A Sword Upon the Rose. Brenda Joyce
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Название: A Sword Upon the Rose

Автор: Brenda Joyce

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Историческая литература

Серия:

isbn: 9781474000543

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ What did this mean? To happen upon one of her visions this way?

      Screams sounded from within the manor.

      The Highlander heard them, too. He sheathed his sword and rushed to the door, which was burning. Flames shot from an adjacent window. He rammed his shoulder into the door.

      And then he suddenly turned and looked at the woods—as if he was looking at her.

      Alana stiffened.

      For it almost felt as if their gazes had met, which was impossible.

      Within a moment he had vanished inside the burning manor. Flames shot out from the walls near the door.

      Alana did not think twice. She began to run out of the trees, toward the battling men—toward the manor.

      He appeared in the doorway, a small boy in his arms. A woman and another child ran past him; he let them go first. As he ran out of the house, more of the flaming roof crashed down. He dived to the ground with the child, protecting the boy with his body.

      Alana tripped, fell, got up.

      He had risen, too, and was ushering the boy into his mother’s arms. Then he whirled to face her.

      This time, Alana knew she was entirely visible. This time, in spite of the warring men between them, she knew their eyes met.

      For one moment, she paused, breathing hard as they stared at one another, in surprise, in shock.

      And then she saw the man behind him. He was approaching rapidly, and was but a short distance away. His hair was shaggy and red.

      Her heart seemed to stop. This man meant to betray his fellow Highlander, meant to murder him. “Behind you!” she screamed.

      The Highlander whirled, sword in hand. Apparently he did not see any danger, for he faced her again. But the red-haired Scot held a dagger and his strides were unwavering....

      Alana tried again. “Behind you! Danger!” As she cried out, he whirled, and his assailant swiftly stabbed him in the chest. Almost simultaneously, the Highlander thrust his sword through the traitor, delivering a fatal blow. Slowly, the other man keeled over.

      The Highlander looked across the battle at her, staggered and fell. His blood stained the snow.

      Alana heard herself cry out. She began to run toward him again. The English knights who remained mounted were galloping away. Those on foot who could flee were doing so. All that remained was the small, victorious Highland army, the wounded, the dying and the dead.

      Alarm motivated her as never before. She had to swerve past bodies, and she tripped on a dead man’s outstretched arm. Someone tried to grab her; she dodged his hand. And then she reached him.

      She dropped to her knees in the snow, beside him. “You are hurt,” she cried.

      His blue gaze pierced hers, and he seized her wrist, hard. “Who are ye?”

      She felt mesmerized by his hard blue eyes. They were filled with suspicion. “You’re bleeding. Let me help.” But his grip was brutal—she could not move.

      “Ye wish to help?” he snarled. “Or do ye think to harm me?”

      ALANA’S TENSION WAS impossible to bear. He would not release her wrist, and his stare was colder now. “Dughall,” he said harshly, his gaze unwavering upon her face, “take the dagger from my chest.”

      “Aye, my lord.” A tall blond Highlander knelt and ruthlessly yanked the blade from the flesh and tendon where it was embedded.

      Alana cried out. The Highlander did not make a sound, although he paled and his grasp on her wrist eased as his blood spewed.

      Alana jerked free and seized the hem of her skirts; she pushed a wad of it down hard on his wound. What had he been thinking?

      “That was a fine way to remove the blade,” she said tersely. But the enemy blade had missed his heart; she was relieved to see the wound was high up, almost in his shoulder.

      He eyed her exposed knee as another man handed her a piece of linen. Alana quickly put it on his wound in place of her skirt. The wound continued to bleed. Dughall knelt, offering the warrior a flask. He took it with his right hand and drank.

      Now on both knees in the frozen snow, she shivered—but not from the cold. She was terribly aware of the Highlander she was trying to help. His presence—his proximity—seemed overwhelming. “Your wound needs cleaning. It needs stitches.”

      His blue eyes were ice. “Why would ye help me—a stranger?”

      She had no answer to give. She did not know why she was compelled to aid him. She did not know why she was worried. But he had clearly survived the attack—and she was relieved.

      She had no explanation for her relief, either.

      When she made no answer, his eyes darkened with suspicion. He struggled to stand. Instantly he reeled, as if he were a tree buffeted in the wind.

      “What are you doing?” she gasped, left holding the bloody linen. She rushed to him to brace him to stand.

      “Dughall, tell the men to raise our tents. We will spend the night here.” He did not glance at her, shaking her off, his gaze on the burning manor. It was mostly rubble and smoldering ash now, although some timbers still burned. He appeared satisfied. “No one will use this place against us now.”

      Alana recalled what she had heard about Bruce—how his armies left no stones standing. So it was true.

      He turned to Alana. “So yer an angel of mercy.” He was mocking.

      She flushed. He did not seem grateful for her aid. He seemed highly skeptical.

      “I could not let you bleed.”

      He turned as if he hadn’t heard her. “And, Dughall, get a needle and thread.”

      “Aye, Iain.” Dughall raced off.

      Her pulse was racing. His name was Iain. Why did that seem to matter to her? “I can see a simple knife wound will not kill you. You should sit back down, my lord.”

      “A true angel.” He eyed her. “Why not, mistress? Why not let a stranger bleed to death?”

      She did not know the answer herself!

      “Why were ye in the woods? Did ye flee the manor when we attacked?” He spoke sharply.

      “No.” She hesitated, now thinking about the fact that Eleanor was hiding in the woods, and it would be dark in another hour. And he was fighting for Robert Bruce. He had been in battle with Duncan’s men. It would be dangerous to reveal who she was, or where she had been going—or why. He was the enemy, even if she had been compelled to help him. “I was on my way to visit kin in Nairn.” A version of the truth would surely do.

      “Ye journey alone?” He was obviously СКАЧАТЬ