Pride Of Lions. Suzanne Barclay

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have to excuse her curtness. We were set upon by brigands.”

      “Was it Bells?” Derk exclaimed.

      “Aye,” Hunter said slowly, neither trusting nor distrusting. “How did you know?”

      “Well, most of the ill deeds done hereabouts can be laid at Ill Will’s door, but,” he said as he glanced around, “truth to tell, we’d not be taking this trail through the glen if my scouts hadn’t spotted Will and his bunch up on the moor.”

      “What were they doing?” Hunter and Allisun both asked.

      “Roasting a haunch of beef.”

      “You are certain ’twas not a man?” Allisun asked.

      “The lass knows Ill Will, I see. Nay, ’twas a steer. They had a good-size herd standing about nearby. Will’s men looked right busy keeping an eye on them, but my lads and I decided we’d not take a chance the Bells had time to rob us.” He grinned. “My Morna’d have a fit if I lost that thick Turkish carpet before she’s had a chance to walk on it.”

      Hunter smiled back and laid his sword down. “We understand. Come ahead and water your stock, Derk Neville.”

      “Nay,” Allisun softly cried. “What if he’s lying?”

      “Shh.” Hunter motioned her down beside him. “The truth is, if Derk wanted to kill us, there is not a damn thing I could do to stop him,” he whispered. It galled, for he was a man who prided himself on his ability to cope with any situation. “I might take one or two with me,” he added, watching out of the corner of his eye as the Nevilles dismounted and brought their mounts to drink at the stream. “But I’d not win.”

      “Us,” she hissed back. “I know how to use this, and if I had a sword—”

      “Allisun.” He closed his hand over her clenched fist. “Even if we had two swords apiece, they’d best us.”

      She glared hatred at the Nevilles. “What do we do?”

      Derk Neville hailed them from across the stream. “Couldn’t help noticing ye’ve no horses about.”

      “They are grazing,” Allisun replied.

      Hunter squeezed her hand, then looked at Derk. “Actually, we lost both mounts getting away from the Bells.”

      “Ah. Ye’re lucky to be alive. Ye hurt yer foot?” At Hunter’s nod, Derk frowned. “If ye like, we could juggle our load and free up a horse for the pair of ye to ride.”

      “Aye,” said Hunter.

      “Nay,” said Allisun.

      “We must. No telling how long before our kinsmen can safely look for us,” Hunter said through his teeth. No telling if they were even alive. Then louder he said, “Thanks. We accept.”

      Allisun spat a curse that would have made a trooper blush.

      “Did your mother never tell you swearing isn’t ladylike?”

      “She died when I was six.”

      Hunter’s anger leached away. “I am sorry.” Recalling the gentle guidance and unswerving love of his own mother, Hunter felt a stab of pity for this prickly lass. With his free hand, he gently grazed her cheek.

      She knocked his hand aside, her eyes flashing blue fire, her chin mutinously high. “I’m not going with you.”

      Beneath her defiance, Hunter saw a flicker of fear. It stabbed at his conscience, reminding him that he was responsible for her safety. Whether she liked it or not. “Aye, you are. I’ll not leave you here alone and on foot with the Bells—”

      “You are not responsible for me,” she snapped.

      “Lovers’ quarrel?” Derk asked, grinning as he waded across the stream.

      Allisun glared at Derk and tried vainly to wrench her hand from Hunter’s grip. “We are not—”

      “Of a sort,” Hunter interjected, seeing an answer to the questions he knew Derk would pose about who they were. “We were running away.” Beside him, he heard Allisun draw breath to protest. He stilled it by wrapping a loverlike arm around her waist and squeezing... hard.

      “Humph,” Allisun wheezed, exhaling noisily.

      “Her family does not approve of me.” Hunter grinned in response to her outraged expression. Under cover of dropping a kiss on her brow, he whispered, “If you do not go along with me, he may learn you’re a Murray and decide to collect the reward Uncle Jock has offered for you.”

      Her eyes widened, and her mouth snapped shut.

      “Truly?” Derk climbed the bank, water streaming from his knee-high boots. His sharp gaze moved from Hunter’s equally fine boots and Spanish-made sword to Allisun’s worn tunic.

      Hunter’s nimble mind seized a likely response. “I’m a Highlander,” he confided. “Her kin feared I’d take her north, and they’d never see her again.”

      “Highlander, ye say. What clan?”

      “Sutherland. I am Hunt Sutherland of Kinduin,” he added, borrowing his Uncle Lucais’s surname and estate.

      Derk nodded his head in acknowledgment and turned to Allisun. “And ye, lass?”

      “Allie...Allie Hall.”

      “Hall?” Derk rubbed his thick gray beard. “From where?”

      “Over Moffat way,” she said grudgingly, glaring at Hunter.

      “Allie Sutherland, she is now.” Hunter met her scowls with a wide grin. “We are handfasted,” he added, to prevent her from being branded a loose woman.

      Allie made a choking sound, her eyes wide with horror. Do you realize what you have done? they silently asked.

      Hunter was a little shocked himself. The words had just slipped out before he’d had a chance to think...really think... about the consequences. In some places, merely declaring themselves wed before witnesses was enough to unite a couple for a year and a day. Then if the marriage did not suit them, the couple could separate. They’d be parting much sooner than that, Hunter thought. “’Tis just till we can find a priest and be properly wed,” he added, and hoped Derk would think lack of a permanent ceremony the reason for Allie’s outburst.

      “Women set store by that,” Derk said. “’Tis pleased I am to meet ye both. Ah, here come the lads with the horses.”

      While Derk went to meet his men, Hunter levered himself to his feet. “I am sorry for that,” he whispered to Allisun. “But I could not have him think you were a...a—”

      “Better a whore than your wife,” she snapped.

      “You are not the mate I’d choose, either,” Hunter said through set teeth. “But ’tis only for a few days, till my ankle heals and we can go our separate ways.”

      “If

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