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Saturday, January 26, 2013

The Legend and the Laird


Her need for revenge outweighs her duty to her betrothed and his clan. Raven McDraoigh and her mentor have been riding through the Scottish highlands for several years, searching for clues to the man responsible for her mother’s murder and the massacre of her clan. When she runs out of places to search she can only turn to her betrothed, Jamie McKay, laird of Clan McKay. But Jamie has other ideas in mind.

       For the last ten years, Jamie believed his wife was dead, murdered along with her mother and clan. Imagine his surprise when she turns up on his doorstep. A battle of wits is about to take place. Jamie wants a wife, a partner to lead his clan. She won’t give in until she’s fulfilled her vow.

When the McDraoigh Legend stands against the Laird of Clan McKay, there’s sure to be fireworks.

 
 
James Alexander MacKay slouched in his chair and stared at the document on his desk. How had he gotten himself into this mess? He had been polite to Lord Carlisle’s stepdaughter, and manners had somehow been mistaken for courtship. The nobleman was showing signs of impatience, waiting to see the chieftain’s mark on the paper. True, Jamie was expected to marry. Having no siblings, the responsibility of an heir fell to him alone. Andrew was the only person to know the truth of the matter, and he’d been sworn to silence long ago.
Andrew sat back in the window seat. Despite the warmth of the sun glowing through the window, he felt the cold stones behind his back. The spring day was bright, but couldn’t dispel the foreboding he felt. Andrew seemed to pay no attention to his nephew’s dilemma, preferring to stare at the distant mountains. Jamie’s future lay somewhere beyond those mountains, but the younger man refused to do anything about it. Sometimes, Andrew didn’t understand his nephew. Willing to try one more time to get Jamie to see reason, he never turned from the highland view he loved. “Tell Carlisle outright why you cannot sign that foolish paper. It is the only way to end this farce.”
“You, of all people know I can’t do that. No one but you, knows of that other business, and until I’m shown proof it is done, I can do nothing about this, except delay him longer. Even if nothing stood in the way, I’d sooner cut my own throat, than be wed to that…that harridan.”
Andrew laughed at the apt description, but had to agree with Jamie. Before either could comment further, a rap on the library door drew their attention. The young servant lost her balance when the door was shoved open. Andrew rose quickly at the disturbance, turning in time to see a stranger grab the girl’s arm before she fell. The girl quickly stepped back,  moving closer to the door. She crumpled the edge of her apron within her fingers, nervous over the intrusion into the chieftain’s library. She opened her mouth to speak, but was interrupted when a pleasant female voice cut in.
“Rather a messy solution, I would think, and your people would have the untimely chore of choosing a new chieftain.” The newcomer stood before the desk as Jamie dismissed the servant girl with a nod.
Jamie and the newcomer studied each other carefully, while Andrew watched the scene with amusement. He had a fairly good idea who their guest was and had expected her to arrive eventually.
Jamie sat back and ran the feathered quill through his fingers, slowly, contemplatively, never taking his blue eyed gaze from her. There was a kind of arrogance in her stance. He liked that. It meant she wasn’t easily intimidated. One hand rested lightly on the hilt of a broadsword, while the other remained loosely at her side. A dirk was sheathed at her belt. Her black hair was partially hidden beneath a dark bonnet. Pinned to the bonnet was a clan badge with what looked to be a thunderbolt, holding three merlin feathers securely in place. Chieftain?
Her pale skin gave contrast to the blush on her high cheekbones. Something about her black eyes was rather unnerving when she returned his stare. She refused to look away or be forced to back down. She was dressed in black, from her linen shirt and breeches, which hid nothing of her slim figure, to the fitted knee-high boots. The light silver tartan, with its intercepting lines of emerald green and black, and two shades of yellow, presented a plaid unfamiliar to Jamie. The lower part of the tartan was caught within her wide belt, holding it in place. A larger version of her clan badge held the gathered wool at her shoulder.
Jamie studied her weapons again. Can she really use that broadsword or is it only for show? It should weigh her down, yet she manages it adequately.   It was rare when a woman learned to use a weapon other than a dagger.  Even then, she didn’t often learn to wield it with any proficiency. Her serious demeanor remained unruffled under his scrutiny. He strongly suspected there was an impish inclination beneath her indifference, waiting to escape, if only for a moment. Brief incidents of subtle humor flashed across his memory and he was sure of a connection.
Unbidden, his thoughts turned in another direction. The betrothal contract.  Lord Carlisle was desperate to marry off his stepdaughter, Cordelia, and believed Jamie was the only man capable of handling the willful young woman. Cordelia was beautiful, with her slender figure, hazel eyes and thick ash blonde hair, but she was intolerably demanding. She’d left a month before, and his home was still being put to rights. The term ‘witch’ was too kind for her.  There could be no comparison between Cordelia and the woman who now stood before him.
“I know who you are,” he finally commented while he glanced, once more, over the supple figure, before returning her stare. “You…are my conscience.” He grinned again.
Raven was well aware of the distracting thoughts racing through his mind. Her eyes widened briefly at the sudden change in thought. His revelation startled her, although it wasn’t quite what she expected. The link between them, indeed, must work in both directions. She would have to study the matter further. If he is stronger than originally thought he could interfere with my plans…unless I can control him. “If that is what you believe…” she allowed the rest of her statement to go unfinished. “I’ve come here to fulfill two promises made. Fulfilling one will depend on the results of the other.”
Andrew glanced at Jamie, then the woman. “Exactly, who are you?”
Raven slipped a ring from the first finger of her left hand, placed it on the document before Jamie, then stepped back and resumed her previous stance.
Jamie picked up the ring and studied the emblem, while Andrew looked over his nephew’s shoulder. “That is the signet of the Clan MacDraoidh.” Andrew turned to Raven.  “How do we know you didn’t steal the ring?”
Jamie raised a hand to ward off further questions from his uncle.  “Clan MacDraoidh no longer exists,” he goaded, no longer amused. He tossed the ring onto the desk where it bounced once, before settling on the contract, like some sort of omen.
“Then,” she concluded, reaching into the pouch on her belt, “I must be a ghost.” She reluctantly pulled out a folded sheet of parchment with a broken seal and placed it next to the ring. Introducing herself was no problem. The contents of the document could very well be. “May I introduce myself.  I am Raven Althea MacDraoidh.  Chieftain of Clan MacDraoidh—if, as you suggest, there is still a clan to lead.”
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

 

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