by Laurel Adams
The laird was a proud man—more afraid to let his men see him in a moment of weakness than he was afraid of death. But his head drooped in acceptance of this chastisement, and he pressed his lips together. “You’re right. You’re exactly right. And I’m sorry for it, Ian.”
There was a moment when, in the bunched up silence, I thought there might be a reconciliation. But then Ian let out a long breath and strode to the door. “Sorry isn’t good enough.”
“Ian!” I called after him.
“Don’t waste your strength, lass,” Ian said, with a shake of his head. “You two love each other. You have no feelings for me whatsoever. Even if you did, it’s my fault you were stabbed. All because of a little maidservant whose name I couldn’t have told you two weeks ago. I never even noticed her and yet she she nearly killed us all for an unrequited love. I could almost pity Brenna. So I don’t wish to dwell upon the humiliation of what’s passed between the three of us lest I go as mad as Brenna and find my own end on the stones below the castle walls.”
“You’re nothing like Brenna,” I insisted, squeezing the laird’s hand to reassure him as I added, “And of course I have feelings for you. It is only that—”
“You’re his woman, not mine,” Ian finished for me.
“I am my own woman,” I said, deciding the thing in that very moment. I would not be given anymore. I might give, but I had proved myself to my laird. Now he would have to prove himself to me. “I’m sorry, but I am.”
“I’m not sorry for it,” Ian said.
And with that, he slammed out the door.
“Brooding bastard,” the laird muttered, as if he were one to talk.
Very softly, I murmured, “Do you not see that you tore his heart out?”
The laird swallowed, hard. “I suppose after your time together you see him more clearly than I do. Is it Ian that you want, then, or perhaps you’re done with us both?”
What did I want?
“You broke my heart, John.” My voice cracked on his name and tears spilled from my lashes. “I surrendered everything to you. I gave you my body, my shame, and my obedience. I trusted myself to you, body and soul, and you broke me.”
“Yes,” he admitted, his voice thick with emotion. “You must think me a monster, but I broke myself, too, if it’s any consolation. I will never be able to tell you how I suffered to send you away. Even if I could, you shouldn’t care. I can say only in defense of myself that it was all done for love. It was because I feared you would rather die with me than live for me.”
“I would have, that’s true,” I confessed, angry that my heart, for all its cracks, still insisted upon it. “I would, still. Yet, if there is a child in me I would want her to know a better life than living always at the whim of a man who can discard her mother.”
“A girl, is it?” the laird asked with a start, his eyes widening with something akin to delight. But then the rest of my words reached him and his shoulders slumped again. “I would never discard you, mo chride. Never.”
“Never again, you mean.”
I was provoking his temper, but he managed to keep it in check. “In facing death, lass, I did for you the best thing I knew how to do as a laird. But perhaps what you need is a man who is not the laird. You need a man who can make a wife of you—”
“Don’t,” I said, with a violent shake of my head, sure that he was about to do it all over again. To send me away from him to some man of his choosing, without my having a say in it. “I don’t want some other man.”
The laird’s eyes widened. “I wasn’t speaking of another man. I was offering myself to you, lass. The whole of me. If you will have me, I will give up my position as laird.”
I blinked at him, furrowing my brow, not letting myself understand. “Give up your position as laird? I’ve never heard of such a thing!”
“Because it’s never been done,” he said, his brow furrowed too. “At least, not that I know of. But that wouldn’t stop me. I will face too much opposition in marrying you—it will cause people to scheme against us both. So I will resign my lands in favor of Ian in exchange for his blessing to wed you.”
Oh, the awkward pain of asking Ian for his blessing! And yet…and yet…this man, this proud man, was offering me marriage. Marriage! As if I were a respectable girl. “You cannot mean that.”
The laird nodded, gravely. “I do. I thought once that you were sent by the devil to tempt me. But now I think it was something of divine providence that brought you to me. I am no good without you, Heather. Not good as a laird and not good as a man. I had the chance to see that, while contemplating my death, and I thought it would be a short time of suffering without you until the end. But now I face a whole life ahead, and I will do anything to have you with me. Anything but force you to have me.”
In spite of how I told myself to resist him, to be wary of being taken in again by his charms, his words touched me so deeply that I would have to be a heartless woman to deny him. My laird had told me that he liked to leave marks on his women—well he had left marks on me. Deeper than skin. Deeper than pain. Deeper than anything.
I was, for him, always more naked than naked.
“You’ve never had to force me to do anything, my laird. And if you give me your word you will never discard me for any reason, it will be enough for me. You need not give up your clan. You’re the laird. It’s who you are. I would never be the one to take it from you.”
He gave a rueful chuckle. “You see, I always suspected you preferred the laird over only John Alexander Ramsay Macrae…”
“And I told you that you weren’t only anything,” I smiled, cupping his cheek. “My laird, the clan needs you. None of them, not even Ian, is as strong as you are. What you did, it pained me, as a lover. The lover in you did wrong. But the laird did not. You were willing to sacrifice everything for your clan’s safety and honor. Everything.”
“Yes,” he said.
“That is the sort of man the clan needs, and I will proudly love that man and be his harlot all my days…”
The laird winced. “Not my harlot. Never again. Not my mistress, either. But my lady. And my wife, some day, if I can make it so without causing a bloody feud. This I vow to you, Heather. As true as a husband to you. I swear it.”
Tears of happiness coursed down my cheeks as I kissed him, savoring the taste so long denied me. I wanted him so badly, in spite of the wounds and everything else. “Never your harlot?” I let the faintest trace of disappointment tinge my words. “Not even when I’m in your bed, pleading with you to take me in every way it is possible to take a woman?”
The consternation on his face as he struggled with his love and his lust might have been comical were it not for the fact I earnestly feared his answer. “I’m trying to speak to you of my heart, woman!”
Laying my hand upon his chest, where his heart beat, I felt the heat pass between his skin and mine. “So am I.”
He was cracking, I could tell. And as he stared down at my fingers as if hoping desperately for them to trail a path lower, he rumbled, “Well, maybe in bedroom play you can be my harlot. If it would please you…”
“T’would please me,” I said, boldly, imitating his thicker brogue. “I’m a woman for rough wooing, ye ken. You said once that being with you was painful, but pleasurable for the right lass. Well, I’m the right lass, John Alexander Ramsay Macrae.”
A slow and sheepish smile crossed his face. “Aye, you are. The right lass for me. The only lass for me. I will never be sated of you. Not my whole life long. With or without a churching.”
Chapter Twelve
JOHN
The wedding was celebrated in fine fashion in the Great Hall, with music and feasting. Heather wasn’t quite recovered of her wound enough for dancing, which was a shame, because the laird loved to watch her long coltish legs. Best that she take it easy, though, given that her belly was round with child.
His child, he was sure.
He would never admit to any other
possibility. And it mattered not at all, because Heather had told him the way of it between her and Ian. Which meant that the child was conceived in the laird’s bed one way or another. Which was nothing short of a miracle. A blessing he scarcely deserved. It felt like divine forgiveness, which made him, in turn, feel more forgiving against those who had wronged him.
Not the Donalds and MacDonalds. Never them. But Heather’s father he forgave, inviting the man to return from the countryside with his bairns in tow for the wedding. Alas, Heather and Arabella’s father was a stubborn old goat. Seeing his younger daughter honorably wed to Davy of Clan Macrae wasn’t enough to lure him back to his laird’s hall.
And so it was left to the laird to give young Arabella away in marriage.
For Heather’s sake, he felt already as an older brother to the lass. For Davy’s sake, he would never utter another word against the girl. Not even when she danced as often with Malcolm as with the groom, and with as much fondness.
“You have my congratulations,” the laird told Davy, slapping him on the back. “You seem a very happy groom.”
With a sunny smile and a kiss to the top of his bride’s head, the red-headed, freckled warrior said, “Oh, aye. T’was worth the frostbite on every one of my fingers on the night I stole away from the castle under cover of dark, and worth all the shivering, laying flat in a skiff that might’ve been seen by the enemy at any moment, nearly drowning in the loch when some enormous fish bumped the boat!”
Arabella laughed. “T’was likely a seal, not a fish!”
“T’was a fish,” Davy insisted, grinning ear to ear.
The laird would never be able to properly thank Davy for his heroics. And likely no other warrior in his command could have lived on winter berries and bugs, without even a horse or blanket, until he found MacLennan lands.
“You have my gratitude, Davy,” John said, earnestly. “And my blessing.” Raising a glass, the laird proposed a toast. “To wedded bliss.”
Davy drank. Arabella drank. And Malcolm also drank, as if he were a second groom. As curious as that was, the laird promised himself never to inquire more about it. If the three of them were happy, he would not question it.
For he had his own unorthodox arrangement. But his contentment with this arrangement came upon its first new challenge when, after they’d all sat down at the high table to dine, Lady Fiona looked askance at her chair, so near to Heather’s.
“Isn’t it time you took a wife of your own, laird?” his aunt Fiona asked.
John had been waiting for this moment. He only hoped that it wouldn’t come so soon. And that it would not happen in front of the woman he loved. Nevertheless, he was prepared for it. “I will have Heather or no wife at all.”
His aunt’s dragon features sharpened and she put her hands on the table, readying to bare her claws. She gauged him, as if preparing for war. Then, with a tilt of her head, she asked, “What’s stopping you then?”
“From what?”
His aunt’s smile went flat. “From taking Heather as your bride.”
John glanced at Heather, whose beautiful, sensual, mouth had fallen slightly agape. Then at the rest of the people at the table, who had gone suddenly, and completely silent. “You know perfectly well what’s stopping me,” the laird snapped. “I won’t take her for my wife only to have a thousand harpies clawing at her back, gossiping about her past.”
“They wouldn’t dare,” Lady Fiona said. “I am the chief harpie in this castle and if I say she has a blameless past, who is to contradict me?”
John stared at his aunt, wondering what she could possibly be up to.
She was a wily woman. Ambitious too. Though the laird was sure Ian was innocent of any conspiracy against him, he had never been as sure about Fiona. It often struck him as strange that a maidservant should take on a plot of treason by herself…
The laird put down his wine, which had gone entirely sour in his mouth. He didn’t want to argue during a wedding. He didn’t want to spoil their happy time. But his aunt had stirred up this hornet’s nest. “Heather is an unmarried woman big with child.”
“Don’t be vulgar,” Lady Fiona said, with a tap of her fan. “Our pretty Heather is merely pleasingly plump. Now that the siege is over, we’re all happy to eat our fill. You cannot blame her for indulging in a few extra pastries. That’s the only reason her belly is swollen.”
It was a blatant lie. There was a bastard child in Heather’s belly. Everyone knew it. John scowled. “I suppose you will say that you’ve never heard rumor of why I brought Heather here to the castle in the first place.”
With an exaggerated bat of her lashes, Lady Fiona replied, “She had information about the Donalds hiding at her father’s farm. A good thing, too, or we wouldn’t have had advanced warning of the siege. I’m quite certain that my nephew, the Macrae, wouldn’t have dishonored himself by bringing such a sweet crofter’s girl to his chambers and stripping her in front of his men just to shame her father.”
That’s exactly what he had done, and so he fell silent.
Lady Fiona turned in her chair. “Let’s ask our groom. Davy of Clan Macrae, have you ever seen the laird’s lady in any improper way?”
Davy crimsoned from the tips of his freckled ears to his toes, studiously avoiding the eyes of his new wife, who quite possibly did not know that he’d seen her older sister in a state of undress. It took him only a moment to consider his options before he glanced at the laird and uttered the lie. “Never. Pure as the driven snow, is the laird’s lady.”
John’s heart began to thump at the show of loyalty. But it was too easy…
“What about our best swordsmen?” Lady Fiona asked, turning to Malcolm. “Have you ever seen the laird’s lady in any improper state?”
Malcolm sat stonily, staring into his wine as he considered his answer. Then someone—likely Arabella—seemed to have kicked him under the table, because he gave a jolt, and sat straighter.
“Never,” was Malcolm’s answer.
Lady Fiona finally turned to Ian who sat so stiffly he looked as if he might shatter with a touch. “And my son?”
That’s when John knew what Fiona was up to. She wanted to give Ian the clean break he so desperately sought. She wished to wipe the past away so that he might start again fresh. But to do it, he would have to renounce Heather. Renounce ever having loved her. Renounced having touched her. Renounce any child she might ever have…
The torment of it played out across Ian’s face, such that Heather whispered, “Stop it. Leave him be.”
Fiona smiled at Heather with something almost like warmth. “Don’t you want to know your standing in the clan, my dear? It should be spotless…and my son’s honor can vouch for yours.”
The whole table full of guests seemed to hold its breath in the tension. Ian’s chest rose and fell, his eyes lifting to the wooden beams overhead as if he were praying to God to deliver him.
It was too much. It was too much to ask of him. “Enough Fiona,” the laird snapped.
But the damnable woman was relentless. “It’s a simple question for my son. Ian, if the laird were to take Heather for his bride, and someone were to say that she had bedded with you, how would you reply?”
Ian’s eyes met John’s. It was a moment of agony. Slowly, Ian made a fist of his hand on the table. He looked ready to sweep away every dish and goblet upon the table. But in the end, his croaked, “I would say it was a damnable lie. And I would cut the heart out of any man who repeated it.”
The laird knew what it cost his kinsman to say this. It was an act of loyalty beyond that which any other man had ever shown him. And John’s heart, which he had once been so convinced didn’t exist, now swelled to the bursting point, and tears filled his eyes.
“It’s settled then,” Lady Fiona chirped. “It’s unwise and short-sighted and recklessly sentimental for a laird to wed a common crofter’s girl without a coin to her name. But you’re the laird and if you say she’s innocent, then she is. And
if we say she’s a girl of good reputation, what could possibly stop you from marrying her? Quickly, of course, to prevent anyone from counting back should a child be born prematurely…”
John Macrae had loved his clan all his life; but for the first time, he felt this love in return. “You would do this for me and Heather?” he asked around the table, hoarsely. “All of you?”
When they nodded solemnly, it humbled him to the breaking point.
Truly, John would have blubbered like a child were it not for Heather slipping her hand in his to give him the strength he needed. The strength she always gave him. He was supposed to be the strong one. The big warrior with the giant sword. But he wanted to wield it for her. And, if she would consent to be his bride, he always would.
~~~
HEATHER
I was undone. They were all, all of them, willing to let the laird and I be happy together as man and wife. Even Lady Fiona. Even Ian, though having said as much, he looked now as if he couldn’t bear another moment at our table.
Yes, I was undone. A glow of hope in my heart warmed me to my soul. But the laird…oh, the laird. His lower lip trembled and he dabbed at his eye with a napkin, muttering, “Pardon, there’s something in my eye.”
Tears, I thought. But the good kind.
Once he had them under control, my laird squeezed my hand and said, “Well then, Sweet Heather, Clan Macrae has spoken. I must call upon your father and make amends so that we may be wed. If he will consent to it, then I will do everything proper, on bended knee if I must.”
“And if he will not consent?” Arabella asked while my heart fluttered madly.
The laird grinned. “Then I must steal your sister away to make her my bride.”
Everyone laughed at that.