by Lydia Dare
“So glad you find it humorous.”
Bexley had obviously enjoyed himself more than Alec had this night.
“I’m going back to Castle Hythe. Are you coming?” Alec crossed the street toward the stables, with the earl quick on his heels.
“First Radbourne and his brothers left, and now you?”
Bexley complained. “I hope the lot of you learns patience sometime soon.” He clucked his tongue.
Reaching the stables, Alec gestured to the young lad in the yard to retrieve his horse. “Patience?” He glanced back over his shoulder to glare at Bexley. It wasn’t patience Alec lacked. In fact, he had it in abundance. He’d shown it tonight when he’d set Sorcha away from himself.
“If at first you don’t succeed, you have to try again,” the earl coaxed. “In fact, I have two lovely wenches waiting inside for us. Come and join me for a bit of fun first?” When Alec didn’t respond, a corner of Bexley’s lips lifted in a sideways grin. “Don’t tell me you’re afraid of the chits.” He faked a look of a shock and gasped. “Don’t tell me you’re an innocent?” He could probably hear Alec’s teeth grinding, because he suddenly sobered. “Fine,” he huffed. “If you insist, I’ll abandon my pursuit of the two barmaids and escort you back to Castle Hythe. Then I’ll get you some warm milk and read you a story to help you sleep.” He muttered something even Alec couldn’t hear, but it sounded like damn them all.
“You needn’t give up your pursuit of the wenches, Bexley,” Alec said. Then he took a jab at the man. “Some of us don’t need to chase skirts the way you do. Women simply drop at my feet, ready for a tumble. Must be my dark eyes.”
“So, that’s how it is?” Bexley countered. “You’ve had enough for one night?”
He’d had enough of Bexley. But not nearly enough of Sorcha Ferguson. He’d most definitely had enough of this conversation.
The stable boy brought Alec’s horse into the yard and handed him the reins. Alec pressed a coin into the lad’s hand. “Many thanks.”
“Best get mine too,” Bexley grumbled, sending the boy back into the stables once more.
Alec sighed as he swung up into his saddle. He would have been happy to ride back to Castle Hythe alone, but he wouldn’t have that luxury now. He couldn’t abandon Bexley, much as he’d like to. Instead, he waited for the earl to mount his own steed, and then the pair of them started back for Castle Hythe in relative silence.
Apparently, the earl was annoyed about leaving the village earlier than he’d wanted, because he barely made a sound most of the way, uttering only an occasional grunt or grumble.
After finally reaching Hythe grounds, Alec glanced over at Bexley. The fellow hadn’t needed to leave on his account.
And if he truly had a lovely pair of wenches waiting for him in Folkestone, that would explain his surliness. “There’s a pretty little maid who works in the kitchens. I could put in a good word for you,” he offered. Just because Alec was miserable in Kent didn’t mean Bexley had to be.
But the earl just laughed. “I had her yesterday.”
“Why doesn’t that surprise me?” Alec returned as they both came to a stop in front of the stables.
After they had handed their horses off to a couple of grooms, they entered the castle and started toward the duke’s study. Behind them, the Hythes’ butler coughed gently to get their attention.
“Did you need something?” Bexley asked the man.
“A letter came for Mr. MacQuarrie,” the butler said as he held out a silver salver with the note on top.
Alec took the note and gazed down at the elegant scrawl he knew by heart. Cait. It was from Cait. The room began to spin a bit, or perhaps it was just his world turning upside down. What could she possibly want from him?
“Good night, all,” Alec grunted as he dashed up the stairs to his own quarters, determined to answer that question. He ripped into the letter, tearing apart the sealing wax with haste, so anxious to see what she had to say that he couldn’t move quickly enough.
My dear friend Alec,
I am certain you have no wish to hear from me, and that saddens me more than you know. Please be aware that I have always valued your friendship and hold you in the highest esteem. I have been worried about you these past months and was relieved when I learned you would be staying at Castle Hythe for a time. You belong among the living.
I know you are the last person I should ever ask a favor of, but I find I have no choice. By now, you must have seen Sorcha at the castle. The duchess has taken a special interest in our friend, and truly, such an interest can only be beneficial for Sorcha. She has a brilliant future ahead of her, but she is stubborn. It must amuse you to hear me, of all people, say such a thing about anyone else. Perhaps that will impress upon you how truly stubborn she has become.
I know I can trust you, Alec, with what I am about to impart. Sorcha’s future has always been very clear to me. I have always known what path she should follow and which man was destined to be her one great love.
Unfortunately, she pays little heed to my advice on this matter. She has convinced herself a Lycan is her destiny, but she is mistaken. Such an alliance would be disastrous for her.
You do not owe me anything, Alec, but I know you care for Sorcha. While you are in residence at Castle Hythe, I beg you to watch after her. You are the only one I trust to do so. I will call on Sorcha tomorrow. I will understand if you do not wish to see me.
Always your friend,
Caitrin
A friend. She’d only seen him as a bloody friend. Alec tossed the letter on his bedside table. Really, what had he expected? That she had seen the errorof her ways in marrying Eynsford? That she would beg Alec to rescue her from the worst decision she’d ever made?
Alec snorted. He was still a damn fool. But he’d loved Caitrin so deeply for so long that he supposed old habits were difficult to break. If only he could remove her memory from his mind, it would be so much easier to get on with his life. He leaned back against his pillows and closed his eyes.
He heard Cait’s voice in his mind, repeating poignant parts of her letter. Sorcha was mistaken in her estimation that a Lycan was her destiny. Thank God. He hated to think about one of those mangy beasts drooling on her soft, white skin.
But Sorcha was deucedly stubborn. Cait was right about that. Look what Sorcha had done this very evening. And an alliance with a Lycan would be disastrous for the little wood sprite. He didn’t even want to know what Cait meant by that.
He didn’t have a choice now, did he? There was no one else around to keep Sorcha out of trouble. But how was he supposed to keep her out of trouble when he couldn’t even trust himself around her?
Chapter Eight
Sorcha snuck into the Hythes’ orangery, hoping the flowers and plants would bring a little peace to her soul. She could use a little peace. She’d slept very little the previous evening because memories of Alec’s kiss had kept her awake more than half the night. Then like a fool, she’d rushed to the breakfast room and remained there all morning, hoping he would make an appearance, before she realized vampyres didn’t need to eat breakfast. Well, they might have breakfast, but it wouldn’t include capers or baked eggs.
Still it had been disappointing. She hoped he wasn’t avoiding her after what had happened the night before. Or perhaps he’d stayed abed with a headache like the ones Lord Blodswell had suffered from before he became human.
It was a foolish thought, she well knew. Alec was still entirely devoted to Cait. He wasn’t going to become human after sharing one kiss with Sorcha. Or was he? After all, she’d been completely set on a Lycan of her own until she had shared one kiss with him. That kiss could have affected him as much as it had her, couldn’t it? But if so, wouldn’t he have sought her out this morning?
She shook her head. The kiss probably meant nothing to him at all. In fact, she’d wager that he had kissed lots of lasses the same way. After all, he was very good at it. A most delectable shiver crawled up her spine
as she remembered how his lips had taken hers and how he’d masterfully made her want to surrender more than just her mouth to him. That had to come from practice, didn’t it? The very thought of Alec kissing someone else brought her even lower.
Sorcha noticed a sad little daffodil on a worktable. Poor thing. Her ill mood had probably made the flower droop.
Sorcha took a few steps toward the flower, which was wilting before her eyes. A happy thought would help. She caressed the yellow petals and closed her eyes; Alec’s face appeared in her mind. His black-as-night eyes were filled with desire, as they had been the previous evening.
A very male voice came from behind her. “Maddie said you have a green thumb.”
Sorcha’s eyes flew open, and she leapt backward right into something very hard. She gasped and spun around, surprised to find Lord Bexley’s green eyes twinkling down at her. “Oh!” He’d almost caught her using magic. That would have been disastrous.
“I didn’t mean to frighten you, Miss Ferguson.” The earl grinned roguishly.
Sorcha stepped away from him and touched a hand to her heart. “I was only startled a bit.” She affectionately stroked a leaf on the drooping little plant. She’d come back to it later.
“My apologies, my dear.” He gestured to a small set of chairs by a wall of windows overlooking the garden. “Since I’ve already interrupted your solitude, care to join me?”
“I havena seen ye in the orangery before, my lord,” she said as she took his outstretched arm.
“I confess I don’t come to the orangery often. But I’d heard of the miracles you were working here. When I didn’t see you above stairs, I was hoping you had paid Grandmother’s plants a visit this morning.”
Had he come here to search her out? “Ye wanted ta speak with me?”
Lord Bexley held out one of the wooden chairs for Sorcha. “I do enjoy your delightful company, Miss Ferguson.”
“Ye’re very kind.”
“What a horrible thing to say.” He chuckled as he took the spot across from her.
Horrible? What had she said? “Are ye sayin’ ye’re no’ kind?” Sorcha frowned at him.
“I’ve never been accused of it before.” Then he shook his head. “No, Miss Ferguson. I am opportunistic, if anything.”
“Opportunistic?” She must sound like a mockingbird, repeating everything he said the way she was. But she didn’t have a clue what he was talking about.
“I have been hoping to find you alone for quite some time.”
He had? He’d barely looked in her direction until a few days ago.
He shrugged. “Amusements are few and far between here in Kent. How are you keeping yourself occupied?”
Sorcha wasn’t quite sure what to say. Kent seemed perfectly fine to her. Castle Hythe was more secluded than what she was accustomed to in Edinburgh, but she’d been quite happy with her visit. “I’ve enjoyed Maddie’s company immensely, my lord.”
A mischievous glint lit his green eyes. “I am certain, my dear, that you would find me much more entertaining than my sister, were you to give me half a chance.”
Half a chance at what? “I’m no’ quite sure—” she began, but she was interrupted by the clearing of someone’s throat from the threshold.
“Miss Ferguson.” The Hythes’ stoic butler caught her eye.
Sorcha leapt to her feet. “Yes, Palmer?”
Lord Bexley rose from his spot as well and smoothly dropped his arm across her shoulders. “Can this wait, Palmer? Miss Ferguson and I are in the middle of a conversation.”
The butler kept his old eyes leveled on Sorcha. Was that censure for Lord Bexley she saw in the depths of them?
“Lady Eynsford has just arrived, Miss Ferguson. She said you were expecting her. I’ve placed the marchioness in the golden salon.”
Thank heavens Cait was here, if for no other reason than to end her bizarre conversation with Lord Bexley. “Thank ye.”
“Allow me to escort you.” The earl once again offered Sorcha his arm. “I find I am not quite ready to give you up, my dear.”
The butler sighed. “And His Grace is asking for you, Lord Bexley.”
Bexley’s arm fell to his side, and his brow furrowed with disbelief. “Grandfather is asking for me?”
Sorcha was just as surprised as his lordship. She hadn’t laid eyes on the duke during her stay at Castle Hythe.
Maddie had explained that her grandfather was quite sickly and never left his chambers. She glanced at Bexley, still beside her. “Doona let me keep ye, my lord. I can find my own way ta the golden salon.”
“Thank you, Miss Ferguson,” he said quietly. “I hope we can continue our conversation soon.”
Sorcha wasn’t quite certain she wanted to continue their conversation, but she smiled politely before rushing off toward the main section of the castle. She could hardly wait to see Caitrin and she bustled, most unladylike, down the corridors to reach the golden salon. Thank heavens the duchess wasn’t around to see the spectacle she was certainly making of herself.
Finally reaching her destination, Sorcha burst through the doors. Standing beside one large, arched window, Cait was as radiant as ever in a sky-blue gown that perfectly matched her eyes. Her flaxen curls were piled high on her head, and an all-knowing smile graced her face.
“Cait!” Sorcha gushed, throwing her arms around her friend’s shoulders. “Ye came.”
Caitrin giggled. “Ye dinna give me much of a choice, did ye?” Still she returned Sorcha’s embrace and kissed her cheek. “Archer said if I dinna make the jaunt of my own accord, he’d toss me over his shoulder and drop me at yer feet.” She took a step backward, and her eyes raked Sorcha up and down. “Aye, ye have all of Eynsford Park in an uproar.”
Sorcha frowned a bit. She knew the look in Cait’s eyes.
She’d seen it all of her life, always right before her friend began telling her that what she wanted wasn’t in her future.
“Doona start, Cait. That’s no’ why I wanted ye ta visit me.”
“Doona start what?” Her friend feigned innocence better than most.
“Ye ken exactly what I mean. I’m no’ in the mood for ye ta tell me once again that a Lycan is no’ in my future.” It didn’t matter that Sorcha wasn’t the least bit concerned about Lycans at the moment. She still didn’t want to hear Cait’s irritating, all-knowing advice on the subject. People should be allowed to make their own decisions about some matters.
“Make yer own choices, will ye?”
“Well, why no’? I should be able ta have whatever in life I want, no matter what or who ye see for me.”
At that, a broad grin spread across her friend’s face.
“Now ye sound like Alec.”
Alec. He was exactly the creature Sorcha needed advice about, but asking Cait for such in theory was much easier than asking for it in person. Sorcha knew she needed to be very careful how she went about all of this. Cait might have married Eynsford, but a part of her would always care for Alec. “I’m certain I doona sound a thing like that self-pityin’ vampyre.”
Cait smoothly rounded a white brocade settee and then gracefully sat on the very edge. “Oh, ye sound exactly like him. One of the last conversations, or arguments rather, that we had before I married Dash was on predetermined fate and whether or no’ a man should have a say in his own future.”
Because Alec had been so in love with Cait and hadn’t understood why she refused to give him a fair chance. In his place, Sorcha would have felt exactly the same way. She dropped onto the settee beside her friend and tried to keep her face from dropping just as quickly. “He’s still in love with ye.”Cait disagreed with a shake of her head. “He thinks he is. Once a man gets an idea in his mind, it is hard to get him to shake it. Just like ye and yer fascination with Lycans. See, the two of ye are very much alike after all—stubborn, independent-minded Scots.”
That hardly sounded flattering, the way Cait said it. But she was wrong. Lycans were no longer at the fore
front of Sorcha’s mind. “Cait, have ye seen a future for Alec? Is it possible he could be transformed the way Lord Kettering and Lord Blodswell were?”
Cait’s blue eyes narrowed, and she folded her arms across her chest. “Ye ken I canna answer a question like that, Sorch.”
Well, she could; she just chose not to. Blasted principled witch. A simple nod or shake of her head would do. “But I’m worried about him. Please tell me somethin’.”
Cait leaned back against the settee and sighed. “I’m worried about him too. I canna tell ye specifics, Sorcha. Ye ken that. However, I can tell ye that Alec’s happiness is no’ lost forever. It just will be different than he ever imagined. He canna be allowed ta return ta the darkness in which he’s been livin’. Doin’ so could jeopardize whatever future he has.”
“Darkness?”
“A place so void of life and so debauched that I will never speak of it. Seein’ him there tears at my heart.” Cait leaned toward Sorcha and touched her hand. “But ye’re so full of life, Sorch. And he’s always adored ye. And ye’re here with him at Castle Hythe. Do ye think ye could help remind him that life is worth livin’?”
Remind him? How was she to go about doing something like that? Well, he’d certainly felt alive when she’d kissed him, not that she would ever divulge that to Cait. She would like to kiss him again. Especially if it was for his own good.
If his future depended on being reminded what it was like to live. But how could she even try to kiss him again if he was avoiding her? “Cait, do ye remember the promise ye made me?”
Cait laughed. “I am sure I have made ye many promises over the years, Sorcha. What are ye talkin’ about?”
“Ye promised ta tell me all about the marriage bed.”
Cait’s face immediately flushed as she began to fan herself. “I promised no such thing,” she whispered vehemently. “And keep yer voice down.” Her eyes scanned the room, the windows, and the doorway.
Sorcha couldn’t stop her giggle from erupting. “Ye’re an old married woman and still embarrassed about what happens in the marriage bed?”