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HIGHLAND THIRST
BACK
BLOOD FEUD – PROLOGUE
Northern England –
Spring, 1511
The chill
of foreboding swept through Heming MacNachton’s blood as he
dismounted before the inn. He frowned at the sign hanging crookedly
above the door. The fact that the inn was called The Hanging Tree
only added to his growing sense of unease. Heming no longer thought
the huge old tree a few yards away was an intriguing sight, despite
how the moon turned the emerging leaves a soft silver color. At
least no one was still dangling from its thick, sturdy limbs, he
thought, and reluctantly handed his reins to the stable boy.
“I dinnae
like this,” he said to his cousin Tearlach MacAdie as they
approached the door to the inn.
“We
willnae stay long.”
Heming
nodded, recognizing that statement as Tearlach’s agreement that
something felt wrong. They could not falter in their search for
information just because they felt a little uneasy about a place,
however. Their people were being hunted and the hunters were
getting more organized. The very survival of their people depended
upon gathering as much information about their enemies as possible.
Once
inside the inn, however, Heming’s wariness grew even sharper. He
and Tearlach found a table set away from the others, their backs to
the wall, but that did little to calm him. A burly cold-eyed man
served them ale and as Tearlach paid for it, Heming looked around.
The first thing he noticed was that there were no serving wenches to
be seen. That was odd but he knew there could be many reasons for
that. What could not be so easily explained was the fact that no
one paid them much attention. Two kilted Scotsmen in an English
border inn should draw attention but aside from a few hasty,
sidelong glances, everyone continued talking and laughing. And
there was a false note to all of that talk and good cheer, Heming
thought as he drank his ale with more haste than enjoyment.
It was
not until the three well-dressed people, two of whom had actually
shown a natural curiosity about two Scotsman in an English inn, got
up and left that Heming knew he and Tearlach had made a serious
error in judgment. “The ale – “ he began as an odd feeling started
to creep over him.
“Was
poisoned,” growled Tearlach as he slammed his empty tankard down on
the scarred wood table.
“Nay, not
poisoned. Something to weaken us or make us sleep.” Heming saw
that all those fleeting sidelong glances were becoming far more
intent; the men obviously watching and waiting for whatever potion
he and Tearlach had just drunk to take effect. “Didnae taste it at
first, but the taint of it is now verra clear. I just thought the
ale wasnae a verra good brew.”
Tearlach stood up and started for the door. Heming quickly joined
him. The fact that everyone in the inn just sat and silently
watched them caused Heming’s insides to chill with alarm. Even
before Tearlach opened the door, Heming knew they would not be
escaping this trap. His thoughts were already clouding over and
he felt as if he was trying to walk through thick mud. Once
outside the cool night air did nothing to ease that. Heming
staggered and he saw Tearlach do the same. They both managed to
stumble along for a few more feet although Heming wondered why they
even bothered for they would never make it to their horses.
The next
thing he knew he was on his knees. Tearlach fell to his knees right
beside him a heartbeat later. Heming tried to fight the pull of
the potion but was not really surprised when he next found himself
sprawled in the dirt, Tearlach quickly sprawling at his side. His
last sight was of dozens of booted feet encircling them.
Consciousness came to him slowly and painfully. Heming felt as if
his head was going to split apart. Then he recalled sprawling in
the dirt, dragged into unconsciousness by some herb or potion
slipped into his ale. He slowly opened his eyes and stared around
him in utter disbelief. He was in a cage, thick silver chains
holding his wrists and ankles to the heavy iron bars surrounding
him. He was also naked and weaponless and there was no sign of
Tearlach. Hearing footsteps, Heming fought down his rage and the
panic he felt twisting inside of him. A moment later a tall,
elegantly dressed man stood before his cage.
“Weelcome
to Rosscurrach,” the man drawled and coldly smiled.
The name
sounded familiar but it took Heming a moment to place it. Then he
recalled that he and Tearlach had stopped in an inn near the keep a
few days ago. It was the home of the Kerrs. Their laird was
named Sir Hervey Kerr and he was not well liked if Heming recalled
correctly. This slender man, dressed as if he was about to attend
the king, did not look like the cold, brutal man they had heard
whispers about, but Heming knew all too well that looks could be
deceiving.
“Tearlach,” he began, intending to demand to know where his cousin
was.
“Your
companion? I fear he is now the guest of the Carbonnels and
enjoying all the comforts of a secure English dungeon. My ally,
Wyman Carbonnel, intends to make your cousin tell us all about the
hiding places of your people. We wish to locate your many nests so
that we can clean them out.”
“He will
tell ye naught. Nor will I.”
“Oh, I
dinnae intend to ask about where all of ye hide yourselves. Nay,
‘tis my intention to find out all of your strengths and
weaknesses.” He lightly rubbed his pale, elegant hands together.
“I have many an idea on how to test them. I fear ye willnae find
that as enjoyable as I will, however.”
“And just
why have ye made us your enemies?” Heming suspected the man knew
far too much about the MacNachtons already, but wanted to hear the
man admit to it.
“Ye and
your ilk are the enemies of all men. Ye are an abomination. I
find it an insult that ye e’en look like a mon instead of displaying
clearly the mark of the devil as ye should. No mon of conscience
can allow such spawn of hell to continue to exist. Tis time the
ones ye see as prey become the hunters.”
Heming
did not believe the man was truly on some righteous crusade against
evil, but would not try to guess what his game really was. “I am
but a mon,” he said quietly.
“Nay, ye
are far more than that. Dinnae play me for a fool. Ye will soon
show me all of your strengths and weaknesses; reveal all of your
secrets. Tis said that your kind can live forever and I mean to
find out why.”
Something
in the tone of the man’s voice Heming that what the man had just
said was a clue to his real intentions, but Heming’s head was
throbbing too much for him to be able to sort it all out right
now. Once his head cleared, his first thoughts were going to be
how to escape and then rescue Tearlach, not about what this swine
wanted. Heming refused to think that this was how he would meet
his end – as a caged beast for this courtier to torment. When the
man took a few hasty steps back, Heming suspected his rage was
revealing itself upon his face.
“Ye
cannae escape,” the man said, a faint tremor in his voice revealing
his fear. “Those chains are made of silver and, just in case that
is a myth, the cage is made of iron.”
“What?
In case I am fey as weel as a demon?” Heming was not surprised to
hear the low rumble of a growl in his voice for his anger was
running hot and wild. “Ye have heeded too many tales told to scare
bairns.”
“Och,
nay, MacNachton. I ken what ye are – a bloodsucking, soul-eating
abomination. I will learn all of your secrets, including
why ye and yours should be blessed with such long lives. Here is
where the truth of your evil will be fully revealed and here is
where ye will die.”
Watching
the man stride away, Heming murmured, “Nay, fool, the only marching
toward that fate is you. Ye are now a walking dead mon.” It was a
vow, one Heming full intended to fulfill no matter how long it took.
CHAPTER ONE
He had
eyes like her pets, almost solidly black as if the center had grown
so that he could see more clearly in the dark. Brona Kerr
immediately decided that was not precisely true. The man’s eyes
were decidedly far more feral than her dog or even her cat’s. The
fact that both of her pets were tense, their fur bristling slightly,
told her that she was not the only one who sensed a dangerous
wildness in the man. Yet she knew her pets were as confused as
they were wary, as if they each sensed a friend as well as a foe.
The man
was caged like some feral animal, thick silver chains holding his
wrists and ankles to the fat iron bars of the cage. Water and a
congealed stew sat in bowls set in one far corner of his cage and a
bucket sat in the other. There was no bedding for him, not even
the thinnest of old blankets. Despite the fact that he was naked,
he did not appear troubled by the damp chill of the dungeon. In
the flickering light of the torches she had lit his skin appeared to
be almost golden yet the wounds she could see on him should have
left him as pale as a ghost. Those wounds should also have bred
away the fury she could see glittering in his feral eyes. Eyes in
which she could now see a hint of gold as the black circle eased
back into a more human size.
He
watched her like some stalking predator, his golden eyes narrowed
slightly and fixed unblinkingly upon her. Thick raven hair hung
almost to his trim waist. He was lean and tautly muscular just as a
predator should be. Brona did not think she had ever seen a man
like him before. He should terrify her and, in some ways he did,
but she also felt drawn to him. That made no sense to her and she
frowned.
Heming
studied the woman who was studying him. She was an ethereal
creature, not very tall and slender yet possessing lush breasts and
nicely rounded hips. Horror and curiosity were evenly blended in
her expression. The flickering shadows caused by the torches
accentuated the fine lines of her face. A thick braid of pale hair
was draped over her right shoulder and hung down to the top of her
thighs. She smelled of woman, of clean skin and a hint of
lavender. It was a welcome change from the damp foul air of his
prison.
To her
right sat a very large gray dog and to her left sat a large yellow
cat. Heming got the strong feeling that the animals were as much
her companions as her pets. It surprised him that Hervey Kerr even
allowed pets at Rosscurrach. The fact that this woman had the pets
indicated that she was no mere servant of the keep. Few of the poor
had the time or the food to pamper an animal and these two animals
looked very pampered.
“Who are
ye?” she asked, struggling to keep her gaze fixed upon his face and
fighting the urge to look him over, very carefully, from head to
toe.
“Sir
Heming MacNachton,” he replied, wondering if she was in league with
Hervey and sought to trick some important truth out of him.
“I have
ne’er heard your name before. Are ye one of my cousin’s enemies?”
“I had
ne’er e’en met the fool ere he captured me and brought me here. And
who are ye that ye dinnae ken that?”
Brona
heard the suspicion in his voice but was not troubled by it.
Chained naked in a cage as he was, the man had every right to be
suspicious of everyone at Rosscurrach. She had a few suspicions of
her own about him. She knew her cousin was not a good man, but she
found it hard to believe that he would cage and torture a man he had
never met and who had done no wrong.
“I am
Mistress Brona Kerr, first cousin to the laird,” she answered and
could see by his hardening expression that she had only added to his
mistrust. “I heard some quickly hushed whispers about a prisoner
and decided I would see just what the secret was. No other prisoner
has e’er warranted such mystery.”
“Your
cousin has a lot of prisoners, does he?”
“Nay.”
She sighed. “I fear he often just kills those he feels have
wronged him. When he does hold a prisoner ‘tis for ransom, or to
torture a few secrets out of him ere he kills him. What secrets
does he think ye have?”
“I ken
naught that he needs to know.”
“That
doesnae really answer my question, does it.” Brona idly scratched
her dog Thor’s ears. “Cousin Hervey is cold and cruel, but he is
also lazy. He has obviously expended a great deal of time and
effort to hold ye here and try to get ye to tell him something. I
but wondered what it was.”
“And why
do ye need to ken such things?”
“Knowledge is power.” Her cat Havoc rubbed its head against her leg
in a bid for attention and Brona briefly leaned down to scratch the
cat’s back. “Tis weel kenned round here that I dinnae hold with
the torturing of a mon, but I doubt that it the only reason there is
such an effort at secrecy about you. My cousin is little
interested, and even less moved, by my disapproval of his
actions. Nor are ye here for ransoming as no one has been sent
out to take a demand to anyone.” She shrugged. “I have
considered many a reason for this but each one only raised more
questions so I decided to come here and ask ye.”
“Ah, and
I have told ye. He thinks I can tell him something.”
“But
what? What could he possibly wish to learn that is worth treating
ye like this?”
Heming
carefully considered his answer. The woman appeared honestly
concerned, even appalled, over his mistreatment, but he dared not
trust in that. Hervey could be trying to trick him into revealing
something. Too many men had fallen victim to believing in a woman’s
softness, in her wiles and words of coring. Even a few of his
kindred had stumbled into such traps. He could, however, tell her
exactly why Hervey had caged him and was torturing him so
assiduously. If he spoke in the right tone of voice, used the
right words, he could make her see it all as utter nonsense. He
might even get her to question her cousin’s sanity.
“He
thinks I can tell him how to live forever,” he said, pleased by the
scorn-filled drawl he was able to produce from his parched throat.
Brona
stared at the man and forced herself not to gape. “Why would he
think ye could do that?”
“My kin
are long-lived. The fool thinks as far too many others do and sees
such strength and health as the result of magic.”
“Does he
think ye have some potion? Mayhap some muttered spell words?”
When
Heming nodded, she frowned, recalling that many of the men in her
family died young and not all from battle wounds, either. It was
sad but she had never seen anything unusual in their deaths. Each
one was easily explained. If this man spoke the truth, however, it
could be that Hervey feared some curse or the like. It would also
be just like her cousin to want to find out if some rumor about a
potion for long life was true, even if he doubted it at first.
“Then
‘tis wrong of him to do this to ye,” she said quietly. “Verra
wrong.”
A spark
of hope stirred to life inside of Heming but he hastily doused it.
Just because this woman believed her cousin was doing wrong did not
mean that she would help him. Hervey was her kinsman and her
laird. Even though her words implied that she held no affection for
the man, going against him to the extent of releasing a prisoner
could cost her dearly. A blood tie would not save her from
punishment for such a betrayal.
“Do ye
think that troubles him?” he asked
Brona
nearly winced at the bitterness underlying his words. “Nay, not at
all.”
“He will
kill me in the end, ye ken.”
“I ken
it,” she whispered.
“And ye
will do naught to stop him?” He felt guilty for trying to push her
into helping him when he knew it would endanger her, but he was
fighting for his life and that of his clan.
“Nay on
your word alone.”
“Fair
enough, but if ye havenae learned anything in the near sennight I
have been trapped here, my word may be all ye have.”
A pinch
of shame pricked Brona’s heart. She had been hesitant, had tried
to ignore the whispers of the others at Rosscurrach and the cries of
pain and rage she had heard in the night. While she had struggled
to keep herself safe from Hervey’s anger this man had suffered
horribly. While she had continued to do her best to stay out of
Hervey’s sight as much as possible, this man had been tortured and
humiliated.
It
was time to stop thinking only of protecting herself, she decided.
Her cowardice appalled her. She had not realized how deeply it had
entrenched itself within her heart. Brona knew her caution around
her cousin was completely justified, but nothing Hervey could do to
her was worth allowing this man to continue to suffer like this if
he was truly innocent of any crime.
The urge to immediately release him from his chains and his cage was
strong, but she resisted it. He could be lying to her, trying to
stir her sympathies. Although what few whispers she had understood
seemed to indicate that he was indeed imprisoned here because of
some strange tales Hervey had heard about the man, it was not
enough. Even if this man did not kill her the moment she released
him, Hervey might. Her cousin would certainly punish her in ways
he did not care to even think about.
She needed more information. This time she would actively seek out
the truth instead of puzzling over the occasional whisper she
overheard. Repulsed as she was by the way Hervey treated men
guilty of some crime, she would not free a guilty man. Hervey was
the laird of Rosscurrach and it was his right, his duty, to punish
those who broke the law. The most she would do is protest his
cruelty in meting out his punishments. But, if what this man said
were true, then she would have to do far more than protest; she
would have to free him.
A
tremor of fear passed through her at the mere thought of doing such
a thing. Simply protesting Hervey’s actions often brought
retribution that left her bruised and aching. What she was
considering could easily get her killed if only from the severity of
the punishment that followed. Brona knew she would not only have
to decide what to do about this man, but make a plan to protect
herself as well. A selfish, terrified part of her told her to just
ignore it all as she had ignored so much else, but Brona silenced
it. Some wrongs could not be ignored.
“I
didnae try to learn anything,” she confessed in a soft voice.
“Knowledge may be power, but ignorance is sometimes all that keeps
one safe. Howbeit, now I will try to learn something.”
“And then do what?” Heming was surprised at how hard he had to
struggle not to believe in this woman, not to let his hopes rise.
“If my cousin is treating ye so cruelly simply because he thinks ye
may have some potion or spell that will make him live longer, then I
will set ye free.”
“But nay right now.”
“I
cannae act against my kinsmon, my laird, on your word alone. I
will visit ye again soon.”
Heming watched her walk away, pausing only to douse the torches she
had lit, and he fought the urge to call her back, to try to convince
her to act now. It was an odd feeling to suffer from since he knew
he should neither trust her nor believe her. Holding out some hope
to a condemned man was just the kind of cruelty Hervey Kerr would
enjoy yet Heming found himself unable to believe that the fey Brona
would have any part of that. He almost smiled when he realized
his inability to believe she was hand in fist with her brutal cousin
grew from the way she acted towards her pets and they acted toward
her. It was a thin branch to hang his hopes on.
He
suddenly tensed as he realized Brona had halted just a few feet
away. Heming knew two men had been dragged down here two days ago
and he felt sure she had halted near their prison. Closing his
eyes, he concentrated on listening closely to what was said. His
hearing was far better than any Outsider’s and he hoped something
would be said to help him come to some decision about Mistress Brona
Kerr.
“Why have ye been thrown down here?” she asked the men.
“The laird says we have failed in our duty to him,” replied a man
with a deep, rough voice, bitterness dripping from every word.
“Failed, Colin? How could ye and your brother have failed in
anything? Ye work from sunrise to sunset.”
“Then mayhap we should have worked until moonrise, mistress.”
“Who cares for your family? For your poor mother and your other
siblings?”
“Ranald and Mangus are of an age to be the heads of the household.”
“Has my cousin told ye what your punishment will be?”
“He gave us each ten lashes, mistress, and we thought that the end
of it, but then he threw us in here.”
“I
think he means to feed us to the monster,” said another man, his
voice weak and a little unsteady.
“What monster, Fergus?”
“The one ye just went to look at.”
“There is no monster there, just a mon.”
“Nay, mistress, that is no a mon e’en if he appears to be one,” said
Colin. “Ye havenae heard him. He makes sounds like a beast,
howling and snarling, e’en hissing. And the laird tortures him for
hours demanding answers no mon could e’er give, asking questions
about living forever and all of that. And the mon should be dead
by now or near to it after all the laird has done to him, yet he
isnae, is he.”
“Colin, I was just there, seeing him and speaking with him. He is
just a mon.”
“He killed Peter. The laird dragged Peter down here last night and
when the poor fool was carried back by us he wasnae alive and his
neck was all torn up, like some beast had ripped it open.”
Heming winced even as he felt an urge to protest. He had not torn
up Peter’s neck. Hervey had sliced the man’s neck, drawing blood,
and then had his guards force the poor man closer and closer to
Heming. Weakened by loss of blood, nearly maddened by pain, Heming
had been unable to fight the dark hunger stirred to life by the
scent of Peter’s blood. He could not be sure, but he may have
roughened the wound already there when he had fed off the man. He
was sure, however, that Peter had been alive when he had been
dragged away, alive and well able to recover given a little care.
“What are ye saying, Colin? That the mon down there, the mon
chained hand and foot to an iron cage, ripped open Peter’s throat
and fed on him?”
“Tis what it looked like. Chained hand and foot, ye say?”
“Aye, naked and caged like an animal.”
“If ye had seen Peter, mistress, ye wouldnae doubt us. Me and
Fergus fear we will be next, that we are being kept here to feed
that demon. Mayhap the laird thinks that will be the only way he
can keep the monster alive and get the answers he seeks. The laird
is bargaining with the devil, he is.”
“What crime had Peter committed?” Brona asked, her voice little
more than a whisper, but Heming could hear the shock she felt
trembling in every word.
“Ach, mistress, ‘tis nay something I can tell ye.”
“Tell me, Colin. Ye have just told me I have been speaking to a
demon who rips out men’s throats and drinks their blood. I think
there is little else ye could tell me that would shock me more than
that.”
“Peter was a bonnie lad, aye? Slim and fair with a bonnie face.”
Heming could almost smell the tension in the silence that followed
that statement.
“My cousin loves men?” Brona asked after a few moments.
“Aye, mistress. I am thinking he likes the lasses too. Tis
against the church’s law and all that, but I dinnae judge such
men. They do nay harm, nay more than any other. S’truth, I ken
one or two such men and they are good men, aye? Peter wasnae one
of them though and he told the laird so, but the laird doesnae like
to be told nay, does he. A lass can be forced, aye? Tisnae so
easy to force a mon, especially when ye dinnae want the world and
its mother to ken what ye are about.”
“Then mayhap Peter isnae dead. Mayhap it was all done to force
Peter to say aye.”
“He must be dead. The demon took his soul. Tis what demons do,
aye?”
“Colin, I find it verra difficult to believe the mon I just spoke
with is a demon. If naught else, surely he would have the power to
get away from Hervey. That my cousin may lust after men was
something I had begun to suspect. Only the fact that I kenned all
too weel that he beds women kept me from being sure of it. I
didnae realize ye could lust after both. I had another cousin, a
woman, who only loved other women, so I am nay ignorant of such
things. Aye, I was a little shocked but, as ye say, I cannae
condemn as the church does. God made us all, didnae he and I
cannae see how loving someone, anyone, can be such a great sin.
Lusting as my cousin does, aye. Love, nay. But, to harm or kill a
person because he or she doesnae share your lust is wrong. Verra
wrong. I thought it was all done willingly.”
“Most times it is, mistress. E’en the lasses who dinnae really
want to warm the laird’s bed make no real complaint when they are
called there. It isnae worth it, aye?”
“There will ne’er be another nay uttered now,” said Fergus. “Nay
when it could mean a demon will be fed your soul.”
“Ye cannae be sure that is what happened, Fergus,” said Brona. “I
came down here because I heard whispers about a mon down here, a mon
caged like an animal and being tortured. I decided I needed to ken
what my cousin was doing and why. Now I have e’en more I must
learn about such as what has happened to Peter. And why the two of
ye are still held here. I must go now, however, for my cousin will
soon be arriving. Answer me this, Colin – do ye and yours have
anywhere safe ye can flee to?”
“Aye, mistress. Why?”
“I
am nay sure yet, but this is wrong. All of this is so verra, verra
wrong.”
Heming heard the soft rustle of skirts as Brona fled the dungeon.
The rapid click of the dog’s claws against the stone floor told him
that Mistress Brona was running away. It was no surprise. The
fear of being discovered down here might be enough to make her run,
but he suspected talk of demons and murder gave her speed as well.
He
sighed and tried to get into a more comfortable seated position.
It appeared that Mistress Brona Kerr was just what she seemed to be
– a young woman appalled by the actions of her kinsman and
struggling to decide what, if anything, she could do to right
things. Unfortunately, that young woman now had to wonder if he
was a demon who had killed a man by ripping out his throat and
drinking his blood along with his soul. Heming had to wonder if
she would even bother to try to find out the truth now. It would
not surprise him to discover that she no longer even thought he was
innocent of all but attracting her cousin’s interest in the
impossible.
It
was difficult not to rage against a lost chance at freedom. Heming
knew that, if Peter was dead, all chance of Mistress Brona helping
him to escape her cousin was gone. She might not fully believe he
was some soul-sucking demon, but she would certainly think him some
dangerous madman.
An
all too familiar footstep dragged Heming from his morose thoughts
and his whole body tensed. Hervey was returning and with at least
three men. The blood that had been forced upon him had almost
healed all of his wounds and restored his strength so Heming knew
that this time the torture would last for a long time simply because
he was now strong enough to endure it. He pushed aside a sudden
overwhelming sense of defeat. He could not let Hervey know that he
was slowly winning this uneven battle. He prayed that Mistress
Brona would judge him innocent and find a way to free him from this
hell for he knew he was doomed to madness if this constant torture
continued for very much longer.
He
also prayed that Hervey did not want to see the drinking of blood
again. Colin and Fergus feared they were being held for just that
reason and Heming knew that was a real possibility. He also knew
that if he was driven to feed again on either of those men, he was
doomed. No one at Rosscurrach would help him then.
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