The Saint: A Highland Guard Novel Read online


But her brother wouldn’t back down. “Ask him about the strange explosion that took down part of the wall at Threave, Helen. Does it remind you of any stories I used to tell you about?”

  She gasped, and her gaze shot to Magnus’s. Knowledge of the Saracen black powder was rare enough to be remarkable. “Is it true? Is what my brother says true? Was William part of this phantom army?”

  But she didn’t need to ask. His eyes burned into hers, hot and full of torment.

  She stepped back, covering her mouth in shock. “Dear God!”

  It seemed incredible that William could have been part of something that seemed almost mythical or apocryphal. How little she’d known him!

  To her surprise, her brother looked just as stunned as she was. “Damn,” Kenneth muttered. “It’s true.”

  “If you care anything about your sister’s safety you will never mention it again.”

  Kenneth’s mouth fell in a grim line.

  She looked back and forth between them. “What does it have to do with my safety?”

  The men exchanged looks; clearly neither was eager to explain. After a long pause, Magnus broke the silence. “There are many people who would be willing to pay a price to learn the identities of the alleged ‘phantom army.’ Anyone known to be connected to any of them is in danger.”

  “But I don’t know anything about it.”

  “Aye, but no one knows that,” her brother pointed out.

  God, he was right. Helen stared at Magnus. “Am I in danger?”

  “I don’t know.”

  “But you have a reason to believe I might be.”

  He nodded.

  “That’s why you were so worried in the forest.”

  “What happened in the forest?” her brother demanded.

  Magnus looked as if he wished Kenneth far away, but eventually he said, “I thought someone was watching us.”

  Kenneth swore. “Why didn’t you go after them?”

  His mouth thinned at the criticism. “Because I wanted to get your sister to safety, that’s why. I couldn’t very well take her along. I was about to organize a scouting party when you got in my way.”

  “I’m going with you.” Before Magnus could object, he added, “She’s my sister. If she’s in danger I’ll protect her.” He turned to her. “Come, Helen. I’ll take you back to camp.”

  She shook her head. “Magnus will do it.” She watched Kenneth’s expression darken. “It shall only take a few minutes and you can see me from camp. There is something I must say to him.”

  “If you need help finding the right words, I have a few suggestions.”

  Helen ignored him, not needing much of an imagination to guess what those words might be.

  “Get MacGregor and Fraser,” Magnus said to him. “I don’t want to take any more men from camp than that. We will leave as soon as I am done.”

  Kenneth didn’t like it, but he left them alone.

  The ramifications of William’s involvement with the mysterious warriors were staggering, but one possibility loomed above the others. She thought of the changes in Magnus. His closeness to William. The tight bond he seemed to have with the king. “And what about you, Magnus? What does Bruce’s phantom army have to do with you?”

  “The king acknowledges no such army.”

  “So because it’s not official, it doesn’t exist? You’re part of it, aren’t you?”

  He held her gaze, his expression perfectly unreadable. “Don’t ask me a question I cannot answer.”

  But she didn’t need to ask. She knew. He was part of the group, too. Her brother suspected the truth as well. That was one of the reasons he wanted him to stay away from her.

  Was it also one of the things that was keeping Magnus from admitting his love for her? Was he trying to protect her? Her heart swelled.

  She stepped closer to him, until their bodies were almost brushing. “I don’t want your protection, Magnus. I want your love.”

  His expression was fierce in the moonlight, almost as if she had him on the rack. He was waging some kind of horrible war inside himself that she didn’t understand. He shook her off. “Nay. I promised to protect you, damn it, and I will.”

  Her heart caught mid-beat. She stilled. Promised? A horrible premonition crept up inside her. “To whom did you make this promise?”

  He seemed to realize he’d made a mistake and wished the words back, but it was too late. She could see the apology in his gaze. “To Gordon. I vowed to him that I would protect you.”

  Helen let out a very slow breath through the hot vise fitted tightly around her chest. “Is that why I am on this trip? Is it so that you could watch over me?”

  He tried to avoid her eyes, but she stared at him until he met them. “Aye.”

  She nodded. “I see.” And she did. Clearly. Without the blindness of illusions. It was duty that had forced his nearness, not that he’d softened toward her.

  Stung, hurt, and not a little angry, she started to walk away, but he caught her arm, preventing her. “Helen, wait. It’s not like that.”

  Her eyes blurred. Hot tears pressed against the back of her throat. “Oh really, then how is it? Are you here—am I here—because you love me, or because you want to protect me?”

  His silence was all the answer she needed.

  It was a long night. Magnus, MacGregor, Sutherland, and Fraser rode for hours patrolling the forests, mountains, and countryside near their camp at the eastern end of Loch Glascarnoch, trying to find any sign of the interloper. But whoever it was had vanished without a sign.

  There were few inhabitants in the area—only a handful of stalker huts and bothies—and so far no one they questioned reported seeing or hearing anything since the king’s party had traveled through. No suspicious men, no riders, no armed warriors, no brigands, nothing. Of course, it would be a hell of a lot easier if they knew exactly what they were looking for.

  They were just returning to their horses after wresting an unhappy cottager and his wife from their beds when Sutherland fell into step beside Magnus.

  Magnus tensed, the muscles at his neck and shoulders bunched in anticipation.

  “Are you sure someone was there?” Sutherland asked. “Perhaps it was an animal.”

  He gritted his teeth. Coming from anyone other than Sutherland, the question wouldn’t have riled him so much. But he couldn’t look at the bastard without seeing that damned sword and feeling the blood-chilling moment of uncertainty when he hadn’t known whether he was going to be able to get Helen out of its way.

  Sutherland’s hot-tempered recklessness had been inches away from costing his sister her life. Only the knowledge that the bastard had cause for his anger—and Magnus’s own guilt for what had nearly happened with Helen—prevented him from fully regretting his decision to let him go. But he was waiting for an excuse to shed some of that too-hot blood and didn’t doubt Sutherland would give him one.

  “It wasn’t an animal. Someone was there. I heard the ting of metal on metal.”

  “It could have been someone from camp.”

  Fraser had overheard Sutherland’s question. “But why wouldn’t they make themselves known?”

  Magnus and Sutherland exchanged angry glares in the darkness, both thinking the same thing: perhaps the person had been too embarrassed to interrupt what was happening.

  “It wasn’t someone from camp,” Magnus said flatly. He didn’t know how to describe it, except that he’d felt the weight of malevolence in the air and it had been aimed at him—or them, he didn’t know which. It was that extra sense. The primitive instinct that detected danger and set every nerve-ending on edge. His gut told him someone was there and that person was a threat. And his instincts had helped him survive too many times for him to ignore them.

  “We can’t take any chances,” MacGregor said, sidestepping Fraser’s question.

  “But you aren’t certain my sister is in danger?”

  Magnus’s mouth fell in a flat line. He knew Sutherland wasn’t sa