“We aren’t the only ones leaving in the dark tonight,” Duncan said to Alex, after they had stepped away to speak in private. “I saw another boat go out a couple of hours ago.”
Alex waited, sensing Duncan had something more to say to him.
“Glynis is a good woman,” Duncan said at last.
“I know she is,” Alex said. “I don’t intend to take advantage of the situation.”
“Good luck,” Duncan said, squeezing Alex’s shoulder. “I suspect ye will need it.”
* * *
The moon shone between the fast-moving night clouds, revealing the occasional rock poking above the sea. Alex maneuvered the boat around them easily. He did not know the waters around the Mull as well as he did those around the islands to the north and the west. But the Viking blood was strong in him, and gave him a sixth sense on the water.
The only sound was the soft splash of his oars. The water was flat and silent, and neither he nor Glynis had spoken a word in the hour since they left the shore.
“Ye didn’t have to kiss me,” Glynis said.
He smiled to himself. Obviously, Glynis had been dwelling on those kisses, too.
“Ye could have pretended,” she said. “It was too dark for the guards to tell the difference.”
“And why would I want to do that?” he asked.
Glynis cleared her throat. “I fear I didn’t make myself clear. When I asked ye to take me with ye—”
“Forced me, ye mean,” Alex said.
“I didn’t mean it as an invitation to… to…”
Alex couldn’t help himself. “To make love to ye morning, noon, and night, all the way to Edinburgh?”
“Alex!”
Glynis sounded so scandalized that he laughed.
“Don’t jump overboard—I know ye were only looking for an escort, not a bedmate.” Under his breath, he added, “A shame, that.”
A damn shame. This was going to be one hell of a long trip.
“What do ye know of your mother’s family?” he asked to divert himself.
“I’ve never met them, but I understand they are a wealthy and respected merchant family,” she said. “One of my uncles is a priest.”
Alex would make sure that her mother’s family were good people before he left her with them. If they weren’t, heaven help him, for he didn’t know what he’d do with her then.
“Why do ye travel to Edinburgh?” Glynis asked.
“I have business for my chieftain,” Alex said. “And some of my own as well.”
He should have kept his mouth shut about his own business. Before she could ask about that, he said, “’Tis a dangerous world, Glynis. Like it or no, ye need a husband to protect ye.”
His own words caused an annoying sensation in his gut.
“Like my last husband protected me? No thank ye,” Glynis said. “My mother’s family will look after me. Besides, Edinburgh sounds like a tame place.”
Alex didn’t like the idea of her alone with only a family of Lowlanders and priests to protect her. “Ye should find yourself a strong Highland man.”
“Hmmph. I’ve had one of those,” she said
A heavy fog had rolled in. Alex heard a faint mewling sound in the distance and lifted his oars to listen.
“What is that?” Glynis asked in a hushed voice. “It sounds like a cat caught in a tree.”
That was no cat. Alex rowed the boat toward the sound through the billowing fog.
CHAPTER 11
Help! Someone help me!” The cry came through the dense fog.
“It’s a woman,” Glynis said, leaning forward and grabbing Alex’s knee.
“Aye.” He had known it was a female from the start. The question was, what kind?
Alex wasn’t a superstitious man—for a Highlander—but every story he’d ever heard about selkies came back to him as he rowed closer. A selkie was a sea creature who was known to take the form of a beautiful woman and lure sailors to their deaths. In nearly all the stories, selkies appeared to men when a dense fog lay over the water.
“Help me!”
In front of him, the black shape of a rock emerged out of the mist.
“I can see her!” Glynis stood in the boat, pointing. “She’s clinging to that rock.”
Alex saw the outline of the upper half of a figure with long flowing hair above the water line. Her legs—or tail—were beneath the water.
“Hold on,” he called out. “We’re coming for ye.”
“She’s just there!” Glynis said.
“Get in the back of the boat.” Knowing Glynis was not the sort to follow orders without an explanation, he added, “I need ye to keep the boat steady while I pull her in.”
But if Alex saw a tail, he was dropping this creature back into the sea.
He brought the boat up next to the rock. When he leaned out to lift her, she kept her arms wrapped around the rock. Ach, this was no selkie. The poor thing was shaking like a newborn lamb.
“Ye can let go now,” he said, using the same soft tone he would use with a riled horse. “I’ve got ye.”
Only two feet of the rock remained above water, and the tide was still coming in. Another hour or two, and she’d have nothing left to hold on to. How long had she been here, clinging to it as the water rose around her? No wonder she was afraid to let go.
“Don’t worry, lass,” he said. “You’re safe now.”
“Alex?” the woman asked in a hoarse voice. “Is that you?”
God in Heaven, the woman clinging to the rock was Catherine Campbell.
“Aye, it’s me,” he said. “Put your arms around my neck. I promise I won’t drop ye.”
Catherine’s skirts were heavy with water as he lifted her into the boat. Moving quickly, he loosened his plaid and wrapped it around them both, then he set to rubbing her back and limbs to get her blood moving. She was so cold her teeth were chattering.
Glynis found a blanket and draped it around Catherine’s shoulders.
“What happened, Catherine?” Alex asked. “How did ye get out here?”
“Sh-sh-aggy did it.” Her teeth chattered as she spoke. “He-he brought me out here and left me.”
“Are ye saying Shaggy meant for ye to drown?”
She nodded against his chest.
The saints have mercy! Alex had seen a good deal of violence in his life, and he knew of instances when men murdered wives or lovers in a rage. But the cold ruthlessness of this shocked him. Shaggy had wanted his wife to watch the water rise for hours, knowing all the while that she would drown in the end.
“We’ve got to go to shore and get a fire going for her,” he said to Glynis. “Then we’ll need to get her to her family.”
“What do ye want me to do?” Glynis asked. “I can row.”
Thank God Glynis wasn’t the sort of woman to lose her head in a crisis.
“I’ll row,” he said. “Just keep her as warm as ye can.”
A second woman had asked for his help.
* * *
Glynis tried to lift Catherine Campbell to the back of the boat as Alex took up the oars, but the woman slid from her arms like an eel. When Glynis tried again, Catherine wrapped her arms around Alex’s waist from behind and clung to him, just as she had to the rock.
“It’s all right. Just tuck my plaid around her,” Alex said. “My body will give off plenty of heat while I row.”
As he rowed, Alex calmed Lady Catherine with a steady, low murmur, as if he were soothing a babe in his arms. Glynis felt useless.
She bit her lip against her own disappointment. After what Lady Catherine had suffered, it was small of her to think about how her own plans were ruined. Alex would insist upon seeing Catherine safely to her brother’s castle, as well he should, and Glynis would never make it to Edinburgh.
The Campbell chieftain would send word to Glynis’s father. And she would go home in worse shame than before.
“The fog is lifting, and the wind is picking up,” Alex said to Glynis after a while. “We can put the sail up now, and we’ll be on the Campbell side of the loch in no time.”