Read Ransom Page 14


  “Why are you staring at me?” she asked.

  “The same reason you’re staring at me, lass.”

  From the sparkle in his eyes, she guessed he had a bit of the Devil in him and she simply wasn’t up to the task of being clever or flirtatious. She wasn’t even sure she knew how.

  She pushed his hands away from her waist and stepped back. “Why have we stopped here? And who was that man in the doorway? Alec shouldn’t have gone inside until I—”

  He cut her off. “This is the last time I’m going to tell you that Alec is safe with Dylan. He would be highly insulted to know you don’t trust him.”

  “But I don’t trust him,” she whispered so the other soldiers wouldn’t overhear. “I don’t know him.”

  “You don’t know me either,” he pointed out. “But you’ve decided to trust me, and you therefore have to believe that what I tell you is true. My soldiers will protect Alec with their lives.” The briskness in his voice indicated he was finished discussing the subject.

  “I’m too weary to argue.”

  “Then don’t. It’s pointless to argue with a Buchanan,” he added. “You can’t possibly win, lass. We Buchanans never lose.”

  She thought he might be jesting, but she couldn’t be absolutely sure, and so she didn’t laugh. Either he had a very strange sense of humor or he was sinfully arrogant.

  “Come along. We’re wasting time,” he said as he caught hold of her hand and started up the stone path.

  “Are we going to spend the night here?”

  He didn’t bother to turn around when he answered. “No, we’ll move on after Annie tends to your arm.”

  “I don’t want to be a bother.”

  “She’ll be honored to serve you.”

  “Why?”

  “She thinks you’re my bride,” he explained.

  “Why would she think that? I only told the lie to one MacDonald soldier.”

  He laughed. “News travels fast, and everyone knows the MacDonalds can’t keep secrets.”

  “Oh, dear, I’ve caused you considerable trouble, haven’t I?”

  “No,” he answered.

  When they reached the doorway, he stepped back to let her go inside first. She moved close to him and asked in a whisper, “Do you trust these people?”

  He shrugged. “As much as I trust anyone who isn’t a Buchanan,” he answered. “Kevin Drummond’s sister is married to one of my soldiers, so he’s considered kin of a sort. Anything you say in front of them will be held in confidence.”

  Dylan introduced her to the couple. Annie Drummond stood near the hearth and bowed low to Gillian. She was about her age and was heavy with child. Kevin Drummond also bowed and welcomed her into his home. Both of them, Gillian thought, appeared to be extremely nervous.

  Their cottage was small and smelled of freshly baked bread. An oblong table took up a good deal of space in the center of the room and from the number of chairs, six in all, Gilliam assumed the Drummonds were used to entertaining visitors. It was a home, warm and comfortable and inviting, the kind of place Gillian dreamed of when she allowed herself to fantasize about falling in love and having a family. Such a foolish notion, she thought to herself. Her life was consumed with worry now, and there wasn’t room for such yearnings.

  “It’s a privilege to have you in our home,” Kevin told her, but his eyes, she noticed, were fully directed on Brodick.

  After formally greeting the laird, Annie suggested Gillian take a seat at the table and let her have a look at her injury. She pulled a chair out on the opposite side and waited for Gillian to get comfortable. Then she spread a cloth on the tabletop while Gillian pushed up her sleeve and unwrapped the bandage.

  “I would appreciate any medicine you have,” she said. “It isn’t a serious injury, but I believe it’s become a bit inflamed.”

  Gillian didn’t think her arm looked all that bad, but Annie visibly blanched when she saw it.

  “Ah, lass, you must be in terrible pain.”

  Brodick and his men moved forward to look at the injury. Alec ran to Gillian and pressed against her. He looked scared.

  “How in heaven’s name did this happen?” Dylan asked.

  “I cut myself.”

  “It’s got to be opened and drained,” Annie whispered. “Laird, you’re going to have to stay with us a couple of days at the least while I tend to this. She’s a lady,” she added, “and I must therefore use the slow method of curing her.”

  “No, I cannot stay that long,” Gillian protested.

  “If she were a man? What would you do then?” Brodick asked.

  Thinking he’d asked the question out of simple curiosity, Annie replied, “I’d open the skin and drain the infection, but then I would pour mother’s fire on the open wound, and though the special brew has cured everything I’ve ever used it on, it causes terrible pain.”

  “I’ve seen warriors shout during Annie’s treatment with her mother’s fire,” Kevin said.

  Brodick waited for Gillian to decide which method would be used.

  She believed the Drummonds were exaggerating the treatment, but it really didn’t matter. She couldn’t afford to lose so much time just to avoid a little pain. Brodick seemed to be reading her mind.

  “Do these warriors you’ve treated with this mother’s fire of yours stay for days or do they leave?” he asked.

  “Oh, they leave once I’ve put the healing salve on the wounds,” Annie answered.

  “The ones who can stand leave,” Kevin interjected.

  Brodick caught Gillian’s barely perceptible nod and then said, “You will use this warrior’s treatment on Gillian, and she will not make a sound while you’re tending her. She’s a Buchanan.” He added the last as though that explained everything.

  “I will not utter a sound, Laird?” she asked, her voice laced with amusement over his galling arrogance.

  He was serious when he answered. “Nay, you will not.”

  She had a sudden urge to start screaming like a wild woman before Annie even touched her just to irritate the pompous man, but she didn’t give in to the desire because the kind woman and little Alec would both become upset. When she was alone with Brodick, however, she was going to remind him that she wasn’t a Buchanan, and she might also add that she was going to thank God for that fact, because the Buchanans were a little too full of themselves. She had noticed that when Brodick announced that she wouldn’t make a sound, every one of his soldiers had nodded.

  Oh, yes, she certainly wanted to scream all right.

  Annie had turned as pale as milk after Brodick chose the treatment to be used. She leaned against her husband and whispered into his ear. Because she spoke so rapidly, Gillian only caught a word or two, but it was quite enough for her to figure out that Annie was asking Kevin for permission to give Gillian a sleeping draft.

  Kevin put the request to Brodick while Annie rushed about the cottage gathering her supplies. Before Brodick could answer, Gillian spoke up. “I don’t wish to be drugged. I appreciate your concerns, but I must insist on remaining clearheaded so that we may continue on our journey.”

  Brodick nodded, but Gillian wasn’t certain if he was agreeing with Kevin’s request or with her denial. “I mean what I say,” she pressed. “I don’t want to be drugged.”

  Alec demanded her attention then by tugging on her sleeve. As she leaned down to him, out of the corner of her eye she saw Annie sprinkle brown powder into a goblet and then add wine.

  “What is it?” she asked Alec.

  “Are you gonna tell on me?” he whispered.

  “About the cuts on my arm?” He bumped her chin when he nodded. “No, I’m not going to tell, and I want you to stop worrying that I will.”

  “All right,” he said. “I’m hungry.”

  “We’ll get you something to eat in a little while.”

  “With your permission, Laird, I would like to toast you and your bride,” Kevin announced as he carried a tray of goblets to the table
.

  “Oh, but I’m not—” Gillian began.

  Brodick interrupted her. “You have my permission.”

  She frowned at him, puzzled as to why he hadn’t corrected Kevin’s misconception, but decided to wait until later to ask him to explain.

  Kevin put Gillian’s drink in front of her. He then placed the other goblets a good distance away, no doubt so that the drugged wine wouldn’t get mixed up with the others. The toast was but a clever ploy, and though she knew Kevin’s intentions were good-hearted, it still rankled her that he had ignored her wishes. After the toast was given, she would have to take a drink, for otherwise she would be considered rude. That left her only one choice.

  “May I call your other soldiers inside to share this toast?” Kevin asked.

  In answer Brodick went to the door and whistled. The sound echoed through the cottage. Less than a minute later, the rest of his soldiers filed inside to take a goblet. Gillian helped by handing one to each man.

  When everyone held a drink, Kevin stepped forward and raised his goblet high.

  “To a long happy life filled with love and laughter and healthy sons and daughters.”

  “Here, here,” Aaron agreed.

  Everyone waited until Gillian had taken a drink before they downed their wine. Brodick nodded to Annie, pulled out a chair, and straddled it to face Gillian. He motioned for her to put her arm out again, and then put his hand down on top of hers.

  She didn’t have to ask him why he was holding on to her. He was making sure she didn’t pull away during Annie’s treatment.

  Dylan came around the table and placed one hand on her shoulder. “Robert, take the boy outside,” he ordered.

  Alec frantically clutched Gillian’s arm. “I want to stay with you,” he whispered anxiously.

  “Then put your request to Dylan,” she instructed. “And perhaps he will reconsider, but be polite when you ask him, Alec.”

  The boy hesitantly looked up at the soldier, craning his neck back as far as it would go. “Can I stay . . . please?”

  “Milady?” Dylan asked.

  “I would be happy for his company.”

  “Then you may stay inside for a little while, Alec, but you mustn’t interfere. Can you promise me that you won’t?”

  Alec nodded. “I promise,” he said, then leaned into Gillian.

  Annie stood beside her, watching her closely. She was ready to begin, yet continued to wait. “Are you feeling a bit sleepy, milady?” she inquired casually.

  “Not overly,” she replied.

  Annie glanced at the laird. “Perhaps I should wait another minute or two.”

  Gillian looked up at the men surrounding her and noticed that Annie’s husband was yawning every other minute, but then the soldier named Robert also yawned, and she couldn’t decide which one was actually getting drowsy. Then Kevin began to sway.

  “Annie, would you please ask your husband to sit down?”

  Kevin heard her request and, blinking furiously, tried to make sense of it. “Why would I want to be sitting down, lass?” he asked.

  “So you won’t have so far to fall.”

  No one understood her suggestion until Kevin suddenly pitched forward. Fortunately, one of Brodick’s soldiers was quick on his feet and caught him before his head struck the edge of the table.

  “Ah, lass, you switched goblets, didn’t you?” a soldier asked.

  “She drugged Kevin?” another soldier asked, grinning.

  Gillian could feel her face burning and concentrated intently on the tabletop while she tried to think of a proper apology to give Kevin’s wife.

  Startled by such trickery, Annie turned to the laird. Brodick shook his head as though in disappointment, but there was a definite sparkle in his eyes and voice when he said, “It seems Kevin drugged himself. Toss him on the bed, Aaron, and let’s get this done. Annie, we need to be on our way.”

  She nodded, and with trembling hand she put her knife to Gillian’s arm. Brodick tightened his hold on Gillian’s wrist just before she felt the first prick of the blade cutting through her tender skin. At first Gillian let him know she thought he was overreacting, yet once Annie began to probe the wounds, she was glad for his anchor. The need to flinch was instinctive, but Brodick’s grip wouldn’t allow any movement at all.

  The treatment wasn’t nearly as awful as she had anticipated. Her arm had been throbbing from the pressure of the infection swelling beneath the surface of her inflamed skin, but once the wounds were opened, she felt immediate relief.

  Alec squeezed under her right arm and clung to her. Frightened, he whispered, “Does it hurt bad?”

  “No,” she answered quietly.

  When he saw how calm she was, the tension eased out of him. Curious, he asked, “Does it hurt as bad as when that man punched you in the face?”

  “Hush, Alec.”

  “But does it?” he pestered.

  She sighed. “No.”

  Annie had been cleaning the wounds with clean strips of cloth, but paused when Alec asked the question. “Someone struck you, milady?” she asked. The sweet woman looked so appalled, Gillian immediately tried to reassure her.

  “It was nothing, really,” she insisted. “Please don’t concern yourself.”

  “This man . . . who was he?” Annie asked.

  The room grew deadly quiet while everyone waited to hear her response. She shook her head. “It isn’t important.”

  “Oh, but it is important,” Dylan said to a chorus of grumbled agreements.

  “He was an Englishman,” Alec blurted out.

  Nodding to indicate she didn’t doubt the child’s statement, Annie picked up another cloth and resumed her task of cleaning the wounds. Gillian winced from the discomfort, unaware that she was now gripping Brodick’s hand.

  “I knew he had to be English,” Annie grumbled. “I don’t know of any Highlander who would raise his hand against a woman. Nay, I don’t.”

  Several soldiers nodded their agreement. Desperate to change the subject, Gillian latched onto the first thought that came into her mind. “It’s a fine day today, isn’t it? The sun is bright and the wind is mild—”

  Alec interrupted her. “The man was drunk, terrible drunk.”

  “Alec, no one wants to hear the particulars—”

  “Ah, but we do want to hear,” Brodick drawled out, his mild voice belying what he was truly feeling. He tried to be patient, but his need to hear the full story from start to finish was driving him to distraction. What kind of a madman would prey on such a gentle lady and a little boy? Alec had already painted a dark picture of the horror he’d survived and had let them all see a glimmer of the courage Gillian had shown. Aye, he wanted all the details, and he decided that he would hear the full tale before nightfall.

  “He was drunk, wasn’t he, Gillian?” Alec pestered.

  She didn’t answer him, but the boy wasn’t deterred. Since she hadn’t actually forbidden him to talk about the beating, he decided to tell everything he knew.

  “Uncle Brodick, you know what?”

  “No, what?”

  “The man, he hit her with his fist and knocked her clear off her feet to the ground, and then you know what he did? He kicked her and kicked her and kicked her. I got real scared, and I tried to make him stop, but he wouldn’t.”

  “How did you try to make him stop?” Dylan asked.

  Alec lifted his shoulders. “I don’t know,” he admitted. “Maybe I cried.”

  “Annie, are you almost finished?” Gillian asked.

  “Just about,” the woman answered.

  “And then you know what? I threw myself on top of Gillian, but she pushed me away, and then you know what she did? She rolled on top of me and put her hands on my head so I wouldn’t get kicked none.”

  “What happened then, Alec?” Liam asked.

  “She patted me and told me to hush ’cause she said it was going to be all right. She wouldn’t let nobody hurt me. She didn’t neither,” he adde
d. “I never once got kicked.”

  Gillian wanted to put her hand over Alec’s mouth. The men looked horrified by what the child was telling them, but their gazes were locked on her. She felt ashamed and embarrassed by what had happened.

  “Was it just one Englishman who touched Lady Gillian?” Robert asked. “Or were there others?”

  “Another man hit her,” Alec said.

  “Alec, I wish you wouldn’t—” Gillian began.

  “But he did hit you, don’t you remember? The man kicked you, and then the other man hit you. How come you don’t remember?”

  She bowed her head. “I remember, Alec. I just don’t want to talk about it.”

  The boy turned to Brodick. “You know what she did after he hit her? She smiled just to make him mad.”

  Annie gathered up her cloths and put them aside on one of the stools, then spread a thick towel under Gillian’s arm. “Laird, I’m finished cleaning out the infection.”

  Brodick nodded. “The boy’s hungry. He would appreciate a piece of your bread if that isn’t too much trouble.”

  “Maybe with honey on it,” Alec suggested.

  Annie smiled. “Of course with honey.”

  “You must eat it outside,” Brodick ordered. “Robert will go with you and see you don’t get into mischief.”

  “But, Uncle Brodick, I want to stay with Gillian. She needs me, and she might get lonely.”

  “I’ll keep her company,” he promised. “Robert?”

  The soldier moved forward. Alec saw him coming around the table and pressed closer to Gillian. She leaned down and whispered, “I’ll call out to you if I need you.”

  She had to promise on her mother’s heart before Alec was convinced that she wouldn’t disappear if he left her for a few minutes. Then he snatched the bread from Annie’s hand and ran out the doorway, forgetting in his haste to thank her properly.