that you come to no harm in the church.â
Meg closed her eyes and struggled not to scream out her anger at the ambitions of the men around her. To have her life and her body used as pawns in the name of the English kingâs peace was an expected, if harsh, duty of a noblewoman.
To have her life and her body used to start a war could not be borne.
âI cannot,â she said.
âYou shall,â hissed John. âYou may be Duncanâs wife or you may be a whore for his Reevers, it matters not to me.â
âLord Johnââ Duncan began unhappily.
âSilence! Far better you have any other wife than the green-eyed spawn of Glendruid! At your urging, I agreed to ask the witch for her alliance. She refused it. Go you now and tell your Reevers to rise up and slay theââ
âNay!â Meg said. âFatherââ
â I am not your father .â
Megâs breath came in harshly as she looked for a way out of the trap Duncan and John had sprung around her.
No way came. Meg interlaced her fingers and gripped so harshly that she drove blood from her hands and feeling from her fingers.
âIââ she began, but her voice cracked into silence.
The two men watched her with hazel eyes so alike and yet so subtly different. In Johnâs there was a hatred as old as her motherâs betrayal. In Duncanâs there was a hope as old as his understanding of who his father really was.
âMeggie?â Duncan asked quietly.
She bowed her head.
âI shall do what I must,â Meg whispered.
5
M EG LEFT HER FATHERâS ROOM so quickly that her wool mantle lifted and swirled behind her. She had much to do before she fled the castle. First she must prepare a quantity of medicines for the vassals who depended on her aid. Then she must sneak enough food and blankets from the castle to last her a fortnight.
And then what? she asked herself.
There was no answer except the obvious one: anything was better than being the stone upon which her beloved Blackthorne was broken.
Candle flames bowed and whipped as Meg hurried by on flying feet, descending the tight spiral staircase at reckless speed. No sooner had she reached the great hall than Eadith spotted her and moved to intercept despite Megâs obvious hurry.
âMy ladyââ
âNot now,â Meg interrupted.
âBut Lord Dominic wantsââ
âLater. I have medicines to prepare.â
Startled by Megâs curt manner, Eadith was for once speechless as she watched her mistressâs rapidly vanishing form.
As though afraid Eadith would pursue, Megredoubled her speed. Once below the level of the great hall, she met no one on the ground floor but servants. She slowed to a more reasonable pace. Even so, her mantle still rippled and stirred behind her.
Small, dark roomsâmore like stalls than true roomsâopened on either side of Meg as she hurried down the aisle. Smells of piled roots and ale casks permeated the gloom, as did the odors of salted or smoked fish and eels in their barrels, and fowl hanging by their cool, faintly scaled feet. Beneath all the food smells was the arid, complex scent of the herbal that had been created by Lady Anna for the drying of her plants and the preparation of her medicines.
Megâs memories of her mother were vivid. Many of them involved standing in the herbal or in the garden with Anna, listening to her musical voice describing each plant and its properties for healing or soothing the small aches and great pains of the vassalsâ lives. The herbal, the gardens, and the bath had been constructed according to Annaâs exacting requirements, for each was important to the rituals and well-being of someone raised in Glendruid traditions.
Close to the entrance to the herbal were two tables for the crushing, chopping, and powdering of leaves, stems, flowers, roots, and bark; all of which were used in Megâs medicines. Small chests,
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