Blythe Gifford

Return of the Border Warrior


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had left. Ahead of him, Rob and Bessie leaned towards each other, shoulder to shoulder, eyes on the life ahead of them.

      A life in which he had no place.

      Cate, to his right, was dry eyed, but none wearing the Brunson brown and blue had more vengeance in their gaze than she. More vengeance, he thought, than sorrow.

      No, Rob would not, could not yield, he feared, as long as Cate held him to his father’s word. She was the key.

      Well, women were changeable. The king’s own mother had sided with the English, the French and the Scots in turn, changing sides as easily as she changed husbands. This Cate would be no more steadfast if he gave her the right persuasion.

      He just had to figure out what persuasion that was.

      ***

      Last night, the hall had been full of talk, laughter and tears. Today, the guests were gone and only Rob’s and Cate’s men remained. And the silence of sorrow.

      John escaped the tower, even the courtyard, unable to feign regret he did not feel. Outside, in fresh air, he would be able to think clearly on the challenge of Cate Gilnock.

      He did not need her acceptance. He did not need, or want, to touch the woman. He simply needed her to release vengeance he still did not fully understand. He feared, however, that peeling away her layers could be even harder than peeling off her clothes.

      Beyond the tower walls, the Galloway ponies dotted the field, left to feed themselves until the coldest weather came.

      Let them find their own forage, his father would say. Makes them strong.

      He paused to pat one of the bays on his broad, sturdy chest and the pony let him, nosing for a treat. John held up empty hands. ‘Not today, boy. Next time.’

      In apology, he swept his hand down the reddish hair of the beast’s back, feeling warmth beneath his palm. When they were boys, Rob used to challenge him to mount a pony bareback and race around the tower. John won often enough that Rob dropped his dare. He beat his brother because he was more flexible, able to communicate with the horse, rather than forcing the creature to his will.

      He grinned. He could probably do it still.

      Seized with the memory, he murmured a word or two and stepped away to allow a running start. The pony waited patiently as John approached, jumped, then pushed himself up and swung his leg over to settle astride.

      Well trained, the pony lifted his head and waited his command. No saddle held John on. No reins helped him guide. And no armour separated him from the feel of his mount’s muscles, flexing beneath him.

      He guided with his legs and, by shifting his weight, headed out to where the Liddel Water skipped down the valley. He was surprised to discover that, once mounted, he remembered paths his head had long forgotten.

      Following the stream, he saw Cate in the distance, wading across in water that reached near to her waist. She carried a wad of cloth and kept glancing downstream, as if looking for someone.

      Instead of calling out, he stopped the pony in a thicket of trees where they could not be seen, curious.

      She dropped the cloth on the other side of the stream, then waded back across. Man she might try to be, but now he knew the truth. Now, he could appreciate the shades of ash and flax mixed in hair that did not reach shoulders too slender to be mistaken for a man’s. And as she climbed out of the stream, wet cloth clung below her waist, drawing his gaze to the place her legs met and putting him in mind of what might happen if she spread them for him. Strange that a place normally hidden behind a skirt should be so tempting when clothed in breeches.

      Pausing, shoulders hunched, she looked from tower to valley to hillside, as if wary of danger. Storwicks could be around any bend, true, but it was early in the season and still daylight. An attack was unlikely.

      His pony, trained to be silent and invisible, did not draw her eye. Then she turned her back on him and ran downstream to disappear around a bend and into the trees.

      Baffled, he urged the horse ahead, slowly, uncertain whether to follow. What was she doing with—?

      Before he could finish the thought, a sleuth dog in leather harness burst through the bushes, pulling Cate behind.

      The beast weighed more than she, if John were any judge. Nose to the ground, the dog dragged her with him as he followed the trail she had laid, turning abruptly to cross the water where she had, and pouncing on the bundle of cloth with his tail wagging when he reached the opposite bank.

      Well trained, he thought.

      ‘Good, Belde,’ she said, pulling a treat from her pocket for him to gobble. ‘Good dog.’

      And then she petted him with more affection than she’d shown to any two-legged creature.

      As they crossed the stream again, he dismounted and walked closer. But before he reached her, she heard his step over the rushing water, whirled and drew her dirk.

      Not drawn for him, he realised. She was a woman wary of any sound. He held up his hands, palms toward her, a gesture of peace. ‘No enemy. Only me.’

      She did not lower the blade. The softness she’d shown the hound did not extend to him. They reached the bank and the dog bounded over to him, then put his nose to John’s waist and started sniffing him up and down.

      John pushed him away to no avail. ‘What’s he doing?’

      ‘Getting to know you.’

      He took a step towards her and the dog, between them, started to growl, the hair on his neck standing straight.

      ‘What do you want?’ she asked. After four trips through the water, she was soaked. Only the quilted jack-of-plaites vest disguised her sex.

      He raised his eyes, fighting irritation. ‘Not a kiss. I promise.’ He had told her flatly he would not bed her. Could she tell his body was not listening? ‘Call off your dog and put down your dirk.’

      She sheathed the blade and her eyes flickered to the pony, standing patiently behind him. ‘You’re riding Norse. He’s a fast one.’

      Her tone gentled, as when she had spoken to the dog.

      ‘Do you work with the ponies, then?’

      ‘Aye.’ She walked over to the pony and stroked his neck. Her dog followed and sat squarely between Cate and John.

      Physical persuasion was futile, but the four-legged creatures seemed to be the chink in her armour. ‘You’re good with the animals.’

      She threw him a look of disgust. ‘I’ve found them to be kinder than people.’

      An odd statement. ‘I never thought animals had any feelings at all.’

      ‘At least they don’t kill their own.’

      He did not remind her that she was the one ready to kill Willie Storwick. ‘What possible quarrel might one sheep have against another?’ He laced the question with a smile, bending towards her.

      The dog rose, growling.

      ‘Sit, Belde,’ she said, grabbing his harness.

      The dog looked at her, wagged his tail and sat.

      John eyed him warily. Drooping ears and a wrinkled face gave the dog a lazy look, but he acted as if he would kill, if she asked.

      ‘He’s very protective of you,’ John said.

      ‘To the death,’ she answered, meeting John’s eyes. The gentleness she showed to the animals did not extend to him.

      He raised his brows. ‘A sleuth dog usually has an English hand on the leash.’ And behind him, a pack of riders tracking the reivers across rock and water.

      ‘Not this one.’ Cate wasted no more words than his brother.

      ‘How did you get him?’