He stared at her. “Aye, I would.”
She gasped. “I have lost three brothers, as well as both my parents. He is my only brother, and I beg you to reconsider. I do not even know how badly he was hurt!”
“Then ye need ask and I will tell ye. He suffered a gash from a sword on his leg, lady, as well as a blow to his head. And he has been properly attended.”
“But I am accustomed to taking care of the wounded! Please—let me attend him!”
“So will ye give me yer word that ye will not plot against me? That ye will not plan on how best to overthrow me?”
She tensed. Of course they would discuss how to best overthrow him, damn him!
“I dinna think so.”
Margaret could not move, still stunned by his refusal. “And if I beg?”
“Yer pleas will not be heard.” He was final. “Sit down, Lady Margaret, before ye fall down.”
Margaret was so angry she shook, but she knew she must hold her tongue now—when she wished to accuse him of cruelty, when she wished to curse him for all he had done. “And what of the rest of your prisoners? What of my archers and soldiers and Malcolm? What of Buchan’s knights whom you captured in the ravine?”
He now stood up. “They hang tomorrow at noon.”
She did not cry out. She had expected such an answer. In war, the enemy was often executed. And he had told her, point-blank, that if she did not surrender, he would spare no one. “And if I beg you for mercy for them? If I beg you to spare their lives?”
“Mercy,” he said softly, “makes a warrior weak.”
She inhaled, staring; he stared back. “I cannot allow you to execute my people.”
“You cannot allow or forbid me anything. I am lord and master here.”
She needed to control her temper. She needed to overcome her fear. She needed to persuade this man to have mercy on her kin. Margaret looked down at the table, which she clasped so tightly her knuckles were white. How could she get him to change his mind?
She somehow softened and glanced up. “My lord, forgive me. I am but a woman, and a weary woman, at that. I have never had to defend a castle before. I have never had to engage in battle, and I have never been in the midst of a siege. And I have never had to make so many decisions, decisions that should have been made by men.” Tears filled her eyes. She welcomed them. “I have never been so frightened! The last thing I would ever wish is to command a keep against a siege, much less against the Wolf of Lochaber!”
“Ye refused to surrender,” he said softly, a potent reminder of her sins.
“I was foolish, but then, I am a woman.”
He slowly shook his head. “Dinna think to outwit me, lady, when we both ken yer no fool.”
“My choice was a foolish one!”
“And ye will pay the price for the choice ye made. Only a fool would allow his enemy to live to fight another day—they hang tomorrow at noon.”
She had lost. His mind was made up. She began to shake, her fury erupting. “Damn you!”
“Have a care,” he warned.
“No,” she said, tears falling. “I will not have a care, you have stolen my castle from me, mine, and now, you will execute my people, mine!”
“I have defeated ye, Lady Margaret, fairly, in battle. The spoils are mine.”
“There is nothing fair about my having been attacked so rudely, by the mighty Wolf of Lochaber!” She knew she should not be shouting at him, but she could not stop now. “You may have won the day, Wolf. But this is my castle. This is MacDougall land. No matter what happened today, this will always be MacDougall land!”
“War changes everything.”
“I will never let you keep this place!”
His eyes widened. “What do ye say?”