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Lucy turned, waving her arms as she waded through the mass, hoping her heavy skirts would keep any of them from biting her legs. Step after step, she dodged massive heads and thick tails. Would they turn on her, devouring her as she tried to liberate them? Her sister, Cordelia, would say she deserved it for risking herself so outrageously to free the hounds.

Lucy fell against the stone wall after tripping over a bulldog, but she reached the door, swinging it open. The surge of yelping, barking beasts rushed around her like water from a shattered damn. They hit her skirts and legs, pushing her forward with the flow. Her arms flailed as she hurtled toward the ground. Eyes squeezed shut, it took her a moment to realize someone had caught her.

*

Greer Buchanan pulledthe woman toward him, turning them both so that they moved out of the violent rush of hounds. The dogs raced off behind a circular building that looked like an arena.

The woman wore laborers’ clothing and smelled of strawberries. The hair that had escaped her linen cap was golden, and her skin lay smooth against high cheekbones.

The dogs could have torn her apart. “What in bloody hell are ye doing, lass?”

She turned blue eyes up to him. “Put me down,” she ordered. When he didn’t immediately, she began to kick and twist in his arms.

“Let her go!” a boy yelled.

A heartbeat later, a cutting pain broke across Greer’s forehead, followed by an explosion of icy snow over his face. He dropped the woman, and she landed with a thud.

“Holy hell,” she said.

“Mo chreach!” he yelled, wiping the ice and snow from his face.

“Run!” the woman yelled, and three children ran off across the field, the boy in the lead. The woman pushed back onto her heels and straightened, her gaze going back and forth between him and the kennel she’d liberated. “You’re bleeding,” she said.

He wiped at the sting. “Bloody snowball had a rock in it,” he said, but the lass had already run back into the kennel.

Greer yanked a rag from the belt that held his woolen plaid in place and wiped at the blood on his forehead. Aye, she was mad, and her lad had a most accurate aim.

Going to the door, he pulled it open. The woman nearly ran into him.

“Here,” she said, thrusting a smallish dog into his arms while she held onto a second tan-coated pup.

“Ho there! What’s going on?” a man dressed in guard’s livery called from around the corner of the now empty kennel.

“Holy Mother Mary,” the woman whispered.

“Bloody hell,” he murmured as he and the lass stood there looking guilty enough to march directly to the gallows. Three other guards followed the one in charge, and all Greer could do was hold the pup against him as it tried to lick his face.

Greer Buchanan had already deduced that the portly man on London Bridge had sent him the wrong way to Whitehall Palace. As a Highlander in dress and speech, many of the English thought nothing of lying to him, even when he used his mother’s advice on being polite.

“Thank goodness you’ve come,” the woman said as the guards halted before them, short swords drawn. Tears filled her eyes, and her gloved hand shook as she pointed after the hounds. “I was but walking this way and all your dogs barreled out.”

Fok. Her statement made him the obvious culprit.

“Who are you?” a frowning guard asked him as two of the men ran into the kennel.

“Greer Buchanan,” he answered, “with a message from Lord Moray on behalf of King James to your queen.” The dog squirmed in his arms.

“’Tis empty!” the second guard yelled, running back out. “Look!” He pointed toward the pack breaking off into three groups around the fishponds.

“Did Lord Moray send you to steal the queen’s dogs?” the leader said, nodding to the pups in their arms.

“I’m not stealing dogs,” Greer said. “I was trying to find my way to Whitehall Palace when the noise drew me here, and I came to the aid of the lady.”

Tears slid down the woman’s cheeks. “These two poor pups were being trampled. I persuaded this man to help me save them.”

“Whitehall ’tis on the other side of the Thames, Scot,” the guard said, turning outward at the sound of squawking.

“Holy hell,” the woman whispered next to Greer. They all watched as the lad who’d hit him with the rock-laden snowball ran out of another animal kennel behind a flock of roosters that he’d apparently freed. They were squawking and flapping their wings as they scrambled in a haphazard race to escape the lad’s flailing arms.

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