The Laird Who Loved Me

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The Laird Who Loved Me Page 6

by Karen Hawkins


  Flags of high color marred Georgiana’s cheeks. “You did not ask him such a thing!”

  Roxburge rubbed his snuffbox with one thumb. “I . . . it’s my house and my pear.”

  “Once it was placed on MacLean’s plate, it became his pear.” Georgiana clasped the duke’s arm and literally began to drag him away, her mouth tight with anger. “Sit in your seat at the head of the table and leave our guests alone.”

  Roxburge allowed himself to be led off, though he complained loudly, “I just wanted the pear! It’s the last one and—”

  She shushed him as if he were a child of two. Lips thrust out, he plopped into his seat, smacked his snuffbox on the table beside his plate, and demanded that one of the footmen go to the kitchen and search for more pears.

  Down the table, Dervishton chuckled. “It’s Beauty and the Beast. I wonder what Georgiana sees in him.”

  “His bank accounts, I would think,” Alexander answered.

  “She’s a beautiful woman; she could have anyone.”

  She can now. But in the beginning, Roxburge was the one who was doing the favor. Alexander had discovered that little tidbit quite by accident. He’d been in the stables and had overheard the butler—who’d been angry at Georgiana’s peremptory manner toward his nephew, the new footman—discussing his employer’s origins in a vigorous tone of voice.

  It was amazing what one could learn if one merely listened. And after thinking about it, Alexander easily recognized signs that Georgiana wasn’t born to the role she played. She was far more dismissive of the servants than most ladies of breeding were, as if she had something to prove. She reminded him of a person speaking a foreign language, overcorrect and stiff.

  Viscount Falkland wandered into the breakfast room and came to stand beside Dervishton’s chair. “G’morning! What’s for breakfast?”

  Dervishton grinned. “Don’t ask for pears. MacLean here got the last one, much to our host’s dismay.”

  Falkland looked to the head seat and watched as Georgiana placed strawberries on the duke’s plate, then took her place at the other end of the table. “It’s almost criminal, all of that beauty in bed with that shriveled-up shell of a man.”

  “Oh, I’m sure it’s been years since Georgiana visited that bed,” Dervishton said drily.

  The viscount’s plump, childish face cleared. “Thank goodness for that. I think he prizes that gold snuffbox more than his wife, anyway. It never leaves his hand, and they say he sleeps with it under his pillow.”

  “Poor Georgiana,” Dervishton murmured.

  “Don’t waste your sympathy,” Alexander said. “She isn’t suffering overmuch; you’re sitting in one of her many consolation prizes. Roxburge paid over eighty thousand pounds for this house.”

  Dervishton whistled silently while Falkland winced.

  “At least she got something out of it.” Falkland glanced at the buffet. “I’d better get something to eat before the ladies arrive. I came down late to breakfast yesterday because I had trouble getting my cravat to look just so, and by the time I arrived, there wasn’t a single egg to be had.”

  Dervishton eyed the viscount’s neckwear. “Yes, we can see that you decided to give up your cravat for eggs today.”

  “What’s wrong with my crav—” Falkland gaped at the doorway, then frantically adjusted his cuffs and smoothed his waistcoat.

  Alexander followed the plump young lord’s gaze and found Caitlyn entering the room arm in arm with Miss Ogilvie. They made a pretty picture, and Alexander would wager the family castle they knew it.

  “Good God, she’s—” croaked Falkland, turning bright red. “She’s an angel! A true angel!” He subsided into wide-eyed bliss.

  “Easy, fool,” Dervishton muttered. “You’ll embarrass us all.” He stood and flourished a bow. “Good morning! I trust you both slept well.”

  “I certainly did,” Miss Ogilvie said.

  “As did I. I slept until almost ten,” Miss Hurst added in her rich, melodious voice.

  Falkland visibly shivered, and it was all Alexander could do not to chide the fool. The youth was smitten, and judging from the way Dervishton was watching Caitlyn, he was in no better shape.

  Good God, did every man except him fall madly in love with the chit? It was damnably annoying.

  Falkland leaned forward eagerly. “Miss Hurst, can I carry your plate at the buffet and—”

  “Don’t even try it.” Dervishton slipped his arm through Caitlyn’s. “Miss Hurst needs someone with steadier hands to hold her plate.”

  Falkland stiffened. “I have steady hands, and I can also—”

  “For the love of God!” Alexander snapped, unable to take another moment. “Leave the chit alone! She can get her own damned breakfast.”

  Falkland turned bright red. “I was just—”

  “Sausage!” Caitlyn looked past him to the buffet. “There’s only one left and I intend to have it. If you will pardon me a moment, please.” She slipped her arm from Dervishton’s, whisked around him, and began to fill a plate while exclaiming at the sight of kippers.

  “Excuse me!” Falkland scurried off to pester Caitlyn.

  Chuckling, Miss Ogilvie followed him to the buffet.

  Dervishton returned to his seat. “Well! I’ve never been dismissed for a plate of sausage before.”

  Alexander had to hide a reluctant smile. He should have been irritated, but his sense of humor was too strong to allow it. He watched Caitlyn chat animatedly to Falkland about the variety of fruit on the buffet as she filled the plate he dutifully held. Last night she’d been equally enthusiastic about their dinner, her reaction immediate and genuine. Their previous relationship had happened so quickly, so fiercely, that he hadn’t learned her everyday likes and dislikes. Not that it mattered, he told himself, dispelling a flicker of unease. He knew her character, and that was all he needed to know.

  “Falkland is a fool,” Dervishton said into the silence. “He is escorting the charming Miss Hurst this way. I’d have taken her to the other end of the table, away from the competition.”

  Alexander watched as the weak-chinned viscount assisted Caitlyn to a chair down a little and across from Alexander. Caitlyn was chuckling at something the viscount said while he watched her with an adoring air that nauseated Alexander.

  When Alexander turned to say as much to Dervishton, he realized that the young lord’s gaze was locked on Caitlyn, too. “Watch,” he murmured to Alexander. “You’ll be glad you did.”

  “Watch what?”

  A mesmerized look in his eyes, Dervishton didn’t answer.

  Muttering an oath, Alexander turned and regarded Caitlyn. The morning sunlight slanted across her, smoothing over her creamy skin and lighting her golden hair. Her long lashes, thick and dark, shadowed her brown eyes and made them appear darker. She looked fresh and lovely, no different from what he expected.

  Irritated, Alexander shrugged. “So?”

  “You’re an impatient sort, aren’t you?” Dervishton flicked a glance at Alexander, then turned back to Caitlyn. “Wait a moment and you’ll see.”

  Alexander scowled, but as he did so, Caitlyn leaned over her plate and closed her eyes, an expression of deep pleasure on her face. Her expression was like that of a lover, a sensual yearning.

  Instantly Alexander’s throat tightened and his heart thundered an extra beat. “What in hell is she doing?”

  “Smelling the ham, I believe.” Dervishton’s voice was oddly deep.

  Alexander was fairly certain his own voice wouldn’t be normal either as he watched Caitlyn savor the scent of her breakfast.

  She smiled and lifted her fork and knife … and licked her lips.

  “Good God,” Dervishton whispered hoarsely.

  Alexander’s body flash heated, and for one wild, crazed moment he wanted that look—wanted to own it, to possess it, for it to be directed at him and no one else.

  Caitlyn slipped her fork beneath a small bit of ham and brought it to her lips.


  If he had thought her expression rapturous before, he’d been wrong. Her blatantly sensual expression now was beyond description. “Has she never had food before?”

  Dervishton answered quietly, “I think it’s the sophistication of the dishes that she savors.”

  “Ham and eggs?”

  “Seasoned with chives, butter, and a touch of thyme—Roxburge keeps an excellent table. I have seldom—” Caitlyn slipped a forkful of eggs between her lips. “Damn,” Dervishton breathed as Caitlyn closed her eyes and slowly chewed, her lips moist.

  Damn indeed. The woman was talented at garnering attention, but this was beyond enough! Alexander saw that every man in the room was watching her eat—even Roxburge had a greedy expression on his faded face.

  Alexander’s jaw tightened. Then he leaned forward and said in a clear voice, “Miss Hurst, I’ve never seen a woman eat with such relish.”

  She lowered her fork. “I doubt I enjoy my food any more than anyone else.” She turned to Miss Ogilvie, who’d just taken a seat. “Don’t you think that’s true, Miss Ogilvie?”

  “Oh, we all have our weaknesses,” Miss Ogilvie said promptly. “For example, no one loves chocolate cake as much as I.”

  Beside her, the Earl of Caithness grinned. “I’ve been known to hoard truffles.”

  “Don’t let MacLean fool you,” Dervishton added with wicked twinkle. “He almost fought our host over the last pear.”

  Caitlyn blinked. “There were pears?” She leaned forward and, with a look of deep longing, regarded his plate.

  Alexander’s jaw tightened as an unfamiliar stab of envy pierced him. Good God, I’m jealous of a damn pear! The ridiculous thought irked him yet more. With grim determination, he announced, “Yes, I have the last pear.” Alexander cut a piece and made a show of tasting it. “Mmm! Cinnamon. Excellent.”

  Her gaze narrowed and her lips pressed firmly together, which made the pear taste all the better to Alexander.

  Georgiana’s sharp voice cut through the moment. “Lord Dervishton, you mentioned last night that you’d enjoy a ride this afternoon.”

  Dervishton nodded, his gaze drifting back to Caitlyn.

  “It’s brisk today, but I shall have the horses readied.” Georgiana looked at Alexander and her expression softened. “You don’t normally ride for pleasure, I recall.”

  He shrugged. “I ride while attending my lands. I don’t normally find it a relaxing pastime.”

  Lady Kinloss, seated at Georgiana’s left, clapped her hands. “A ride would be delightful! Though her grace and some others”—she sent a quick glance at Alexander—“are not much for riding, I’m sure the rest of us would enjoy it. Perhaps we could even visit the Snaid.”

  Miss Ogilvie looked up from a low conversation she was having with Caithness. “The Snaid? Is that a castle?”

  Lady Kinloss tittered. “Lud, no! The Snaid is what the locals call Inversnaid. It’s a very small village, but there’s an inn there with exceptionally good fare and some astounding views of the Ben, which is quite a lovely mountain. We could ride to the Snaid this afternoon, have tea, and return in plenty of time to get ready for dinner.”

  “Miss Hurst, do you ride?” Dervishton asked.

  “Somewhat. I was learning in London when—” Her gaze slipped to Alexander, and then, catching his sudden gaze, she colored. “Of course I can ride.”

  He lifted his brows, amused at her pink-stained cheeks. Though he knew that while she was talking about their rides in the park, she was thinking about the kisses that followed. As was he.

  Glad to know that those moments still flustered her, he allowed his gaze to flicker over her mouth. “Miss Hurst is an excellent … rider.”

  She flushed a deeper pink, her gaze flying to meet his. “Thank you, Lord MacLean, but I wouldn’t classify myself as excellent.”

  “Oh, come now. Don’t be so shy about your talents.”

  All eyes turned toward Caitlyn. She flicked Alexander a cold glance. “While I can ride, I don’t know the horses in her grace’s stables and—”

  Alexander drawled, “You are worried they wouldn’t be up to your standards, of course. Having seen you ride, I can certainly understand your concern.”

  Dervishton raised his brows. “You have ridden together before?”

  “I had the privilege of teaching Miss Hurst when she was in London last season.”

  A distinct pause in the conversation followed.

  Caitlyn’s cheeks couldn’t be brighter. “Fortunately, I’ve had more instruction since.”

  Alexander’s humor disappeared. What in hell did she mean by that? Was she talking about riding, or kissing? Dammit, she’d been ensconced in the countryside for the last three months! Had some country bumpkin dared touch her?

  Alexander’s blood boiled at the thought of Caitlyn’s pink-and-white perfection in the hands of a rough farmer.

  “Your Grace,” Miss Ogilvie interjected, “I’m afraid my riding skills are quite negligible. I will need a gentle mount.”

  Georgiana seemed amused by this artless confession. “Don’t worry, Miss Ogilvie. I have quite a number of smaller, gentler mounts in the stables for just such a reason.”

  Miss Ogilvie sighed in relief. “Thank you, Your Grace!”

  “Of course.” Georgiana sent a look at Alexander from under her lashes and said in a lazy voice, “While most of you are enjoying a ride, I will stay here and attend to some correspondence. That should be a lovely way to spend the afternoon.”

  Alexander wished she’d try for a little subtlety, but he supposed it was beyond her. To show his disinterest, he turned back to his plate to enjoy his pear. But as he raised his fork, he realized the pear was gone.

  Across from him, Caitlyn lifted the last piece of pear with her fork. She’d stolen his pear from his plate, the wench!

  She smiled at him as she slid the pear between her lips and chewed it with obvious relish. Her eyes twinkled mischievously, and an answering spark of amusement lifted one corner of his mouth, but he staunched it immediately.

  For a dangerous moment, he’d almost forgotten why she was here. Dammit, he had to be on guard that she didn’t beguile him the way she’d already enslaved the majority of men here.

  He turned toward Dervishton. “The wind is blowing from the north. It’ll be a cold ride this afternoon.”

  Dervishton looked down the table at Caitlyn. “I don’t care if it snows; I wouldn’t miss this ride for the world.”

  Irritation flared and Alexander regarded the younger lord with a jaundiced eye. He knew exactly what would happen: Dervishton and Falkland would spend the entire ride to the Snaid trying to outjockey one another, which would gratify Caitlyn Hurst’s vanity to no end. It was a pity he wasn’t going. If anyone could keep the two lunkhead lords at bay, it was he.

  Hmm . . . perhaps he should go. He thought of all the ways he could tease her while riding, when private conversation was more easily obtained. Not to mention he knew her true riding skills, and they weren’t the best. It was one thing to ride the smooth, flat paths in Hyde Park and another to ride a narrow, uneven country lane.

  Alexander smiled. “I believe I will go for that ride after all.”

  Georgiana’s head snapped in his direction, her hard blue gaze sharp, and for an instant he thought she would blurt out something indiscreet. After a moment, she collected herself and gave an uncertain laugh. “Alexander, really! I’ve never known you to join in such mundane sport.”

  He shrugged. “I’ve decided I’d enjoy the fresh air.”

  A flash of displeasure marred Georgiana’s face. “Since you won’t be here … Lord Dervishton, perhaps you will be so good as to stay. I shall be glad to have the company.”

  Lord Dervishton looked disappointed, but he quickly hid it. “Of course, Your Grace. It would be my pleasure.”

  Caitlyn felt a faint sense of satisfaction as the duchess glared at Alexander. Muiren’s information about the duchess and MacLean must be true. Caitlyn shot
a glance at the duke, who was happily polishing his snuffbox. Since he didn’t seem bothered, perhaps she shouldn’t be, either. After all, she had no claim to MacLean.

  Of course, if he’d been her husband, she wouldn’t have stood for such nonsense. When she married, she’d make sure her husband respected their relationship and her, just as her parents respected each other.

  The thought of her mother gave Caitlyn pause. Already, she’d allowed MacLean’s goading to push her down the same path that had caused the trouble from before—the oh-yes-I-can-and-you-can’t-stop-me that had led her into such indiscretions. She’d let his teasing keep her silent on her limitations as a rider, even claiming that she knew more now, which was a blatant falsehood. She simply could not allow him to lure her into altercations.

  There was something insulting in the way MacLean looked at her, as if he found her wanting in some fundamental way. That look had the power to push her into rash behavior, which was why she’d stolen his pear. The pompous ass had been so patronizing that she’d longed to take him down a notch. Fortunately, only the Earl of Caithness had witnessed her theft, and he’d merely grinned and returned to his own breakfast.

  Caitlyn could see why Miss Ogilvie thought Caithness an interesting man. He had a steadfast, calm quality. It was a pity Caitlyn didn’t find such men attractive, but she was invariably drawn to the more volatile, less predictable sort.

  She regarded MacLean from under her lashes and wished he weren’t quite so handsome. He looked far too much like a hero from a novel, though his actions were anything but. She wondered what his intentions were. He was certainly out to embarrass her, but why? What did he hope to gain?

  Perhaps she could discover that when they were riding. She’d find a way to speak privately with him and—

  The duchess leaned forward to say something in a low voice to MacLean. He listened, then shrugged and turned away. The duchess looked furious, while MacLean merely looked bored.

  A faint flicker warmed Caitlyn’s heart.

  Sally leaned across the table. “Caitlyn, instead of riding, perhaps I should stay here and look at the grand portraits.” She glanced down the table at the duke, before saying in a low whisper, “I’ll count how many have the unfortunate Roxburge chin.”

 

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