The Inscription (20 page)

Read The Inscription Online

Authors: Pam Binder

Tags: #Action & Adventure, #Scotland, #General, #Romance, #Historical, #Fiction

“You did what you had to do. It happened a long time ago, and you need to put it behind you.”

“Two days ago I came across a village where the dead were left to rot in their own blood.”

Amber swayed against the wall. “What are you talking about?”

“My enemy, Subedei, took more man my cattle.” Lachlan’s voice seemed hollow. “The Mongol was not satisfied with murdering the inhabitants in the village. One man who survived told me that Subedei impaled the villagers on long poles, and watched them die a slow death.”

She tasted bile. The extent of some men’s cruelty to others unnerved her. “Dear God, no. What kind of monster would…”

“My father was such a monster… and I fear the same madness awaits me.”

Amber struggled to get her trembling under control. Lachlan had been there. He had seen firsthand the horror of which she could only imagine, and the fear that must have run like a brush fire through die village. However, the expression in his eyes told of a deeper fear. She needed to find the right words to help him fight this battle.

“Lachlan, from what you’ve said, your father and Subedei have done unthinkable things, but that does not mean you will as well. I know you.”

The cruelty she heard in his laugh startled her and his mouth turned up in a grim line. “You do not know me at all. I will become like my father.”

A chill shivered through her. She shook herself free from its grasp. It was essential for Lachlan that she keep a level head. Amber reached for all the psychology she’d learned from the high school counselors.

“Just because your father did terrible things doesn’t mean you automatically will do them.” She turned his face toward her. “You have a choice. You need to take control of your life and choose your own path. Besides, I won’t let you turn into a beast.”

He brushed a wisp of hair off her forehead before cradling her against him. “I pray your belief in me will prevail.”

Stuffing a chunk of Una’s freshly baked bread in his mouth, Lachlan warmed himself by the cookroom hearth. He watched as she kneaded a sticky lump of dough. Sleep had eluded him last night, after he had escorted Amber to her chambers. Wandering restlessly through the castle as all others slept had given him time to think. He had no illusion about his wakeful state, or the reason for it. Amber was the cause. Last night, in the corridor lined with portraits, the words she had spoken held strength and conviction. Although others had told him he might escape his father’s madness, Amber said he had the power within himself to change. When he had looked into her eyes, he believed it as well.

Thoughts of the way she would touch his arm when she wanted to get his attention, or to coax him out of ill-humor, drifted through his mind. And her smile; it lit up her face and his heart.

“Lad, you are far away this morn.”

Una’s words pulled him to the present and to another concern. Marcail. On the night that O’Donnell had returned to them, Marcail had told Lachlan she had chosen the Irishman. He respected her decision, but he would not give his sanction until he knew more of the man. He pushed away from the hearth.

“O’Donnell was not in his chamber. Have you seen him?”

Una clucked her tongue as she added flour to the dough. “I fixed him a bowl of porridge. He mentioned he was headed toward the courtyard to practice his game of chess. The Lady Marcail trounced him well last night after he awoke.”

“O’Donnell will need more than practice to beat Marcail at chess. He will need the intervention of the ancient gods.”

She laughed and brushed a wisp of gray hair off her face. “Aye, lad, the Lady Marcail is a match for any man. I sense many are scared away before it gets interesting.” She winked. “But this man is different, and is much like you. The greater the challenge, time more satisfying the prize.”

“You have known me for too long.”

Her expression grew serious. “True enough, we go back a ways, you and I.”

Her skin was lined with age, but her eyes were as clear and bright as when he first rescued her from the ruins that had once been her village. There were many years between them. It was not the first time he regretted their speed. Still he did not regret telling her about himself and his race. He lowered his voice. “Truly, the loss was mine that we never became more than friends.”

She rubbed the small of her back and dosed her eyes. Pain marred her features. She looked at him and the full impact of her age and weariness struck him. He put his hand on hers.

“Why do you not answer me?”

“The answer was always as dear as rainwater. A woman needs to know that she is more than wanted. She must be as necessary to her man as sun and water are to the heather in the Highlands. In those days, you needed no one.” She squeezed his hand and nodded in the direction of the staircase. “But I have watched you with the Lady Amber. There is a difference about you when she is around.”

She shook a flour-smudged finger at him. “And don’t be telling me you feel responsible for her because you pulled her from the loch or some such nonsense. You are in love with her, Lachlan MacAlpin. And it scares you more than the affliction that cursed your father in his last days.”

“You read more into my actions than is there.”

“Nay, lad, I do not.”

“Even if what you say is true, she deserves something I am unable to offer. Our high council does not agree with me that there is a difference between the future and the past. As yet, I cannot give her the child I believe she longs for.”

She punched the dough with her fist. “Your responsibilities are too heavy for one man to carry.” Her voice was a soft whisper. “Be off with you. I feel a lecture bubbling to the surface, and unless you want to hear its full force…”

He reached over and brushed a tear from her cheek. “Madam, I would sooner face the cannons of the English queen than your words of rebuff.”

“Well spoken. Promise me you will not take your feelings for the Lady Amber lightly.”

“Aye, I shall consider it. But you well know…”

She interrupted him. “What I know, Lachlan

MacAlpin, is that if ever there was a man who needed the touch of a woman to make him whole, it is you.“ He shrugged. ”You worry overmuch.“

“And who else but me would have the patience?” He bent over and kissed her on the cheek. “I do not know why you have put up with me for so long.”

“ ”Tis a wonder to me as well. Now, off with you.“ Una shaped the dough into loaves and began to hum an old Celtic tune. It was her way of dosing the conversation between them. He felt a tightness around his heart as he tore off another chunk of warm bread and crossed to the door that led outside. The unspoken words between them cut him deeply. There was a time when he had tried to return, in kind, the feelings she had for him. He wished she were not so perceptive, but she had known the limits of his love and turned him away. Una, in her fragile mortal body, needed someone with whom she could cherish each moment as though there would not be another to take its place. She was wise to cast him aside.

He stepped into the courtyard. The air was cool and brisk after the warmth of the cookroom. He hoped it would dear his troubled thoughts, but knew the only solution was to attack another problem.

As he paused, the courtyard started to churn to life. A maid carried a bowl of grain and a stable boy yawned and stretched as he headed toward the horses. The day was beginning.

Ribbons of pale morning light stretched across the horizon as Lachlan went in search of O’Donnell. The man was not hard to find. He sat, leaning against a stone wall, a chessboard balanced on his knees. So, this was the man Marcail chose over all others. O’Donnell was not yet aware of her decision and might still refuse her. He doubted the likelihood of that outcome. Marcail was seldom denied what she sought.

Chickens clucked and squawked as the maid tossed a handful of grain in their direction. Lachlan walked over to O’Donnell. He did not question that Marcail had given the matter much thought, but he did wonder at her choice. She was acting impulsively. It was not the Marcail he knew. Although she had committed to drinking the elixir, there were no assurances O’Donnell would do the same. There were a few incidents where one person had fulfilled his vow and drunk the Elixir of Life, only to learn that the one chosen had changed his mind. Of course the penalty for such a breach of conduct was death. He would not allow such a fate to happen to Marcail. Lachlan would find out the mettle of the Irishman before he consented to the match.

“I have heard the Lady Marcail beat you at a game of chess.”

“Not one game, but three. The last was almost over before it began.” O’Donnell picked up one of the chess pieces carved from translucent rose marble. “She took my Queen.”

“She usually does if it is left unprotected.”

“You have played chess with the Lady Marcail?”

“Only when cornered.”

O’Donnell’s laughter was spontaneous and loud. A few chickens flapped their wings and screeched in protest at the disturbance to their daily routine. It startled Lachlan as well. The man had a sense of humor. Good, he would need one.

O’Donnell rubbed his thumb over the smooth curves of the chess piece in his hand. “You are right. I did leave the lady unprotected and let my eagerness overshadow my judgment.“ He put the piece back on the board. ”The Lady plays the game as she experiences life, with a shield of protection as thick as the wall of your castle.“

Lachlan sat down. “Even if she loses her first line of defense, she knows of another that will protect her at all cost.”

“Do we speak of Marcail or of chess?”

Lachlan turned his head toward O’Donnell and held the man’s gaze until the air was thick with tension. “I speak of both.”

“You need not concern yourself with my conduct around the Lady Marcail. I have deep feelings for her.”

“And why should I not be concerned? I know you not, and think now that I should have left you for the wolves.”

O’Donnell tapped one of the pieces lightly on the board. “Not a pleasant thought for a man who would not have been able to defend himself against such an attack.”

“Better that, than Marcail lose her heart to a man who is but passing through.”

O’Donnell stood so abruptly the chess pieces clattered to the ground. He drew his sword.

“I have killed for less offense.”

Lachlan rose to his feet slowly as he appraised the man. He let his hand fall to the hilt of his sword. A red haze clouded his vision. The image of the man who stood before him, dead from his blade, appeared so strong he could smell the blood. He tightened his grip on the hilt and the thin thread of sanity he still possessed. He took a long calming bream of air, and thought of Amber. O’Donnell was prepared to risk his own life to defend his intentions toward Marcail. The man had passed the first test.

O’Donnell wiped the sweat from his upper lip. “I came only to seek Marcail’s love. If she refuses me at this time, I shall wait. Stand and fight me and I will prove, with blood, the words I speak are true.”

A cool breeze swirled the dry leaves in the courtyard. On the other side of the stables a dog barked. Shouts of his men on the practice field nearby combined with the sound of metal striking metal as the mock battles began. Lachlan gazed at the man before him. O’Donnell was traveling to Urquhart when Bartholomew had surprised him, yet Lachlan had no knowledge of him until several days ago.

“Sheath your sword. I have no need to fight you. How is it that you know Marcail?”

“I have known the lady for more centuries than I care to recall. When I first met her my hair was dyed black and hung past my shoulders. My right eye was covered with a patch. She thought me quite the rogue.” He grinned. “We had ourselves a time.”

Perhaps Marcail was not as impulsive as he had first thought. “She said she had never seen you before the night I brought you to the castle. How is it that she did not recognize you?” .

O’Donnell lowered his voice. “The last time we were together we did not part on the best of terms. She discovered me in bed with another woman.” He shrugged. “I tried to explain.”

Laughter burst from Lachlan as though it had been long contained and he clasped O’Donnell on the shoulder. “You are lucky she did not run you through.”

He grimaced. “She did.”

“I should think that would have given her sufficient reason to remember you.”

O’Donnell smiled. “A woman’s mind does not often take the most logical course. She has loved me before, and it has taken me two hundred years to realize that she is the only one I want in my life. I will not leave without her.” He closed his eyes and tilted his head toward the sky. “Did you ever wonder how long you were capable of loving someone?”

The sounds in the courtyard closed in on Lachlan until he could no longer distinguish one from the other. He felt suffocated. The words he spoke were little more than a whisper. “With every waking moment.” He looked over at O’Donnell. “You are that sure of your love for Marcail?”

“I would not be here, otherwise.”

Lachlan gazed in the direction of the water. Love was to him not unlike the Highland mist. It rolled off the loch so thick you could feel its embrace, while at other times it was hard to grasp. “I envy you.”

MacDougal bounded toward him, with Gavin dose behind. His brother tugged on his sleeve. “The Lady Amber asks that you meet us in two hours in the meadow.”

Last night Lachlan had agreed to spend more time with her and his brother. He had not thought she meant to start today. “I shall not be finished with…”

Gavin looked doubtful. “Amber said two hours would be a long enough time for you to play with your sword.”

Lachlan heard O’Donnell’s laughter and silenced him with a glance. He turned back to Gavin. “Did she really use the word, ‘play’?”

“Aye. And she said if you were not in the meadow, she would convince Una to serve you only bread and water for a week.”

O’Donnell slapped Lachlan on the shoulder. “From what Marcail tells me about the Lady Amber, she could convince a fish to jump into the net.”

Gavin motioned to his wolfhound and they raced toward the entrance to the cookroom. Once they had disappeared from sight, Lachlan crossed his arms over his chest and looked to where his men trained. They could do without him for one day. They might even benefit from being on their own without his supervision. It would teach them to rely on each other as well as draw on their own strength for leadership. Aye, his being absent from the training field for a half a day would be good for his men.

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