A Highland Knight's Desire (A Highland Dynasty Book) Read online




  A Highland Knight’s Desire

  Also by Amy Jarecki

  Scottish Historical Romances

  Highland Force Series:

  Captured by the Pirate Laird

  The Highland Henchman

  Beauty and the Barbarian

  Return of the Highland Laird

  Highland Dynasty Romances Coming in 2015

  Knight in Highland Armor

  A Highland Knight to Remember

  Highland Knight of Rapture

  Pict/Roman Romances

  Rescued by the Celtic Warrior

  Celtic Maid

  Contemporary Romances

  Virtue

  Chihuahua Momma

  Other Fiction

  Boy Man Chief, A Native American Historical Adventure

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, places, events, and incidents are either products of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  No part of this work may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without written permission of the publisher.

  Published by Kindle Press, Seattle, 2015

  A Kindle Scout selection

  Amazon, the Amazon logo, Kindle Scout, and Kindle Press are trademarks of Amazon.com, Inc., or its affiliates.

  To the folks at Kindle Press.

  Thank you.

  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  Chapter Thirty-Five

  Chapter Thirty-Six

  Chapter Thirty-Seven

  Chapter Thirty-Eight

  Chapter Thirty-Nine

  Epilogue

  Author’s Note

  Excerpt from A Highland Knight to Remember

  Acknowledgments

  About the Author

  Chapter One

  Melrose Abbey, January, 1478

  Before she knelt, Meg stole a glance behind her. A silent sigh slipped through pursed lips. As he’d promised, her tenacious guard wasn’t standing at the rear of the nave watching. She had several things she wanted to accomplish on this pilgrimage—most importantly, gaining an audience with the abbot. After pleading nearly the entire two-day journey from Tantallon Castle, she’d convinced the guard to allow her a modicum of freedom—at least within the walls of Melrose Abbey.

  Out of the corner of her eye, a bronze cross flickered. It sat atop an altar in a quiet aisle chapel. Meg tiptoed over. She’d have complete solitude there.

  Kneeling, she folded her hands and gazed at the cross. She’d prayed endlessly for guidance, but presently her mind blanked. She closed her eyes. Ah, yes . . .

  Firstly, thank you for our safe passage, and thank you for all my blessings . . . aside from my unruly red hair and my claw of a hand, but we’ve discussed that hundreds of times. I’m well aware Arthur will be unable to find me a suitable husband. I must take matters into my own hands . . . and give them over to you, God. That’s where I belong—serving you. Please help me gain an audience with his holiness, the abbot, that I may make my wishes clear and take up the veil . . .

  Someone tapped her shoulder. She glanced up. A pair of white-robed monks stood behind her.

  “Come,” one said.

  Meg’s heart fluttered. Had her prayers been answered so quickly? “Are you taking me to the abbot?”

  They exchanged glances. “Aye,” the tallest one clipped. A jagged scar etched the side of his cheek.

  Meg eagerly stood and gestured for them to proceed. The corner of the shorter one’s mouth smirked. They were an odd pair, indeed.

  Single file, she walked between the two men. The tallest led her straight to the rood screen concealing the choir. Abruptly she stopped and clapped her hand to her chest.

  The shorter one waved her forward with a flick of his wrist.

  “I cannot.” She kept her voice low. “I’ve not yet taken the veil.”

  The taller monk frowned, stretching his scar downward. He clamped his fingers around Meg’s elbow, his grip a bit forceful for a monk. “You must pass this way to meet the abbot,” he whispered, so softly Meg could hardly discern his words.

  She withdrew her arm from his grasp and inclined her head toward the entry. If this was what God intended, then she’d proceed. Surely she would commit no sin by entering restricted holy ground for the purpose of declaring her wishes to become a novice.

  Crossing through the ornately carved screen, Meg walked into the dim choir where only monks who had taken the vows of chastity, poverty, and obedience were allowed to worship. The walls were lined with two tiers of choir stalls, where each monk would pray from lauds to compline. Their footfalls loudly echoed up to the vaulted ceiling.

  A poke in the back caught her attention. The leader had already moved through and held open a thick wooden door. Meg understood the impatient look on the man’s face. She’d seen the same expression from her brother a hundred times before. She hastened her pace. Why was there never enough time to stop and admire her surroundings?

  Stepping outside into the frigid air, she used her hand to shield her eyes from the sun shining through the clouds. “I’m surprised the abbot is aware I’m here. I hadn’t yet made a request to meet with him.”

  Neither man said a word. They’d just spoken to her, so they mustn’t have taken a vow of silence. Was this an area of the abbey where no one was allowed to speak? Were they near the sacred tomb where Robert the Bruce’s heart had been laid to rest—yet another relic to which Meg wanted to pay homage on this, her first pilgrimage.

  She quickly scanned the surrounding garden. There were no graves at all. The monks sped their pace yet again. Arriving at a doorway leading through the cloister wall, the shorter monk stepped beside Meg and grasped her arm. “We’ll be taking a detour, miss.” This was the first time the stout monk had spoken.

  Miss? The daughter of a Scottish earl, Meg’s respectful courtesy was “my lady.”

  Something was awry.

  Meg’s mind clicked.

  Her blood turned to ice. English. No mistaking it, this man had an English accent.

  “Release me.” Meg dug in her heels and yanked her arm away. Her heart flying to her throat, she shuffled backward and raised her skirts with trembling hands as she prepared to flee.

  “Help!”

  Gasping in short bursts, Meg sprinted toward the abbey.

  Footsteps slapped the mud behind her. “Bloody hell, Isaac . . .”

  A hand c
lapped over her mouth and another around her waist. Meg struggled, kicked, scratched—anything to break free. In the blink of an eye, the stocky monk hauled her outside the abbey curtain walls. With not a soul in sight, three horses stood tethered at the tree-line edge.

  Screaming through the brutal palm clamped over her lips, she kicked and thrashed her entire body until the imposter brutally slapped her across the face. Recoiling, Meg’s feet touched ground. She shrieked and tried to run. Fingers of iron held her in place. A gag filled her mouth while unforgiving hands bound her wrists.

  The scarred monk grabbed Meg by the waist and hefted her onto the horse’s back, belly first. Before she could right herself, the short monk lashed another rope around her wrists and tied her hands to her legs under the horse’s barrel.

  Margaret cried out through the coarse cloth biting into her mouth. She jerked her arms, only to pull her legs under the horse. Her body slid sideways awkwardly. God in heaven, why are they doing this? Her gaze darted from side to side as she tried to scream louder, only to be muted by the foul-tasting gag.

  The men mounted. One tugged her horse’s lead and raced away at a gallop. Meg clamped on to the horse’s short hair while her gut thumped into the unyielding gelding’s back. Her heart raced faster than the hoofbeats. Her chin slammed into the steed’s barrel repeatedly—until stars crossed her vision.

  Chapter Two

  Duncan Campbell followed the servant through the passageway of Tantallon Castle, his brother John at his elbow. The missive from Lord Arthur Douglas, the Earl of Angus, had been vague to say the least, but on one thing he’d been clear: Arthur’s sister, Lady Meg Douglas, had been kidnapped by the English.

  The servant held up his hand. “Please wait here and I’ll announce your arrival.” He opened the door and slipped inside a solar. “Sir Duncan Campbell and Sir John Campbell, m’lord.”

  Silence.

  Duncan could picture the earl’s frowning face, and he stood a little straighter. He’d come in his father’s stead. Few men knew he’d taken up the Lord of Glenorchy’s mantle—yet.

  “Well, don’t just stand there, show the Highlanders in.” The earl’s gruff voice filled the corridor, adding a deprecating inflection to “Highlanders,” as if the Lowland earl believed himself superior.

  The steward led them inside and made the requisite introductions. Sitting at a thick walnut table, the Earl of Angus appeared every bit as disagreeable as Duncan had envisioned. Arthur Douglas was only two years his senior. Duncan tipped up his chin. As heir to the Campbell dynasty, they were peers. There was no cause to bow. John, however, bowed deeply. Blast him. Duncan swallowed his Highland pride and offered a courteous dip of his head. “We came as soon as we received word, m’lord.”

  “I expected the Black Knight, not a pair of wet-eared lads who’ve recently attained their majority.”

  “At three and twenty, my father had already returned from his first crusade.” Duncan rested his palm on the pommel of his sword. If only he could draw it and slice that smirk off the earl’s face. “I assure you, my men and I were trained under his critical eye. You’ll not find another team better.”

  Licking his lips, the earl’s gaze drifted to Duncan’s hilt. “This matter is delicate. One wrong move and it could incite war between our borders and crush the truce the king has worked so hard to maintain.” The earl swiped fingers, bejeweled with rings, across his mouth. “God forbid a Douglas is blamed for that.”

  “Your missive said your sister’s been abducted,” John said.

  Duncan shot him a stern glare. They’d agreed he’d do the talking. He led his band of stealthy warriors, and Duncan would not have his authority undermined, not even by his younger brother, and especially not in front of a peer—one in possession of a vast sum of coin, at that.

  The earl nodded and pulled a folded missive from beneath his surcoat. “Addressed to me, this was found at Melrose Abbey—in the pew where Lady Meg was praying. The bastards took her in broad daylight with no one the wiser. ’Tis almost as if she vanished into thin air.”

  Duncan grasped the note and read. “What rift have you with the Earl of Northumberland?”

  Arthur spread his palms. “Me? None, but my father sacked Alnwick Castle in ’62. Da’s the reason the Percy’s lost the Northumberland earldom.”

  Duncan knitted his brows. “But Henry claimed it back.”

  “Aye.” Arthur pointed at the vellum. “Now he’s set his house to rights, it appears he’s out for vengeance.”

  Duncan placed the missive on the table. The pieces of the puzzle were coming together. “And if you march an army across the border, you’ll risk destroying the truce between England and Scotland.”

  “Exactly. Can you ferret her out quietly?”

  “If anyone can, ’tis me brother,” John said.

  Duncan again glared at his younger sibling. “Sounds easy enough—spirit inside under disguise, find a weakness and slip her out.”

  “Do not underestimate Lord Percy. He’s a slithering snake, that one—nothing about this mission is easy, else I’d have done it myself.” Arthur leaned forward. “You’ve been to England?”

  “Aye, let’s say I’ve had my dealings with Queen Margaret and the Lancasters. I was there long enough to develop a foul taste for the Yorkists as well.”

  Arthur leaned back and drummed his fingers on his armrests, as if he were considering his options. “You’re awfully confident, but then I’d expect that from a Campbell.”

  Duncan had no time for a pompous Lowlander or any slights against his kin. He crossed his arms. “Do you want your sister returned to Tantallon or nay?”

  Arthur stood and moved to the sideboard. “She’s a feisty one, Meg.” He poured three tots of whisky. “She thinks she wants to take up the veil, but I’ve an alliance to make with her hand.”

  Duncan’s gut twisted. “Do you believe Lord Percy would ruin her?” He could not abide any man who defiled a woman. The thought of it made the blood run hot beneath his skin.

  Arthur paled. “If the bastard does, he’ll break the truce for certain.”

  Duncan accepted the cup and sipped, savoring the oaken flavor. I must spirit Lady Meg away quickly, lest she be ruined. Boar’s ballocks, the entire country could go to war because of an earl’s sister.

  The earl tossed his whisky back and cleared his throat. “Bring her home and I’ll see you’re rewarded for your trouble.”

  Duncan set his cup on the table and fingered it. Then he looked directly into the earl’s eyes. “I’ll need a quarter now.”

  Arthur gaped. “A quarter to an unproven pup?”

  Duncan stepped close enough that the Earl of Angus was forced to crane his neck. “If it is credentials you’re seeking, I’d be happy to give you a demonstration in the courtyard forthwith—else I’ll be taking the quarter to cover my men’s expenses and be on my way.”

  For a moment, Duncan thought Arthur might lead him outside, which he’d welcome. It never hurt to demonstrate one’s abilities to a paying customer.

  But the earl ran his finger around the inside of his cup and licked it. “Agreed.”

  Duncan let out a slow breath. Perhaps he should have negotiated for half.

  Chapter Three

  Meg paced across the wooden floor, her arms tightly hugged against her ribs to stave off the cold. Her misty breath billowed with every exhale. They’d locked her in a tower someplace in godforsaken England. Her tiny chamber had one arrow slit, from which she could see little. At least she’d discerned the room was higher than the battlements. Occasionally, a sentry passed on the wall-walk below. Opposite the courtyard sat a chapel with a cross atop a steeple, and that was all she could see.

  Before she’d arrived, her captors had ridden for two long days. Fortunately, about three miles outside Melrose, they’d stopped and allowed her to sit astride the horse, though they’d kept her hands bound. She’d asked countless questions, until they gagged her again.

  One day those two
brutes would see justice, and so would anyone else a party to her kidnapping.

  They’d approached this castle in the dark of night. Its enormous outline loomed in the moonlit sky. The fortress of the devil. The heavy black doors of the barbican opened for her like the mouth of a sea monster swallowing its quarry.

  Pulled from her horse, there was no time to find her bearings while they’d bustled her up countless tower steps and thrust her inside this miserable chamber. Meg squeezed her arms tighter. The guard who brought her meals spoke in monosyllables. Sooner or later someone must come and explain why she’d been kidnapped from a place of sanctuary. She was the daughter of an earl. That also had to count for something.

  The sound of iron keys clanked and scraped in the lock. Meg stood straight and faced the door. By all the saints, she would never allow a one of her captors to think her a coward. A tall and lanky man stepped inside with an appraising smirk. Well dressed in red velvet, he could have passed for a king, right up to his richly ornamented doublet and feathered cap.

  Keeping her arms crossed, Meg balled her crippled hand into a fist and tucked it beneath her armpit.

  He sauntered into the chamber. “Margaret Douglas.”

  “Lady Meg,” she corrected. No one ever called her Margaret—that had been her grandmother’s name.

  He scoffed, his eyes trailing down her body as though he hadn’t eaten in a week. “I’m shocked to see a repugnant chap like the fourth Earl of Angus could produce from his loins a creature so comely.” He stepped closer.

  “I demand some answers.” Meg scooted backward. “Where am I and why was I stolen from the sanctity of holy ground, aside from being gagged, bound and wrestled into this abominable tower?” She tried to keep her voice from quavering, but the sneer stretching his lips unnerved her.

  He took another step.

  Meg’s shoulder blades hit stone. Her heart hammered so forcefully, she feared it might thump out of her chest. She straightened her spine against the wall. “And you, sir, are shameful coming in here, eyeing me like roast mutton without so much as an introduction.” She pursed her lips and tried to swallow. Her gaze darted to the door. He’d left it open, but a gauntleted hand grasped a poleax just beyond. No chance to flee—yet.