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Masquerade Marriage
Masquerade Marriage
Masquerade Marriage
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Masquerade Marriage

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A SECRET LISTTo protect his loved ones and escape the dark fate of his brothers, a noted warrior abandons his identity. Hiding from relentless soldiers who want him dead, Brody MacCaulay vows to protect the woman he loves more than life, more than freedom, more than Scotland. But his presence throws her into danger. A VOW HONOREDTo escape an arranged marriage to an abusive noble, a Lowland Lady weds a stranger to save his life. But vows spoken do not make a marriage, especially when Megan MacMurry holds a different love inside her heart.A SACRIFICE MADEOutlawed, and with a price on his head, Brody condemns himself to a life of heartbreak without Megan. Wanting her desperately, knowing he can't have her, he heads alone to certain death...
LanguageEnglish
Release dateOct 1, 2010
ISBN9781611160260
Masquerade Marriage
Author

Anne Greene

ANNE GREENE delights in writing about gutsy heroines and alpha heroes who aren’t afraid to fall on their knees in prayer. She and her hero husband, Army Special Forces Colonel Larry Greene, live in McKinney, TX. Two of her four children live nearby. Tim LaHaye led her to the Lord when she was twenty-one, and Chuck Swindoll is her pastor. Anne’s highest hope is that her stories transport the reader to an awesome new world and touch hearts to seek a deeper spiritual relationship with the Lord Jesus. To learn more of Anne, visit her at AnneGreeneAuthor.com. She teaches a novel writing class on her blog www.anneswritingupdates.blogspot.com . She contributes monthly to www.heroesheroinesandhistory.blogspot.com. Anne loves to visit with her fans.

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Ever since the year my friend went to Scotland with her Grandmother to visit the land of her ancestors, Scotland and her history has been intriguing to me. This may have been what led me to request the ebook from Fred, but in no wise was this what kept my eyes glued to my Ipad and on the edge of my seat. Drama, from the very first page where Brody woke up on the battlefield to the last page where he is running from the Red Coats, is the name of the game. Vivid imagery has the reader seeing the battlefield through Brody's eye, as well as smelling and tasting the stench, hearing the Red Coats dispense with the living wounded and feeling first the panic and then the determination to escape. Anne does a superb job of showing the story instead of telling, and making the reader feel like the main characters, Brody and Megan as being close friends.As both learn to trust each other and God, I learned to see God in a clearer way. I do not feel I would have the courage to step out like they did, and yet, with God all things are possible. Thank you to Fred at The Book Club Network, Author Anne Greene and the Pelican Book Group for giving me the opportunity to read and review this ebook. Which I was given for the purpose of writing an honest review. The opinions are my own.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I enjoyed the author’s use of the Highland accent – gotta love those Scottish burrs! I found it rather unique that she stayed true to that form of speech when in Brody’s point of view, even outside quoted dialogue.Anne Greene knows how to make history come alive, even for the reader who isn’t a history buff (like me!). Kudos to the author for a tale well told.

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Masquerade Marriage - Anne Greene

KJV

Masquerade Marriage

1

April 16, 1746 - Drumossie Moor, Scotland—the Culloden Estate

Brody MacCaulay woke to a pounding head and gut-wrenching thirst. What happened? The wind and sleet had blown through. Smoke from blazing canons no longer choked him. He no longer heard the deafening din of battle. Silence hung around him, slit at times by weak cries of wounded men.

Cold weight pinned him upon icy ground. He could scarce draw a breath. Fingers dangled in his face. He felt the hand. Cold and stiff. He jerked back his own. Slowly he realized three clansmen crushed him against the frozen earth.

Even as his heart flamed hot hating everything English, the sound of approaching voices alerted him to lie still. He dug numb fingers into blood-dyed ground to keep from springing up and using his dirk.

Duncan, Collin, and Da were dead. He’d seen them fall. Sharp pain bit into his chest. He gritted his teeth. And Angus? Brody’s stomach heaved. Only a protecting angel could have spared Angus. Darkness, black as the smoke of gun powder, descended deep inside Brody’s mind. For certain his favorite brother lay dead, too.

Brody wedged his anguish deep inside his heart, slammed the door, and disciplined his thoughts into calculated coolness. He was a warrior.

The voices drew closer. Clipped. Not softly burred.

A sliver of moon lit ice upon the ground, casting enough light to see heaps of bodies, twisted limbs. The voices grew close. Two scarlet-clad English soldiers stalked among the kilted bodies.

A wounded Highlander looked up at them and begged. Water.

With cold-blooded deliberateness, one of the soldiers ran him through with his bayonet, strangling the Highlander’s weak voice into silence.

Brody slammed his eyes shut, hardly dared suck in a breath, and counted his heartbeats. English voices spoke so close that hair on the nape of his neck spiked. As the awful sound of a bayonet slashed into a nearby body, he fought back bile rising into his throat. I say, I do believe we’ve dispatched all the wounded Scots.

Right. Nasty job.

The first soldier snorted. Sure to be an awful stink. Letting all these bodies rot.

Good riddance, say I.

Boots clumped off. The voices faded.

’Tis almost light. Brody’s own whisper, though hoarse as a rusty hinge, infused him with courage. Somehow he lived. He must fight his way to Ma and Fiona. Protect them before the English hunted them down. A piper’s family proved precious booty for scavenger soldiers. With Da and his brothers dead, his duty lay in protecting Ma and Fiona.

He’d do whatever it took.

He struggled free of the weight sprawled atop him. The dirk lay half-frozen to the ground beneath his cheek. He gripped the handle of the sgian-dhu, worked it free, and jammed it into the sheath on his right leg. Panting, numb hands planted on frozen earth, he pushed to his knees. The scent of bog-myrtle and blood clogged his nostrils. He gazed over the silent battlefield.

What he saw would haunt him forever.

Thousands of men lay still in the blue moonlight. The strength and youth of Scotland’s Highlands sprawled in heaps across the great expanse of the battlefield. Pale twisted limbs gleamed in the cold light. Bloody clan banners lay beneath bodies already stiff.

A stab of guilt pierced Brody’s rage. Why had God spared him? If his brothers hadna sent him to the rear, there would not be a male MacCaulay left alive. Mayhap that was why he found breathing so unnatural. He shook his head. Dizziness. His pulse pounded, increasing the thundering pain. Touching his bloody left temple, he closed his right eye. The carnage before him went black.

He whispered, Canna see with my left eye. Appears my head’s no’ as hard as Angus insisted.

Angus.

Brody shoved aside the heart-stopping thought of his brother. For Ma’s sake, for Fiona’s sake, he must escape before English sentinels spotted him. Hunched double, hiding among the bodies, he retrieved his targe and pipes and strapped them atop the claymore on his back. Despite the cold wind, sweat beaded his forehead. Belly pushed into frozen dirt, he crawled south toward the line of trees growing by the river Nairn. He’d head for high country. Find a place to hide.

Barely able to see his own hands ploughing the earth, he crawled between bodies of family, friends, acquaintances drawn close in the heat of battle. Bodies, clad in blood-drenched tartan stared wide-eyed at the waning moon.

Hurry! Daylight threatened. If the English found him, he’d be murdered.

I willna give them that satisfaction.

Masquerade Marriage

2

We’ll hunt the Highlanders down. Kill every last man Jack of them!

Brody held his breath. The English-accented voice outside the cave sounded dangerously close. Huddled inside with eight other wounded warriors, Brody hunched lower. At the metallic clank of bayonets being fixed on muskets he made a swift, practiced movement and silently unsheathed his claymore.

A deeper English voice resonated through the stone barricaded entrance. Cumberland ordered no quarter given.

Brody’s jaw dropped. Hadna he seen the duke’s work killing the wounded fallen on the battlefield? But take no prisoners! Kill all Highland warriors! That was dirty warfare. Unheard of. The devil’s work.

The shrubbery hiding the mouth to their moldy cave shook. English bayonets and musket barrels slammed against the barrier he and the others had stacked to close off the entrance. Stones thudded inside, stirring dust and sending small insects scurrying.

In the distance, a horse whinnied. When the sound of military accouterments clanked, Brody imagined the red coats turning to listen. In the sudden silence, he heard the sob and heartbreak in the wind whistling around the cave.

His belly growled, audible in the tense silence. He grabbed his gut with both hands to stifle the noise. He was hungry no’ merely for food, but for revenge. For the death of Englishmen.

I smell them, Reginald. The Scots have to be hiding here somewhere. Light a torch. We’ll set this whole bloody mountain afire.

The voice sent spiders crawling down Brody’s spine. His breathing raced and his blinding headache throbbed. Would he die by fire rather than the blade or ball?

From somewhere down the mountainside a Lowland Scot’s burr called, Halloo, the soldiers!

It’s Reverend Fergus, the deeper English voice outside stated.

’Ooo’s Reverend Fergus? a soldier’s cockney-accented voice asked.

Lowland bloke. Pastors the Protestant flocks at Kirkmichael and Inverness. What’s he want?

Doesn’t matter.

The unmistakable sound of flint striking tinder caused Brody’s jaw to harden. Huddled together in the darkness, the musky stench of fear overpowered the pungent odor of bloody, unwashed bodies. Brody fought his urge to run from the cave, claymore poised, ready to die a soldier’s death rather than burn.

The English voice floated through the half-demolished barricade. The grass and wood are too wet. Can’t get a spark. Bad business that.

Would you soldiers care for some shepherd’s pie and hot cider? Again, Pastor Fergus called from further down the mountainside.

Nice, that. These frigid heights aren’t fit for man nor beast. English boots clattered on stones and grew softer as the soldiers descended the mountain.

Brody sucked in a breath. He stretched the burning muscles cramping his calves. His mouth watered. Shepherd’s pie. He could taste the lamb chunks smothered in gravy, with tatties floating in—

Thank Ye, God, for delivering us from being roasted alive, Lachlan muttered as he cradled his shattered arm to his chest.

Aye, other voices whispered.

Brody frowned. Two days past, he would have thanked the Lord as well. His gratitude died with Da on the battlefield. No’ his anger. With a blink of His eternal eye, God could’ve stopped that slaughter. Brody scowled at the wounded men squatting with him on the cave’s floor. He slumped on a rock, teeth chattering like a bodhran.

He felt barren. Nay, more than that. Deserted. More hollow even than that. He struggled to name the emptiness binding his chest as though a tree lay across it. Betrayal. That was it. He clenched his fists around the claymore’s hilt and plunged the double-edged blade deep into the hard earth. God betrayed his trust.

Isna a man among us escaped the battle withoot a terrible wound. Lachlan hung his head. Mine hurts some fierce.

Sorry, lad. Brody laid a hand on Lachlan’s sound shoulder. Pastor Fergus mayhap will make it through with food for us tonight. His voice sounded hollow. He had no real hope to offer. God was not going to send them manna.

After waiting out the long, frigid, miserable day, night did bring Pastor Fergus and food. Though, the shepherd’s pie failed to go far shared among nine starving men. While Brody wolfed his meager portion, Pastor Fergus confirmed that all three brothers lay dead. Tight-lipped, Brody smothered his grief. He would not give way in front of the other men.

The redcoats didn’t even spare some innocent lasses and bairns watching near the battlefield. Tears glinted in Pastor Fergus’s eyes.

Iciness inside Brody’s chest out-froze the cave’s chill.

Pastor Fergus crouched in the center of the circle of wounded men, looking from face to face.

The English confiscated the Chiefs’ lands and homes. Women and bairns scattered to whatever safety they could find. English officers carried off many lasses to the coast.

Brody blinked. His mind numbed. He watched Pastor Fergus’s Adam’s apple move up and down his slender throat. No one kens the lasses’ fate? Slaves, ye think?

Or worse. Pastor Fergus shook his head.

Brody’s voice grated, Ma and Fiona? Do ye ken if they’re safe?

Safe, for the moment. Hiding inside a well.

Brody sprang to his feet, hunched forward, and duck-walked to the entrance. He pushed aside the demolished barricade and gazed into darkness. The redcoats would hunt down Ma and Fiona. He must find them a safer place.

Pastor Fergus gripped Brody’s arm and pulled him back into the group. This cave’s no longer safe. Meanwhile, I have a plan that will help one of you. He glanced around the circle. While a flickering torch cast shadows on the rock wall, Pastor Fergus wrote each man’s name on a crumpled paper. Then, deep voice barely above a whisper, the young preacher outlined his plan. When he finished, the wounded men glanced at one another and nodded. A gleam of hope softened the tired lines of their faces.

Pastor Fergus raised his voice, What of you, Brody?

Nay. Yer idea doesna appeal to me. I’ll take my chances in the wild Highland bracken. Even as he spoke, Brody questioned what stiffness inside made it impossible to bend his pride and receive the pastor’s help?

Think of your ma, lad. She’s lost all sons save you. The English hang or burn alive every fugitive they catch.

Brody shook his head. Nay, I’ll find my own way.

And what of your wee, tender sister? The English will make sport of such a bonny lass, especially with her being kin of the piper.

Brody grimaced. Hot blood pulsing in his wound kicked his pain higher. He slumped against the cold rock wall.

Was there no other way?

Something strong inside him hated the thought of accepting help. Harder to do than face death. Brody burrowed his forehead against cold stone, lifted long, dirty hair off his neck, and rubbed the tight muscles bunched there. Was he man enough? Forfeiting his name was like surrendering his manhood.

The Lady is one of the Ladies MacMurry, Pastor Fergus tempted.

Masquerade Marriage

3

On the morrow I wed. Megan Moria MacMurry, lay full length on the moor that divided the Highlands from their Lowland estate. She propped her chin on her hands and gazed across the soft grass at Cailin, her older sister.

You’ve had but three days of mourning your Jamie. Cailin reached across waving grass and squeezed Megan’s hand. It’s very soon.

Too soon. The scene that had changed her life three days past rushed back to cloud Megan’s senses…

 Despite the extra peat she’d thrown into the sweet-smelling fire, the dovecote remained chill, its small window open to welcome her returning pigeon. She drew the scarlet fur-lined hood of her cloak closer.

For hours the gentle cooing, the ruffling of feathers, the scratching in cozy nests, and bright round bird eyes watching her, kept her company. Soon she’d be forced to return to the castle for dinner. She hugged herself to keep from shivering. She’d been so confident the day would bring news from Jamie. Despite the morning’s cruel premonition, she had prayed for God to give the Highlanders another victory. With a gentle whoosh and flapping of grey wings, a feathered form landed on the window sill, clutched the perching bar with pale talons, and waited as she’d trained it.

Megan leaped from her three-legged stool, rushed to the window, and cupped the messenger’s soft, feathered body. She felt the rapid beat of its heart and smelled the faint bird odor as she opened the capsule on its leg and slid out the tiny slip of paper. A whisper of cool air fanned by pigeon’s wings, and the bird slipped from her hand to fly to its nest.

Megan scanned the note. The handwriting looked unfamiliar. Her heart sank. Her fingers shook. The words blurred. Small inked letters. Devastation on thin parchment, crackling in her fingers.

No. No. No!

She must have read it wrong. She brushed a fist across her eyes and tried again. Letters, in haphazard shapes, jumbled across the parchment. She sorted them out.

She had not misunderstood.

Falling to her knees on the cold hard floor, she dropped her head into her hands to smother her scream.

Jamie was dead. The clans decimated. The Highlands lost.

And with Jamie, Megan’s last hope died.

All the dreams of her life gathered in a heavy puddle inside her stomach...

That was Monday’s pain. Today, the agony had not abated. Megan squeezed Cailin’s hand. Then let it slide to the grass.

I must wed before Papa announces my betrothal to that odious earl. Numbness chilled Megan’s heart. She hoisted herself to a sitting position and retied the narrow blue ribbon around her bundled love letters. This is all I have left of Jamie. She spoke with absolute certainty. And I know with him dead, I shall never love again. She took a deep breath. So now I must choose.

The hated wedding dress destined for her marriage to the Earl of Mabry lay across her bed. Yards of satin elegance waited to entrap her into a beastly marriage. No. She refused to wed the harsh English lord. He’d not even been angry when he hit her.

Cailin frowned and raised her slender white hand to touch her own enormous betrothal diamond necklace, sending blue-white sparkles over her day gown and cloak.

Highland warriors hide in those hills. Megan gazed northward across their grassy glen to where the Highlands formed frowning crags and darkly-shadowed passes above bracken and heath-covered slopes. Pastor Fergus said the English brought in bloodhounds to track the survivors. He said I can save one.

Cailin’s lovely heart-shaped face looked worried. But, Megan, it’s your life I’m concerned about.

Megan tilted her chin toward the mist swirling around the mountain peaks where a perfect rainbow arched across the hazy blue afternoon sky. She slipped her hand into the pocket of her dark cloak, pulled out a paper, unfolded it, and glanced at the names.

Pastor Fergus sent a message that a Lowland Lady marrying a Highland fugitive is the surest way to save his life. He can then pose as a Lowland laird. Since I simply must escape wedding that despicable English earl Papa insists I marry, Pastor suggested this plan. This way, I escape marrying the earl and save a man’s life.

Cailin tapped a finger against her chin. I wish you could simply run away.

You know that’s quite impossible. In this world ruled by men, the earl would easily find me. He would question and bribe every friend, family member, and servant, and search every castle, home, and hut. He said as much when I hinted I wasn’t inclined to wed him. He wants control of my dowry and inheritance in the worst way. I have no other choice. I marry a Highland fugitive or a violent tyrant. Megan leaned forward and whispered in Cailin’s ear, And the earl expects a son.

Yes, he must have an heir for his title.

Megan wadded the skirt of her afternoon dress and kept twisting it. I’ve heard verified stories…he hits his sisters…just because hurting them pleases him. And though we are not yet wed, he struck me.

You must tell Papa.

I did. He didn’t believe me. Papa thought I was trying to convince him not to force us to wed.

Cailin furrowed her smooth forehead. Pastor’s suggestion seems your only way out. Trust that God will supply the right Highlander.

Yes. Like he supplied the ram so Abraham didn’t have to sacrifice his son. Megan frowned at the paper. Pastor Fergus said destroy this list once I’ve made my choice. She shut her eyes, trying to ease the grief of Jamie’s death that poked hot fingers through her heart. At the dovecote when I received the news of Jamie’s death, I discarded all my fanciful dreams of fairy-tale love. Far better to wed a Highlander to save his life and marry a man of my own choice. Not Papa’s.

Only God, she, and the man would know he would remain a husband in name only. Had the choice been hers, she would never marry. Mums and Papa’s unhappiness with one another haunted her dreams. She had even been frightened when she thought to wed dear Jamie.

Megan stared at the rainbow’s promise. Hot tears pricked her eyes. Life as she loved it had ended. She watched the rainbow fade. She had no more time for grief. She must act quickly.

You’re such a crusader. Your decision doesn’t surprise me one bit. Cailin wagged a finger. But Mums and Papa will be furious. They expect the protection, status, and money your earl provides. Besides, Papa thinks Highlanders far beneath our rank.

Megan let her shoulders slump. I know. I’m shunning my duty to marry the wretched earl. She straightened. Well, I won’t marry him! By late tomorrow, I shall be wed to another.

Papa will never forgive you. He’s stubborn as a rusty dungeon door.

I must do this.

You’re as stubborn as Papa. Cailin smiled her gentle smile. Be assured, I’ll keep your confidence.

Megan nodded. Her sister’s sealed lips had kept her from punishment more times than she could name. Thank you.

Cailin’s expression took on that familiar first-born look of setting things right when Megan hopelessly muddled them. Did Pastor Fergus say all the men on this list are Christians? I don’t want you to wed an unbeliever.

And Lord Mabry’s a Christ follower? I think not. She patted her sister’s hand. But yes, Pastor said the men are all born anew.

You’re right about Mabry. Pastor cares more about your future husband’s spiritual life than Papa. Cailin’s rounded brow smoothed. So, which untamed fugitive will you save from hanging?

After Pastor Fergus sent a runner across the moors last night with the list, I prayed. Almost all night. Megan frowned and bit her lip. The breeze lifted her skirts. She slapped them down so hard her legs stung.

So?

Megan pasted on an impish smile. I only wish I could wed more than one man.

Silly. You would if you could get away with it. And?

Megan hugged her squeamish stomach. I’ve chosen Brody MacCaulay.

Cailin’s cupid’s bow-shaped mouth smiled. Oh. I had no idea he was on the list.

Megan spoke in an offhand manner. As I recall, as a lad Brody worshiped you. Chased you like an arrow to a target. Perfect Cailin. After years of struggling with and praying about her own jealously toward her sister, this once, Cailin’s beauty would work to Megan’s advantage. By a stroke of genius, she needed to wed a man already besotted with Cailin.

Cailin’s sky-blue eyes turned to velvet. Perhaps Brody did like me. Years ago. Back when he and the other Highland lads came to train on the borderlands. It’s good of you to save his life. I’m so glad it’s Brody.

He barely knew I existed except to devil me. Desiring a marriage in name only, Megan counted on her husband adoring Cailin. All the English noblemen Papa brought to the castle to court Megan had done just that.

You and Brody usually ended up tormenting each other. Cailin’s gentle smile reminded Megan of an exceptionally trusting angel.

Megan shrugged. Brody’s the only name on the list I recognize. I certainly don’t want to marry a great shaggy man with one bushy eyebrow and a huge nose who only speaks Gaelic. Such a husband would never fit into my plan. The same long-term plan for which she began her secret romance with Jamie. What a happy thought she hatched when she asked Pastor Fergus to keep her identity secret. Any Highlander would battle for the chance to wed Cailin. Or any Lowlander would for that matter. But she doubted any would fight to wed her.

Her sister touched Megan’s arm. I recall Brody when he was almost too young to carry a targe or lift a broadsword. An engaging lad, responsible—

Always at the bottom of any mischief the lads pulled. Gawky, as I recall. Tall and thin. A scamp. Megan wrinkled her nose.

Remember the brash lads and their mock battles with stick claymores? Brody had integrity as he led his pack of would-be warriors.

Megan nodded. Honor. Good. Brody wouldn’t embarrass her by showing his love for Cailin publicly. And he wouldn’t demand his marital

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