When a Scot Ties the Knot
Page 45When she tried to pull it loose, her other leg immediately sank, too—all the way up to her knee. What was this muck? It acted like quicksand, drawing her further and further down.
“Logan?” she called. “Logan, please come at once. I can’t move my feet.”
He stood a few feet to the side and surveyed her situation. “You’ve stepped in a bog. Happens all the time.”
“So it’s happened to you?”
“Och, no. I’m not that stupid.”
Of course not, Maddie thought bitterly. Of course this would only happen to her.
“But I have unmired many a cow and sheep,” he continued.
“Wonderful. If you’d just be so kind as to unmire me. Quickly?”
A hint of amusement gleamed in his eyes. That look told her something terrible.
He was going to help her, but he was going to enjoy every minute of this first.
Maddie twisted and pried at her leg, to no avail. It was well and truly stuck, and her heart was rabbiting about her chest.
“What’s the second rule of bogs? I think we should just skip to that.”
“No thrashing about,” he said. “You’ll fatigue yourself. Just be calm and wait for your body to reach its equilibrium.”
Easy for him to say.
She tried to reach for something, anything, to grab onto. Her hands caught only air and loose grass. The bog tightened its grip, swallowing her hips.
“Logan,” she cried. “Logan, it’s getting worse.”
“That’s because you’re struggling.”
“Of course I’m struggling! I am being swallowed alive. And you’re just standing there.”
He crouched to her eye level. “You’ll be fine. Most bogs are no more than waist deep.”
“Most bogs,” she repeated. “So some bogs are deeper.”
“Almost no one dies of miring.”
“Relax,” he said. “The ones who do perish, they die of the exposure or thirst. Not because they’re sucked under.”
“So you’re saying . . .”
“You’ll be fine. We’ll build a little roof over your head and bring you bannocks twice a day. You can live here quite happily for years.”
Maddie clenched her jaw to keep from smiling or laughing. Every time she made up her mind to despise him, he showed a flare of that disarming humor. She refused to reward him for it.
“Not to worry,” he said. “It takes hours for the weight of the peat to cut off circulation to your limbs.”
She groaned in despair as she sank further still. The peat and mud sucked at her legs, pulling her waist-deep in muck.
She was truly beginning to panic. Landing knee-deep in a bog was a funny situation, even she would admit—for a minute. Maybe two. But immobilized in freezing, waist-deep mud with the distinct possibility of never working herself free?
This was not her idea of a pleasant afternoon. Especially when it seemed likely to become her final afternoon.
Logan, by contrast, seemed to be having the time of his life. He sat down on a bit of rock nearby. “Say, remember that time when you got mired in the bog?” He chuckled to himself. “What a memory. We were there all day. Made a picnic of it. We sang songs for an hour or two. Counted to five thousand, just for larks. Then you insisted I go for sandwiches, and . . .”
She cast him a beseeching look.
“Here’s what I’ll promise, Logan MacKenzie. If you don’t get me free, I will come back from the grave and haunt you. Relentlessly.”
“For a timid English bluestocking, you can be quite fierce when you choose to be. I rather like it.”
She hugged herself to keep her hands out of the creeping mud. “Logan, please. I beg you, stop teasing and get me out of this. I’m cold. And I’m frightened.”
“Look at me.”
She looked at him.
His gaze held hers, blue and unwavering. All teasing went out of his voice. “I’m not leaving you. Ten years in the British Army, and I’ve never left a man behind. I’m not leaving you. I’ll have you out of this. Understand?”
She nodded. She was beginning to comprehend why his soldiers would follow him anywhere, and why the tenants trusted him on sight. When Logan MacKenzie took a soul under his protection, he would die before he let them suffer harm.