The Wrong Highlander (Highland Brides #7) - Lynsay Sands Page 0,80

locked now,” Conran pointed out. “If we position someone at the entrance behind the castle so he can’t leave, ye and I could ride down to the other entrance and enter that way. We could trap him and—”

“Ye aren’t doing anything o’ the kind,” Rory said firmly. “Ye’ve lost a good deal of blood with this injury, and I still have to remove the stone from yer head wound. I’m amazed ye’re yet sitting upright, but quite sure ye won’t be for long. Someone else will have to accompany Laird Maclean.”

“I’ll accompany ye, m’laird,” Aulay offered quietly, and when her father hesitated, he added with understanding, “Ye can even blindfold me for the ride out and until we get inside the actual tunnel if ‘twould make ye feel better.”

Evina’s eyebrows rose at the offer. But then being a laird with his own castle that probably had its own secret tunnels, Aulay would understand that they were secret for a reason. Still, she wasn’t surprised when her father sighed and shook his head. “Yer brother will soon be me son by marriage. It makes ye family. I guess I can trust ye with the secret. There’s no need for a blindfold.”

Aulay merely nodded his head solemnly in acknowledgment of the trust the man was showing him.

“Ye’ll need to pad yer saddle, Laird Maclean,” Rory announced, tossing aside the cloth he’d been pressing against Conran’s back to stop the bleeding, and picking up an already threaded needle. “Take a length of cloth, roll it up and shape it in a circle, and then set it between ye and the saddle so that it’s around the wound on yer arse and keeps it from hitting the saddle as ye ride.”

“Me arse is fine,” her father muttered, turning to head for the door.

Rory shrugged and turned to begin stitching up Conran’s back. “Ye’re the one who will suffer if ye do no’ listen to me.”

Her father muttered something uncomplimentary about healers being as bad as women, but Evina noticed that rather than heading for the stairs when he left her room, he turned toward his room. Hopefully to fetch a plaid to roll up as Rory had suggested, she thought, and then glanced to Conran when he suddenly squeezed her hand almost painfully.

“Sorry,” he muttered, through tightly ground teeth. There was no mistaking the expression on his face as anything but pain. Rory was sewing now. A lousy thing to have to suffer through, Evina knew, and rubbed Conran’s hand gently to distract him.

There was silence in the room for a minute, and then Saidh suddenly released a soft chuckle.

“What’s so funny, sister?” Conran asked grimly.

“I was just realizing that no’ one of us so far has managed a wedding where the bride, or groom, or both, weren’t healing from wounds, bruises or poisoning.”

“Hmm,” Rory murmured dryly. “Ye have all shown a distressing tendency to pursue rather adventurous courtships so far.”

“Ye make it sound like we each looked around for the most troublesome partner and chose them for that reason,” Saidh said with a scowl.

“Well, ye didn’t pack up and leave when arrows started flying and people started getting stabbed as any sensible person would do, did ye?” he pointed out.

Saidh opened her mouth, looking ready to scald him with a tongue lashing, but then snapped her mouth shut and shook her head before saying, “I hope finding the partner ye marry goes much more smoothly than everyone else’s has so far, Rory. But if it doesn’t, I hope I’m there to remind ye o’ yer words on this day.”

Rory paused briefly, concern flickering across his face, but then went back to sewing up Conran’s back without responding.

Saidh’s words had made Evina curious, however, and she decided she’d have to ask her what they were talking about later. It sounded like there might be an interesting story or two in there somewhere, she thought, and then glanced to the door as Tildy hurried into the room carrying a full tray.

“I passed the laird and Aulay Buchanan on the way up and they said ye were all up in m’lady’s room now, so I brought the food and drink here. But some o’ ye may want to go below. Laird and Lady Carmichael just arrived and Cook has the women serving the nooning meal a little early for them after their journey.”

“Murine and Dougall are here?” Saidh asked with excitement.

“Aye,” Tildy said heavily as she reached the table and set down the tray she carried.

readonlinefreenovel.com Copyright 2016 - 2024