Page 13 of Shadow Music (Highlands' Lairds 3)
âIf we only knew what?â Colm asked.
âIf you only knew her,â he hastily said. âShe is innocent of these terrible accusations.â
Colm turned to the priest. âWe already know sheâs innocent.â
âAye, we do,â Brodick agreed.
âYou do?â
Brodick sighed. âWe do,â he repeated. âBut at the moment, that doesnât matter, does it? Look at them. They have all condemned her.â
âYes, they have.â Gelroy was wringing his hands. He stared at Gabrielle as he whispered, âTerrible things will happen to her if they take her back to England and hand her over to King John. That lecherous man is capable of vile deeds, and I will tell you this, when he is finished with her, heâllâ¦â He couldnât go on. Gabrielleâs future was too horrible to speak of.
âThe woman who accused herâ¦â Brodick began.
âIsla,â Gelroy said. âI heard them say her name.â
âShe lies,â Colm said.
Gelroy agreed with a nod. âShe will have to answer to God for this.â
âBut what about the monk?â Brodick asked. âWhy did he confirm her lies?â
âI donât know.â
âDo you know this monk?â Brodick asked.
âI do. Heâs young and eager to serve, and I believe him to be an honest man. I canât imagine why he would say that he had seen Gabrielle. It has to be a mistake, and Iâll seek him out and ask him to tell me exactly what he thinks he saw.â
âThe damage is already done,â Brodick said.
Gelroyâs shoulders slumped. âYes it is. They have ruined Lady Gabrielleâs life. Shame to them.â
âPriest?â
âYes, Laird MacHugh?â
âWhen I leave the abbey, youâre coming with me.â
Gelroy had the sudden urge to throw himself over the parapet. He took a step back, judged the distance to the steps, and then found a bit of courage. He wouldnât run. He would politely decline.
âYouâre inviting me to serve your clanâ¦â
âIf you choose to think of it as an invitation, you may.â
âAnd if I decline?â the priest gulped.
âYou wonât.â
The lump in Gelroyâs throat made it difficult for him to speak, and it took every ounce of self-control he possessed to stand before the MacHugh. Praying that the laird had indeed come to the abbey to seek a priest, and not, as Gelroy feared, to exact revenge for his brother, he rasped, âI will be happy to go with you.â
Brodick laughed. âNow whoâs telling lies? Your face gives you away.â
Embarrassed, Gelroy admitted, âI do have trepidation, but I will do my best to minister to the MacHugh clan.â
âGo and gather what you wish to take with you,â MacHugh ordered.
Brodick waited until the priest was out of sight before speaking. âIâve heard it said that once a priest finds a home with any clan, itâs impossible to get rid of him. Iâve a feeling youâre going to be stuck with Gelroy for the rest of your days.â
Had Gelroy heard Brodickâs prediction, he wouldnât have agreed. The sooner he could complete his duty and be away from the MacHughs, the better.
He didnât wish to irritate the laird by dragging his feet, and so he ran all the way back to his quarters to pack his holy water and oils, his stole, and the rest of his possessions. Laird MacHugh had ordered one of his younger soldiers to accompany the priest, and Gelroy thought the laird did so to make certain he wouldnât try to run away.
God only knew Gelroy wanted to flee, but with Lady Gabrielle in such need, he had to put his own fears aside. All he could think about was finding a way to help her.
He thought she would be worried about her guards waiting for her. It wouldnât do for them to join in this monstrous persecution. Four guards and one woman standing against a hundred incensed menâ¦no, no. The guards must stay outside the gates until this dreadful drama was over. Then, God willing, they could help Gabrielle find shelter away from these terrible people.
Gelroy headed for the front gates. The warrior blocked him. âYouâre to go back to Laird MacHugh,â he said as he took the two bags filled with Gelroyâs things. âIâll see that these get tied to one of our saddles.â
âPray be patient with me,â Gelroy replied. âI must give Gabrielleâs guards orders to continue to wait. She would not want them to come inside the abbey, for there is danger here. It will take but a minute.â
The warrior agreed with a quick nod.
Stephen stood with Gabrielleâs horse just north of the gate. He came forward when he spotted Gelroy with the Highlander.
âGabrielle will be joining you soon. Do you have her clothes and other necessaries with you?â Father Gelroy asked.
Stephen shook his head. âWe have some of her things. Her maids packed her trunks. We plan to catch up to them by late this afternoon. Why do you ask?â
He hated to lie, but Gelroy excused the sin by telling God he was only protecting the guards and Gabrielle from a mob wanting blood.
âShe wanted me to make certain because her plans have changed. She will tell you in just a few minutes when she joins you. She bids you stay and wait for her here.â
Stephen had no reason to doubt the priest, for he knew that Gelroy had become a friend to Gabrielle.
As Gelroy hurried back to the wall, the MacHugh clansman accompanying him remarked, âYou lied to that man. Why?â
âTo protect him and the others. The lady would want it so,â he added. âShe wouldnât wish for them to try to interfere in this debacle, as they would be sorely outnumbered.â
His escort continued to follow Gelroy and wouldnât leave his side until the priest was halfway up the stairs. Gelroy knew that the man was also suspicious that he might decide to hide. When he reached the top step, he stopped and waited for one of the lairds to bid him to come forward. Brodick noticed him and motioned to him.
Gelroy cleared his throat to get MacHughâs attention and said, âLaird, I cannot leave until I know that Lady Gabrielle will be safe from these monsters. With your permission, Iâll go and stand by her side.â
Before MacHugh could respond, Gelroy straightened his shoulders and turned to Brodick. âLaird Buchanan, Gabrielleâs father isnât here to defend her honor, and you are her only relative. You must help her.â
âDo not tell me my duty, priest.â Brodickâs voice was harsh. âI know it well.â
âYes, of course you do,â he said, nodding vigorously.
Dismissing Gelroy, Brodick watched the crowd below. They were being whipped into a frenzy by Coswold and Percy.
âColm, Iâll take her home with me. I can protect her there.â
âKeeping her safe wonât restore her honor,â Colm said grimly.
Brodick agreed. âShe deserves better.â
âHer fatherâ¦he isnât like those barons?â
âI wouldnât allow him on my land if he were,â he replied. âI know him to be a righteous man.â
âSend word to him that his daughter is staying with you, and heâll come and get her.â
âIt isnât that simple. Baron Geoffrey will have to gather his vassals and prepare for war. If the king confiscates his propertyââ
âHeâll be powerless.â
âYes,â he agreed. âGabrielle needs a strong protector. Sheâs my wifeâs cousin. Itâs expected that I would shield her, but that wouldnât prove she is innocent.â
âWhat do you care what others think?â
âI donât care,â he countered, âbut if Gabrielle were my wife, I would kill any man who would dare attack her honor.â
âAs would I,â Colm said.
âBut she has no husband to defend her honor.â
âNo, she doesnât.â
âI think perhaps you should take her home with you.â
Frowning, Colm said, âAnd what would that accomplish? What difference would it make if I offered her my protection instead of you? Youâre as strong a
s I am.â
âI cannot marry her.â
The statement lay between them for a long moment before Colm responded. He knew exactly what Brodick wanted. âYou ask too much of me.â
âYou have a debt to repay. I ask what you can give.â
âMarriage? No. Itâs out of the question.â
Brodick shrugged. âIt makes sense to me. If you marry her, everyone will know you believe her to be innocent. You would not marry a whore. Youâre respected and feared by most of the other clans. You could restore her honor by giving her your name.â
âNo. You will have to come up with another solution,â Colm answered emphatically.
Brodick wasnât deterred. He knew Colm MacHugh would eventually do the honorable thing.
âDo you suggest there might be another laird more powerful than you who hasnât taken a wife yet?â
âI am not suggesting anything, Buchanan. This is your problem to solve, not mine.â
âA wife for a brother. You save her life as I helped save your brother.â
Colmâs jaw was clenched tight.
A Buchanan called out. âLairds, Lady Gabrielle is leaving. Theyâve opened the gates.â
Brodick looked at the commons just as a man stepped forward and spit on the ground in front of Gabrielle.
Colm saw another man pushing his way through the throng as Gabrielle was walking toward the gates. The man called out to her, but she ignored him and continued on. He grabbed her arm then, swung her around, and hit her face with his fist. Had he not had a firm grip on her, she would have dropped to the ground.
Colm was already heading for the stairs with Brodick right behind him as he called out to one of his men, âFind out who he is.â
All the warriors, both Buchanans and MacHughs, understood the command. Gelroy didnât. He hadnât seen what happened below.
âWho is he talking about? What does he want?â the priest asked one of the men who was pushing his way past.
The man didnât slow his descent. âHe wants to know who struck Lady Gabrielle.â
âSomeone struck her? Oh dear Lord,â Gelroy replied. He pivoted on the step and rushed behind the others. âBut why does heââ
The last warrior to leave answered. âThe MacHugh wants to know the name of the man heâs going to kill.â
SHE WAS TRAPPED IN A NIGHTMARE.
An hour ago she was Lady Gabrielle, daughter of Baron Geoffrey of Wellingshire and Princess Genevieve of St. Biel. She had been loved, happy, and hopeful for her future. Now Gabrielle was hated, treated like a leper, and she had no future.
It was too much to take in. Survival was what mattered right now. She had to find a safe place for her and her guards. And though she didnât have a destination in mind, she wanted to get as far away as possible from the heinous barons and their henchmen. Then perhaps she would be able to make sense out of what had just happened.
First, however, she needed time to calm down and quiet her racing heart. She could barely breathe. Strangers screamed foul names at her as she passed them on the long, seemingly endless walk to the front gates.
The humiliation and shame were unbearable. It took all of her concentration to show no emotion. She didnât hurry her paceâthough God knows she wanted to runâand she didnât allow a single tear to fall, for to do either would have given the rabid crowd satisfaction. Pride was all she had left. She would not let them take that from her.
The side of her face throbbed from the hit sheâd taken. Sheâd seen the fist coming and tried to step back from her attacker, a brute of a man with hatred smeared all over his ugly face, but he latched on to her and wouldnât let her retreat. Fortunately, she was able to twist away and lessen the impact. He was more than twice her size and weight. If she hadnât moved, his fist surely would have broken her jaw.
âDonât damage her,â Coswold had bellowed a scant second before the attackerâs fist slammed into her face.
The blow had stunned her, and she had staggered back just as a stone struck her from behind. She quickly righted herself and kept walking. Another stone and then another hit her. Though dazed, she still heard the baronâs shout. Damage her? What a ludicrous command. Coswold, Isla, and Percy had already destroyed her reputation and attacked her character. She had been stripped of everything. In the eyes of her countrymen, she no longer existed, and she belonged nowhere. What difference did it make if they disfigured her as well?
The abbot was waiting for her at the gate. He pulled it open, bowed his head, and whispered, âGod be with you.â
Did he believe the lies? There were tears in his eyes, but she couldnât tell if they were tears of sympathy or shame.
She stepped outside, heard the huge door shut behind her, and then the harsh sound of the bolt slipping into place.
Stephen let out a shout when he saw her. He leaped from his horse and ran to her while Faust, Lucien, and Christien all drew their swords in preparation for a fight.
She knew she must look awful. A stone had cut her skin just below her right eye, and she felt blood trickling down her cheek. Her jaw was sore and probably already beginning to swell and bruise.
âPrincess, what happened to you?â Stephen asked, appalled.
âIâm all right,â she answered, her voice surprisingly strong, âbut we must leave. Now.â
âYouâre bleeding!â Christienâs face was red with anger as he swung toward the closed gates. âWho did this to you? We will kill him.â
âNo, you will not go back into the abbey,â she demanded.
Faust pulled his tunic over his head and doused it with water from his leather pouch. Leaning down from his saddle, he handed the wet cloth to Gabrielle. âDoes it hurt?â he asked.
âNo,â she assured him, quickly wiping the blood from her cheek. âIâll tell you everything, but please, we must be away from here with all possible haste.â
They heard the urgency in her voice and didnât question the command. Stephen lifted her onto Rogueâs back, handed her the reins, then swung up on his mount. Assuming she wanted to catch up with her fatherâs staff, he turned south.
âNo,â she cried out. âWe must go north.â
âWonât your fatherââ Lucien began.
âYou donât understand. If the barons change their minds and decide to take me to the kingâtheir King John,â she corrected, âthey will look for us to the south. Theyâll never find us hidden in the forest.â
âBut whyââ Stephen began.
âNo questions now,â she said. âWhen we are away from here, I will explain.â
Stephen nodded. âWe go north.â
Christien was the last in the procession and the first to feel the ground shake beneath him. The Highlanders approached from the hill below. He called to the others riding ahead of him.
When she turned and saw the approaching horde, Gabrielle panicked, thinking her enemies were in pursuit. But as they drew closer, she recognized the two men leading them: Buchanan and MacHugh. They looked wild and ferocious and proudâ¦and dangerous. A magnificent sight: like a bolt of lightning, beautiful to observe from a distance but terrifying up close.
The sound of the pounding hooves was deafening.
âLet them pass,â she shouted to her guards. She guided Rogue to the left to give the charging Highlanders room, but they didnât go around. They fanned out. Gabrielle urged Rogue into a full gallop, yet they gained on her, surrounding her and her guards and swallowing them into their midst. Enclosed in this thick circle of warriors, they rolled over one hill and climbed the next.
Anyone looking out from the abbey would have seen only the clansmen heading back to their homes. Gabrielle and her guards were completely hidden from view.
Was that their intent? She was so relieved and thankful to be getting farther and farther away from the barons, she wasnât going to worry about the Highlandersâ motives. Besides, sheâd already spotted Father Gelroy bouncing along on his mount. A grimace on his face, the poor priest appeare
d to be hanging on to the pommel of his saddle for dear life. If any of them meant to do harm, would they have brought a priest along to witness their dark deeds?
They veered to the northwest. When they reached the edge of Finneyâs Flat, a good two hoursâ ride from the abbey, she heard one of the men shout that they were on Buchanan land. Rogue was more than ready to rest, and Gabrielle wasnât going to push her horse any farther without a respite.
She was surprised the Highlanders didnât trample her when she abruptly pulled up. They stopped with her, but before she even had time to dismount, they were on the ground, surrounding her.
Her guards stood at attention, ready for what might come. Their hands were at their sides, but their stance wasnât relaxed. They knew that if they even looked as though they were going to reach for their swords, it would be their last earthly act. The Highland warriors would kill to protect their lairds, just as the guards would fight to the death for their princess. As long as the Highlanders didnât press in on them, they would stand their ground.
Knowing her guards wouldnât back down, no matter how many men they were up against, Gabrielle worried for their lives. She heard one of the Highlanders give the command to fall back. She hoped it was the wild Buchanan sheâd heard, but when the soldiers parted, she saw that it wasnât her cousin who had spoken. It was the other laird, the ruthless man who had greeted his long-lost brother with his fist.
He was as big and ferocious-looking as she remembered, but there was something else surprising about him. One might even say he was actually handsome, if one liked the rugged, flawed, somewhat scarred type. She didnât. But if there was anything she did like about his appearance, it was the color of his hair. It was blond, with a hint of red. It framed a face stern and rigid, reminding her of a Viking from the stories of times past. Most likely he was just as mean and barbaric.
Colm MacHugh stopped when he was barely a foot away from Stephen. The two men sized each other up, then Colm ordered, âGet out of my way.â
Stephen moved not an inch. Colm was at least a head taller and much more muscular, but the guard didnât give. He took orders from no one but Princess Gabrielle. The same went for his fellow guards. Faust and Christien moved to stand with Stephen, while Lucien stood with his back to hers.