Rogue of the High Seas
Page 13
Colette gave her a cursory glance. “Of course. I have just begun.” She moved to the table, rummaged through the sketches she’d done yesterday and held one up. “This is the only one that does Captain Henderson justice, do you not agree?”
Shauna looked at it, feeling a twinge of envy. Colette obviously had talent, for she’d captured Robert’s features perfectly—the slant of his cheekbones, the straight nose and square jaw—and she’d even managed to show a hint of his Viking heritage in keeping his eyes light and his tousled hair blond while using black ink. “Aye. ’Tis verra good.”
Colette smiled and turned to Robert, who looked embarrassed. “Today I will concentrate on your shoulders, I think.”
Shauna managed not to groan, but just barely. She’d tried—mostly unsuccessfully—to keep from staring at those broad shoulders herself. Then she remembered how Colette had angled Robert’s face with her fingers a number of times yesterday. Shauna didn’t think she could take Colette spreading her hands all over Robert’s shoulders and chest as well. And—Good Lord—what if Colette asked him to take his shirt off? Then she’d be running her hands on his bare skin.
The thought must have occurred to Robert too, since he shook his head. “Shane is counting on the office being run smoothly. I do not have time to be posing today.”
Colette’s cheeks dimpled. “Do not worry about that. I prefer watching you move so I can observe how your muscles work.”
Shauna would wager the girl preferred watching Robert, period.
“Perhaps I could observe you work outside on one of the ships?” Colette asked.
“I had planned to ask Robert to help me with the ledgers this morning,” Shauna said, knowing she sounded snappish but not able to stop herself. “’Tis nae a lot of activity with that.”
Robert hesitated. “I do need to do some work outside.”
Shauna felt her face sting as though someone had slapped her. So Robert wanted Colette following him around, watching his muscles—and other body parts—move? She felt even more mortified when she noticed Colette’s triumphant smile.
“Fine,” Shauna said.
Robert gave her a sideward glance as he walked over to the counter and picked up a bill of lading. “I didn’t get to confirm the inventory yesterday on the ship that’s leaving this morning.”
“Oh.” Shauna wouldn’t mind if the floor suddenly splintered, allowing her to sink into a hole. How could she have been so stupid as to forget the Loch Lassie was departing at noon? Since Shane had been imprisoned briefly in London on false smuggling charges a year ago, he never let one of his ships leave without verifying the contents to be delivered. She’d allowed herself to be so annoyed with Colette that she’d forgotten one of the most important aspects to working in the dock office. She was about to apologize when her stomach emitted a loud growl.
Colette arched a brow and gave a delicate sniff.
Robert frowned. “Have you not eaten?”
“Aye,” Shauna said, embarrassment washing over her. “I had an apple.”
“An apple,” Robert repeated. “Janet let you leave the house with just an apple?”
“’Tis nae her fault,” Shauna replied, “Albert’s fever returned last night. She’s nae left his side.” Shauna didn’t add that Janet hadn’t left Albert’s side for four days now.
“Let me guess. Kyla doesn’t cook?”
“She tries. Abby has offered to—”
“The daughter of an English earl would cook?” Colette interrupted, looking clearly surprised.
“Aye. So would I,” Shauna replied, “but my sister Bridget dinnae want anyone in her kitchen.”
“So you haven’t had a decent meal since when?” Robert asked.
“’Tis been a few days.”
“Well, there are dining establishments,” Colette said. “Why do you not go to some of them?”
“Because we have a household to feed,” Shauna answered, wondering why it wouldn’t occur to Colette that all those people needed food too. “I will have Johnny take me to market this afternoon.”
“Then the problem is solved, non?” Colette said and smiled at Robert. “I am ready to get started on my sketching.”
Robert nodded. “You can sit on the helmsman’s locker and observe from there.”
“Fantastique,” Colette exclaimed and clutched her sketch pad. “Let us go.”
Shauna picked up a clipboard and smiled when Colette drew her brows together.
“I have to check things off on the ship,” she told the French girl.
Robert began to say something but then closed his mouth abruptly and opened the door. “After you, ladies,” he said.
Robert looked around the kitchen at the MacLeod townhouse. How he’d gotten himself into this situation, he didn’t precisely know, but it seemed he’d taken leave of his common sense…again.
He began unpacking the food he’d brought. After hearing Shauna tell of the cooking problem this morning—and listening to her stomach growl—he thought to bring some things that didn’t require much skill to put together and leave them for her. But then, while he was leaving the market, a small girl in tattered clothes had approached him, asking if he’d care to buy fish fresh from her father’s boat. The child could not have been more than five years, but her hazel eyes looked like a soul much older, and he figured her family probably could use the coin.
So now he was about to prepare Louisiana fish gumbo in Scotland. Shauna had not come home yet, but he had plenty of company. Kyla leaned against the table and watched him with round eyes as the three footmen hovered in the doorway. Seeing the men eye the contents spread out, Robert moved the fresh barley loaf to a counter behind him. Shauna would be having fresh bread tonight.
He spooned lard from a crock into a cast iron skillet atop the stove to melt and reached up on a shelf for the flour sack.
“Can I help?” Kyla asked as he measured out a cup.
Robert contemplated asking her to stir the flour into the hot fat but quickly rejected the idea. Roux was the basic stock for gumbo and it needed constant, careful stirring so not to burn, yet enough heat to bring out the dark, rich flavor of the sauce. “Can you clean a fish?”
Her eyes widened and he knew the answer. After what Shauna had told him about the half-done potatoes, he suspected tasking Kyla with making rice would result in a clumpy, sticky mess. “Nothing else right now.”
“I can clean a fish,” Johnny answered and came into the kitchen. As he unwrapped the newspaper around the seafood, he inhaled sharply.
Robert looked up. “What is it?”
“These are salmon.”
“So?”
Johnny knit his brows. “Salmon are not common in the Firth.”
George and Jacob moved inside too to peer down at the bundle. “Where did you get these?” George asked.
“At a fishmonger’s stand.”
Jacob bent down to sniff. “It’s fresh.”
Robert thought about throwing the whole pack of them out. “Of course it is.”
Kyla left her perch to join the men. “They are salmon.”
“What is so special about salmon? I know they are a tasty fish, but—”
“’Tis a wise fish,” Kyla said.
Robert might have argued the point that the fish had gotten caught, but he was saved the trouble.
“Aye, ’tis,” George agreed. “My uncle Patrick used to tell me stories of the Salmon of Fec.”
Robert knew he shouldn’t ask, but he did anyway. “The Salmon of Fec?”
“Long ago, when the Irish were in search of a new leader, it was said that whoever caught the wise salmon that swam in a deep pool off the River Boyne and ate its flesh would have all the wisdom in the world.”
“Kind of like Eve’s apple in the Garden of Eden?” Robert asked with a smile.
&n
bsp; George frowned. “Nae. No woman was involved. ’Tis Finn McCool I speak of.”
“An Irish version of King Arthur,” Jacob said.
“Ah, yes. Myths are always interesting,” Robert replied.
George’s jaw set. “Finn is nae a myth, any more than leprechauns are.”
He almost told George that he’d just lost his own argument when Robert remembered when they’d brought Fiona back from Ireland, she’d insisted leprechauns had given her gold coins to help her escape the asylum. At the time, he’d thought she was somewhat delusional from her ordeal. Perhaps George was suffering from some kind of shock as well. After all, he knew little about the footmen.
Robert pointed to the dead fish. “I don’t think we’ll have a problem acquiring wisdom from those.”
“Well, we will nae ken until we eat them,” Kyla said and poked Johnny. “Doona be lingering doing the job. I, for one, am hungry.”
The prospect of a decent meal must have been motivating, since each footman suddenly took a fish and started cleaning it. Kyla leaned on the counter, crossing her arms and supervising.
Robert put a kettle of water on to boil for the rice, keeping an eye on the footmen’s progress. The fish obviously possessed no magic wisdom, but he did wonder about Johnny’s claim that salmon weren’t common in the Firth. If that were true, then how had the child’s father come by them?
By the time Shauna arrived at her front door that evening, she was looking forward to having Shane and Albert back. Mr. Frazier had come into the office shortly after lunch to ask about which customs forms Shane used and Colette had taken the opportunity to show her father her sketches. He had beamed at his daughter and managed to linger for most of the afternoon. After posing—once again—by the window so Mr. Frazier could admire Colette’s work in progress, Robert had made an excuse to leave. Not that Shauna blamed him. She would have escaped too if she could.
Then, to make matters worse, Johnny was late coming to pick her up and the market had already closed for the day, which meant trying to eat—and recognize first—whatever Kyla had attempted to make. Shauna couldn’t fault Kyla for her lack of cooking skills though, since she and Abby lacked the expertise as well.
Shauna stopped dead in her tracks as soon as she got into the foyer. The spicy aroma of cinnamon and cloves wafted toward her, along with a scent of something else she couldn’t identify. “What is that delicious smell?”
Johnny grinned at her. “Captain Henderson calls it gumbo.”
“Captain Henderson? Why would—”
“At your service,” Robert said, appearing in the shadows of the hallway near the kitchen. He had a towel tossed over his shoulder. “Dinner is almost ready.”
“Dinner?” Shauna repeated, feeling somewhat lightheaded and confused. Was Robert really standing only a few feet from her, the collar of his linen shirt open and the sleeves rolled up, exposing tanned, muscular forearms? Maybe she was just imagining him. She was hungry and tired—or maybe she had bumped her head in the carriage.
“Yes, dinner. I thought I would relieve Kyla for one night.”
“Aye, and glad I am he is,” Kyla said from behind him as she carried a steaming bowl of rice past him into the informal dining room. “We will feast tonight.”
“It’s not really a feast. Just gumbo. A Louisiana favorite,” Robert clarified for Shauna’s sake. He stepped forward and gestured toward the doorway. “Please, have a seat.”
She walked into the dining area. Johnny had wasted no time taking his place beside Jacob and George. Kyla put rice into everyone’s bowls before taking a seat. Slipping into a chair beside Abigail, Shauna looked at the table. A tureen of whatever that heavenly smell was sat in the middle of the table, fresh barley bread and soft butter on a platter beside it. This was heaven compared to past fare.
“Pass your bowls this way,” Robert said as he dipped a ladle into the tureen and poured rich brown sauce and chunks of fish over Abigail’s rice and set it down in front of her. “Then tell me what you think.”
Shauna managed to mind her manners and wait until everyone had been served, but it wasn’t easy. She spooned some of the soup-like concoction into her mouth and then sighed with pleasure. It was even more delicious than it smelled.
Robert took a seat beside her. “Like it?”
“’Tis wonderful. Ye have this often in New Orleans?”
Robert nodded. “At least once a week. Most of the Creole cooks like to add okra and sometimes tomatoes, but this is the basic recipe.”
“What is okra?” Kyla asked.
“It’s a green vegetable pod, several inches long, that feels fuzzy on the outside.”
Kyla drew her brows together. “Fuzzy? Fuzzy vegetables are usually rotten.”
“Kyla,” Abigail admonished, “What a thing to say.”
“Well—”
“It’s all right, Mrs. MacLeod,” Robert said and turned to Kyla. “I assure you, okra doesn’t taste fuzzy once it’s sliced and cooked. It provides a good contrast to the seafood and cuts the richness of the roux.”
“Ye surprise me,” Shauna said.
An amused expression crossed Robert’s face. “Do I?”
“Aye.” Shauna became aware that, for the first time in several weeks, he was actually close enough that she caught the clean, soapy scent of him. She inhaled deeply and closed her eyes to savor the moment. When she opened them, Robert’s gaze had gone darker. Everyone else was looking at her as well. Good heavens, what had she done? Shauna hoped she hadn’t made any kind of moaning sound.
“Ah…I was savoring the gumbo. I dinnae ken ye were such a good cook.”
He grinned. “There are a lot of things I’m pretty good at.”
Shauna felt her face heat as her imagination flew to things that didn’t have to do with kitchens. But of course, that wasn’t what he’d intended. She swept a sideways glance at him. Was it? He was still grinning. “I meant, I dinnae ken ye knew how to cook.”
As soon as she said the words, she wanted to take them back. “What I mean—”
“Is that the gumbo is excellent,” Abigail said. “It was kind of you, Captain, to give Kyla a reprieve from making the meal.”
Bless Abigail. Shauna picked up her spoon, deciding the best thing to do was eat. It would keep her from making more insulting remarks.
“Mayhap ye could give me cooking lessons?” Kyla asked, her eyes big and round.
Shauna took another spoonful of gumbo before she could tell Kyla what she thought of that idea. As if things weren’t bad enough with Colette hovering in the office…
“I really need to help at the docks until Shane returns,” Robert said, “and then finish fixing the rudder on the New Orleans, but I’ll be glad to leave the recipe for Janet.”
“Please do,” Abigail replied.
As Shauna scraped her bowl clean, Robert leaned toward her, and she could feel his body heat, causing warmth to surge through her as well.
“Would you like more?” he asked.
She stared at him, every inch of her aware of his closeness. “More?”
A corner of his mouth lifted slightly. “Gumbo.”
“Gumbo.” Gumbo. Robert was asking if she wanted more gumbo, not… Good God, she needed to stop this fantasizing. “Aye. Please.”
“Good.” He refilled her bowl and set it down. “I like a woman with a good appetite.”
Appetite. If only he knew what kind of an appetite she really had.
Chapter Sixteen
The dinner with Robert last night had been nearly perfect, although Kyla had managed to linger afterwards asking questions about cooking. In today’s harsh light, Shauna was faced with Owen coming to call.
She hated the thought of Colette fluttering around the office while Robert manned the counter by himself this afternoon, but she’d already made one excuse not to s
ee Owen, and he’d stayed away for several days. A second excuse would be seen as a true insult.
Thankfully, Abigail kept her word to chaperone such visits. Owen had no sooner arrived and been seated in the parlor when Abigail made an appearance with the tea tray, followed by Kyla carrying plates of spiced, baked apple slices and a small crock of clotted cream.
Owen inhaled appreciatively at the aroma. “Has Janet returned to the kitchen?”
Kyla gave him a baleful look. “I warmed these up myself.”
Shauna suppressed a smile. Kyla had warmed the apples, but they were left over from the dessert Robert had made. Perhaps it was just as well that Kyla claimed credit since Shauna didn’t want to explain about the dinner.
Owen looked skeptical. Shauna remembered the meal Kyla had attempted last Saturday night and that Owen had excused himself early, probably to go to a public house to eat. Maybe that was why he had not been back since. Kyla’s—and her own—lack of cooking skills was a gift-horse Shauna wasn’t going to look in the mouth.
Owen eyed his plate somewhat warily and then took a tentative bite. His eyes widened. “These are delicious. They rival anything I have had at the Adelphi Hotel in London.”
Shauna hid another smile. Owen probably wouldn’t be so complimentary if he knew Robert had baked the apples.
“I am glad you like them,” Abigail said before Kyla could reply. “Please enjoy.”
“I met an acquaintance of yours at the Edinburgh Commercial Company on Monday,” Owen said to Shauna around a mouthful of apple. “A man named Neal Austin. He said you visit his father.”
“Aye. On Thursdays at the charitable home,” Shauna replied. “What was Mr. Austin doing at the Commercial Company?”
Owen gave her a studied look before he replied. “He trades in textiles. Do you not want to know what I was doing there as well?”
She probably should have asked that question first. Abigail would have done so to be polite. Shauna bit her lip. Drat it. Why did Owen always manage to make her feel defensive? Abigail would apologize nicely, but Shauna was a stubborn Scot, at least where Owen was concerned. “Ye were probably doing something financial.”