eating.”


He’s na’ doing either, because he wants me to look bad before my
brothers. I already know how my squire thinks.”

Morgan, the horse, had small braided portions to his mane. Morgan, the squire, found one of them, ran it through her fingers, then found another one. Zander had been braiding pieces of hair while they journeyed? That was
interesting, she told herself.

“Canna’ you see? Your squire’s incapable, at present.”

“Incapable? This lad has more capability in his foot than any other man.
I’ve seen it. And, he will na’ take a rest. I asked, and he refused.”

“Did you ask him up onto your horse?”

“Doo
na’ overstep, Plato,” Zander said.


He asked me,” Morgan spoke up. “I refused.”

“And he also offered food and rest?”

“Aye.”

“You lie well,
Squire Morgan. Face me when you do it.”

Face him
?
It was all she could do to remain standing. Morgan took a
deep breath and swiveled with her entire body, carefully blanking out the sharp
stab of pain that arced between her shoulders.

“You see, Zander, it’s written all over the lad. He’s a back injury, in
agony, terrified of having to stand again, and you’ve marched him all night and
most of the day. At least give the order to encamp here. We can reach Argylle
tomorrow, dawn.”

If Plato was hoping for gratitude from Morgan, he was sadly mistaken
. S
he glared at him. A FitzHugh pitying a KilCreggar? And worse, asking for
leniency? All her life was spent for a moment such as this, and she lifted her chin,
ignoring the minute gasp she couldn’t prevent. “I was na’ resting because I
dinna’ need it. I doona’ wish to eat, because I’m replete, and my injury is just that,
FitzHugh,
my
injury. Doona’ trouble yourself over me and I’ll na’ stick a dirk in
you when you least expect it.”

Zander chuckled.
“Well, I did try to warn you, Plato. He wishes me to
look bad before my brothers. Nothing more.”

Plato looked unconvinced, but he left them. Morgan took another slight
breath, before she could pivot back. Zander was still there. She heard him take a bite of his carrot. She watched the splash of a drop on her hand, then another. She hoped it wouldn’t rain in earnest. The mud might be more than she could
walk through.

“The Earl of Argylle has an English lord staying with him
,” he said.

“So?” she replied.

He took another bite of his carrot, noisily chewed it, and just as loudly
swallowed. “This English lord has a champion. A fencing master. An English
fencing master.”

Morgan watched more raindrops fall onto her hands, then felt them on
her head, thumping with the weight of water each carried. She sighed. God was
as merciless as a FitzHugh, obviously. “So?” she finally replied again.

“We’ll speak more of this when we get to the castle. Have you ever seen
a real castle, Morgan?”


Nay,” she whispered.

“I receive rooms in the keep. My squire stays at my side.”

She probably should have joined them in the bushes, Morgan realized, as
the sickness fell to the pit of her belly. He was already punishing her for his own
lack of control. She hardly dared be put in that position again. She wasn’t
strong enough to withstand him, and it wasn’t to withstand his punishment.

It was to withstand the paradise he’d given her a glimpse of.

“Squire Martin will enjoy that,” she answered.

“Squire Morgan will, too.”

“Squire...Morgan?”

“P
hineas wishes you for his squire. Would you like that?”

She sucked in breath, tinged with rain. It felt cool in her mouth and down
her throat. It felt good. “Phineas?” she asked.
Phineas,
she asked again to
herself.
Too?

“P
hineas. I’ve told him the same as I told Plato before him. There is no
amount of silver that will release you from me. Besides, Phineas abuses his servants.”

Morgan almost laughed. “Abuses
?” she asked.


He uses the whip. Branding irons. I’ve heard. I’ve seen his handiwork.
I’ll na’ stay at the castle, his home.”


Branding irons?” Morgan repeated.

“Aye. And chains. He also claims more bastards than there are days to
the week. All delivered to him by the women he takes. I don’t believe they
enjoy it.”

“Why are you telling me all this?”

“I don’t know. Because I could always talk to you, maybe.”

Rain was slicking Morgan, the horse’s, hide and darkening it to a brown
shade that resembled Zander’s hair, for some reason. Morgan, the squire,
looked at it and then turned to face him, ignoring every ache at the movement.
She could swear they were getting easier to bear, too.
In comparison to her failure, anything would be,
she thought. She knew what failure felt like, now. I
t wasn’t a pleasant experience. She, who had always tasted success, was
now a failure. She’d been broken. A KilCreggar had been broken by a FitzHugh! She realized she was, too. She was broken in everything that
mattered; her spirit, her body...her heart. How her ancestors must be writhing
with disgust.

She sighed. “You d
oona’ wish to talk to me, Zander FitzHugh. You wish
to punish me. You know why. I know why. No one else does, nor will they ever. Very well. I accept your punishment. Now go, and find someone else to
converse with. I’ve tired of it.”

His face was as shuttered as her own felt like. He was still a very
handsome man, with rain molding everything he wore to him. He lowered his jaw and blazed every bit of his midnight-blue scorn onto her.

“I wish to warn you of what your lot could be should I take Phineas up on his offer.”

“Is that supposed to be worse?” she asked.

He pulled back. “I dinna’ mean to harm you,” he whispered.
“I doona’
know my own strength sometimes.”

Oh God, that
was
worse!
she thought. She sucked in on the newest agony, and
realized that it hurt more than anything her back had been giving her. She didn’t want a FitzHugh’s pity! Especially this FitzHugh!

Morgan slitted her eyes and regarded him. She’d rather have his hatred.
It matched her own, if she found it again. She sneered a bit at him. “You forget
yourself, FitzHugh,” she said coldly.

“Forget?”

“There are others all about you.”

“True. We’ve surrounded by others. What of it
?”

“If
you tarry much longer at my side, they may suspicion why, you know,” she whi
spered.

His face turned to a stone-like mask, and she watched it happen. It felt
like every piece of her was crying, but the rain covered any such motion, and her e
yes remained dry and hard.

“Our rest is over. We make Castle Argylle by dark
.”

Morgan blinked her acknowledgment and turned back forward as the
word was given. She decided, after another thousand steps, that the ache in her
back, sending shooting pains down each leg was the easier to bear.

~ ~ ~

Zander had been right. Morgan had never seen a castle. She hadn’t
much will to look at this one as they walked up a hill toward it. All she could tell
was it was immense, and torches from the walls shed light all around the
surrounding acreage. The column halted, and then she was walking across
wood, listening to the echo of horses’ hooves and her own boots.

Since she wasn’t capable of turning her head, she took it all in with
unblinking eyes from a position beside Zander’s leg. They had more torches
sputtering and spewing light at every curve of the steps, and Zander walked his
horse right into a building and up a flight of steps. Morgan tripped only once,
and when she did, the immediate pressure of Zander’s hand was on hers, holding her up, and keeping her up until she steadied.

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