Epilogue
The land smelled of smoke and rain the next morning.
It was not the bitter, choking odor of total ruin, not anymore. It was the sharp, clean scent of healing.
Margaret stood shoulder to shoulder with Fergus at the very lip of the western ridge, the crisp morning wind tugging at the heavy wool of the plaid wrapped securely around her shoulders.
Below them in the wide glen, the entire MacKenzie clan moved across the blackened, soot-stained fields like an army of ants.
Able-bodied men worked in sweaty teams to clear fallen, charred timber; sturdy women carried wooden pails of water and baskets of fresh supplies between the workers; and small children darted carefully along the safer edges of the bracken, their high-pitched laughter ringing out as they gathered anything left untouched by the hungry flames.
The fire had scarred the ancient Highlands. It had left deep, black gashes across the earth, but it had not taken the land.
Sunlight spilled in pale, liquid gold across the rolling hills, warming the wet earth where a sudden, heavy downpour during the gray dawn hours had finally smothered the last stubborn, glowing embers.
Wisps of white smoke still curled faintly from certain patches of peat, but the terrifying danger was now a memory.
Life remained.
Margaret watched with a soft expression as Angus stood a few hundred yards away, gesturing wildly and arguing cheerfully with two young stable boys over the proper, structural way to rebuild a split-rail fence, while Maisie distributed thick chunks of barley bread with a terrifying, hands-on-hips authority from the back of a supply wagon.
A fond smile tugged at the corner of Margaret's mouth.
Beside her, Fergus rested his large, calloused hand lightly against the small of her back.
He had barely stopped touching her since they had returned from the dragon's tail the night before.
It wasn't a possessive, aggressive grip, but something infinitely quieter.
A continuous, grounding pressure. As though the physical contact itself reassured his battle-hardened instincts that she was truly standing there beside him, whole and unharmed.
Margaret had discovered over the past twelve hours that she liked his constant proximity far more than her pride should allow.
"Ye're smilin', lass," Fergus murmured, his deep, gravelly voice rumbling low in his chest.
She glanced up at him through her lashes.
The dark, bruised circles of total exhaustion remained etched beneath his eyes, but something fundamental had shifted in the sharp, aristocratic lines of his face.
The constant, unyielding tension she had grown entirely used to seeing in his jaw and shoulders over the past year had finally eased, melted away by the fire.
The tension hadn't vanished entirely. Fergus was a laird, and he would always carry the heavy weight of his people's responsibility like iron armor. But now, looking at him, she could see a profound, radiant warmth beneath the steel. Peace, perhaps. Or at least the beautiful beginning of it.
"Angus nearly lost his footin' and fell headfirst into the mud ten minutes ago," she informed him with mock gravity, her hazel eyes dancing.
Fergus looked toward the muddy fields, his brow lifting. "Tragic."
"It was very entertainin', me Laird."
His mouth curved slightly at the corners, forming that genuine, unreserved smile again. Margaret still had not fully recovered from seeing just how breathtakingly handsome her husband looked when he smiled at her sincerely, without the burden of the world holding his lips back.
The heavy thud of footsteps sounded on the damp grass behind them.
Isobel approached, her face bright under her dark hood, carrying Lilly balanced comfortably against one hip, while Alasdair followed close behind.
The simple, domestic sight stirred something incredibly warm and fierce inside Margaret's chest. A family. They were a family now, not just by blood, but through deliberate choices. Through survival. Through love.
Lilly immediately spotted the towering silhouette of her father.
"Da!" The child eagerly launched herself through the air from Isobel's arms the moment Fergus reached out his strong arms for her.
Margaret laughed softly, the musical sound catching on the wind, as Fergus caught Lilly against his broad chest with practiced, natural ease, lifting her high.
The little girl immediately grabbed his sharp jaw with both of her small hands.
Fergus narrowed his dark eyes at Lilly in mock sternness, though his lips were twitching. "And who exactly taught ye how to say such sweet sounds, ye little terror?"
As if really understanding Fergus, Lilly pointed a chubby, caked finger straight at Margaret.
Margaret gasped in dramatic, wide-eyed outrage, covering her heart with her hand. "Traitor. After all the honey cakes I've sneaked ye."
Lilly burst into delighted, breathy giggles, burying her face in Fergus's neck. The sweet sound floated across the ridge, light and bright against the crisp morning air, cutting through the heavy smell of the ash.
Margaret saw Isobel watching them quietly from beneath her dark hood, her eyes shining. Their gazes met in the bright morning light. And without a single word spoken between them, a deep, ancient understanding passed easily between the two friends.
"I'm glad ye stayed, Margaret," Isobel whispered fiercely into Margaret's hair.
Margaret looked over Isobel's shoulder toward Fergus. Toward the small child who was so naturally balanced against his broad hip. Toward the dark, possessive warmth burning in his eyes every single time he looked back at her now.
"So am I," she answered softly.
By the afternoon, the clan had settled fully into the steady, rhythmic routine of rebuilding the fallen structures. By the evening, there was music.
Margaret had not expected that. She was from the orderly Lowlands, where grief and recovery were quiet, somber affairs.
But maybe these rugged Highlanders just understood something vital and unbreakable about the essence of survival.
If people still sang after a devastating fire, then the fire had not truly defeated them. The fire inside them was simply hotter.
Long wooden tables filled the gravel courtyard by sunset, lit by torches. Platters of roasted meats and fresh bread appeared from every corner of the stone kitchens. Someone brought out an old, weathered fiddle from a leather sack; someone else found a hidden cask of strong malt whisky.
Children ran wild beneath the flickering lantern light as exhausted, soot-stained men laughed louder than usual from sheer, intoxicating relief.
Margaret sat beside Fergus on a long bench, wrapped tightly in one of his heaviest wool plaids against the sudden chill of the evening air.
Lilly slept soundly across her lap, her small mouth open, with one tiny fist tangled desperately into the coarse fabric of Fergus's sleeve.
The simple, beautiful sight softened the rigid lines of his face every single time he looked down at the babe.
Margaret noticed. Of course she noticed.
She observed every single detail about him now, storing them in her heart.
She saw how his thumb unconsciously brushed across Lilly's copper curls when he thought about winter supplies.
She recognized how his dark, intense gaze instinctively sought Margaret across the crowded, noisy courtyard.
She noticed how his broad body always angled slightly toward hers, even when he was deeply engaged in serious conversation with the elders of the clan.
There was no more distance. There was no more careful, agonizing restraint between them.
He loved her openly now. Quietly, in the way of a Scotsman, but entirely without apology. And Margaret found herself growing almost dizzy from the sheer, overwhelming joy of it.
The lively, scratching strains of a traditional reel swelled somewhere near the roaring bonfire. Several laughing clan women dragged reluctant, blushing men onto the stones into a chaotic dance while cheerful jeers broke out across the yard.
Margaret leaned closer to Fergus, her shoulder rubbing against his. "Ye are expected to lead the dance eventually, me Laird. The people are waitin'."
Fergus turned his head slowly toward her, his dark eyes darkening. "I'd rather face another ragin' fire in the pass, Margaret."
She laughed softly, the sound low and intimate. "Coward."
The look that flashed in his eyes sent an immediate, white-hot heat rushing straight down to her core.
Margaret had learned over the last twenty-four hours that once Fergus stopped holding his desires back and allowed himself to look at her without the armor of duty, he saw her very differently.
Hungry. Deep. Openly possessive. As if he no longer feared the terrifying prospect of wanting her too much.
His large, calloused fingers slid quietly through hers beneath the heavy wool of the plaid, his grip tight and warm. "Come with me."
Margaret blinked, her pulse fluttering. "Where are ye takin' me, Fergus? The feast is barely underway."
Fergus rose from the bench without answering, a slow, wicked curve lifting his lips.
Lilly had already been gently, skillfully transferred into Maisie's delighted, knowing arms moments earlier. Margaret followed him through the dark edge of the courtyard, her slippers whispering against the stone as she softly laughed to herself to avoid drawing attention from the elders.
"Ye are distractin' me from me wifely duties, Fergus. I should be pourin' the ale."
Fergus glanced back over his broad shoulder, his dark hair catching the torchlight. "Is this how it's goin' to be now, wife? Constant defiance?"
"Aye." She smiled up at him, her hazel eyes bright. "I believe it is."