The Nutcracker Reimagined: A Collection of Christmas Tales

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The Nutcracker Reimagined: A Collection of Christmas Tales Page 29

by Le Veque, Kathryn


  Moments later, the clouds returned, bringing with them even stronger breezes and a few raindrops.

  “Och!” Rodrick said with a mischievous smile. “And now ’tis over. But it did last a wee bit longer than last year, aye?”

  Just why she found it so funny, she couldn’t begin to say. For the first time in months, she actually laughed. Unconstrained and uncontrollable, she laughed until her sides hurt. The more she laughed, the more Rodrick smiled. There was also a bit of pride twinkling in his bright blue eyes.

  “’Tis good to hear ye laugh, lass,” he said, still smiling.

  “I must admit, it does feel good,” she told him as she tucked her hand into his offered arm with a smile. From that point forward, Rodrick made it his mission to make her laugh as often as he could.

  Muriel was not just ill in the morning, but in the afternoons as well. This babe was certainly wreaking havoc on her body. She was constantly tired, a bit irritable, and her stomach couldn’t seem to hold anything down.

  Both Aggie and Rose insisted that the upset stomach would eventually go away. But the being tired all the time? “That will no’ go away until ye become a grandmother,” Rose told her one afternoon. Aggie had to agree. “Bein’ a mum is the hardest work a woman can ever do. But ’tis also the most rewardin’.”

  Muriel didn’t want to hear about the rewards of being a mum. She was still convinced she would not keep this babe. But neither of the women would listen to her when she mentioned it. Whenever she brought the matter up, one of them would immediately change the subject.

  While she knew they meant well, that they were only trying to be encouraging in her time of despair, she resented the way they dismissed her concerns and worries. Though she truly did appreciate their companionship and kindness, this one thing grated on her nerves.

  Rodrick was no better. He too would dismiss her complaints. “Ye’ll feel differently after ye have the babe,” he would say in a most irritatingly reassuring tone.

  Betimes she wished they weren’t so nice. Mayhap then she could wallow in her own misery a bit better. But ’twas growing more and more difficult to grouse and feel morose when one was surrounded by such good, kind people.

  Being the kind of people they were, they’d not pity her, nor would they help fuel the flame and add to her brooding moods. If she were honest she would admit she was glad for their positivity.

  ’Twas on the eighth day of her arrival that things changed. Muriel woke up that morning with an upset and sour stomach, which had become her normal state of being. She was also as tired as she always was, even after going to bed early the night before.

  Nay, she hadn’t changed, but Rodrick had. He arrived at noontime, looking as though he were about to meet the king. His face was freshly shaved, his hair still damp from bathing, and he smelled quite nice. He wore a fresh, dark blue tunic and black leather trews. Even his boots looked clean, and the hilt of his sword glistened in the sunlight.

  “Good day to ye, Muriel,” he said as he stood in the doorway.

  “Rodrick.” She stepped aside to allow him in.

  He didn’t budge.

  “What be the matter?” she asked, sensing something was amiss. Was she imagining things, or did he seem nervous?

  “I would like ye to take a walk with me,” he said.

  She began to protest. “I do no’ think—”

  “Please?”

  ’Twas more sheer curiosity than his plea that made her grab a shawl and leave her hut.

  The yard was bustling with all manner of people, mostly men who were busy working on building the keep. Women stood around fires and tables as they prepared meals. Children ran through it all without a care in the world.

  And not one person gave her any notice.

  Not one.

  Mayhap they had been ordered by Rose and Ian to leave her be. Either way, she wasn’t certain if she would have preferred they threw stones and insults over the silence she was met with.

  Rodrick led her out of the yard, through the great wall, and away from the keep. “Where are we goin’?” she asked nervously.

  “Just fer a walk, lass. We’ll no’ go far.”

  Whether ’twas instinct or the fact that Rodrick had never done anything to make her feel ill at ease, she was not filled with fear or dread. Though she hated to admit it, she did like his company. She felt safe whenever he was near.

  They headed south until they came upon a wide, meandering stream. The sound of water trickling over the rocks and pebbles was relaxing. It was a beautiful day, with the sun hanging high, bathing the land in warmth and comforting brightness. Yellow, pink, and blue flowers peeked their heads through the tall grass that waved in the gentle breeze.

  They followed the stream until they came upon a copse of trees. In the distance, Muriel could hear the faint sounds of men working on the keep. The rhythmic tap tap tap of hammers against wood and the occasional shout of an order.

  Rodrick stopped and turned to face her. For the first time since meeting him, she actually took the time to truly look at him. He was not what some would call a handsome man. But neither was he horrible to look upon. The breeze picked up his long brown hair, making him look even more a warrior. His bright blue eyes held an intensity and warmth that didn’t make sense to her at the moment.

  “Muriel,” he began, then his voice caught in his throat. He cleared the knot and tried again. “Muriel, there be something I want to say and ask ye.”

  Puzzled, she gave him a nod as permission to continue.

  He started to speak, stopped, and started again. He grew frustrated rather quickly and let out a quick, irritated breath. “God’s bones,” he mumbled as he raked a hand through his hair.

  “Rodrick? What be the matter?” she asked, growing more and more confused.

  He stared at her for a long moment before throwing his hands in the air. “I be makin’ a mighty mess of things, aye?”

  She had no idea what he meant by that.

  With another exasperated sigh, he tried once again. “I ken we have no’ known each other long, lass. And I ken I be no’ the most handsome or brightest of men. But I be a good man. An honorable man who keeps his word. Ye ken?”

  Not understanding what he was trying to say, she could only nod her head. “Aye, I believe ye be an honorable man.”

  He smiled then. A wide, happy smile. “I am,” he said as he continued to look upon her with that fond smile.

  “Is that all?” she said after a long moment of silence had passed.

  “Nay,” he finally answered. “Nay, that no’ be all.”

  Muriel was doing her best to remain patient until he was able to tell her what was weighing so heavily on his mind. “And?” she asked, hoping to prod him into getting to the point.

  “I want to marry ye,” he finally blurted out.

  Stunned, she took a step back, uncertain she had heard him correctly. “What?” she asked breathlessly.

  “I want to marry ye.”

  Rodrick had come to that decision a week ago. It had taken him this long to finally get up the courage to ask. Finally he had decided to ask today, for he was fearful someone else might before he had the chance. That had happened once, with Leona MacDowall. With a deep sense of desperation, he did not want a repeat of that day.

  He knew he had very little to offer her, but he would give anything he owned to hear her say yes. Instead, she looked at him with horror-filled eyes. It did little to bolster his ego or his hopes.

  “I ken I be a bit aulder than ye,” he told her. By more than a decade if anyone chose to count. “And I ken I be no’ the most handsome man ye’ll ever meet.” There were countless others amongst his own clan who were far easier on the eyes than he. “And I do no’ have much to offer ye,” he added. “But whatever I have be yers.”

  Tears welled in her pretty blue eyes and she took another step back. “Ye can no’ mean what ye’re askin’,” she said.

  “But I do mean it, lass,” he replied b
luntly. He had grown to care for this young woman a great deal. ’Twas not just that she needed a husband and father for her unborn child. That was part of it, but not all of why he was asking. He found her beautiful, smart, and witty. That was when she wasn’t so consumed with what had happened to her. “I—”

  “Nay,” she said, the look of horror still etched on her face. “Nay, I can no’ marry ye. I can no’ marry anyone!”

  “But yer babe,” Rodrick replied. “Yer babe will need a father.”

  ’Twas mayhap not the right thing to say.

  The babe. The babe! Muriel’s life now revolved around a babe she did not want. Everyone seemed to be more concerned with this child who was conceived out of a violent act than they were concerned with her.

  “I will no’ marry ye, or any man,” she said as she swallowed back the tears and bile. “And I am no’ keepin’ this babe! As soon as it’s born, I am giving it away. I never want to see it, to look at it, or touch it, do ye understand? And I want to be left the bloody hell alone about it!”

  She didn’t wait for a response before turning away and fleeing, leaving him standing alone next to the stream.

  Her emotions and thoughts ran rampant. Were her situation different, had she not been raped, were she not carrying Fergus MacDonald’s babe, she might very well have said yes to Rodrick’s proposal.

  But her situation wasn’t different.

  It was as real as the grass she was running through. It was as real as the deep ache in her heart.

  It was as real as the babe growing inside her.

  She didn’t want a proposal born out of pity, and that was all Rodrick’s proposal was: a sheer act of pity.

  Lord, she knew she was being foolish and selfish, but she could not help it. These feelings boiling up inside her, this constant sense of despair and anguish would not cease. No matter how hard she prayed to feel differently or to forget the last year of her life, there was no running from it and no way to deny it.

  Through the open gates she ran straight to her hut. She slammed the door behind her and fell onto her bed. Her tears came in great, wracking sobs.

  She knew she had hurt Rodrick’s feelings, but that had not been her intent. She knew she owed her life to him. But to marry him out of a sense of gratitude or despair? Nay, that would not be fair to either one of them. Rodrick deserved far better than that. There was no hope for her. She was a lost soul without a future. And there was no way she could ever be a true wife to him.

  Around and around her emotions went—from anger to guilt to everything in between—until her her head spun and her stomach churned.

  How can I make him understand? She cried silently. How can I make anyone understand when I do no’ quite understand it myself?

  Rodrick stood frozen in place as he watched Muriel run away.

  He had never felt more dejected than he did right then. His heart cracked a little more with each step she took away from him.

  Ye be a fool, Rodrick. A bloody fool.

  Why he thought she would accept his proposal to begin with, he could not now imagine. Mayhap he hoped she was just desperate enough to say yes. Mayhap he thought she could overlook his shortcomings—and there were many—and agree to a union betwixt them.

  Until the past year, having a wife and children was nothing more than a dream and ridiculous wish. Though he believed he didn’t truly deserve those things, the yearning for hearth and home, for a wife and bairns, had grown stronger.

  Mayhap ’twas because he was not getting any younger. Mayhap he was tired of roaming the country searching for a place to call home. He was tired of looking, tired of waiting and wishing for things that he now believed were no longer possible. He truly believed Muriel was his last hope at having the kind of future he now yearned for.

  What was wrong with him that turned women away? He was a strong man with good morals, and held himself to a high standard of honor. He did not drink in excess, he never chased after bar wenches and whores. He could be a good provider to a family.

  The more he thought on it, the angrier he became. He may not be as handsome as Ian Mackintosh, but neither was he a monster. He might not be a man of flowery words or poetry, but neither was he an idiot.

  Ye be a warrior, fer the sake of Christ, he cursed under his breath. “That be all ye are, Rodrick McFarland. A warrior.”

  Mayhap ’twas time to set aside this yearning for a home and accept what he was.

  It did not take long for word to reach Aggie and Rose about Muriel’s distress. The two women came to Muriel’s hut as soon as they heard. Muriel was in no mood for company. “Go away,” she called from her bed. Rodrick must have told them, the traitorous man! Now they’re here to try to convince me to marry him. They knocked again. “I said go away!” she shouted.

  The two women did not heed her demand and came in anyway.

  Muriel’s eyes were red and swollen from crying. Keeping her back to the door, she remained curled into a ball, holding a pillow to her chest.

  “Muriel,” Rose said as she came to sit on the edge of the bed. “We heard ye came through the gate cryin’. What happened?”

  Mayhap they truly didn’t know. “I do no’ wish to talk about it.”

  “Och, lass!” Rose said as she patted her shoulder. “Ye must talk about it. Ye will feel better.”

  Anger bubbled from deep in her stomach. “Nay I will no’ feel better. Ye will no’ listen anyway. Ye’ll just ignore me and tell me I will feel better later. After the babe is born. Everything is always after the babe is born with ye two!”

  Rose and Aggie giggled. They were laughing at her distress. Furious, she sat up in bed and glared at them. “’Tis no’ funny!”

  Aggie brought a chair over and sat next to her. “Lass, we laugh because we have both been with child. We understand that yer feelin’s, yer emotions, they sometimes do no’ make a lick of sense when ye’re carryin’. That ’tis why we do no’ take everythin’ ye say so seriously.”

  Appalled, she stared at them with mouth agape. “Ye think, ye truly think I be so upset all the time because I be with child?”

  Each of them nodded aye.

  The tears began to fall again, but not out of a sense of sadness. These were tears of sheer anger. “I be upset all the time because of Fergus MacDonald! Because he raped me. Repeatedly. Over and over again for three solid months. I be upset because I feel dirty, unworthy, used, and ugly! I be upset because every time I close me eyes I see his face. I hear his words in me sleep. Ye be a whore, Muriel. Naught but a whore. Ye like it when I do this to ye. Admit it!” She took in a deep breath and shook her head. “I carry the babe of a man I despise, a man I wish I’d had the strength to kill. A man who torments me day and night even now.”

  Rose started to speak, but Muriel stopped her. “Nay! I will no’ listen to ye tell me how I will feel after this babe is born. Do ye no’ understand? I am no’ the same happy, cheerful girl I used to be. He destroyed her. He destroyed me, and left this,” she spread her arms wide as if to say take a good long look. “I have no future. I have no life. All me hopes and dreams are gone now. I will never have a chance at a normal life, at a happy life. Neither of ye could ever understand that!”

  Aggie quirked a brow and stood up. “Rose, will ye go and check on Ada fer me?”

  Rose did no’ argue. Quietly she left them alone.

  Once the door closed behind Rose, Aggie looked at Muriel. “Ye think I do no’ understand?” she asked her with a raised brow. “If anyone here understands, it be me.”

  Immediately, Muriel felt guilty. But she truly believed her circumstance was different than Aggie’s. How the woman had been able to overcome what had happened to her, she could not understand. Neither could she understand how Aggie had been able to keep, raise, and love her son.

  “Think ye be the first woman ever raped? Think ye be the first woman who has ever gone through what ye be goin’ through?”

  Muriel swallowed hard before replying. “Nay,” she
murmured. “But—”

  Rose stopped her protest. “There be no but. I too, have gone through what ye have. ’Tis true I was only raped once, no’ repeatedly like ye. But me attacker? He left me with three things. One, this scarred face,” she said, turning the scarred cheek so Muriel could get a better look. “Secondly, he left me with child. I was only three and ten.” Turning her head, she looked Muriel in the eye. “And he left me with a sense of fear that only someone like us could ever understand.”

  Aggie sat down on the edge of the bed. “Muriel, I do understand. I ken how the fear can take over yer life. I ken how it hurts. There were many times I wished I could die. Just close me eyes and never wake up. But God did no’ answer those prayers.”

  “That’s all I want right now,” Muriel admitted. “To die. To walk away, find a quiet place, and let death come fer me.”

  Aggie’s knowing smile said she knew all too well that feeling.

  “How can ye love Ailrig as ye do?” Muriel asked.

  “Because he be mine. Half of him is me. I could no more give him up than I could fly,” she said as she patted Muriel’s hand. “’Tis true, I did worry he would be more like his father than me, but either by God’s good grace or the way I raised him, he is nothin’ at all like the man who raped me.”

  Muriel never thought of it that way, that half this babe was made of her own blood.

  “Ailrig does no’ ken that I be his mother by blood. Fredrick adopted him after we were married. I do no’ think I shall ever tell Ailrig the truth of it, fer I do no’ want him to worry that he might turn out like the man who seeded him.”

  “I will no’ ever say a word,” Muriel promised.

  Aggie smiled and thanked her for keeping that confidence. “Fredrick has done much to help me. ’Twas through his love and kindness that I was able to stop bein’ afraid, stop holdin’ me head in shame, and to stop me stutterin’.”

  Muriel’s brow creased. “Ye stutter?”

 

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