Keeley McDonald was up before dawn to tend her fire and ready herself for the
day. She was midway between the wood pile behind her cottage and her cottage door
when it occurred to her how ridiculous it was to imagine that she had a day filled with
duties and activities.
She stopped as she came around the corner of her cottage and stared down into
the valley that stretched to the distant crest several miles away. Smoke from the
McDonald keep and the cottages immediately surrounding it rose like a whisper and
floated lazily toward the sky.
How fitting that she should be afforded a prime view of the one place she was
never welcome. Her home. Her clan. No more. They’d turned their backs on her. They
didn’t acknowledge her as kin. She was an outcast.
Was this her punishment? To be relegated to a cottage where she was forever
reminded of her birthplace, close enough to see but barred from returning?
She supposed she should be grateful to have any place at all. It could be worse.
She could have been forced from her home with no place to go and no recourse but to
earn her way in life on her back.
Her lips grew thin and her upper lip curled into a snarl.
It was a trial to her good nature to dwell on such matters. It only made her bitter
and angry. There was nothing she could do. She couldn’t change the past. Her only regret
was that she hadn’t been able to seek justice against the bastard McDonald for all he’d
done. And his wife. She’d known the truth. Keeley had seen it in her eyes, but the
mistress of the keep had punished Keeley for her husband’s sins.
Catriona McDonald had passed on four years ago, and yet Rionna hadn’t sent for
Keeley. Her oldest and dearest childhood friend hadn’t come for her. Hadn’t summoned
her home. And Rionna, of all people, knew the truth.
Keeley sighed. It was stupid to stand here and dwell on past hurts and dashed
hopes. It was stupid to have ever had the hope that when Rionna’s mother died, Keeley
might have been welcomed back into the clan.
The huff of a horse whirled Keeley around, and she dropped the armful of wood
with a clatter. The horse clopped into view and came to a stop beside Keeley. Sweat
gleamed from the horse’s neck and there was a wildness in its eyes that suggested it had
suffered a fright.
But Keeley’s eyes were riveted to the warrior slumped over in the saddle and to
the blood that dripped steadily onto the ground.
Before she could react, the man fell off the horse with a heavy thump. Keeley
winced. Jesu, but that had to hurt.
The horse danced to the side, leaving the sprawled warrior at Keeley’s feet.
Keeley dropped down, pulling at his tunic as she sought the source of all the blood. There
was a huge rend in the material at his side and when she pushed aside the tatters, she
gasped.
There was a cut that ran from his hip to just underneath his arm. The flesh was
flayed open and the wound was at least an inch deep. Thankfully it wasn’t deeper, for
surely it would have been a mortal blow.
It would certainly need needle and thread and a lot of praying that he didn’t
succumb to a fever.
She ran her hands anxiously over his taught abdomen. He was a strong warrior,
lean and well muscled. There were other scars, one on his belly and one on his shoulder.
They were older and didn’t look to have been as severe as his current injury.
How was she to get him into her cottage? She glanced back at her doorway with
her bottom lip stuck solidly between her teeth. He was enormous and no match for a lass
her size. It would require cunning to solve this dilemma.
She rose and hurried into her cottage. She stripped the linens from her bed and
wadded them into her hand. She ran back outside letting the material unfurl in the wind.
It took her a moment to position the sheet just so, and she had to place rocks on
the end to keep it from billowing up in the wind. When she was done, she went around to
the other side of the warrior and pushed at him to roll him onto the sheet.
It was like pushing a boulder.
She grit her teeth and put more muscle into the effort. He bobbed a bit but
remained in his position.
“Wake up and help me!” she demanded in frustration. “I can’t leave you out here
in the cold. ’Tis likely to snow today and you’re still bleeding. Have you no care for your
life?”
She poked him for emphasis and when he didn’t stir, she smacked his cheek with
the flat of her palm.
He stirred and frowned. A growl escaped his lips that nearly sent her back into the
safety of her cottage.
Then she scowled and bent closer so he could hear. “You’re a stubborn one, aye,
but you’ll find I’m even more so. You won’t be winning this battle, warrior. ’Tis better if
you surrender now and help me in my endeavor.”
“Leave off,” he snarled, his eyes never opening. “I’ll not aid you in taking me to
hell.”
“ ’Tis hell you’re going to if you don’t stop being difficult. Now move!”
To her surprise he grumbled but rolled as she pushed him.
“I always knew there would be women in hell,” he muttered. “ ’Tis only
appropriate that they should be there causing as much difficulty as they do on earth.”
“I’m fair tempted to leave you out here to rot in the cold,” Keeley snapped.
“You’re an ungrateful wretch, and your opinions of women are as deplorable as your
manners. ’Tis no wonder you find women so repulsive. I’ve no doubt you’ve never been
able to get close enough to one to change your opinion.”
To her astonishment, the warrior laughed and then promptly groaned when the
action caused him pain. Some of Keeley’s irritation fell away as she saw his face grow
ashen and sweat bead his forehead. He was truly in agony and here she sat debating with
him.
She shook her head and then gathered the ends of the sheet in her hands and
hauled them over her shoulder.
“Give me strength, God,” she prayed. “I’ve no chance of dragging him into my
cottage without your aid.”
She pursed her lips, ground her teeth together, and then pulled with all her might.
Only to be jerked backward. She nearly toppled to the ground. Her warrior hadn’t budged
an inch.
“Well, God never promised you extraordinary strength,” she muttered. “Perhaps
he grants only reasonable requests.”
She stared at the problem before her and then glanced at the warrior’s horse who
stood in the distance munching on grass.
With a disgruntled sigh she marched toward the horse and gripped the reins. At
first he refused to budge, but she planted her feet and coaxed, pulled and begged the
monstrous animal to do her bidding.
“Have you no loyalty?” she accused. “Your master is lying on the ground, gravely
wounded, and all you can think of is your belly?”
The horse didn’t look impressed with her speech, but finally he clopped toward
the fallen warrior. He leaned his snout down to nuzzle against his master’s neck, but
Keeley pulled him away.
If she could just secure the ends of the sheet to the horse’s saddle, then he could
pull him into the cottage. Not that she wanted a dirty, foul-smelling animal in her home,
but at the moment she didn’t see an alternative.
It took her several long minutes before she was satisfied she had a workable plan.
After the sheet was secure and she was reasonably sure the warrior wouldn’t roll off the
material, she urged the horse in the direction of the cottage.
To her delight it worked! The horse dragged the warrior along the ground. It
would take a week to wash the dirt from her bedding, but at least the man was being
moved.
The horse clopped into her cottage. There was barely room to maneuver around
the animal and the warrior. They filled the tiny interior of her home.
She hastily untied the ends of the sheet and then set about getting the horse to go
back the way he’d come. The stubborn horse evidently decided he liked the warmer
interior of her cottage. It took half an hour to budge the stubborn beast.
When she finally had him outside where he belonged, she slammed her door and
leaned heavily against it. She needed to remember next time that good deeds often went
unrewarded.
She was fair exhausted from her efforts, but her warrior needed tending if he was
to live.
Her warrior? She snorted. Her pain in the arse, more likely. No need in
entertaining stupid, fanciful thoughts. If he died, she’d likely be blamed.
Upon closer inspection, he obviously wasn’t a McDonald. She frowned. Was he
an enemy to the McDonalds? Not that she owed them her loyalty, but she was a
McDonald and as such their enemies were her own. Was she even now saving the life of
a man who was a threat to her?
“There you go again, Keeley,” she mumbled. Her flights of fancy often veered
dramatically to the absurd. The tales she spun in her head would make a bard look boring.
His colors were unfamiliar to her, but then she had never been farther than
McDonald land in her life.
She had no hope of getting him to her bed so she did the next best thing. She
brought her bed to him.
She arranged the blankets and pillows around him so that he would be
comfortable, and then she added wood to her dying fire. Already the room had gone
chilly.
Next, she collected her supplies and gave thanks that she’d traveled into the
neighboring village a few days past to replenish her meager stock. Most of what she
needed, she gathered herself. And thank the good Lord that she had superior healing
skills, because it was all that had sustained her for the last years.
Though the McDonalds were quick enough to toss her out of the clan, they had no
compunction about seeking her out when one of them needed healing. It wasn’t
uncommon for her to stitch a McDonald warrior after a training mishap or a wee one’s
head after taking a tumble down the stairs.
McDonald keep had its own healer, but she was aging and her hand was no longer
steady at stitching. ’Twas said she did more damage than good when putting her needle to
flesh.
If Keeley were more mean spirited, she’d turn them away just as they’d turned her
away, but the occasional coin they provided for her services kept food on her table when
hunting was lean and it enabled her to purchase supplies that she couldn’t gather herself.
She mixed herbs and mashed the leaves, adding just enough water to make a
paste. When she was satisfied with the consistency, she laid it aside and set about
preparing bandages from an older linen sheet she kept for just such emergencies.
When everything was in order, she went back to her warrior and knelt by his side.
He hadn’t regained consciousness since being dragged into her cottage. For that she was
grateful. The last thing she needed was a man twice her size to become combative.
She dipped a cloth into a bowl of water and gently began to cleanse the wound.
Fresh blood seeped from the wound as she brushed aside the crusted, dried parts. She was
meticulous in her task, not wanting to leave even a speck of dirt into the wound when she
closed it.
It was a jagged wound and it would leave a great scar, but it wasn’t anything he
should die of if he didn’t take a fever.
After she was satisfied that it was clean, she pressed the flesh back together and
took up her needle. She held her breath as she slid the needle in the first time, but the
warrior slept on and she quickly set her stitches, making sure they were tight and close
together.
She worked down, hovering over him until her back ached and her eyes crossed
from the strain. She estimated the wound to be at least eight inches in length. Perhaps ten.
At any rate, it would pain him to move in the days to come.
When she set the last stitch, she sat back and sighed her relief. The hard part was
over. Now she needed to bandage him and bind it in place.
By the time she was done wrestling with the warrior, she was exhausted. Wiping
the hair from her eyes, she went to wash and to stretch her aching limbs. The inside had
grown overwarm and she welcomed the brisk cool air of the outside. She walked down to
the bubbling stream not far from her cottage and she knelt by the edge to scoop the water
up in her hands.
She filled a bowl full of fresh water and then headed back to the cottage. Then she
washed the wound down once more before applying the thick poultice to the stitched
flesh. She folded over several strips of material to fashion a thick bandage and then
holding it to his side, she awkwardly wound the much longer strips around his waist to
hold the bandage in place.
If only she could sit him up, it would make the task much easier. Deciding there
was no reason she couldn’t lift him to a sitting position, she tugged at his head and then
put her entire body behind him to shove upward.
He sagged forward and more blood seeped between the stitches. Working quickly,
she wound the strips tightly around his midsection until she was satisfied that everything
would stay as she’d positioned it.
Then she eased him gently back to the floor until his head rested on one of the
small pillows. She smoothed the hair from his brow and fingered the braid that hung from
his temple.
Drawn by the beauty of his face, she ran her finger over his cheekbone and to his
jaw. He truly was a beautiful man. Perfectly formed and fashioned. A strong warrior
honed by the fires of battle.
She wondered about the color of his eyes. Blue, she speculated. With that dark
hair, blue would be mesmerizing, but it was just as likely they were brown.
As if deciding to answer her unspoken question, his eyelids flipped open. His
stare was unfocused, but she was mesmerized by the pale green orbs surrounded by dark
lashes that only added to his beauty.
Beauty. Clearly she needed to come up with a better term. He would be mortally
offended by a woman calling him beautiful. Handsome. Aye. But handsome didn’t begin
to aptly describe the warrior.
“Angel,” he croaked out. “I’ve gone to heaven, aye. ’Tis the only explanation for
beauty such as this.”
She felt a prick of pleasure until she remembered that just earlier he was likening
her to hell. With a sigh she smoothed her hand over the warrior’s unshaven chin. The
bristle abraded her palm and she briefly wondered what it would feel like on other parts
of her body.
Then she promptly blushed and pushed the sinful thoughts from her mind.
“Nay, warrior. ’Tis not heaven you’ve found. You’re still of this world, although
you might be feeling as though you’ve been gripped by the fires of hell.”
“ ’Tis not possible for an angel such as you to reside in the bowels of hell,” he
said in a slurred voice.
She smiled and soothed her palm over his cheek again. He turned and nuzzled
into her hand, his eyes closing as an expression of pleasure settled on his features.
“Sleep now warrior,” she whispered. “ ’Tis God’s truth you have a long recovery
ahead of you.”
“You mustn’t leave, lass,” he murmured.
“Nay, warrior. I won’t leave you.”