Chapter 5
“I’m going to scream!”
“Like ye havena already?”
She whacked him on the bare back for his flippant response. It stung like a whoreson’s mother, but Broc didn’t give her the satisfaction of yelping.
“I’m going to keep screaming until we’re found!” his twisting burden assured him.
“Och, lass,” he answered calmly, “My ears would thank ye not to.”
Her answering shriek nearly rendered him deaf.
He managed to ignore it, but his teeth hummed at the shrill sound. He was feeling generous. They were near their destination with no sign of her companions’ pursuit, so she could scream all she wanted to.
Seana’s abandoned home—the one she’d shared with her drunkard father—was hidden so deep within the woods and was so completely in union with its natural environment that he doubted anyone would discover them. It would be safe enough to keep her there until he had assessed the situation better.
She was lean—not so lean that he could see her bones, but he could damned well feel them as she squirmed over his shoulder and he thought maybe someone aught to feed her more. Her fists continued to pound his back in protest.
Getting desperate, she pressed her teeth into his shoulder, and Broc squeezed her leg—painfully, he knew.
“That wouldna be a verra good idea, lass,” he advised her, gripping her right thigh more firmly still.
He’d be damned if she was going to take a chunk out of him so easily.
“I don’t much care what you think is a good idea!” she countered, but she didn’t bite him, and he loosened his grip upon her leg as a reward. “Where are you taking me?” she demanded haughtily.
“Somewhere safe.”
“Safe! Hah! The only safe place is somewhere far from you!”
And then her mettle seemed to falter, because he heard her breath catch. “Oh, God—John!” she cried, and went suddenly limp over his shoulder and began to sob.
He was glad she had finally stopped battling him, but he felt guilt-stricken that she was worried for her brother.
“The worst he’ll suffer is a headache,” he reassured her.
Either he had swooned, or Broc had managed to hit him just right to knock him out. In either case, Broc knew for certain the lad was still breathing when they left him. He’d reached down to feel his breath. His frantic sister had simply been too distraught to notice.
“I saw you fell him!”
“Aye, lass, you saw me hit him with the butt of my dagger.”
They reached Seana’s abandoned hovel, and he set her down in front of the door. It took her a moment to regain her footing.
“We’re here.”
“Wonderful!” she replied and Broc recognized both fear and anger in her tone. He admired her for standing up to him. She was nothing like her milksop brother. In fact, he decided she had more courage than most men.
Her brows collided and she seemed to be considering whether to believe him. “You hit him with the butt of your dagger?”
Broc nodded, watching her expression.
Much of her copper hair had worked itself free from her thick braid and fell in disarray about her face.
He brushed it aside to reveal a pink nose, evidence of tears, and eyes so stark a green they seemed almost unreal.
She had the look of a Highland lass about her—and attitude as well. She shrugged away from him.
“Ye have my word, he’s fine.”
Her eyes glazed with unshed tears.
“Och, dinna cry.” He reached out to wipe away her tears, unsettled to see them.
She slapped his hand away and averted her gaze.
Damn, but he was glad she had done that. He almost forgot himself—almost forgot she was a peevish English wench. Still he wanted to tell her not to worry, that he wouldn’t harm her, but his tongue was suddenly too thick to speak.
Already, in little more than a few months, the forest had begun to reclaim Seana’s hovel. Colin had forbidden his new bride to return to this place, where so much had happened to dispirit her.
He watched the wench from the corner of his eye as he worked the door free of the vines that had begun to tangle within the doorframe. Once the door was forced open, he gently pushed her within the cairn, but not before she managed to cast him a malevolent glare.
Broc really couldn’t blame her, but he would explain everything once they were safely within.
He followed her inside and closed the door behind them, casting the room into shadows, but, no matter, he knew his way around well enough not to trip over anything.
In any case, the place was nearly empty now.
It was dank and rotten-smelling and Broc grimaced at the grim reminder that Seana’s old man had lived the last of his life huddled in a cold, damp corner of the single-room dwelling.
He didn’t understand how Seana had lived here so long. He understood even less why her da hadn’t gotten off his lazy, drunken arse and built them a small but respectable hut somewhere in these woods instead of shacking up in the ruins of an old cairn.
But none of that was really any of his affair.
The old man was dead now, Seana was comfortable and deliriously happy with her new husband, and the cairn would make a good hiding place until Broc could best determine what to do with his feisty bit of baggage.
He pulled her further into the room. “You cannot keep me here!” she protested, jerking away from him as though his touch disgusted her.
He grasped her firmly, pulling her back. “Trust me when I tell you ’tis for your own good, lass.”
Not until he discovered who the bowman was did he intend to release her. He didn’t wish to have her death on his conscience now that he had chosen to intervene. Sassenach or not, she was a woman in need of his protection, and what sort of man would he be if he refused to give it?
His mother had needed him once long ago, and he’d failed her. He’d not throw away any opportunity to redeem himself by championing those who could not protect themselves.
He led the girl to one of two chairs in the room and sat her down at the table, then knelt in front of her to explain the situation as calmly as he was able.
Before he could open his mouth, she flew at him. He caught her hands before she could do any damage and jerked her down once more.
“Listen to me!” he demanded.
“This place smells like death!”
“Aye, it does,” Broc agreed. “Now, listen,” he commanded once more, trying to calm her.
“Someone will find us!” She sounded hopeful. And angry. “And when they do, you will regret ever having laid a hand upon me, Scot!”
“Nay.” He shook his head. “No one will find you here.” Even those who had known Seana lived here had not been able to find the place with precise directions. The dwelling was well hidden between cliffside and woodland.
As soon as he was able to do so he would get her some light. The place didn’t look quite so frightening with torches lit against the night.
“Aye, my men will find us!”
Not unless they chose to be found, Broc was certain.
“And if they cannot find me, my father will send more men to aid in the search! They will find me!”
It sounded to Broc as though she were trying to convince herself, but he wanted to tell her that there would be no need, if only she would shut up and listen. “They will search in vain,” he said instead, annoyed with her persistence.
“And my father’s cousin will be furious! He too will scour this land, and when he finds me, he’ll cut off your hands for daring to touch me!”
At least he was getting somewhere now.
“And your cousin is?” he asked.
Maybe her cousin would aid them. If he could leave her here in Seana’s hovel, safe from the bowman, he could go and seek out her cousin on her behalf.
“What good will it do for me to tell you who he is? Will you set me free once you know? Or hold me for ransom?”
She struggled to free her hands from his grip, but to no avail. He held her fast.
Broc’s brows drew together. “Ransom?” The thought hadn’t even occurred to him.
“Aye, that thing you do when you abduct innocent women to extort money from unsuspecting victims!” she explained acidly. “Don’t tell me the thought never crossed your mind, Scot!”
He blinked and stared up at her and then grinned suddenly.
“Don’t look at me that way!”
“Which way?”
“As though the idea only just occurred to you.”
His grin widened. “Och, lass, how much are you worth?”
Elizabet gasped in outrage.
She wanted to assure him that no one would pay anything for her.
Despite her bravado, she doubted a distant cousin who had no inkling she even existed and didn’t have the first notion she was to be tossed at him like so much baggage would bother to lift a finger to help her.
And she wasn’t about to give up her meager dowry either, when it was all she had left in the world.
Besides, even if she promised her captor every last coin, she had no assurance he would set her free.
If this madman wished to ravage her, kill her and toss her body to the wolves, no one would care. The thought wholly disheartened her.
He shook his head. “I have no intention of ransoming you.”
Elizabet eyed him dubiously, unsure whether to be relieved or afraid at that revelation.
Her eyes adjusted to the dimness of the room, and she peered about, trying to gauge their surroundings. It did smell like death in this place. It reminded her of some old, forsaken crypt.
“Where are we?”
“Somewhere safe.”
Light. She needed more light in order to be able to assess her chances of escape. “I’m afraid of the dark,” she lied. Or mayhap it wasn’t a lie. Somewhere near where she sat, the sound of little scurrying feet brought a gasp to her lips.
“If you promise to behave, I’ll light a candle.”
Elizabet bristled. No one had commanded her to behave since she was a child. But she nodded anyway.
“I promise,” she said grudgingly, and took comfort in the fact that a lie told in self-defense wasn’t any sort of lie at all. God would surely never hold it against her.