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Highland Devil (Murray Family #22)(2)

By:Hannah Howell


Freya made a small chirping sound as Mora thought hard on where she was  going. The clan she sought was a relation of her mother's, but Mora had  only met them twice. All she could recall about them was a lot of boys  and every shade of red hair. She prayed they recalled her mother or she  could find herself facing a lot of confused and angry men.

Shaking her head, she fought to recall how hard her father and mother  had worked to make certain she knew how to get to Dubheidland. The  moment they had suspected trouble from her uncle's sons, they had begun  to speak on where to run to. They had been very adamant about it being  the best place for her to run to be safe, so for their sake she pushed  aside her doubts and fears and started walking.         

     



 

When Freya snapped her head around to look behind them, Mora turned and  headed into the trees. The cat had proven to be very good at warning her  of trouble. Mora listened carefully but it was several minutes before  she heard the sound of a horse approaching. Freya crouched down into the  bag, flattened her ears against her head, but made no sound.

A single rider came into view astride a magnificent horse. The animal  had a white tail, a white mane, and a blaze of white down his face, but  the rest of him appeared to be black. In a soft, deep voice the man  spoke idly to the animal, and the way the animal's ears moved made Mora  ready to believe that it was actually listening to the man.

Once the rider was out of sight, Mora looked back down the road and  listened carefully but neither heard nor saw any sign of someone else  coming. She glanced down at Freya only to find the cat idly washing  herself, so Mora relaxed. She was as certain as she could be that there  would be no more surprises, so she slowly returned to the road and  started walking again.

"Mayhap I should have spoken up when that man rode by, Freya. He was but  one man and I didnae recognize him as an acquaintance of my  thrice-cursed cousins. Even if I had not met him before, I would surely  have recognized that horse. He may have even offered us a ride. It would  be much nicer if we could ride to Dubheidland."

Glancing at her pet, who was giving her what Mora could only see as an  expression of disgust, she grimaced. "And, mayhaps not. Still, it would  have been faster to be able to ride at least some of the way to our  destination. And I would have someone to talk to aside from a cat. And,  he could have provided some warmth, too," she grumbled as the air grew  even colder and she tugged her cloak more tightly around herself. "Ye  are all tucked up in the bag and have fur so ye dinnae notice, but there  is a sharp bite to the air tonight."

Watching the road so that she did not stumble, Mora forced herself to  keep a sharp listen out for the sound of someone approaching from any  direction, although she wondered why she bothered as Freya could hear  the sound of hooves long before she did. She carefully thought through  all that had just happened and made herself believe it, forcing away all  thought of how they were family. Her cousins wanted her and Andrew  dead. She had not truly caught her parents' growing fear until they were  dead, killed on the road back from the market. Even then it had been  too easy to believe it had just been thieves. Then her cousins had come  for her and Andrew and actually boasted of their killing of her parents.

Thinking back to that moment, she realized at least one of her cousins  might not have been in complete accord with his brothers. Murdoch was  just eighteen and, even through her own shock, she had seen how stunned  he had looked at Robert's boasting. He had then protested when his  brothers had gone out to kill her goats. Unfortunately, he was also the  smallest of the group and Robert had just slapped him around until he  could only sag against the side of the house. She doubted she could  count on him to give her much more help than that.

Another stroke of luck was that her goats were not the completely  brainless beasts the cousins had anticipated. They killed a few but the  fear and blood of the murdered goats sent the others racing for the  fence, which they easily cleared, and then they disappeared into the  forest. She had had the time to send her little brother off, for which  she was grateful. Murdoch had watched her and said nothing, then  motioned with his head for her to move away.

As she had grabbed some things to take with her and picked up her cat,  the others had returned. They had tried to slaughter her goats and  Robert had then tossed her cat toward the fireplace. Mora could taste  the fear she had suffered thinking she was about to watch her pet get  burned alive, but Freya had twisted as she had flown through the air to  land hard just to the side of the fireplace. Mora had grabbed her cat  and, dodging Robert's attempt to stab her but still feeling the bite of  his knife, shoved her cat in her bag, then bolted for the door, while  Robert cursed and shrieked, his brothers trying to tend to him. She had  raced down the road and hidden away, something she was getting very  tired of doing, for she had begun weeks ago, when her parents had warned  her there was a threat from her cousins.

She had briefly considered running to their father, her Uncle Tomas, but  shook aside the thought. The man was still sick but she had no idea how  bad he was. He could no longer be sensible enough to understand what  she said or strong enough to stop his sons if they came after her. He  had also proven impossible to convince that Robert could do anything  wrong. Even her mother had complained about it. It was better to make  her way to her mother's cousins in Dubheidland and pray that they  believed her and were ready to help her.         

     



 

After walking for what felt like miles, the small wound Robert had  inflicted stinging badly, she stopped and sniffed the air, realizing she  smelled the hint of smoke. Unsure what caused it, she scurried into the  trees. As soon as she felt certain she was hidden in the trees well  enough not to be seen by anyone on the road, she stopped and sniffed the  air again. The smell of wood smoke was still there and had become just a  little stronger.

Mora looked carefully through the trees trying to see where the smoke  could be coming from. She finally spotted a faint flicker of light to  her left. Moving forward as quietly as she could, she drew near enough  to recognize a small campfire. Then she saw the horse. The animal she  saw was enough to tell her who was crouched by that fire. A moment later  the scent of what he was cooking drifted her way and her stomach  growled. It smelled as if he had caught himself a rabbit. Mora was  sorely tempted to walk right over to him and ask for a share.

Knowing that would be foolish, she turned her attention to his horse.  With a mount like that she could keep well out of her cousins' reach and  probably get to Dubheidland quickly, even with her poor riding skills.  It would certainly be better and faster than walking every step of the  way. There would be less need for camping out in the night all by  herself as well. She looked back at the man and prayed he would wander  away just for a little while.

She crept as close as she dared to his campsite, then settled down to  watch for him to walk away. Mora decided she would not need much time to  take the horse. As soon as she mounted the animal it would be easy  enough to avoid the man if he came back and tried to catch her. Once she  was on the road she would definitely have a strong advantage. Studying  the horse carefully, she planned out the quickest way to saddle the  animal, attach her bag, and then mount. While waiting for the man to  leave for a short while, she kept going over the plan in the hope that  she would be able to move fast.

Her mind kept reminding her that stealing a man's horse could get one  hanged. Mora decided to ignore it. If she let it linger it would make  her afraid and that could cause her to fail. Despite having many good  reasons to be afraid, she refused to allow that fear to settle inside  her.

The man abruptly stood up and stretched, then scratched his bottom. She  rolled her eyes. Her brothers always did the same, stretch and scratch.  Then she pressed her lips together to hide the sigh begging to be let  out.

She missed her brothers, Niall and David. Although she and her parents  had written to them several times, and she had written again after her  parents were killed, there had been no reply. They had gone to France to  fight, to join one of the mercenary bands there. Mora had the chilling  feeling they were dead. She would not be surprised if, when her cousins  learned where her brothers were going, they had made certain they would  never return. If her brothers had joined with some mercenaries, she  suspected it would not be difficult to get a few of those men to kill  two of their own kind for the right coin.

Staring in the direction of the fire as she thought, Mora was slowly  pulled out of her musings. The man stood with his hands on his hips  staring into the fire and frowning. He was a fine-looking man from what  little she could see. The flickering light from the fire made it  difficult to see his face though. She was much more interested in his  face. She had seen far too many men who had a fine, manly build that any  woman would appreciate-only to discover they had a face that looked as  if they had lost too many fights or a horse had sat on it.