What else might they need? She had no food or drink here in her chamber. She glanced around the room and spotted bricks of peat lying by the hearth. They were lightweight and could be exchanged for a night's lodging or burned for heat if necessary. She crammed five into the large pouch that the bulky material of her arisaid made when it bunched out over her belt and took the two extra candles lying on the mantel.
"We must slip out during the céilidh. Come," Isobel whispered, picking up the lantern and heading toward the door.
In the corridor, Nolan's bearded, wiry manservant approached in his worn, belted plaid. Isobel's heart rate spiked. Once Beitris had exited the room, Isobel closed the door and stood before it. She prayed Nolan made no sound inside.
"M'lady, have you seen Master MacLeod?" the servant asked. "His wife is wondering where he got off to."
Chapter Two
Her heart beating frantically, Isobel tried to slow her rapid pulse by taking in another deep breath before she had to meet the wary gaze of Nolan's manservant in the dimly lit stone corridor.
"Nay, I know not where Master MacLeod is," Isobel said, hoping her voice was steady enough to make the lie convincing.
The servant gave a brief bow and continued along the corridor.
"I knew someone would soon notice the knave missing from the great hall and come looking for him," Isobel whispered to her maid as she led the way down the narrow turnpike back stairs.
"I'm praying he believed you, m'lady," Beitris said. "And that he doesn't look into your chamber."
They emerged in the overheated kitchen on the ground floor. The sweating servants working there were too busy to notice them… until one pushed a platter of sliced bread into Beitris's hands. "Make yourself useful and take that to the hall," she ordered in a grouchy tone.
"Aye."
The kitchen servant went back to her chores.
Beitris turned slowly, then set the empty platter on the worktable opposite. She dragged Isobel hastily toward the exit.
"Where did the bread go?" Isobel whispered, hoping to pilfer it for their next meal.
"Shh." Beitris opened the door. Once outside in the blustery air, she said, "In my arisaid. We'll need food, will we not?"
"Ah. A wise move." Thank goodness they wouldn't have to starve, at least not for a while. Chills raced down Isobel's spine just the same. Was it fear or the nippy wind?
Even if they managed to slip past the guards… what then? She knew naught about this part of the Highlands near Assynt. Indeed, a wee village lay south of here, not too far away. But would it be safe to stop there?
She tried to recall the path her brother and his party had taken when they brought Isobel and her maid here a fortnight ago. She only remembered a few villages here and there, several isolated crofts, and many tall, rugged mountains, interspersed with moors, fields and lochs. Beautiful but forbidding, especially with winter approaching.
Isobel prayed they could find enough crofters willing to give them a warm place to sleep each night until they reached Dornie. She remembered her brother Cyrus saying 'twas over a hundred miles and difficult travel by land. But if they had enough coins to pay the fare, they could take a galley part of the way, as they had on the journey here. The port at Ullapool was not so far, perhaps twenty-five miles.
Outside in the brisk air, full night had fallen. The sparkling frosted grass crunched beneath her leather slippers as they descended a sloping knoll on the small island where the castle sat. They proceeded across the stone paved courtyard and carefully toward the gate. Isobel pulled the plaid of her arisaid more securely over her head like a cowl to conceal the upper part of her face. The guard could not recognize her as a lady or his chief's future bride, else he'd detain her for a certainty.
Isobel held her breath, but the guard barely gave her bulky, ratty clothing a second glance before he opened the gate. Thankfully, he viewed two maids traveling back to the village as nothing unusual. Isobel breathed a sigh of relief as she and Beitris proceeded through and across the narrow bridge over a small arm of the loch.
A hard gust of icy north wind whipped at their clothing.
"Walk faster. We must hurry," Isobel said, tugging her maid along the muddy trail. "They could find him at any moment and give chase."
"Oh, m'lady, 'tis growing colder and the wind harsher. We must find a place to spend the night afore long."
"Aye, we will."
"I'm glad you're certain of that. I'm not."
Isobel always believed things would turn out well. She'd gotten that outlook from her mother. But in the end, things had not turned out well for her mother when she'd died of a fever six years ago. Isobel's throat closed and the wind near froze the tears welling in her eyes.