The Highlander

The Highlander by Kerrigan Byrne, now you can read online.

PROLOGUE

Wester Ross, Scotland

Something has to be done, Liam Mackenzie decided as he stared down at his gruesome discovery.

About the evil man who ruled the Mackenzie of Wester Ross with sadistic whims and cold terror. About the hollow-eyed woman who’d replaced Liam’s own wretched mother, haunting the halls of Ravencroft Keep like a thin, tormented specter of regret and fear. About her son, Liam’s half brother, who hid in closets and had never learned to smile in his entire young life. About the Mackenzie bastard recently beaten to death in Newgate prison.

Something had to be done about the body that Liam had just fished out of Bryneloch Bog.

Tessa McGrath.

Though she’d been little more than a skeleton covered in sludge, peat, and mud, Liam had known it was her. The moment he’d glimpsed what remained of the wool cloak he’d given her on that terrible night those few years ago, he’d known.

That cloak—his final act of kindness—had become her shroud.

Tessa had been a bawdy whore who’d boasted of incomparable skills and dark fetishes. It was why the Laird Hamish Mackenzie had hired her for his sons. Why she’d been chosen to turn boys into men. Nay, not men, but something entirely more terrible.

Tessa had underestimated the abject cruelty of the Marquess of Ravencroft. She’d not known the depth of Hamish Mackenzie’s evil.

“She wants it.” Liam’s father had sneered as he’d strapped a naked, blindfolded Tessa to the bed. “She’s begging for it.”

The whore had been begging for it. For the playful lashes of the buttery-soft whip she’d brought in her satchel of pleasure toys. She made the appropriate noises, writhed in the appropriate ways. She’d said inviting things and given salacious permissions that would send any boy of sixteen into a lustful frenzy.

But not Liam.

It wasn’t her fault. She could never have imagined what the laird had in store for her. She liked to play with a little pain, but Hamish Mackenzie didn’t stop a game when he’d won, he kept going until his opponents were utterly broken.

Liam had already suspected that Hamish meant to break the girl in front of them. To compel them to watch. He could never have imagined that his father had intended to force his sons to break her. To observe with sick, sadistic pleasure as the very lads he’d sired became monsters.

Monsters like himself.

Not until the laird had produced a toy of his own had Liam guessed. An antique, Roman lead-tipped whip with as many leather straps as Medusa had snakes on her head.

Each one of Laird Mackenzie’s sons trembled at the sight. Hamish, the laird’s namesake bastard. Liam, his heir apparent. And the boy they called “Thorne,” the only son of the laird’s second wife. They were all intimately acquainted with that whip. They knew the pain of its kiss and missed the flesh it tore away with each lash.

Indeed, they’d stared at it in wide-eyed incredulity as the laird had run it over the purring whore’s back. She’d arched and gasped in anticipation … at first.

Then she’d screamed and cried, struggled and begged, and that was after only two lashes.

Dark eyes glowing with perverse excitement, Hamish stalked to their side of the bed and held the detested whip’s pommel out to his sons, who gaped from a regimental line.

“Two lashes for each of ye,” he’d ordered.

“She’ll not survive that,” Thorne had argued, his pubescent voice cracking against his fear.

The laird answered his son’s impudence with his fist, sending Thorne sprawling to the floor. “Two. Lashes. Each,” he repeated. “I doona care which of ye gives how many, but she’ll not be released until she’s been whipped six times.”

Laird Hamish Mackenzie, a giant of a man, used to tower over all his sons as he did most men. But on that night, Liam noted that he looked across at his father eye to eye for the first time. Few dared to meet his father’s glare, let alone stand against him.

“Ye do it,” the laird ordered with an evil smile. “Or I’ll do it myself.”

It was disconcerting, to say the least, when the person you hated the most wore your own features. To ken that someday, perhaps in two decades past, those same monstrous dark eyes would stare back at Liam from the mirror, a reminder of the rancid cruelty that ran through his tainted Mackenzie blood. Seeing the paternal challenge on the face of his father, Liam realized that one day, he would no longer have to be afraid of this man. He would have to grow just as large, just as cunning, ruthless, and brutal. But one day, he would challenge the monster with a beast of his own.

The glint in his father’s eye had told him that he looked forward to that day.

Seizing upon the opportunity to impress his father, Hamish the younger had reached out for the whip, a familiar cruel anticipation building beneath the apprehension on his less compelling features.

Hamish would do what his father said.