Rescued by the Forbidden Laird – Bonus Prologue

 
France, Spring of 1714

 

Rain lashed the stone walls of the old garrison at Fort de Launay, turning the training yard below into a churned pit of mud and shouts.

Arran Mackay stood beneath the overhang, with his fists still wrapped from the morning drills. Stray curls of dark hair clung to his brow and sweat slid down the line of the scar on his jaw.

He relished the ache in his muscles. Pain was simple. It was predictable; a far cry from the life he had left behind.

That was when a stable boy sprinted across the yard, splashing through the mire. “Monsieur Mackay!” he called out breathlessly, clutching a sealed letter. “From Scotland, marked urgent!”

Arran’s stomach tightened. Only two things ever came urgent from Inverness: war… or death.

He took the letter in silence, and the familiar wax of Clan Mackay stared up at him like an accusation, with its black seal of a rampant stag. That was his father’s mark, the very thing he had crossed half a continent to escape.

For a long moment, Arran didn’t break the seal. He simply stared at it, with his jaw clenched until it hurt. Rain needled the back of his neck, but he barely noticed it.

That seal had immense power. He had seen that seal used to order raids, punishments, even hangings. It had shaped his own childhood, with a scowl and a fist.

At last, he snapped the seal and unfolded the parchment. His eyes moved once down the page. Then again, more slowly this time.

Laird Donald Mackay is dead.

The words blurred for a moment before steadying, symbolizing the end of an era. His father was gone. The tyrant of Inverness. The man who had ruled their clan with an iron will, a cold heart, and a hand forever poised to strike.

Arran exhaled. He couldn’t believe it.

He had pictured that moment before, but never like that, never alone on foreign soil, with nothing but rain and the distant clang of French steel to witness it.

Oddly enough, there was no relief and no triumph. All he could feel was a hollow weight in his chest. He should have known that a lifetime of wounds would not vanish with a single death.

His gaze dropped to the final line:

Ye must return at once. The clan will fracture without its laird. If ye dinnae claim yer faither’s seat, others will.

So, it had come to this… duty.

Behind him, footsteps approached. He guessed Captain Rousseau’s stride easily. The man was broad-shouldered, mustached, and ever boisterous.

“What is it, mon ami?

Arran folded the letter carefully, though his hand trembled once before he stilled it. Then, he faced his friend. “Me faither is dead,” he said simply, as if discussing the weather. He was both unaffected and utterly distraught by the news, and the two kept tilting to one side, then to the next.

“The tyrant of the north has final fallen,” the captain murmured. “You did not love him, I know that much. But still… he was your father.”

Arran swallowed heavily before replying. “A man can be faither in name and stranger in all else.”

Rousseau nodded, understanding more than he said. “And yet you go back.”

“Aye.” Arran’s voice was quiet. “Me clan will tear itself apart if I dinnae. Me faither ruled through fear. Men like that create enemies faster than sons.”

“Enemies you must now inherit,” Rousseau said grimly.

Arran didn’t deny it. “There are chieftains in the north who will use me faither’s death tae grab power. Others who will swear they loved him, then spit on his grave. And some…” His eyes darkened. “Some who will blame me, though I was leagues away.”

“Is this why you left?” Rousseau asked gently. “To escape his shadow?”

Arran hesitated. “Tae learn if I existed beyond it.”

The captain’s eyes burned with something like pride. “And you did. You became a leader men willingly follow. Not because they fear you, but because they would die for you.” Then Rousseau’s voice dropped. “But Scotland is not France. Here, a strong hand keeps peace. In the Highlands? A dagger keeps it better.”

Arran’s silence spoke his agreement. He looked out across the sodden training yard, where French soldiers barked orders through the downpour. For years, this place had been his exile, his refuge, and his proving ground. Here, he had carved out an identity that was not his father’s and not his clan’s. It was solely his own.

But the Highlands called him back all the same.

“Dae ye think I can hold a fractured clan taegether?” Arran asked, surprising himself with the confession. His voice carried no fear, only the hollow truth of a man who had survived too much to lie to himself.

Rousseau’s answer was steady. “Oui. Because you know what you refuse to become. And because the Highlands do not need another Donald Mackay.” He rested a firm palm against Arran’s arm. “They need the man I have seen, the man who fights with honor, the man who protects what is his.”

Arran swallowed, the words striking deeper than he wished. “Ye speak as though I already belong tae them.”

“I speak as though you never stopped.”

A long silence followed, broken only by rain and distant commands.

He inhaled deeply, then spoke. “I leave by first light.”

Rousseau clasped his shoulder. “Then I pray Scotland is kind to you.”

Arran gave a humorless smile. “Scotland has never been kind. I dinnae expect it tae start now.”

He turned from the yard, heading for his chambers to pack. There was not a moment to lose. Lives depended on it… he knew that much. He remembered his father’s voice, cold as steel:

Kindness makes a man weak. Rule with fear and fear alone.

Arran had sworn, long ago, to be nothing like him. Now, he would return to the very place that had made him. He would return to a clan that mistrusted him, to enemies who had not forgotten his father’s sins, to a land where loyalty was as sharp as a blade and every alliance could turn to ash.

And somewhere in those mist-covered Highlands, buried beneath his father’s ruin, lay the truth of his mother’s death, the wound that had poisoned everything.

As he walked, he could feel the storm at his back and Scotland ahead, cold and waiting for him. But whether he would come to it as its laird, its shield or its next casualty, was yet to be determined.


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