Lion's Legacy. Suzanne Barclay
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“And leave my grandfather to your mercy? Nay.”
“Think you I’d strike a wounded man?”
“You assaulted me...a lone, defenseless woman.”
“Defenseless? Defenseless!” He leaned close, his breath hot on her face. “’Twas you ambushed me. And struck me unconscious.”
“That was Geordie,” Laurel yelled back, hands on hips, jaw tilted up to meet the aggressive edge of his cleft chin. “And only because you were shaking the living daylights out of me.”
“I thought I was protecting myself from a man.”
“And Geordie was protecting me.”
“Now that’s settled, here’s yer whiskey.” Her aunt thrust a cup between them. “’Twill chase the dust from yer throat.”
“’Tis not settled,” Kieran snapped, but he took the cup.
Someone had taught him manners, for he muttered a brief thanks. Laurel had hoped to goad him into acting the barbarian. He certainly had the look of one with that stubbled jaw and unruly black hair to match his temper.
“Ye’re most welcome, Sir Kieran,” her aunt cooed.
Was everyone blind to his threat but her? Laurel wondered. It seemed so, for her grandfather began making soothing noises.
“’Twas a mistake. The lass mistook ye for reivers. We’ve dire need of yer aid, lad,” Duncan said. “Draw up a chair and I’ll tell ye what we know of the fiends who did this to me”
Pity flickered in Kieran’s eyes. Wary, but less angry, he did as her grandfather bade.
Laurel repaired to a stool by the hearth to think things over. She still wanted Kieran gone from Edin, but there was something about him that confused her.
“What is it about Kieran that riles ye?” Nesta whispered.
Laurel flinched. “He’s an outsider, like Aulay.”
“Mmm. But he doesn’t look or act like Aulay Kerr.”
“He acts a dozen times worse.”
“I think there’s more to it than that,” Nesta whispered. “Tell me about this dream of yers.” She sat quietly while Laurel poured out the details of the vision and her frustration with not being able to understand it. “It takes time to learn to work the power ye’ve been given.”
“Did it take you a long time?”
“Nay, I was a lass when I did my first conjuring, but—”
“Then I’m hopeless.” Laurel hung her head.
“Never that. The dreams are different than the conjuring is all. Yer great-grandmam had them. I recall my mother saying old Nell had difficulty learning to make sense of her visions.”
“How did she do it?”
Nesta took Laurel’s icy hands in her warm ones. “First ye must come to terms with yer heritage, grow comfortable with it.”
“What if I never do?”
“’Twould be a loss,” Nesta murmured. “When I’m gone, our people will have need of yer special skills. But there’s time yet. Ye’re a MacLellan. We women have always had the gift”
Laurel nodded absently. “If you think of something that might help...some way I could learn to control my dreams.”
“Aye.” A shadow crossed her face. “Though I want ye to develop yer gift, it has its dark side. Ye already know there are superstitious souls who fear me even while they seek the answers to their questions. Worse is looking into the future and seeing the death of a loved one.”
“Or sensing danger and not knowing its source,” Laurel whispered. Why had she dreamed of Kieran? Not once, but many times, each one bringing him closer till she’d finally seen him clearly. Seen his hunger and yearning. What was it he wanted?
“Laurel. Come here, lass,” her grandfather called.
Laurel jerked her head around, and her gaze slammed into Kieran’s. Cold as winter frost, it bored into her, freezing her to the marrow. Gone was all trace of the man who’d held her earlier, eyes hot with a passion that had sparked her own. Here was a warrior devoid of warmth or gentleness. ’Tis what he was destined to be. The insight startled and confused her.
“Go on, dearling.” Her aunt released her hands. “We’ll talk more of this later. I’m glad yon knight has come here. He looks fierce enough to defend us from the devil himself.”
Laurel grudgingly agreed, but as she hurried to the other side of the bed, ’twas Duncan she watched. The color excitement had lent to his skin couldn’t hide the circles under his eyes nor the fatigue in them. “You should rest now, Grandda.”
“Aye,” he said faintly. “I’m that tired, but I’ve a favor I’d ask of ye first before I can sleep.”
Laurel’s nerves went on alert. Duncan never, ever admitted to weakness or talked in that one-foot-in-the-grave voice except when he wanted to coerce her into something. “What?” Warily.
“Kieran desires to ride over Edin Valley and look to our defenses. And I can think of no better guide than ye, lass.”
“Nay!” Kieran exclaimed.
Laurel glared at him over the rumpled bed. How dare he refuse before she could? “Ellis knows the land better than I do.”
“But ’tis ye’ve been seeing my orders were carried out,” Duncan said smoothly. Too smoothly. He was up to something.
“She has?” Kieran’s scathing glance raked Laurel from head to waist and back up. She had a wholly feminine urge to smooth back the curls that had come free from her braid and brush the dirt from her baggy, cast-off tunic.
“Aye. She’s a braw lassie,” her grandsire said proudly.
Kieran’s lip curled. “Females have no business being about men’s work.”
“Defending the clan is everyone’s duty,” she replied.
“You haven’t the skills to—”
“I had skills enough to capture you.”
Kieran’s face turned a satisfying shade of red, and his mouth compressed into a hard line.
Her grandfather made a sound halfway between a choke and a cough. “Well, now. The less said about that, the better, I’m thinking. ’Twas just an honest mistake. All our nerves have been on edge, what with the raiders lurking about.”
“No need to make excuses for my behavior. And the only mistake that’s been made is hiring him,” Laurel replied. She turned on her heel and stalked from the room.
“I’d prefer to