MacGregor's Daughter Read online




  Also by Gwyn Brodie

  The Highland Moon Series

  Beneath a Highland Moon: A Scottish Historical Romance

  Once Upon a Highland Moon: A Scottish Historical Romance

  Chasing a Highland Moon: A Scottish Historical Romance

  Tempted by a Highland Moon

  MacGregor's Daughter: A Scottish Historical Romance

  Table of Contents

  Also By Gwyn Brodie

  MacGregor's Daughter (The Highland Moon Series, #5)

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Epilogue

  Author's Note

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  Also By Gwyn Brodie

  MacGregor's Daughter

  Gwyn Brodie

  When Lady Ceana MacGregor's castle is attacked by the Campbells, she hides in the laird's lug, where she watches in horror as her parents are both murdered. Knowing their chief, Lyall Campbell will stop at nothing to find her, she escapes on a massive warhorse, and travels across the snow-blanketed countryside, searching for safety and shelter. She finds both in the arms of Alexander MacPherson, the Laird of Blackstone, and the Highlander who rescues her. Ceana soon finds herself in love with the handsome laird, but will she trust him enough to tell him the secret she's keeping?

  After the battle, Lyall Campbell is satisfied that he has ended the lives of even more MacGregors, once again proving his loyalty to the king. Then the Campbell chief becomes both outraged and baffled when he learns the MacGregor laird's daughter has taken his devil of a warhorse. He swears to hunt her down and reclaim his horse, then to use the bonnie lass anyway he sees fit—before ending her life. When he learns she—and his prize stallion—are at Blackstone Castle, nothing will keep him from seeking revenge—no matter how many MacPhersons he has to kill.

  Alex is captivated by the dark-haired lass he rescues in a snowstorm and can think of little else. Ceana tells him almost nothing about herself, but it's obvious, she's running form something—or someone. And in order to protect her, he needs to know what to protect her from. He falls deeper and deeper in love with her and wants her for his wife. But first, he intends to find out what it is she's hiding from him. Will the truth bring them closer together, or forever keep them apart?

  MacGregor's Daughter

  By Gwyn Brodie

  ALL RIGHTS RESERVED

  Copyright 2018, Gwyn Brodie

  License Notes

  This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This book may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. This book is a work of fiction. The characters, names, incidents, locations, and events are fictitious or used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental or from this writer's imagination.

  Dedication

  To my husband, Michael, for always being there when I needed him.

  To my friend, Vonda, for her unfailing encouragement and motivation.

  MacGregor's Daughter

  By Gwyn Brodie

  Chapter One

  Western Highlands, Scotland, November 4, 1609

  A thunderous crash severed the morning calm at Teineaer Castle, jarring the floor beneath the feet of Lady Ceana MacGregor. Heart pounding, she jumped up from the window seat. "Saints above, what has happened?" After throwing open the door of the solar, she raced down the corridor toward the stairs, the embroidery she had been working on tightly clutched in her hand. Trembling, she stood on the landing and peered down below.

  Like a raging river, Campbells spilled through the splintered door hanging from its twisted hinges. Her clansmen fought fiercely to keep the invaders from entering the castle, but there were so many—perhaps a hundred or more. The clash of steel on steel echoed throughout the castle, the high-pitched clang deafening. She watched in disbelief, while one MacGregor after another was slaughtered, their life's blood darkening the stone floor. A scream tore from her throat, joining those of the injured and dying.

  Where were her father and mother? The last time she had seen them they had been breaking their fast. She fell to her knees, as she watched the horror unfolding before her. "Lord, protect us," she whispered, her blurry gaze searching the crowd for any sign of her parents.

  Growling ferociously, Duff and Ross, her two beloved wolfhounds, suddenly leapt into the battle, each taking down an intruder at the foot of the stairs. An enemy raised his sword to strike the dogs dead.

  She held her breath, terrified that one—or both—of the dogs she had raised since birth would meet their death before her very eyes.

  His companion stopped him. "Dinnae kill the bloody beasts," she heard him say. "We'll bring them along with us, once we're finished here. A fine pair such as these will fetch a fair coin, to be sure."

  The knave lowered his sword and the other man dragged the growling animals by their collars into her father's library, then quickly exited and slammed the door.

  A middle-aged man, his face splattered with MacGregor blood, gazed up the stairs, his lustful regard settling on Ceana. A slow grin spread across his ruddy face, as he placed a booted foot on the bottom step.

  The embroidery fell from her hand. She turned and darted down the empty corridor.

  "Dinnae run away, lass. I promise I'll be gentle," he said, then followed up his words with a laugh that chilled her blood.

  She ducked into an alcove and drew the curtain, then slipped her sgian dubh from the sheath strapped to her leg—and waited. The battle on the floor below rang loud in her ears, while she listened for the footfall of the Campbell guard. She knew he was close, for he had been but a short distance behind her.

  "No use in hiding. I'll find ye sooner or later."

  She held her breath, clutched the hilt of the small weapon in both hands, and raised it above her head.

  The guard yanked the curtain aside, his large frame blocking the entrance—and the only exit. "Och, I found you," he said, reaching for her.

  Ceana brought the blade down hard, with the intent to bury it in his chest, but instead, it struck his breastbone, sending a tremor up her arms. She jumped back, leaving her only weapon dangling in his flesh.

  He yelped, then extracted the sgian dubh. Blood sprang from the wound, darkening the front of his doublet. "I'll kill ye, wench," he roared, angrily throwing her sgian dubh down the corridor.

  Shaking like a leaf in the wind, heart thundering against her ribs, Ceana threw all her weight against him and sent him staggering backwards a few feet, allowing her enough room to run past him.

  "I'm no' finished with ye yet," he yelled after her.

  She had to get to the laird's lug. There she would be safe for a time, for only those who knew of its existence could find it. Reaching the end of the corridor, Ceana did not look back as she hurried up to the third floor, with her legs trembling so violently she could scarcely stand. She heard the guard's footfall on the stairs behind her, as she opened the hidden door to the laird's lug and ducked inside. After barring the thick oak door behind her, she slumped to the floor and quietly sobbed.

  How were the Campbells able to breach the castle wall without being seen? Had someone inside raised the portcullis and allowed them to come right in? If so, th
en who would do such a thing—and why? What about the guards on the ramparts? Why had they not sounded an alarm? These were things Ceana wanted to know, but first and foremost, she wanted to know how her father and mother fared. Had they been killed? Or taken captive? Praying the Campbell guard had given up on finding her and returned to his clansmen below, she wiped her tears on her sleeve, then reached to open the door, but the sound of her father's deep voice stopped her. An icy finger of fear clawed its way up Ceana's spine. She hurriedly pressed her eye against the small opening overlooking the great hall.

  "Damn you to hell, Lyall Campbell," he shouted, his angry words echoing against the thick timber beams of the high ceiling.

  The clan chief laughed. "You'd best be the one fashing about hell, MacGregor."

  "Has not enough of my people's blood already been spilled to satisfy your bloodlust?" Her father eased himself and her mother toward the door leading out into the bailey.

  In answer to his question, the chief smiled and shook his head. "There'll never be enough until the last MacGregor lies cold in the ground. Seize him, and the woman," he ordered his men.

  Helpless to do naught, Ceana watched, horrified, as her father fought off one Campbell guard after another, shielding her mother with his own body, until several of them rushed him all at once, one burying a blade in his ribcage. He stiffened, then dropped to the floor, his blood quickly darkening the grey tiles.

  Ceana choked back a gasp and covered her mouth with her hand.

  "James!" her mother screamed, the sound piercing Ceana's very soul. Her mother dropped to her knees beside the man she had always adored, crying as if her heart was broken—and Ceana knew that it was.

  The chief grabbed her arm and yanked her from the floor. "I was certain I'd find you again, sooner or later." He placed his foot on her father's chest, and her mother sobbed louder. "MacGregor might have managed to escape me once before, but not this time. No matter what you call yourselves, a MacGregor is still a MacGregor. The king will reward me greatly for what I've done here today." He roughly pulled her against him and tried to kiss her.

  Screaming hysterically, she pulled her sgian dubh from her waist and slashed him across the face.

  He knocked the blade from her hand. "To hell with you, MacGregor whore," he growled, quickly drawing his own blade across her throat.

  Eliza MacGregor clutched her neck, then fell to the floor, across the body of her husband, and moved no more.

  A violent wave of nausea washed over Ceana, as invisible hands grabbed her by the throat, stealing the very air she breathed. Physically and mentally recoiling from the sickening scene below, she dropped to her knees, crawled into a corner and curled into a ball. Burying her face in her hands, she muffled her sobs, as a river of tears ran from her eyes. She wanted to scream at the top of her lungs, but if she did, she would most likely be found out and lose her life, as well. Instead, she quietly grieved the deaths of her loving parents and the life they had once shared.

  If she had not left the table earlier and returned to the solar to finish the needlepoint for her mother's birthday, she would have been in the dining hall, alongside her parents, when the Campbells had attacked. She knew her parents wanted her to live—and would have done anything to ensure that she did, but the stabbing pain inside her heart made her doubt she could.

  None of this would have happened if not for King James' hatred of her clan. Several years earlier, after a battle between the MacGregors and the Colquhouns where many atrocities took place, the king had decreed that the MacGregors change their names or risk death. Her father had naught to do with the battle, but many of his cousins had. Those MacGregors who had fought had been caught and executed in Edinburgh, but the rest of the MacGregor clan had suffered much. They were now forced to hide in remote areas of Scotland and known as "Children of the Mist." Many were tracked down with dogs, and women were even stripped of their clothing, branded and whipped through the streets. And anyone barbaric as Lyall Campbell who killed a MacGregor could do so without punishment and be well rewarded.

  This was not the first time the Campbell chieftain and his guards had attacked and murdered her people. Seven years past, when Ceana had seen but thirteen summers, she had watched from her bedchamber window at Dunstan Castle, as his army had gathered outside the castle wall. Her mother had pointed him out to her, and Ceana had never forgotten the cruelty in his expression, nor in the sound of his voice when he had ordered his guards to kill everyone. He had glanced up at her window and their gazes met. A revolting grin spread across his face, causing her to tremble and tightly grasp the window sill. He shouted more orders, and his archers shot burning arrows over the wall, setting fire to anything and everything that would burn.

  Ceana and her parents had managed to escape, along with many of their clansmen, through an ancient tunnel. But a great many MacGregor guards had perished saving their laird and kin from certain death. Keeping out of sight by day and traveling by night, they had finally reached Teineaer Castle, an ancient and secluded estate, belonging to Laird Angus MacDougal, Ceana's grandfather. In making their escape, most of their possessions had to be left behind, but at least, now they were safe. After changing their names to MacDougal, they had lived a relatively happy life. Now that life was destroyed. How could she survive without her parents and her clan? With her back pressed against the cold stone wall, she wrapped her arms around her knees and quietly cried until she could cry no more.

  Ceana was unsure how much had passed when she noticed the jeering and celebrating of the victors had ceased, and the castle had grown quiet. She reluctantly peered down into the great hall, her gaze immediately falling upon her deceased parents, the sight piercing her heart as surely as a blade. She bit her lip to keep from sobbing aloud. Pressing her ear against the small opening, she carefully listened for voices, but heard naught. Had the Campbells gone? And was she the only soul at Teineaer who had survived the violent onslaught?

  Quietly, she removed the wooden bar and placed it aside, then opened the door and stepped out into the corridor. The guard she had stabbed earlier was nowhere to be seen—dead or alive. She picked her blood-stained sgian dubh up from the floor and slipped it back into the sheath strapped to her leg. Ceana was surprised the guard had left it behind, as it had several small jewels embedded along the top of the hilt. But she was glad he had not taken the weapon, as it had been a gift to her from her recently deceased grandfather.

  Trembling, she slowly and silently moved down the stairs, watching for any sign of the invaders. She prayed the other women and the children had reached the safety of the hidden chamber but had there even been enough time? The attack had happened so quickly.

  The air was thick with the metallic scent of blood, bringing her earlier nausea to the forefront. She made her way to the great hall, stepping over the bodies of men she had known for most—or all—of her life, lying in dark pools of their own blood. She had seen her share of death. For years, she had helped her mother and the healers tend to the injured, many of whom were warriors. But she would never grow used to the sight of men, who were like family members, lying slain and mutilated before her.

  Ceana wept as she reached the high table and knelt beside her parents' lifeless bodies. She gently touched her mother's beautiful face, knowing she would never again feel her warm touch against her cheek, nor hear her father's contagious laughter echoing against the wooden beams of the great hall. She squeezed her eyes shut. Her chest tightened with grief and disbelief. Gathering her strength about her, she kissed them each on the forehead, then rose to her feet. "Farewell, Father, farewell, Mother," she whispered. A storm of emotion smashed into her, the pain of her loss crushing her beneath it. Her throat tightened as she bent and picked up her mother's sgian dubh from the floor.

  Her parents—as well as the others—would have a proper burial, for she would see that they did. But unfortunately, their interment would have to wait until the earth thawed enough to put them in the ground. Until the
n, the bodies would need to be stored.

  She dried her eyes on her sleeve and went to the library to free Duff and Ross from their confinement. She opened the door and stepped inside—empty. What had they done with her beloved pets? She prayed they had not changed their minds about selling them and killed them instead.

  Ceana moved about the castle checking for a heartbeat on each fallen MacGregor warrior, but found none. The blackguards had been thorough. Still, she prayed the majority of her clan had somehow managed to escape the slaughter. Perhaps there were survivors in the secret passage behind the tapestry hanging at the end of the great hall.

  Just as she headed across the room to find out, a deep male voice reached her ears from the kitchens below, followed by the laughter of many others. Heart drumming against her ribs, she turned and raced up the stairs to her bedchamber. She had to leave before they realized one MacGregor was yet alive, but she could not go out in the snowstorm dressed as she was. Her mother's words came back to her. Keep your head about you, Ceana, or else you'll never be able to think clearly. "I will, Mother," she whispered, then took a deep breath to steady herself.

  After slipping into her bedchamber, she secured her mother's blade inside her bodice, then slipped on three shifts, two heavy woolen gowns, two pairs of wool stockings and her boots. She fastened her ermine-lined cloak about her shoulders and pulled on her deerskin gloves, the inside warmly padded with rabbit fur—a gift from her father.

  Grabbing her jewelry and what funds she had, she stuffed them into a leather pouch, then listened at the door, before slipping back out into the corridor. She wanted to take her mother's and father's valuables along with her, but their chambers were located at the far end of the castle, and besides, how would she carry them?

  Returning to the laird's lug, she barred the door, then pressed her eye against the small hole. From there, she could continue to observe the invaders with them being none the wiser. From what she could tell, there did not appear to be as many men as there had been. Perhaps some had returned to Campbell lands, once they had secured the castle for their murderous chief.