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“I don’t think you can call that stone castle a keep,” she said, renewing an argument they’d had when she first arrived.

“But castles are taxed, my lady.”

“Then by all means, lead me to the keep.”

They made it there eventually. After several clan members had expressed both their gladness that Abigail had not been hurt and their appreciation of her cleverness in moving out of the horse’s way despite her inability to hear the shouted warnings.

Talorc returned to the fortress just before the evening meal. His hunt had been successful and he delivered the boar to Una in the kitchens.

She praised his hunting skills and then gave him a look of commiseration. “I am sorry, laird.”

“What are you sorry for?” he asked, with little interest. His thoughts were elsewhere, as they had been all day.

“That you were tricked into marrying a woman both flawed and so full of deceptive wiles.” She made a tsk sound and shook her head. “I don’t know why the rest of the clan is behaving as if she managed some great feat in deceiving us all.”

He didn’t either, but he was grateful if that were true. He wasn’t looking forward to having to protect Abigail from her own clan.

Not really wanting to get into a discussion with the widow, he simply shrugged. And then could not help thinking the action would have had his angel glaring at him rather than looking overly sympathetic as Una did.

Feeling uncomfortable from the brief conversation for no reason he could fathom, Talorc went to the great hall to join his soldiers and his wife.

She was already seated in her customary place at the banquet table. Her hair shone golden, her curls smooth as if she had just brushed them. She’d donned one of her embroidered blouses with her plaid and it struck him she had made her best efforts to look lovely for him.

At least it had better be for him.

He looked down at his plaid with small blood spatters caused by carrying the pig and gave a mental shrug. He was no woman to worry about his appearance, but perhaps he could have washed off the sweat from his walk back to the fortress before joining her in the hall.

There was nothing to be done about it now. He walked toward the table, his attention fixed on his wife.

She was blushing and looking mildly distressed. He frowned and listened to what was being said around him. The hall was abuzz with something to do with his horse and his wife. Had she tried to ride him? He thought the stallion had shown a great deal of tolerance for her thus far.

She looked up with shock on her porcelain features when he touched her shoulder to let her know he was there. “You have returned.”

“As you see.”

“Was your hunt successful?”

“Yes. We will have boar tomorrow.” They would have had it today, but the one he’d killed the day before had been scavenged by other predators. It was only to be expected when he had left it there for them to find.

He took his seat beside his wife and turned to Barr. “What has happened with my horse and my wife in my absence?”

“Someone tormented the stallion into a lather and then released him from the stable on a rampage.”

Talorc had barely taken Barr’s words in when Earc said with relish, “Your wife was directly in the horse’s path.”

A subsonic growl of fury rumbled in his throat, making the other Chrechte around the table send back immediate growls of submission. Only the fact that she was sitting there looking unharmed in any way kept him from roaring out his anger.

He turned abruptly to face his wife. “You are well?”

“Right as rain.” She even smiled.

“Someone saved her. Who?” he asked Barr.

“She saved herself. She didn’t hear the shouts of warning, but she noticed the earth trembling beneath her feet,” he said with clear admiration.

Hell, Talorc was more than a little impressed himself. “Where was her escort?”

From the look on Barr’s face, that was the first time the question had occurred to him. “I do not know, Talorc. Who did you assign to escort her today?”

Talorc’s memory flew back to that morning and his leave-taking from the fortress. He had not assigned anyone the specific duty of watching his wife. He rotated the duty amongst his soldiers daily, so none missed too much training time. Despite the fact that he had not assigned a soldier to the task, his wife knew better than to leave the tower without an escort.

“You know you are supposed to be escorted when you leave our room,” he censured her.

A wisp of something like anger passed through her beautiful brown eyes before she blinked and it was gone. “I was never alone.”

“If you had an escort, you never would have been in danger.”

“I avoided the danger on my own. I’ve been doing so for years.”

“She’s a liability to the clan. Anyone can see it,” Osgard said angrily from his place down the table.

Talorc looked at his wife to see her reaction to the old man’s words, but she appeared not to have noted them. It struck him then that she rarely looked in Osgard’s direction. Considering the fact that she could not “hear” him if she did not see him, her behavior effectively eliminated the crotchety warrior from her notice.

It was an effective way to deal with his advisor’s annoying inability to accept his new lady. Talorc had to admire the simplicity and ingenuity of it as well.

He turned so she could not see his lips either and glowered at his advisor. “She is my wife.”

“To hell with the clan, then?”

“Watch yourself, Osgard. You will go too far with your prejudice and find yourself living with your great-niece in an already crowded cottage.”

“It wasn’t the clan in danger today, but our lady,” Guaire said from his customary place on the other side of Abigail.

“I wasn’t actually in any more danger than anyone else,” Abigail asserted, obviously having read Guaire’s lips.

Osgard snorted, but several soldiers nodded in agreement, their respect for their lady clear.

“What did the stable master have to say?” Talorc asked Barr.

“He did not see anyone.”

“No one at all?”

Barr shook his head. “He was training one of the young mares in the paddock, so was nowhere near the stable at the time your horse got out.”

“And the stallion?”

“Shows signs of being whipped on his left flank.”

Talorc let out a growl that had several warriors’ heads snapping up. “Did you check for scent?”

“There was naught but the stable master and his helper, and nothing in the whip marks themselves at all.”

Talorc frowned at that. Whoever had played the prank clearly knew enough to avoid detection by masking their scent. In addition, they had been careful to use an implement that they had not touched at the end used to whip the horse. “You think one of the boys?”

“It could be.” Barr was a cautious man and would not accuse without some indication of guilt.

Not even youths known for their pranks.

Despite being unsure what her husband was feeling toward her, Abigail found the evening meal surprisingly pleasant. It was more relaxing than any meal she had eaten in the presence of others since coming downstairs for the first time after her fever when she was ten. She did not have to worry about revealing her secret anymore.

The release of pressure was most amazing. No one got impatient with her when she missed something they said. Everyone acted like her ability to understand them was some great talent, that she was something special.

Not someone cursed.

“Did you hide your deafness among your English family?” Earc, ever the curious one, asked.

“Of course. Only my mother, stepfather and eventually my younger sister Jolenta knew.”

“Why ‘of course’?”

“At best my affliction was considered a great misfortune.”