Chapter Nine #2
lord like your sire, commanding men with the flip of a finger. But” — his eyes twinkled — “there isn’t a man in the garrison
who wouldn’t do my bidding for a double portion of viands or a plump sack of my honey cakes!”
“Then you’ll help me?” Gelis could scarce believe it. “With everything?”
Hugh MacHugh nodded, his red beard gleaming.
“ O-o-oh! Thank you!” Gelis threw her arms around him, hugging him fiercely, uncaring that he smelled of onions and fish brine.
And when she pulled back, she somehow wasn’t surprised to see a bit of dampness misting his eyes before he quickly knuckled
it away.
Hugh MacHugh, master cook and curly-bearded giant, was a romantic.
Who would’ve thought it?
A good portent, to be sure.
Willing it so, she whirled, grabbing first Anice, and then young Hector, embracing them as well. But her high spirits plummeted
when she turned to leave and nearly tripped over Buckie.
He lay sprawled on the stone-flagged floor, the deep shadow cast by the teetering pile of empty wicker baskets making it almost
impossible to see him.
But she saw him now and the sight made her heart wince.
If anything, the dog looked even more dejected than he had in the bailey.
“Awwww, Buckie . . .” She dropped to her knees beside him. “I didn’t know you were there,” she crooned, fondling his ears,
stroking a hand down his shaggy back.
His tail swished across the stone floor, but when he twisted round to peer at her, his eyes were still sad.
Defeated.
Gelis frowned. “Now, Buckie. You know he’ll be back.”
The dog blinked.
Then, with a bit of an effort, he struggled to his feet and stood looking at her.
His tail swished again.
When his gaze slid to the door and he shook himself, his eyes turning hopeful, Gelis knew she had a problem.
Remembering her promise, she rubbed the dog’s bony shoulders.
“A fine meat-bone for you, h’mmm?” She did her best to make the bribe sound tempting. “I am sure Hugh can spare one.”
Hugh MacHugh grunted.
Gelis pretended not to hear.
Instead, she pushed to her feet, prepared to insist. “He can have a stew bone, anything with meat on it. Or perhaps the mutton
. . .” She stopped, her gaze snapping to the pile of empty creels.
Hector was perched on one of the upturned baskets, his feet resting on a tight-wound coil of heather rope.
Gelis frowned again.
Something — indefinable and niggling — flickered at the edge of her mind. She lifted a hand, began tapping her forefinger
against her chin.
And as she tapped, her gaze lit on Anice. The girl still sat on the little three-legged stool, her selfheal-smeared hands
resting on her lap.
Hands damaged repairing the hooping on Castle Dare’s wine barrels.
Gelis’s finger stilled in midtap.
She spun around, searching a shadowy corner across the kitchen. The willow bands Anice had carried up from the wine cellar
lay there still, innocent and . . . beckoning.
Stirring memories.
Gelis stared at them, an idea forming.
Her heart began to thump.
As if he sensed her excitement, Buckie barked. His eyes began to brighten and his tail swishes became rapid, full-fledged
wags.
Watching him, Gelis had to struggle against raising a balled fist and shouting Cuidich N’ Righ!
She wasn’t as successful in stifling a little bounce of joy.
Or the laughter she couldn’t seem to quell.
It bubbled forth, uncontained.
“ Lady —” Anice stood, reached out a goop-smeared hand. “Are you well?”
Gelis dashed a hand across her cheek. “I am fine, never fear,” she managed, the words garbled by her mirth. “Indeed, I am
feeling better by the moment.”
Then, not caring that Hugh MacHugh, Anice, and even Hector were gawping at her as if she’d run mad, she crossed the room to
seize one of the willow bands and wave it before her like a prize.
“I will need this, too,” she announced, beaming at the slack-jawed cook. “To go along with a meat-bone and —”
Hugh ran a hand over his head. “You want the willow band? To go with a dog bone?”
“Aye, and” — Gelis nodded, her mouth twitching — “a coil of rope and —” She broke off, knowing she was going about this the
wrong way.
So she set down the length of willow and smiled.
“Tell me, Hugh MacHugh,” she began, “have you ever heard the saying that a man must fight for what he wants in life?”
Hugh MacHugh gave her a look of astonishment, but finally nodded.
“Then you’ll understand that women must do the same,” she expanded.
When he only stared at her, owl-eyed, she snatched up the willow band, brandishing it like a sword.
“I am about to ride into battle. And this” — she laughed as she wielded the bobbing willow — “is going to help me win.”
“God go with you and keep you.” Ronan stared after the departing company of MacKenzies.
Riding as one, they moved fast. Tight-knit, banners flying, and shouting their slogan, the fore riders in their ranks were
already cresting the next ridge.
Ronan watched them, his every sense alert.
Mounted no less nobly and drawn up high atop his own vantage point, he felt a great surge of relief. By long custom, he shot
a glance over his shoulder, but saw naught amiss. Even so, his horse shifted and tossed its head, the low clouds and scudding
mist making him nervous.
He patted the beast’s neck, spoke a few soothing words.
And still the MacKenzies rode on.
Scores of powerful hoofbeats tossed up clumps of sod and thundered on the chill morning air, the clank of armor and the creak
of leather drowning out the soft soughing of the Highland wind.
The saining words Torcaill murmured so quietly.
Ancient blessings so old their meanings were indecipherable to anyone who hadn’t lived them.
Ronan slid a glance at the druid, noting that his staff gleamed bright silver against the drifting mist.
Indeed, the thing pulsed and glowed in rhythm with the rise and fall of the graybeard’s incantations.
Safeguarding spells that seemed to be working, however much the words sounded like gibberish.
Ronan frowned.
Grateful as he was for the druid’s support, it galled him that such measures were necessary.
That Glen Dare wasn’t as . . . others.
His heart began to hammer in his ears and he let out a long breath, almost a sigh.
He kept his gaze pinned on the riders, his shoulders tense until the valiant array spurred up the braeside to gather on the
hill’s summit.
And not just any summit.
Steep, heather-covered and scored with rock-strewn corries, the rise marked the end of Dare’s influence and the beginning
of the Black Stag’s own territory.
Not surprisingly, the skies were brighter there. Indeed, as he looked on, pale sun broke through the clouds, the slanting
rays streaming down to glint brightly off so much massed steel and valor.
The Black Stag was easily recognizable. Ever a man apart, he sat his horse proudly, black mail gleaming and his dark hair
whipping in the wind. Nearby one of his men held the MacKenzie banner aloft, silken furls snapping.
“The saints hold that one dear.” Glad for it, Ronan kept his back straight, in respect.
Beside him, Torcaill lifted his slachdan druidheachd in silent salute.
As if Kintail knew, he raised a hand.
For one long and disconcerting moment, Ronan was sure he could feel the older man’s stare boring into him. But then the Black
Stag turned, signaling to his trumpeter.
At once, the man sounded retreat.
The sharp blast, shrill and ululant, echoed off the hills even as the standard bearer wheeled his steed in Ronan’s direction,
briefly dipping the great wind-tossed banner.
That last gesture of farewell completed, Duncan MacKenzie thrust up his arm once more. His great steed reared, powerful forelegs
cleaving the air before MacKenzie wrenched him around and went charging after his men.
Then they were gone, the whole glittering lot of them disappearing over the ridge.
Ronan stared at the empty air where the Black Stag had been but a moment before. “The devil himself couldn’t make such a flourish.”
Torcaill shrugged and lowered his staff. “There are many who call him a devil.”
Ronan humphed.
“That race is famed for their hot blood and flair.” Torcaill carefully slid his walking stick into a sheath tied to his saddle.
“Even so, their leave-taking wouldn’t have been such a triumph had she been with them.”
Ronan tensed again.
The words could have been a pail of cold water dashed in his face.
Twisting in his saddle, he glared at the druid. “Say you.”
“You know it, too.” The ancient’s eyes narrowed, looking deep. “Even if she might have left the glen unscathed, naught would
have changed. She belongs here, with you.”
Ronan snorted.
He slashed the air with a denying hand.
If Gelis MacKenzie belonged in Glen Dare — with him — the fates were more than unkind.
They were cruel.
Wishing it were otherwise, he closed his eyes.
When he opened them again, he was prepared for the druid’s penetrating stare.
“Tell me again what you said earlier, Torcaill of Ancient Fame,” he pressed.
He flicked at a fold of his plaid, waiting. He kept his expression neutral.
His mind as blank as was possible.
“I would hear the words once more.”
Torcaill wagged his white-maned head. “You disappoint me, my son.”
“Humor me . . . please.”
“It is possible I have already told you more than I ought.”
Ronan edged his horse a few steps nearer to the druid’s. He leaned close. “Then there can be no harm in repeating what I have
already heard.”
Torcaill drew a long breath. “When she touched you . . . you said she placed her hand on your face, brought her fingers to
your lips?”
Ronan nodded.
Then he straightened, flipped his plaid over one shoulder. Why the druid found it necessary to be so explicit was beyond his
ken.
It also made his face burn, much to his annoyance.
So he frowned. “That isn’t the part I mean — as well you know!”
“Ahhh . . .” Torcaill’s long white beard stirred in the wind. “Have you so soon forgotten what I told you about the significance
of that touching?”
Ronan did his best not to give the druid a withering look.