Reading Online Novel

Surrender to the Highlander(Terri Brisbin)(42)



She threw her cloak over her shoulders and walked to the ruins of the  old church at the end of her father's estate. The winds blew strong but  not too cold yet, and she enjoyed the bite of it. When she reached the  piles of rocks, for that was all that was left now of the circular  church dedicated nearly two centuries ago to Saint Nicholas, she sat and  let the sun beat down on her.

Her maid Brynja had been replaced by an older woman who did not like to  walk and who began complaining within minutes of leaving the house.  Margriet ignored her as long as possible because her walks were one of  the few pleasures left now that her life had fallen apart. Oh, she did  not downplay her part in her own failures, but she wondered if this was  her penance or if it had not yet begun. On thinking about that question  and about the real Thorfinn, who was only now showing himself to her,  she thought it had not yet started.

Finally when the woman's nagging ruined the beautiful day, Margriet  turned and headed back to the house. She paused to watch some boats pass  by close to shore. Seeing them now always made her wonder about Rurik.

She could not-nay, indeed, did not-blame him for the way things worked  out. He'd been honest with her about his dreams and his need for the  things his father offered him. And when the question was put to him,  when he could have done more good by lying, he told the truth. He chose  everything he'd wanted in his entire life over love.

Pushing her hair out of her face, she watched as the larger ship sailed  on past the docks and a smaller one turned to maneuver into place there.  It seemed like a lifetime ago when she'd arrived here to return to her  father's home, hoping to find compassion and the truth. Oh, she'd found  the truth, but it was not what she had hoped for.

She did not matter.

Not to her father, who exiled her for ten years and then abandoned her when she caused his honor a blow.

Not to her betrothed, who only wanted the obscenely large dowry that Erengisl was providing to soothe the insult to his honor.

And not to the man she foolishly fell in love with.

That hurt the most, in spite of knowing he'd warned her of the choice he  would make, and in spite of knowing that she'd damaged his pride and  betrayed his trust, several times in just the short time since they'd  met.

She sighed then, a signal to Aslief to begin complaining about her  dawdling again. She turned and followed the path back to the house,  knowing that one long day would lead to another and another, and nothing  could change the situation.

She did not matter to the only man who mattered to her.

Margriet entered the house to find that visitors had arrived. Thorfinn  and his men sat at her father's table, drinking ale … and waiting for her.  Confused by Magnus's presence with them, she was just about to greet  him when they stood and left, taking every servant with them. Then only  she and Thorfinn remained and Margriet feared her penance had only just  begun.



Rurik rode as though the devil was on his trail, when he knew that the  devil he sought was already ahead of him. The message had been left  while he'd been out seeing to his father's business and now Thorfinn and  his men had a two-hour advantage over him. Sven, Donald and Leathen  rode with him, silent, all remembering the servant girl's body and  thinking of Margriet's fate if they did not reach her in time.

No one complained. No one slowed their pace or asked to stop. No one  voiced the fear that ate at their guts as they rode. Finally as the sun  reached its highest point in the sky, they reached the hills beyond  which lay Gunnar's estates and Margriet.

With only a hand signal, they followed Rurik's orders, dismounted and  followed him on foot, leaving the horses hobbled in the field. They  crawled the final hundred or so yards so they would not be seen. The  house was surrounded by more guards than they expected and they were  seriously outnumbered.                       
       
           



       

While they hurriedly planned their attack, a scream rang out … one they  each recognized from when she'd fallen in the river on their journey  there. Any hope of surprising those on guard fell at the sound of her  terror.

With swords and daggers drawn, Rurik screamed out his own cry and led the men to the house.



"I will not stand here and let you murder my child, Thorfinn."

Margriet wiped the blood that streamed down her face with the back of  her hand and positioned herself now with her back to the wall. At least  that way, she could see him coming at her.

He'd sent everyone out, except his man Sigurd, and then he'd tried to  batter her down. She'd fought back, though not enough to keep him from  bloodying her nose and mouth and landing a powerful blow on her back. He  could have ended it much faster with a blade or sword, but he seemed to  enjoy delivering the pain with his hands … and his feet. She'd dodged two  kicks aimed at the babe in her belly before blocking herself behind the  long table.

"I did not ask you to, Margriet. Truly I like the challenge of catching you before I beat it out of you."

"Holy Mother of God!" she cried, still not believing that he was so evil as to do that. "Why?" she cried. "Why?"

When he grabbed hold of the table between them and shoved it aside, she  knew he was. She still brandished the leg of a chair he'd thrown at her  as she ran and hoped it would be strong enough to defend herself with.  Margriet swung it as he approached, but he waited and grabbed it from  her hands as it swung by him.

"I do not need that bastard at all and, now that your dowry is in my coffers, I need you less."

She had no place to run now. He grabbed by the hair and dragged her to  him. He raised his fist, but Magnus came running in. "Magnus! Help me!"  she screamed to him.

"My lord, he is here."

My lord? He called Thorfinn "lord" now? She struggled in his arms,  trying to tear herself from him but she was lost against his superior  strength.

"Sigurd, go and greet my brother," he ordered. "I will finish here." The  brute bowed then to Thorfinn and left, heading, she knew, to kill  Rurik.

"You will not get away with this, Thorfinn," she said. "The servants know. Someone will tell my father. Or yours."

He dragged her out away from the wall and tossed her on the floor. She  tried to crawl to the door, but he feinted with kicks that kept her  where he wanted her. "Did you not hear the warnings about the outlaws  lately seen near the coast? They have been attacking some of the  outlying cottages," he said with a smile. "I did warn your father to  assign extra men, but he did not heed my warning."

He was about to make what she thought would be the killing attack, when  Magnus stepped from the shadows and came up behind him. Thorfinn never  saw the blow and fell in a crumpled heap at her feet.

"Come, lady. I must get you out of here," he said, reaching for her and trying to help her to her feet.

She found she could not stand on her own and it took several minutes  before she stood. Just as he began guiding her to the door, Thorfinn  came to and jumped up behind Magnus.

"I think not, Magnus," he said in deadly quiet as he plunged his dagger into the man's back.

Margriet watched in horror as Magnus sank to his knees before her, blood  pouring from his wound onto the floor. "Forgive me, lady," he begged.  With his last bit of strength, Magnus waited until Thorfinn grabbed his  shoulders to shove him out of the way and plunged his own dagger into  Thorfinn's chest. "Tell Rurik I served him at the last."

Both men fell back and Margriet stayed hunched down on the floor. The  sounds of fighting outside reached her, but she could not move. Curling  up on the floor, she could feel herself slipping away when she heard a  bloodcurdling scream.

Rurik was here and she knew she was safe now.



He sent for Gunnar once they'd fought their way in and found Margriet  unconscious on the floor. His heart stopped in that moment when he saw  the two men and all the blood, but she murmured a sound as he picked her  up to take her away from this. Within a day, Gunnar arrived, put his  house back to rights and arranged for Margriet's care. Rurik discovered  later that it had been her walk that saved her that day, for it was the  delay he needed to catch up with Thorfinn.                       
       
           



       

And Magnus's actions, as Margariet had related them, and his decision to  turn against Thorfinn in those last moments, had contributed to her  rescue.

The story that Thorfinn planned to use to cover her murder worked well  for his own demise and Erengisl promised the other landowners along the  coast that he would add additional guards to protect them from such  marauders. If he suspected or guessed the real cause, he never spoke of  it. Although it galled him that Thorfinn should be thought of as a hero  for trying to defend his betrothed against an attack, Rurik could accept  it since he was dead and would not be a threat to her again.