The Hunter (Highland Guard #7)(104)



Sutherland frowned. “What is suspicious about a local boy fishing?”

“Nothing,” Ewen answered. “If that’s what he is doing. But look, his line isn’t in the water—it’s on the edge of the bank—and he isn’t watching the fish.” He was watching the door to the priory, exactly as Ewen would be doing, albeit far less obviously.

“What do you think he’s doing?” MacLean asked.

“I don’t know, but I intend to find out.”

Ewen kept watch on the door and the boy for the rest of the afternoon. Each time a nun emerged, the lad seemed to study her face every bit as intently as Ewen did. Not once did the boy check the fishing line beside him. Either the lad was the worst fisherman ever or he was watching for someone. But for whom?

If it was a coincidence, it was one that made Ewen uneasy. Damned uneasy. And he didn’t think it was a coincidence.

His suspicions were confirmed a short while later, when the door of the priory closed for the night and the lad abandoned his post. Following him was easy, but every step of the way, Ewen’s heart jogged a little faster.

The lad wasn’t headed to a house nearby, he was headed to Roxburgh. More specifically, he was headed to the castle.

Ewen didn’t need to follow the lad through the castle gate. From his vantage atop a nearby hill, he could see with bone-tingling clarity directly into the courtyard. Even before the boy approached the building, Ewen had guessed where he was headed. Ah hell, the chapel!

His blood went cold, recalling Janet’s confrontation with the castle priest at the market.

If the priest was having someone watch the priory, Ewen knew what that meant. The monk found on the road to Berwick had talked before they killed him. Janet’s identity had been compromised. That was how the English had followed them so easily from the priory a couple of weeks ago.

It also meant that Ewen wasn’t the only one hunting her, and if he didn’t find her first, the danger he’d feared would become all too real.

Thanks to the merchant and his wife, Janet had a way to make contact with her source without returning to Rutherford, a place to stay, and a new identity.

Her veil and scapular stayed hidden in her bag. In their stead, she donned a linen cap and became a member of the burgeoning number of tradesmen and merchants who were flocking to the burghs. In the highly structured feudal society, the merchants were somewhere below the nobility and above the rest—not unlike the clergy. As a daughter of a merchant, she enjoyed the same kind of freedom that she had as a nun to walk around largely unnoticed.

Janet didn’t know what had provoked the merchant to claim her as his daughter, but it had saved her from what could have been a very difficult—and probably life-threatening—situation. One she very well may not have been able to talk her way out of.

Even with the merchant’s claim, Sir Thomas was suspicious. It wasn’t until the merchant’s wife, Alice, had come forward to scold her for making eyes at the handsome knight when she was nearly betrothed to another, and Janet had broken down in tears, sobbing that she didn’t want to marry a man old enough to be her father, that the squire admitted he could be wrong, and Sir Thomas allowed them to move on. Indeed, he seemed to want to escape the family drama and Janet’s “rescue me” gaze as quickly as possible.

But her heart hadn’t stopped pounding for days, even well after they’d arrived safely in Roxburgh. She’d thanked the Hendes for what they’d done and had been relieved when they hadn’t asked her questions, but had simply offered her a place to stay for as long as she needed.

Janet repaid their kindness with hard work, helping them to set up their shop in the lower floor of a building on High Street, which also housed a haberdashery, vintner, and goldsmith.

In retrospect, the run-in with the soldiers near Melrose had proved an unexpected boon. It had given her exactly what she needed: a way of making contact with her informant in the castle that allowed her to avoid places she’d been before. She’d taken Ewen’s lessons to heart; she didn’t want any way to connect Novice Eleanor or Sister Genna to Kate, the wool merchant’s daughter.

On the first Saturday of her return, when the ladies from the castle wound their way through the market booths, Janet was ready. A quick “accidental” bump, a mumbled apology, and a meaningful glance had been all the explanation necessary. Janet had made a point to walk slowly back to the Hendes shop, where she was sure her informant would see her enter.

Janet’s guilt for any potential danger she might have put the Hendes in by staying with them was assuaged a bit by the immediate success the couple garnered, after a number of noble men and women from the castle entered their shop and declared their wool the “best in Roxburgh.” The Hendes were soon fending more orders than they could fill, including one from the constable of Roxburgh Castle himself, Sir Henry de Beaumont.

On one of these visits, Janet managed a short conversation with her informant while showing her a swathe of fine ruby-colored cloth.

“Is there anything I can help you with, milady?” she’d asked, careful to keep her words innocuous in case they were overheard.

The woman shook her head. “Not as of yet, I’m afraid. But as there are many important celebrations upcoming, I’m sure I will think of some reason for this beautiful wool soon.” She smiled. “There is much excitement around the castle with Christmas approaching.”

Monica McCarty's Books