A Warrior's Soul Read online




  Table of Contents

  A Warrior’s Soul

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Afterword

  A Warrior’s Soul

  Highland Heartbeats

  Aileen Adams

  Contents

  A Warrior’s Soul

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Chapter 31

  Afterword

  A Warrior’s Soul

  Book Eight of the Highland Heartbeats Series!

  This warrior’s soul isn’t meant to be alone...

  He’s a former warrior turned soldier of fortune hired to escort a Highland shrew to an Englishman.

  She’s the niece of a Highland laird betrothed to English royalty against her will.

  She’s hardheaded, fierce, and independent.

  He’s hellbent on delivering her to her destination. Until he discovers her destination is a version of hell he wouldn’t wish on his worst enemy, and certainly not on this spirited Highland lass.

  1

  “Can we ride no faster?” Rodric’s voice was almost a growl.

  Brice MacDougal exchanged a look with his brother Fergus, whose notoriously thin patience was growing thinner by the moment. It showed.

  On the other hand, Brice found Rodric’s anxiety humorous. It was his nature to find humor in the truly ridiculous.

  And at this moment, Rodric’s behavior fell well within the ridiculous.

  Rodric rode in front of Brice and Fergus, every movement jerky and sharp as though he were nursing a grudge, and hardly able to behave himself as a result.

  Didn’t he know that when he acted that way, it only made his friends want to slow to a crawl?

  It wasn’t that any of them wished for Rodric to delay in seeing his bride for the first time in a week. They were in agreement that his marriage was a fine, solid decision. The best he could’ve made. Rodric and Caitlin were clearly meant to be man and wife, as they had been since childhood.

  Brice would never begrudge a friend his happiness—especially a friend who meant as much as Rodric did to him. He’d never been one to experience anything more than a brief flash of jealousy from time to time, and that was always in the most extreme cases.

  So, it was not Brice’s jealousy of Rodric’s marriage which was beginning to make Rodric rather unbearable.

  It was the way Rodric insisted on conducting himself of late.

  Not an evening had gone by without him mentioning her at least once. Wondering aloud what she might be doing, how she might be feeling. Wondering if Sorcha’s home was truly the best place in which she should spend her time while the four of them were out, earning a living.

  It had gotten to the point where, once, Fergus had asked, “And who is Caitlin again?” when Rodric mentioned her name.

  They’d all laughed, including the new bridegroom, but that laughter held an edge of truth to it. Perhaps Rodric should’ve taken time away from their work in order to be with her.

  Not a possibility, unfortunately, for he needed the silver as much as they did—nay, more, as he wished to secure land for his bride and his family.

  The modest farmhouse came into view once they made the turn from the main road, with its lush trees on either side, to the narrower trail which led to the McMannis farm. The land was open, sitting as it did at the apex of the fork in the River Nevis.

  It was a lovely sight, to be sure, especially since the four of them were rather filthy and seemed to be holding a competition with the horses for who could smell the worst. So far, the animals were winning, but it was a close contest.

  A homecooked meal and a night spent indoors—even if it meant sleeping on Sorcha’s kitchen floor—would be a treat.

  Rodric rode ahead, as Brice had known he would. The MacDougal brothers chuckled to themselves, perhaps more than a bit relieved that their friend would finally be with his wife and leave them alone about her for the time being.

  “Do ye think we ought to wait outside for a moment?” Fergus wondered aloud as they approached, Rodric already having disappeared through the kitchen door.

  Inside the house, something clattered and broke. “I think we ought to give them more than just a moment,” Brice laughed. “Come. Let us water the horses and perhaps have a bath.”

  “You could certainly use one,” Fergus observed, nose wrinkling in distaste as though he did not also carry the stench of horse and sweat.

  The two of them grumbled good-naturedly as they tended the horses, hobbling them in a particularly thick patch of clover before stripping off their filthy clothing. “I must say, I’m not sorry to be doing this,” Brice groaned as he stepped into the cool, clear water. He’d never been one to believe in an afterlife, much less anything better waiting for him in some far-off invisible place, if such a place existed, however…

  A high, shrill voice cut through the heavy, late summer air. “What do the two of you think you’re doing there?”

  Brice was already in the river up to the middle of his waist, but Fergus hadn’t yet gone in past his knees. The strident female voice made him stumble in surprise, sending him splashing full-bodied into the water.

  Brice laughed at his brother, but Sorcha did not. “Where have you lot been that you do not know of the rains which have swelled the river? It’s dangerous, being in there!” She approached the bank with hands on her hips, glaring at the two of them.

  “The current is strong, but not overly strong,” Brice assured her.

  Fergus shook his head, flipping back the soaked hair which had hung in his face when he emerged from the rushing river. “You’ve a talent for surprising a man,” he observed, crouching low for the sake of modesty.

  “Och, I’d have held my tongue longer for the sake of observing ye if I hadn’t been concerned for your safety.” Sorcha smoothed back the gray-streaked hair which a steady breeze had pulled loose from her braid. “The pair of ye looked so pleased to be washing the filth from yourselves.”

  Brice had never possessed much patience with women—they were beyond his realm of understanding and so rarely relied on sense and logic—but Caitlin’s aunt was a different matter. She was a lovely person, which perhaps was the highest compliment he could pay.

  He’d known man
y who were not nearly so lovely, after all.

  “We’ll be safe enough,” he grinned. “And if I feel the current pulling on me a bit too strong, I’ll be sure to call out to ye for help.”

  She shook her head. “I’d give your head the dunking it needs, more like.” She glanced toward the house, a sly smile crossing her face. “I suppose my nephew and niece are inside.”

  “Aye, which is why we’re outside,” Fergus snorted.

  “I’m certain ye could both use the bath after spending your days in the saddle.” She ran a hand over the soft, brown flank of the gelding Brice had been riding since they departed Drimarben and crooned soft words into its ear. “I would’ve preferred my nephew join ye prior to spending time with his wife inside my home, but I cannot ask for everything.”

  “He ought to scrub the place out after spreading his stench about,” Brice suggested. “I’d be more than happy to order him for ye.”

  “Aye, I’m certain of it,” Sorcha grinned. “I’ve never seen a lot so ready to break each other’s private bits.”

  Fergus snorted in disbelief at the older woman’s turn of phrase, perhaps even a slight twinge of embarrassment. But not Brice. If anything, it only made him like her more. He could understand why Rodric had taken to her in such a manner.

  At least his friend had a kind, motherly woman to call his aunt after having married Caitlin. She’d always been a mother figure to him, Brice knew, and it meant a tremendous lot to him that she was still part of his life.

  So, too, did it mean much to know his new wife had a home to live in and someone to watch after her while he went off to his work.

  Brice was a reasonable man. He knew his friend was loyal, steadfast, brave. He also knew he’d rather be home with his wife if at all possible. It pained him endlessly to spend even a day away from her.

  Many were the nights when they’d spoken amongst themselves, determined to draw him out by telling old stories and jokes when he’d fallen into silence after speaking of her.

  To his credit, he’d done his best to play along. Never one to dampen the mood if he could help it. But Rodric’s heart wasn’t in it, just the same, and they’d given up after a while. Best to let him stew in his thoughts, far away from wherever the men happened to be camped for the night.

  Just as it had before, it would be a difficult parting when the time came for them to leave. Only the fact that Quinn hadn’t met them at the house—meaning he’d still be in the village or on his way back—allowed them to linger as they were.

  “Well?” Sorcha asked, gazing down at the two bathers from the slightly elevated bank. “What will ye be embarking on this time?”

  Brice shrugged, careful to keep himself far enough below the surface to maintain even a slight sense of modesty. While he enjoyed conversing with her, he wished she’d find something else to do at the moment, but the house was likely off-limits just then, and she wouldn’t wish to intrude on the newlyweds.

  “We cannot say just yet,” he explained. “Quinn rode ahead to the village, so he might get word of another task for us.”

  “And you’re certain he won’t dally?” she asked with a knowing gleam in her eye. So, Caitlin and she had talked about the men with whom her husband spent his time. Quinn was notorious among them for his roving eye and way with women.

  “I’d like to see what he could find in terms of companionship with the small bit of silver in his pouch,” Fergus laughed. “We made certain of it. I don’t trust him on his own after so many days spent outside the acquaintance of lasses.”

  “A wise decision,” Sorcha smiled, nodding. Then, she turned in the direction of the house and cupped her hands around her mouth. “I’ll be needing to prepare dinner for my guests, in case anyone inside the house cares! I’ll want to enter in a minute or two!”

  The door opened moments later, Caitlin’s familiar black hair fanning out when the breeze caught it. “You can come in any time you like, and many thanks for the embarrassment!”

  Brice raised an eyebrow as Sorcha headed toward the house. “Hmm. Already finished up in there. Perhaps our friend was a bit more… enthusiastic than we gave him credit for.”

  The brothers did their best not to chuckle knowingly as Rodric advanced. His brow was deeply lined, his mouth a sharp slash across the lower part of his face.

  “You won’t, if you know what’s good for ye,” Rodric announced as he stripped down and plunged into the river, washing his clothing as he washed himself. “Here,” he said, tossing two small cakes of brown soap to the men.

  “Many thanks,” Brice replied, glancing at his brother. Fergus shrugged.

  “She’s feeling poorly,” Rodric explained without being prompted. “Told me she’s been losing the contents of her stomach all morning.”

  “Och, that’s a shame,” Brice muttered as he washed. “Poor timing, to be certain.”

  “That isn’t what bothers me,” Rodric replied as he savagely washed his tunic. His movements were sharp, jerky, making Brice wonder if he shouldn’t warn against rubbing holes in the already worn cloth. “It’s that she’s been ill like this for days. And there is no way for me to know about it when she is. Anything could happen here. Anything at all.”

  It was a familiar concern, one which the rest of them were unable to offer a solution to. Just as they’d always been unable to do before.

  The way Brice saw it, life was full of choices. This or that. Live in front of the hearth, comfortable, growing fat and soft over time as a life of action and activity faded away until it was nothing but the vaguest memory, or continue to travel across the countryside in search of new adventures—while, not unimportantly, providing for one’s family.

  In Rodric’s case, choosing to make a living as he did meant spending time away from his new bride. He might instead decide to accept his brother Padraig’s offer to make a home in the Anderson clan—according to the order of his birth, Rodric as the eldest surviving son should be the one to lead the clan, not Padraig, the youngest son.

  However, Rodric wanted nothing to do with clan leadership.

  Brice could understand that.

  Still, after three months of taking on assignments, stopping at Sorcha’s farm whenever possible, it seemed to all of them that Rodric should have adjusted to being without Caitlin.

  After all, as Quinn had made the grave mistake of pointing out, the couple had spent seven years apart after Rodric left to join the Army.

  Rodric hadn’t taken well to that bit of flippancy, and Quinn had earned himself a split lip. As it turned out, while they’d easily jested with one another for as long as they’d been acquainted, there were certain topics a man did not appreciate being used as fodder for jokes.

  Brice knew well when to hold his tongue, and he did so while the three of them finished bathing. He ran the soap between his hands and lathered his beard, then the thick hair which hung down to his collar. A mix of brown and red, more of the latter than the former.

  At the very least, his friend’s inability to stay away from his wife meant the occasional warm, fresh meal from Sorcha’s kitchen and the promise of a pack full of food to take along when they left.

  The smell of roasting lamb greeted Brice as the three of them walked from the river toward the house, making his mouth water in anticipation. It would be a pleasant afternoon and evening, to be sure. He was glad Quinn took so long in the village, as they’d been on horseback for nearly a solid fortnight.

  Even a man whose life had been spent more or less outdoors, no matter the time of year, appreciated the promise of rest.

  Rodric was first inside the house, followed by Fergus. The pair were immediately put to work by Sorcha, who ordered them to scrub potatoes and turnips as Caitlin still wasn’t feeling herself.

  Brice laughed at the look on his brother’s face—the only time he’d ever spent in a kitchen was while eating.

  Caitlin did not allow Brice to enter, catching him by the arm before he could cross the threshold. The trouble
d look in her eye put him on his guard. He allowed her to lead him behind the house, where the land came to a point at the river’s fork. It was a lovely scene, to be sure, with the tall grass swaying and rippling in the breeze, stretching out before them.

  Caitlin Anderson didn’t look as though the landscape gave her much pleasure. She looked rather put out, in fact.

  She took a deep breath, closing her eyes briefly as she did. “Forgive me,” she whispered, “but I needed to get away from the house for a bit. While the meat is roasting, I cannot seem to avoid feeling ill.”

  Her skin had a strange, gray color to it, and he began to wonder if there wasn’t something to her strange illness, after all. Perhaps Rodric’s worry wasn’t entirely without merit.

  “Do you need to sit?” he asked, casting his eyes about for something suitable.

  She shook her head, eyes opening. “No, thank you. It’s kind of ye to ask. How was your journey?”

  He knew what she was asking. “He did well. No danger to him. Did I not offer my word?”

  Something he never would’ve admitted to Rodric—or, frankly, to any of the others. The morning the group had left on their first mission after the wedding, Caitlin had all but held a dirk to his throat and forced him to give his word to protect her husband.

  He’d wanted to tell her the dirk was unnecessary. The four of them and any other of the men they’d lived and fought and traveled alongside had protected one another for years. There was no hope for any of them to survive otherwise.