Page 5 of Shadow Music (Highlands' Lairds 3)
For a moment she thought they were standing over one of their own, praying for his soul before they buried him. They were clustered together near what appeared to be a pit. Near the hole was a fresh mound of dirt. When their true intentions became clear, she nearly gasped. An eighth man was on the ground. He wasnât dressed as a monk but wore a muted plaid. His hands and feet were bound, and he was covered in blood.
Gabrielle moved closer. She felt Stephenâs hand on her shoulder, but she shook her head and continued on. Still shielded by the trees, she watched and listened to the discussion under way.
The men were arguing over which way to drop the bound man into the hole. Three wanted him to go in headfirst. Others vehemently disagreed, wanting the captive tossed in feetfirst. The one who had been silent, most likely their leader, made the final decision.
All were in agreement on one issue: they wanted their captive to wake up so that he would know what they were about to do to him.
Gabrielle was sickened and appalled by the snippets of conversation the wind brought her. What sin was their captive guilty of? What was his transgression? She decided that it didnât matter what he had done, for no crime, no matter how heinous, deserved such a sadistic punishment. It was inhuman.
As she listened to their escalating argument, she discovered the truth. The only sin their captive was guilty of was one of association. He was Laird Colm MacHughâs brother.
The leader finally spoke. âHamish, keep your eyes on that ledge. We canât put Liam MacHugh in the ground until we see his brother.â
âGordon, I ainât deaf. You already told me what to do, and Iâm doing it. I got my eyes peeled on that ledge. Iâm still wanting to know what weâre supposed to do if Laird MacHugh donât come to save his brother.â
âHeâll be coming all right,â one of the others answered. âAnd when he makes the turn at the lookout, heâll see whatâs happening, but no matter how fast he rides, he wonât get here in time. His brother will be long dead, and weâll be long gone back to the border.â
âAnd how will he be able to tell itâs his brother going in the ground?â yet another asked.
Gordon answered. âWordâs reached him by now that his brotherâs in trouble. He wonât be able to see his face from such a distance, but heâll recognize the plaid.â
âWhat if he donât recognize the plaid from so far away?â Hamish asked.
âHeâll still see us dumping Liam into the hole and burying him. Heâll know.â
âIf he canât see his face, then he canât be seeing our faces, either. So how come we have to wear these robes? Theyâre scratching my skin. I feel like I got bugs crawling on me. It smells, too, like pig swill.â
âQuit your complaining, Kenneth,â Gordon ordered. âWeâre wearing the robes we stole because we arenât going to take any chances MacHugh might see our faces.â
âIf he ever finds out we did thisâ¦â Hamish visibly shivered. âHeâll do worse than bury us alive.â
There was a grumble of agreement. âMaybe we ought to just leave him and take off now,â Kenneth said. He was nervously backing away from the hole.
âDonât talk stupid,â Gordon said. âLaird MacHugh is never going to find out who we are. Why do you think we were brought up from the lowlands?â He added in a rush before there could be another complaint, âAnd paid handsomely. Are you willing to give that up?â
âNo, butââ Hamish began.
âEnough talk of running away,â he snapped. He turned to the soldier standing over the unconscious warrior and said, âKick him, Roger. See if he stirs. I want him awake when he goes in the hole.â
Roger did as ordered, swiftly kicking him in his side. Liam didnât move.
âI donât think heâs going to wake up this time,â Kenneth said. âIâm guessing heâs dying now.â
âYou shouldnât have beat him so hard, Gordon,â Hamish muttered.
âWe all took a turn,â Roger reminded him.
âWe only did what we were told to do,â another interjected.
Gordon nodded. âThatâs right. We were only following orders, like the good soldiers we are.â
Kenneth pushed the hood on his robe back, scratching his ear. âTell me again. What did Liam MacHugh do?â
âIâve told you ten times already,â Gordon shouted as he gave Kenneth a mighty shove, nearly knocking him into the hole.
The soldier scrambled to regain his balance. âTell me again,â he said.
âWe caught Liam, and weâre killing him to bring his brother down off the mountain so the soldiers hiding in the east woods can catch him unawares.â
Kenneth scratched his ear again as though to remove a pesky bug. âWhat are they gonna do with him when they catch him?â
Gordon shook his head. âKill him, you simpleton, and bury him next to his brother.â
Kenneth wasnât offended by the name calling. âWhat clan are the soldiers from? You know, the ones hiding over there.â He waved his hand toward the east, squinting to see if he could spy any of them.
âNever you mind what clan they belong to,â he answered. âThe less you know, the better for you.â
âLook! Liam might be waking up,â another soldier announced, nudging their captive with his foot.
Roger cackled with delight. âGood. Heâll be knowing whatâs happening when we dump him into the hole. Have any more water to throw on his face, Manus? Get him good and awake.â
Before he could get an answer, Kenneth said, âHe never waked up. Iâve been watching his face, and his eyes havenât even fluttered open once. Heâs as good as dead.â
âBut maybe like Gordon said, if we threw water on his faceâ¦â another soldier suggested.
âI used up the last of it,â Manus said. âWe could spit on his face.â
The men thought that was a fine idea and began to laugh. Gabrielle heard the last two names as they pushed and shoved one another, acting like they were at a festival. Fergus and Cuthbert. She knew it was important for her to remember all seven names, for one day there would be retribution.
Hamishâs snorts of laughter stopped when he happened to look up and spot Laird MacHugh.
âThere he is! There he is!â Hamish shouted as he struggled to get his hood up over his head. âThereâs the MacHugh!â
Everyone, including Gabrielle, looked to the ledge. A silhouette of a warrior on horseback moved like a golden blur against the sun.
âWeâve got plenty of time,â Kenneth said. âThe MacHugh canât fly down here.â
âLook at all the men following him. Iâm counting up to twenty already,â Manus shouted, his voice trembling with fear.
Gordon was getting jumpy. He thought heâd heard a noise behind him. He whirled around, his hand poised on the hilt of his sword. When he couldnât see a threat, he turned again to look to the east and then the west. Nothing.
âWeâve wasted enough time,â he said. âGet him in the hole. Weâve got to cover him with dirt and be on our way.â
Roger and Cuthbert rushed to Liam and hauled him to his feet. The captiveâs head dropped forward. Fergus grabbed him by his hair and jerked his head back. âHis eyes are closed again,â he said, obviously disappointed.
âHis eyes were never open,â Kenneth replied.
They were dragging Liam to the hole when a far-off rumble caught their attention. In unison all seven turned just as warriors on horseback broke through the trees at the far end of the glen. Their horses pounded the ground as they closed the distance. So far away, they were but dots on the horizon.
âIt could be the Buchanans,â Manus shouted. âCanât see them good at all yet, but Iâm guessing itâs them.â
âTheyâll kill us! Theyâll kill us all!â Hamish screamed. He twirled in a circle like a cornered wood mouse trying to decide which way to scurry. âWhere can we hide? Where?â
Cuthbert and Manus dropped Liamâs limp body. Urgency cracked Gordonâs voice when he ordered, âGet him up. Hur
ry, damn you. Get him up. When I was pulling him off his horse, his eyes opened, so Iâm the only one heâs seen. Iâve got to kill him before he goes into the hole. There isnât time to bury him and let him suffocate.â
Cuthbert and Manus didnât obey the order. Neither did Roger or Kenneth or Hamish or Fergus, for all of them had already run for cover.
Gordon drew his sword. At the same time, Gabrielle reached for an arrow and notched it to her bow in anticipation.
The Buchanan warriors were still too far away for their arrows to reach the seven men, and the MacHugh warriors racing down the mountain were also too far away to save one of their own.
Suddenly, there was another commotion. Soldiers waiting to ambush the MacHugh broke through the trees and headed across the flats toward the Buchanans. A full-scale battle was about to erupt. If they didnât hurry, Gabrielle and her guards would soon find themselves in the thick of it.
Gabrielle kept her gaze locked on Gordon, the leader of this pack of rats. His captive wasnât moving. Liam was down on the ground, lying on his side, and Gordon kept nervously glancing to the north. He took a couple of steps back, hesitated, and then moved forward again. Gabrielle knew Gordon couldnât run away and leave Liam, who had seen his face.
âStephen,â she whispered. âIf I missââ
âYou wonât.â
âBut if I doâ¦be ready.â
Gordon made up his mind. Turning in her direction, he swung his sword back, his intent to slice Liam in half.
Gabrielleâs arrow stopped him. Her aim was true, and the tip of the arrow cut through flesh and rib, piercing his black heart.
Seconds later the ground seemed to buckle beneath her feet as the Buchanans and their enemies clashed on the battlefield. The sound of metal slamming into metal was earsplitting. The killing had begun.
The pandemonium moved toward her. Gabrielle prayed that Liam MacHugh wouldnât be trampled by horses or men before she could get to him. Blessedly, Christien and Faust made quick time and arrived at her side with the horses. Gabrielle climbed onto Rogueâs back and started toward the open field, pulling her cape over her head, hoping in the chaos that no one would see her.
Stephen blocked her. He knew what she wanted done. âChristien and I will see to the task. Lucien and Faust will take you back to the stream we crossed. Hurry, Princess. You must get away from here.â
She didnât waste time arguing. She prodded Rogue with her foot and headed back through the forest. Moments later at the stream, Stephen and Christien caught up with them. Gabrielle thanked God they hadnât gotten trapped by the battle.
âIs he alive?â She dismounted and rushed to Stephenâs side. Liam MacHugh was draped over his steedâs saddle.
âHeâs still breathing,â he answered.
âHurry then. I know where we can get help.â
ANOTHER GRISLY BATTLE CRY RENT THE AIR. TORTURED screams followed.
The MacHughs had joined the fight. Forming an impenetrable line, they advanced. The Buchanans followed their lead, and within minutes the two clans had trapped the enemy between them. They showed no mercy. It was an eye for an eye, and when it was over, the field was littered with bodies.
The frantic search for Liam MacHugh began then. Colm MacHugh leapt from his horse and ran to the hole the enemies had prepared for his brother. His relief was great when he saw the hole was empty. There was only one body on the ground near the mound of dirt. Colm didnât recognize him. He was studying the unusual markings on the arrow embedded in the manâs chest when Laird Brodick Buchanan joined him.
âWho the hell is he?â Colm asked.
Brodick shook his head. âIâve never seen him before.â
Colm jerked the arrow from the dead manâs chest. âIs this a Buchanan arrow?â
âNo. I thought it was yours.â
âMacKennaâs behind this,â he said.
Brodick shook his head. âThose arenât his soldiers on the ground, and this isnât one of their arrows. The markingsâ¦Iâve never seen one like this before. Thereâs no sign of MacKenna here.â He picked up a piece of rope. There was blood on it. âThey tied your brother with this.â
âI still think this is somehow MacKennaâs doing,â Colm insisted.
âWithout proof, you cannot accuse him,â Brodick reasoned.
âLiam couldnât have gotten far.â Colm scanned the woods surrounding them. âWeâll keep looking until we find him and whoever has him.â
âThe Buchanans are with you,â Brodick pledged. âAs long as it takes to avenge this black-hearted deed.â
The two lairds divided their men into smaller units to scour the area, but after hours of searching, each group reported that they had thoroughly covered the flats and the forests, but to no avail.
Liam MacHugh had vanished into thin air.
LIAM MACHUGH WAS IN SORRY SHAPE. SOMEONE HAD TAKEN a whip to his back, and his skin had been shredded into bloody ribbons. His legs and the bottoms of his feet had also taken a beating, and blood dripped from the deep gash on the right side of his head.
Gabrielle knew she could get help for the warrior at Arbane Abbey, and though she was in a hurry to get there, the injured manâs immediate needs came first.
They rode along the bank of the stream until they were far enough away from the fighting to stop. Stephen lifted the lifeless body of Liam MacHugh from his horse and placed him on the ground next to Gabrielle. She gently laid his head in her lap and pressed a cloth to the wound at his temple, trying to stop the bleeding, and then she quickly cleaned the other cuts as best she could with a strip of linen sheâd torn from her undergarment and dipped in cold water. The man needed medicine to ward off infection and a soothing salve for his back. He also needed someone to put a needle and thread to him to pull together the ragged edges of skin around the gash. She didnât want to be the one to sew him back together, for she didnât wish to cause him any more pain.
The turn of the stream was tucked in between the pines a fair distance away from Finneyâs Flat. They were isolated and she hoped safe from intruders. While Lucien and Faust guarded the area, Stephen and Christien stayed close to her. Just as she was about to call for her guards to move him, Liamâs head wound started bleeding again.
âPrincess, youâve got blood all over your gown,â Stephen remarked.
âIâm not bothered by it,â she replied. âBut I worry about this poor man. Heâs lost so much blood.â
âI donât think heâs going to make it,â Christien said. âAnd we should be prepared for that possibility. What would you have us do with the body?â
Gabrielle wasnât shocked by Christienâs bluntness. He wasnât being callous. He was a compassionate man, but he was also the most pragmatic of the four guards.
âIf he dies, then it is Godâs will, but I will do everything in my power to help him survive.â
âAs will we,â Stephen assured her. âHowever, Christien has made a valid point. This MacHugh warrior has not seen you.â
Her smile was gentle. âHow could he? He has yet to open his eyes.â
âYou donât understand our meaning,â Christien said. âYou could be in great danger.â
Stephen agreed. âWe donât know who these people are or if any of them may have seen us. Your arrow killed the leader of the men at the grave, but the others got away. If they find out youâre responsible for his death, they might seek revenge. No one must ever know you were there.â
Gabrielle glanced around at the somber faces of her four guards and realized Stephen was right. But it wasnât for her safety alone that she was concerned. If the men at Finneyâs Flat found out she had killed one of their own, they wouldnât just come after her; they would retaliate against her guards as well. She couldnât let that happen.
âWhat do you propose I do?â she asked.
âWhen we get closer to Arbane Abbey, Lucien and Faust will accompany you inside and escort you to your quarters,â Stephen suggested.
âYou
could use your cloak to hide the blood on your gown,â Christien said.
âAnd what of this injured man?â she asked.
âWeâll find another way to get him into the abbey. The monks will surely have the medicine he needs.â
Christien nodded. âIf he dies, there is the possibility that Laird MacHugh might blame you. You heard what those cowards said about him.â
âThey called him ruthless,â she said. âYet they were going to bury an innocent man alive. Why would I believe a word any of them said?â
She stopped them before they could argue. âThis man is now our responsibility. I wonât hand him over to anyone. We will all find a way into the abbey that will not draw attention. Only when I am assured that he is well cared for will I leave his side.â
âBut Princessââ Christien began.
She continued. âThese monks are men of God, are they not? I will simply ask them to keep silent as to how Liam came to be at the abbey. If I can get them to promise, they cannot and will not break their word.â
âThere are other ramifications,â Stephen said. âYou cannot get in the middle of a war.â
She knew they werenât going to let up. âWe shall compromise. Once Liam is safe and looked after, I will separate myself.â
âAnd you will tell no one what happened?â
âI will tell no one.â
IT WAS SURPRISINGLY EASY TO GET INSIDE THE ABBEY UNSEEN. Not only was the door on the south end of the curtain wall that surrounded the monastic buildings unlatched, but it was also propped open. A priest had placed a stone in front of the door so that it would be easier for him to carry in bags of grain from the wagon across the path.
Gabrielle and her guards watched him from the cover of the trees behind the abbey. She thought the bags looked like they weighed more than the priest did. He wasnât quite an old man yet, possibly still in his early forties, she guessed, but he didnât have much muscle. He first tried to put the bag on one shoulder, nearly toppled over, and ended up wrapping his arms around the middle of the bag and letting the bottom drag between his legs.