Laird MacInnes looked smug now. Gabriel decided he would kill him first.
"Are you responsible for beating this woman to death?"
He hadn't asked the question; he'd roared it.
The MacInnes leader frowned in reaction. "She ain't dead. She's breathing still."
"Are you responsible?" Gabriel demanded again.
"I am," the laird shouted back. "I surely am."
It sounded like a boast to Gabriel, who started to pull his sword free. Laird MacInnes noticed the action and suddenly realized his tenuous position. He hurried to explain his reasons for beating the woman.
"Clare MacKay was placed in my household by her father," he shouted. "She was pledged to marry my eldest son, Robert." He paused to nod at the soldier standing next to his mount before continuing on. "I was going to unite our two clans and become a power to be reckoned with, but the bitch was soiled three months past, MacBain, and by one of your own. It be no use denying the truth, for your plaid was spotted by three of my men. Clare MacKay spent a full night with the man. At first she lied and claimed she stayed the night with her cousins. I was fool enough to believe her. Once she discovered she was carrying, she had the gall to boast about her sin. Isn't that the way of it, Robert?"
"Aye, it is," his son answered. "I won't marry a whore," he bellowed. "A MacBain ruined her, a MacBain can have her."
After rendering his judgment, he turned his gaze to the woman. He spit at the ground near her, then moved forward to stand over the unconscious woman with his hands on his hips and a leer on his face.
He drew his booted foot back, then started to bring it forward, intent on giving the woman a hard kick.
An arrow stopped him cold. Robert let out a screech of pain and staggered back. The arrow was imbedded in his thigh. His hands moved to his leg as he turned, shouting still, to see who had injured him.
Johanna stood on the top step in front of the keep. Her gaze was fully directed on the soldier. She notched another arrow to the string of her bow and kept the man in her sights.
She waited for an excuse to kill him.
Everyone was watching her now. Gabriel had moved to intervene when Robert swung his leg back to kick the woman. The arrow struck the soldier before he could. He turned, saw the look on his wife's face, and immediately started toward her.
None of the others moved for a long minute. The Maclaurins were clearly stunned by what they'd just witnessed. The MacBains were just as surprised and certainly just as impressed.
The soldier she'd injured moved close to the woman. Johanna thought he was going to try to hurt her again.
She couldn't let that happen. "Try to kick her again, and by God, I'll put an arrow through your black heart."
The fury in her voice washed over the group of soldiers.
Robert immediately backed away. The priest hurried forward and knelt down beside the woman. He made the sign of the cross and whispered a blessing. "She's daft," Robert whispered.
Gabriel's followers heard his remark. Three of the MacBain soldiers started forward. Calum waved them back with a motion of his hand.
"Our laird will decide what's to be done," he ordered. Keith stood beside Calum. He couldn't restrain himself. "She isn't daft," he bellowed. "But I'll be certain to let our laird know your opinion of his wife."
"My son wasn't being insulting," Laird MacInnes defended. "Just speaking the truth. Look at her eyes. She's gone crazed all right. And over what, I ask you? 'Tis just a whore on the ground."
Gabriel wasn't paying any attention to anyone but his wife now. He reached the steps but didn't touch her. He moved to stand next to her side.
Johanna ignored her husband. She slowly turned until she had Laird MacInnes in her sights.
She was pleased to notice his ugly face turn stark white. His thick lips pinched into a pucker of worry.
"Which one of you beat this woman?"
The laird didn't answer her. He turned his gaze to his left and then to his right. It was as though he was looking for a means of escape.
"You may not kill him."
Gabriel gave his command in a low whisper only she could hear. Johanna didn't show any outward reaction to his order.
He repeated his command. She shook her head. She kept the laird in her sights when she spoke to her husband.
"Do you believe the woman deserved this treatment? Do you think she's less important than dull-witted oxen?"
"You know better than to ask me such questions," he countered. "Give me your bow and arrow."
"No."
"Johanna…"
"Look what they did!" she cried out.
The agony in her voice made his heart ache. His wife was close to completely losing her composure. He couldn't allow that to happen.
"Do not let them see your distress," he ordered. "That would be a victory for them."
"Yes," she whispered. Her hands started shaking, and she let out a low whimper,
"The longer we stand here, the longer the lass goes without proper care. Give me your weapon."
She couldn't let go. "I can't let them hurt her anymore. I can't. Don't you see? I have to help her. I prayed for someone to help me. No one would. But I can help her. I have to…"
"I won't let them hurt her," he promised.
She shook her head again. Gabriel decided to take a different approach. It seemed as though an hour had passed since he'd joined her on the steps, yet he knew less than a few minutes had actually gone by. The length of time didn't matter to him. He didn't care how long it took for her to regain her control. The bastard MacInnes soldiers would have to wait. Gabriel could have taken the weapon away from her, of course. He didn't want to. He wanted her to give it to him.
"Very well then," he said. "I'll order my men to kill every one of them. Will that suit you?"
"Yes."
He couldn't mask his surprise. He let out a sigh, then turned to give the order. He wasn't one to bluff. If she wanted him to kill the infidels, then he would accommodate her. Hell, he'd been looking for an excuse anyway. Pleasing his wife would do well enough.
"Calum," he shouted.
"Aye, MacBain?"
"No," Johanna blurted out.
Gabriel turned to her. "No?"
Tears gathered in her eyes. "We can't kill them."
"Yes, we can."
She shook her head. "It would make us no better than they if we let our anger control our actions. Make them go away. They turn my stomach."
The strength was back in her voice. Gabriel nodded, satisfied. "Give me your bow and arrow first."
She slowly lowered her arms. What happened next so surprised her, she didn't even have time to react. Gabriel snatched her weapon out of her hands, half-turned, took aim, and dispatched the arrow with incredible speed and accuracy.
A howl of pain followed. The arrow found its target in the shoulder of the same MacInnes soldier she'd injured. Robert, the laird's son, had slipped his dagger from his belt and was just about to hurl the weapon when Gabriel spotted the movement. Neither Calum nor Keith had even had time to shout a warning.
Laird MacInnes went into a rage on his son's behalf. Gabriel's fury was far worse. He shoved Johanna behind his back, tossed the bow to the ground, and reached for his sword.
"Get the hell off my land, MacInnes, or I'll kill you now."
The MacInnes soldiers didn't waste time leaving. Gabriel wouldn't let Johanna move until the courtyard was clear.
"Keith, send ten Maclaurin soldiers to follow them to our border," he ordered.
"As you wish, MacBain," Keith shouted back.
The minute her husband moved, Johanna skirted her way around him and ran down the steps. She crossed the clearing, untying her belt as she ran. She had her plaid off before she knelt down next to the battered woman and used the material to cover her. She placed her hand on the side of the woman's neck, felt the pulse beating there, and almost wept with relief.
Father MacKechnie put his hand on Johanna's shoulder. "We'd best get her inside," he whispered.
Calum bent down on one knee and leaned forward to lift the woman. Johanna screamed at the soldier. "Don't touch her!"
"She can't stay here, m'lady," Calum argued, trying to reason with his distraught mistress. "Let me carry her inside."
"Gabriel will carry her," Johanna decided. She took a deep breath in an attempt to calm herself. "I didn't mean to shout at you, Calum. Please forgive me. You shouldn't be lifting her anyway. You'll tear your stitches."
Calum nodded. He was surprised and pleased his mistress had offered him an apology.
"Is she dead?" Keith asked.
Johanna shook her head. Gabriel pulled her to her feet then and bent down to lift the MacKay woman into his arms.
"Be careful with her," Johanna whispered.
"Where do you want me to put her?" Gabriel asked. He stood up, cradling the sleeping woman in his arms.
"Give her my room," Father MacKechnie suggested. "I'll find another bed tonight."
"Do you think she'll live?" Calum asked as he followed his laird across the courtyard.
"How the hell do I know?" Gabriel asked.
"She'll survive," Johanna announced, praying she was right.
Calum ran ahead to open the doors. Johanna followed her husband through the entrance. Hilda was just coming down the hallway from the back door. She spotted her mistress and called out to her.
"Might I have a word with you about our menu for tonight's dinner guests?"
"We aren't having guests," Johanna said. "I would rather eat my supper with the devil or King John himself than suffer the MacInnes' company."
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