The Black Knave

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The Black Knave Page 9

by Patricia Potter


  “Hmm,” she said, her gaze sharpening. “A challenge.”

  “And you love them.”

  “Some. But you risk much, my new lord.”

  “No more than you.”

  She turned back to the mirror. “I hear you have a wife.”

  “The whole of Scotland apparently has heard that.”

  “A Jacobite wed to a king’s man? ’Tis news, Rory. And unexpected, at that.”

  “I was given little choice, and my new bride even less. If I did not marry her, God knows what fate Cumberland would have dealt her.”

  “Always the rescuer.”

  “I received land in exchange,” he said defensively.

  “But that is not why you did it, is it Rory?”

  “I would have been suspect had I not. I am a wastrel, remember, and what wastrel would turn down the king’s favor and new lands?”

  “And how does the bride accept this?”

  “My marriage seems to be the principal topic of conversation,” Rory said irritably.

  “Only because it is so out of character.”

  “’Tis true I have little faith in the institution. If you had known my mother, and my legal father, you would understand why. It is a marriage in name only, one that both the lass and I hope will end soon. But her younger brother is being held by Cumberland and you know my own precarious position.”

  “But does she?”

  “Good God, no.”

  “Do you not trust her?”

  “I do not want another life in danger. And she wants her brother freed. I am no’ so sure what she would, or wouldn’t, trade for it.”

  “Ah, Rory, sometimes I think you enjoy complicating your life.”

  “And you do not? But enough of this. Young Ogilvy has been taken, the last of his particular family. I wish to free him.”

  She stopped what she was doing and turned her body around. “You’ve only smuggled out fugitives before. Do you now intend to storm one of Cumberland’s prisons?”

  “Aye, that is exactly what I intend.”

  “You are daft.”

  “You’ve said that of me before.”

  “I’ve not changed my mind.”

  “I need some more cosmetics.”

  “Of course,” she said wearily. “Can you tell me what you have in mind?”

  “I know the gaol where they are keeping him. One of my men will instigate a fight and hopefully be thrown into one of the cells. Then his dear old mother will visit him, and on her way out ask to see the notorious Jacobite.”

  “And you are the dear old mother.”

  “Aye. Do you think you can do it?”

  She eyed him far more carefully. “More to the point, can you?”

  “I make a great greybeard,” he said testily.

  “A woman is a trifle different, my lord.” Her hands touched him at his waist, bending him slightly. “If you bend, we will need to give you a hump. A cane would not hurt, either. I have a gray wig we used not long ago. A few handkerchiefs to give you a bosom, then a pillow some bulk. You will make an ugly woman, my lord, if you’ll be forgiving me for saying so.”

  “I’d rather be ugly than fair,” he said. “I donna fancy British hands on me.”

  “You will not have to worry about that, not when I finish with you.”

  “When?”

  “When do you plan to return?”

  “Day after tomorrow.”

  “Then come tomorrow night after the performance. I will have everything you need.”

  He took the several steps over to her, leaned over and planted a kiss on her cheek.

  “Now you’ve ruined all my efforts” she fussed, even as she looked pleased. “I’ve missed you, Rory.”

  Bethia nursed the pup for the next few days, waking up several times during the night to give him another feeding.

  She had fixed a soft bed for it, but its soft whimpering had struck a chord in her, and she allowed the pup up in the bed with her, its tiny little body snuggling next to hers. The comfort was not all the dog’s.

  On the second day of the marquis’s absence, she decided to try to learn more about him. The place to begin, she thought, was the man who had been so kind to her the day of the wedding: the blacksmith. Alister.

  She thought of sending for him, but felt he would be less prepared if she suddenly appeared. He came to Braemoor at least once a week to shoe horses and do whatever other chores were needed. The rest of the week, except for Sunday, he apparently kept a shop in a village not far away. Since she was not allowed freedom outside Braemoor’s grounds, and he was apparently in residence this day, she planned a surprise visit.

  Bethia again was surprised at his small stature, even as she noted the strength in his arms and shoulders. He grinned at her when she entered the hot, grimy building that served as the smithy.

  “My lady. I am honored.”

  “Then you are the only one,” she replied wryly. “My presence mostly instills resentment.”

  “It will be gone quick enough,” he said. “Several of the servants had men killed by Jacobites at Culloden.”

  “My brothers were also killed,” she said sharply.

  “I am sorry,” he said.

  She bit her lip. She would not cry in front of these people.

  “Did you have need of me?” he said in a gentler tone.

  She fidgeted. She did not know how to ask the questions she wanted to ask. A lady dinna go to a blacksmith to ask questions about her husband. And yet …

  “You said …” She hesitated.

  “I said?” he prompted.

  “On … before the wedding, you said something about my husband.”

  “Aye?” he replied carefully.

  “No one else seems to …”

  “Want to say anything good about him?”

  “Aye,” she said, relieved that she did not have to pose the question.

  She watched indecision flitter over his face. “Has he been … unkind to you?”

  “He has been nothing to me,” she said flatly. “We have exchanged few words.”

  “He doesna’ like to stay still.”

  “So I am told.”

  “Does that disturb you?”

  “I think it is quite normal for a wife to want to know something about her husband.”

  “What he wishes to tell,” the blacksmith said softly. “Not what others say about him.”

  “You are his friend.” She had not been sure until this moment. His words now told her the truth of it. But she did not understand why the fop she knew as her husband would be friend to a hardworking blacksmith.

  His lips thinned. “The marquis does not have friends such as I. I was sent by the duke of Cumberland to fetch you, and I said what you wanted to hear.” He bent over the forge, his hands easily working the tools that turned a piece of iron into a shoe, bending it with such accomplished ease that she found herself fascinated, even as she realized he was trying to change the subject.

  Bethia’s heart constricted. She had thought, hoped …

  After a moment, she tried again. “I … understand there is someone who grows herbs. I am in need of some.”

  The moving hands of the blacksmith stilled. “I will fetch what you need, my lady.”

  “I would like to see for myself what she has.”

  He didn’t turn to her, nor did the expression on his face change. “It is dangerous, my lady, for a woman to travel these days. There are brigands about.”

  “The Black Knave, you mean?” There, she had said the words.

  “Aye, and others.”

  “I heard he only goes about helping people.”

  The blacksmith turned then, his face red from the heat. “That is dangerous talk, my lady. I would suggest you not say it to anyone else. He is a rebel with the king’s bounty on his head, and people here would not take kindly to any words said in his behalf. Your husband has just lost his father and brother to the Jacobites; he’ll have little sympathy with your in
terest.”

  She drew herself up straight at the scolding. “You are among those who sanction having women and children burned out of their homes and innocent men hanged?”

  “I do not sanction outlaws who defy the king,” he said in a cold voice, “and I advise you, my lady, to ask no other about this matter.”

  She was going to receive no help from this source.

  But even she had known what a flimsy hope it was. A kind word, and she had leaped upon it as if it were far more. It had been only a meaningless nicety, designed to disarm her and get her down to the altar.

  She turned, her back rigid with shame that she had imagined she would receive anything from a member of this household, this clan that betrayed everything she’d been raised to respect and cherish.

  “My lady?” His words followed her out the door, but she did not stop. She felt the mist of tears in her eyes, and she did not want anyone to see them. She would not show any of them, not one, the loneliness that clawed at her heart like some starving animal.

  Her feet hurried toward the tower house, toward the sanctuary of her room.

  Rory neared Braemoor, his pockets full of pound notes won from a churlish Lehgrens. Two kegs were tied down on a horse behind him. One of the kegs contained women’s clothes, paints, a wig and two British uniforms; the other held a rather fine wine. He opened the tap, the better for a patrol to test. He’d been stopped by two patrols, but was immediately and with profuse apologies released as soon as his identity was known and the kegs explained as a gift for Cumberland.

  Neither asked to sample the wine after that explanation, and his precaution was for naught; still, if an officer had been with them rather than a sergeant, the keg might well have been inspected.

  Rory skirted the lane to the tower house. He wanted no one from Braemoor to see him, to report his homecoming to his wife. In fact, he fervently hoped everyone would believe him still in Edinburgh.

  The very thought sobered him. He had thought about her more than he’d wanted during the past several days. God knew he understood what it was to be alone, unwanted, even reviled. She would be all three, and he had no idea how to make her stay here more tolerable without putting both of them, and his friends, in mortal danger.

  Damn Cumberland and his machinations. He would have to find out why it had been so important to the duke and to King George that Bethia MacDonell marry. They certainly cared little about the welfare of any other Jacobite woman, regardless of rank. What in the devil was it about the MacDonell lass? Not lass. His wife. That fact still astounded him every time he considered it.

  He turned down the lane to Mary’s cottage just as the sun set. Mayhap Alister would also be there, and he could sit back and enjoy a tankard of brandy and discuss plans for tonight. Tonight would be his most dangerous mission. Never before had he tried to take a man from British custody. Rory suspected the reward on his head might well double after this night’s work. If he lived through it.

  ’Twas dusk when he rode up to Mary’s cottage. He slipped his heels from the stirrups and slid down. He tied the horse’s reins to a branch, then cut the rawhide strips binding the kegs in place. He lowered the first one to the ground, then the other. “You will be getting your reward soon,” he whispered to the horse, a sad-looking bony mare he’d purchased in Edinburgh. But with a little fattening up, she would improve greatly. She might make a good mount for … his wife once he was satisfied that the lass would stay put.

  He knocked lightly, and the door opened almost immediately.

  Alister was indeed there. He grinned when he saw Rory. “I wasna sure you would make it.”

  “Neither was I. Patrols are heavy between here and Edinburgh.”

  “They are everywhere,” Alister retorted. “I dinna know there were so many Englishmen alive. And now, it seems, they are all in Scotland.”

  “Unfortunately.”

  Alister eyed the barrels. “Is that what it looks like?”

  “One of them,” Rory said. “The other includes some items of clothing. I think Mary will have to assist me with them.”

  Mary stepped out then. “Rory, thank God ye are safe.”

  “I’m far too wicked to die.”

  “Your brother managed it.”

  He looked at her face, suddenly tight and tense, and he remembered when he’d been riding past the cottage years ago, and heard the scream. He’d hesitated only a moment, then went bursting into the cottage, only to find his brother on top of her.

  Mary’s voice pierced his thought. “It is getting late.”

  “Aye, it is,” he replied. “It will take me only a few moments.” He turned to Alister. “Do you have a man who will not object to gaol for a few hours?”

  Alister nodded. “We will have to take him to France with our next load, however. It will be too dangerous for him here.”

  Rory nodded. “Done. Now help me with these infernal garments.”

  “Your taste is not improving, my lord,” Alister said with amusement. “And you might be interested to know your new wife paid a visit to the smithy.”

  Rory stilled. He should have known that she would look for friendship somewhere. Damn him for sending her in Alister’s direction.

  “She is lonely and she had questions about ye,” Alister said.

  “I imagined as much,” Rory said. “But it is not wise for me to stay near her, even if I were more in residence at Braemoor. She cannot suspect anything.”

  “She is a Jacobite.”

  “Aye, but one that must stay in Scotland, at least until we can free her brother. Any change in her attitude toward me, a wrong word dropped, a whisper heard, could condemn us all. No, not until the time is right.”

  Alister nodded. So did Mary, who was standing next to him.

  “Now help me get this bloody thing on. We have business this night.”

  Seven

  “The bloody rogue struck again, this time the gaol in the village.”

  Bethia paused in the hallway. The voices from the great room were loud and angry. She’d heard the approach of horses a few minutes earlier, then the heavy trampling of boots in the hall, and she’d approached softly, wanting to hear. Her presence usually meant stilted silences.

  She heard the marquis’s cousin asking questions. The others, she suspected, were English soldiers.

  “The sergeant swears the leader was an old woman,” an unfamiliar voice said. “I know there are those who say the Black Knave is an old man, but a woman?”

  “Are you sure it is the work of the Black Knave?” Neil Forbes’s soft accent was distinctive among the more clipped ones.

  “Aye, he left a jack of spades in the cell where Ogilvy was held.”

  “Arrogant bastard,” Neil Forbes commented. Bethia thought she heard just a hint of admiration in it.

  “Half my men believe he is a witch, or a devil, able to change his form whenever he wishes.”

  “That’s pure nonsense.”

  “Some even claim it really is a woman.”

  Bethia heard Neil’s laughter. “With that kind of audacity? I think not.”

  “You sound as if you admire him.” The unfamiliar voice had taken on an edge.

  “I admire courage, whatever the source. That does not mean I want this man running loose in our district. He might well turn from stealing Jacobites from Cumberland to taking something more dear.”

  “I want some of your tenants. We plan to search every hut, every barn or covey within fifty miles. The sergeant believes one of the attackers might be wounded. He found blood outside the gaol.”

  “The marquis is the only one who can authorize that. He is not here.”

  “When will he return?” The question was brusque, impatient.

  “I do not know.” Neil Forbes’s voice was contemptuous. “No one ever knows. He does not bother himself with keeping anyone informed. I believe he’s in Edinburgh, but he might well be in someone’s bed.”

  “I thought he was just wed.”

/>   “A Jacobite,” Neil said dismissively. “With a tart tongue and none of the attributes my cousin favors. ’Twas her fortune my cousin sought.”

  Resentment, anger and even shame ripped through Bethia. None of the attributes. “Plain” was what he meant. She told herself she didn’t care what these English-lovers thought, but still the words stung.

  And apparently her bridegroom shared that opinion, since he had no interest in her bed, nor, quite obviously, her company.

  She should be pleased, but pride—the strong pride of the MacDonells—caused her to wince and left her feeling more alone than ever. No one in the MacDonell hold would ever have had such poor manners as to disparage the lord and his lady.

  But then, these Forbeses had no honor.

  She wanted to hear more, but she had no appetite now for being discovered lurking in the hall and overhearing their remarks. Mayhap she could learn more from the men being served mead in the great hall.

  She was mistress here, but she knew the king’s men were always welcomed at Braemoor, and their men fed and offered other refreshment. She flinched every time she saw a red coat. She knew them only too well.

  Bethia entered the great hall. Weapons had been scattered along the walls, and already the sound of voices was growing louder with drink. Curses echoed in the hall. She caught bits and pieces.

  “’E’s a bloody phantom.”

  “Maltworm.”

  “We will be up all night, ’unting these bloody woods.”

  “Drink deep,” said another.

  “’Ow will we know the bloody bastard?”

  “Someone will pay for lettin’ that Jacobite go free.”

  “Aye, I would no’ be in that sergeant’s shoes. Be lucky if he ain’t hung.”

  Bethia drank in all the comments, wishing that one might give her a clue as to how to find the Black Knave. Then one of the men looked her way, and punched another, and he a third until all of them turned toward her, their faces going red as they apparently remembered their language. One bowed. “Milady?”

  “I just came to see if you had everything you need. Food? Drink?”

  “Aye, milady,” said the man who seemed to be the spokesman. “And we be thanking you for yer hospitality.”

  She inclined her head slightly in acknowledgment, then turned and left, relieved to be rid of their presence. The uniforms sickened her, as did their arrogance. They had so much blood on their hands, and they cared little.

 

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