Page 111 of The Hawk


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The signal wasn’t a fire this time, but the hoot of an owl. When it came, Erik stepped out of the darkness and strode cautiously down the hillside to the valley below, where the old church stood. It was no more than a twenty-by-twenty single-story stone building with a thatched roof, but it had served as the local place of worship for centuries—and perhaps even beyond that.

From behind an ancient-looking stone cross came a familiar form. A man Erik hadn’t seen in over a year since he’d left the Isle of Skye after failing the final challenge to become a member of the Highland Guard.

But the truth had been more complicated than that.

Erik stepped forward and for the first time in a week felt the pull of a smile. He extended his hand, and they grasped forearms in a hard shake. “It’s good to see you, Ranger,” he said, using the war name Bruce had given him. “It’s been some time. I hope you’ve been working on your spear-catching since last we met.”

Arthur Campbell let out a bark of laughter at the reference to the challenge he’d “failed.”

Since that alleged failure, Erik had learned that it had all been a ruse to place Campbell in the enemy camp. Only Chief had known. Thinking their former friend had betrayed them, the other members of the Highland Guard were enraged to learn that they’d been deceived. It wouldn’t happen again; Chief had made damn sure of that.

Much of their intelligence these past few months had come from Campbell.

“Bugger off, MacSorl—”

Erik shook him off. “Hawk,” he said.

Campbell nodded in understanding. He’d left before they’d decided to use war names.

“Different name, same shite,” Campbell said with a mocking smile. The famed scout looked around, making sure they were alone. “Come,” he said. “I’ve someone who is anxious to see you.”

“What about the news—”

Campbell sobered. “He’ll tell you himself.”

Erik followed him across the yard toward the church, noting the fine mail and tabard beneath the dark cloak. “I heard Edward made you a knight after Methven. You sure look the part.”

But under all that armor, Campbell bore the same lion rampant mark as the rest of them.

Campbell grimaced. “For feeding him misinformation—not that it helped.”

“You did what you could. I’m sure it hasn’t been easy.”

Campbell made a sharp sound to suggest that was a huge understatement and opened the door.

They stepped inside. Erik felt as if he’d walked into a crypt. Cold and quiet, the air had a musty smell and an unusual stillness—as if that door hadn’t been opened for a long time. There was a small altar on a raised platform at the far end and a line of old wooden benches below. To the right was a tomb—probably the final resting place of one of the original priests.

A moment after the door closed behind them, a shadow emerged from behind the tomb.

Little moonlight streamed through the solitary window, and it took a moment for Erik’s eyes to adjust. The man pushed back the hood of his cloak and Erik swore. Lachlan “Viper” MacRuairi. His cousin and fellow member of the Highland Guard.

Erik stepped forward and embraced him, even though (or perhaps because) he knew it would make his cousin uncomfortable. Lachlan MacRuairi was a coldhearted bastard—stealthy and deadly as the snake who’d given him his war name of Viper—but it was damned good to see him.

“What are you doing here?” Erik asked. “We thought you’d be gracing the Norse court with that sunny disposition of yours.”

MacRuairi’s face slipped out of the shadows and right away Erik knew something was wrong. There was an almost wild, frenzied look in his normally flat eyes.

Erik’s flash of humor departed as quickly as it had come. “Where’s the queen?” he said. His cousin had been placed in charge of the queen, Bruce’s sisters and young daughter, and the Countess of Buchan when they’d been forced to separate after the battle of Dal Righ.

MacRuairi’s eyes blazed with an unholy light. Erik knew what he was going to say even before he said it. “Taken. We were betrayed by the Earl of Ross before we could reach the safety of Norway.”

His cousin gave a quick recitation of the events that led up to the ladies’ capture and then of Ross’s violation of sanctuary.

By some twist of fate—MacRuairi refused to elaborate—he’d escaped capture. But the two other members of the Highland Guard who were in the party, William “Templar” Gordon and Magnus “Saint” MacKay, had not been so fortunate.

MacRuairi had been trying to rescue them ever since. Gordon and MacKay were being held in a dungeon at Urquhart Castle under the watch of Alexander Comyn. They’d escaped immediate execution only because they’d been mistaken for ordinary guardsmen. But the women … Erik felt sick when he heard what had befallen them.

A cage? Dear God.