Forgiving Hearts: Duncurra 1-3 (33 page)

BOOK: Forgiving Hearts: Duncurra 1-3
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“Jock, don’t.”

“Cael, she needs to know. I’ll warn ye now, watch out for Eavan too.”

“Who is Eavan?” Mairead asked.

“She is the brewer’s daughter and a chamber maid at the keep.”

“Not even a very good one,” added Cael.

“I’ll not lie, she is stunning to look at, but that is where her beauty stops. She thought copper curls, violet eyes, and generous curves would be sufficient to win the laird. She is brazen.”

Mairead looked down, not sure of what to say. Jock went on, “But here’s the important part, my lady, the laird has known every one of the eligible young women in this clan his whole life. Even with ample opportunity, he never showed the slightest inclination toward taking one of them as his wife. He has known ye for days and by the saints, I’m telling ye, he more than cares for ye. He loves ye, and don’t doubt that.”

Mairead studied her hands for a moment. She fervently hoped Jock was right about Tadhg loving her. “Jock, thank ye for telling me about the—the resentment. It did hurt, and I didn’t understand it.”

“When the laird hears this he’ll—”

“Nay, Cael, please, must ye take this straight to the laird? He can’t force people to change what is in their hearts. Can ye give me the chance to win them myself?”

“My lady, I knew there were a few members of the clan who were not happy about the marriage. It would have been hard not to hear the grumbling. And I suppose it would be too much to expect there wouldn’t be gossip about last night. But I didn’t know it was so widespread. The way the villagers behaved this afternoon was shameful. The laird would not thank me for keeping this from him.”

“And what can ye tell the laird about the villagers? They weren’t particularly friendly, but no one did or said anything that could be considered disrespectful. Cael, he can’t force the clan to change their minds about me. I have to be the one to do that.”

“My lady, the laird will ask me questions about today, and I won’t lie—I will answer his questions honestly.”

“I understand, and I wouldn’t ask ye to lie,” she said quietly.

“But I guess I don’t have to offer details if he doesn’t ask.”

“That is fair enough.”

Breaking the somber mood, Jock said, “Now, my lady, can ye tell me why ye were rumored to be a mouse? Ye seem pretty tenacious to me.”

“Sweet Mother of God.” Cael put his head in his hands.

Mairead laughed. “I have always been more reserved than the rest of my family, but I was nicknamed ‘MacKenzie’s Mouse’ because all of my brothers and sisters are tall and extremely attractive. I was always so small and plain by comparison.”

“My lady, I’ll grant ye the MacKenzies are a handsome lot, but on the day of yer wedding, I thought ye were the most beautiful bride I had ever seen, and I had three daughters of my own, God rest their souls. Of course maybe it is because I am such a hulking giant myself,” he said, giving her a wink, “but I have always been partial to wee lassies.”

Mairead laughed, putting the distressing news about why the clan seemed to dislike her so behind her for a bit. They continued to chat for a while until Cael said, “My lady, it is getting late. It will be time for supper soon.”

She rose and bid Jock farewell, promising to visit again soon. As they walked to the keep, Mairead thought about the things Jock had told her again. “Cael, can I ask ye a question?”

“Aye, my lady. I will answer if I can.”

“Tell me, does Oren have a daughter?”

“Aye,” said Cael wearily. “Caitlin is a lovely lass and very sweet.”

“That explains things a bit,” she said.

“Frankly, I don’t think she ever had designs on the laird. Her mother is the bigger problem,” said Cael, without explaining more. “But ye did seem to puff Oren up at dinner.”

“Ye see, there is hope.”

~ * ~

That evening Mairead was acutely aware of the aloof politeness she had ignored for days. She endeavored to meet the coolness with as much warmth and grace as possible. Maybe persistent kindness would break down the invisible barriers.

She had enjoyed each visit immensely, and she answered Tadhg’s questions readily.

“Dolan asked ye to sing for him?” Tadhg sounded shocked. “I’ve known Dolan my whole life and he can go for months without a word to anyone. He gives ‘taciturn’ a whole new meaning. It was very sweet of ye to tidy up for him.”

“It was the least I could do. Cael had it much worse when we visited Eilis. She chivied him from the cottage to chop wood.”

Tadhg laughed. “That was probably so she could talk to ye alone.”

“Aye, she wanted to hear every detail of the wedding.”

Tadhg did not seem remotely surprised to hear they spent most of the afternoon with Jock. “Jock loves to have fresh ears to hear his stories.”

“He has plenty of stories. He reminds me in some ways of my grandfather. Every chair my grandfather ever sat in was surrounded by wood chips.” Mairead signed and glanced wistfully around the hall.

“Are ye missing yer family, sweetling?”

Her throat constricted uncomfortably. “A little.” However, in truth, she had never experienced the kind of loneliness that she occasionally had over the last two days.

He reached out and caressed her cheek. She leaned into his hand, taking comfort from his touch. “I’m sure I’ll get used to it soon.” Maybe if she said it enough she would be able to convince herself of it. However, even as the words left her mouth she didn’t believe them. She didn’t think she would ever get used to it. She had spent her life surrounded by people who loved her and for the most part the Mathesons didn’t even try to hide the fact that they disliked and resented her. Her mother taught her every detail of how to seamlessly run a castle, but she had no idea how to win over her new clansmen and women.

“I thought maybe I would feel better after a chat with yer squire but he is dining elsewhere.” She glanced around the hall again but said no more. She wasn’t sure why Flan wasn’t sitting at the laird’s table, but she didn’t want to interfere if this had been Tadhg’s choice.

“I thought it odd when he chose to sit elsewhere, too. Perhaps my comment to him the other day about being his laird as well as his brother-in-law made him think he shouldn’t. I will find out tomorrow.”

Mairead was glad to hear Tadhg hadn’t banned Flan from their table.

Before they left the hall for the evening, Elspet sought Mairead out to tell her Oren had found her harp. It had been uncrated and placed in her solar.

When they reached their chambers, Mairead wanted to see the harp and play it for just a few minutes, but Tadhg pulled her gently to the bedroom. “I want to talk with ye first.” He put his arms around her and kissed her soundly.

“Laird, it is difficult to talk if my lips are busy doing something else,” she said with mock severity when he broke the kiss.

“Well, then, we had better get the talking out of the way so yer lips can get back to the more important business at hand.”

“Was there something specific ye wanted to talk about?”

Still holding her in his arms, he looked at her seriously. “Aye, Mairead, and I think ye know what it is.”

“I’m not sure I understand.” Had Cael told him about the conversation with Jock?

“Do ye not? Care to tell me what happened this morning?”

“This morning?” This definitely had nothing to do with Jock. “What do ye want me to tell ye?”

Tadhg considered her for a moment. “Oren sought me out, clearly angry about yer request to see the books.”

“I’m sorry. I told him I had yer support, but he just wanted to confirm it.”

“Mairead, I’m not angry, just puzzled. Ye knew he was going to be angry at breakfast. Ye were worried about ‘overstepping bounds’ and ‘causing offense.’ I assured ye that ye wouldn’t cause any offense, and I was barely out of the keep when my normally unruffled steward tracked me down looking like an angry rooster. How did ye know it was going to happen? I was supremely confident Oren would accept yer orders as if they were my own and yet ye seemed to know he wouldn’t.”

“I didn’t know—well, not for sure.”

“Mairead, I don’t believe ye. Ye expected to meet resistance. Why didn’t ye tell me?”

Mairead sighed. “It is really nothing. I had tried to speak to him for two days and thought he might be avoiding me. Even ye said it was unusual for him to be ill.” She still chose to leave the more damning details unsaid. “I know having a mistress here after so many years is a big change. I was worried, that is all. Once I was sure there was absolutely no question about my role, I was able to do what I needed to do.”

“I see.” Tadhg chuckled. “Now can ye tell me what happened at the noon meal?”

Mairead smiled up at him. “I knew his pride was injured this morning and I wanted to repair it a little.”

“His pride was injured because he challenged ye, which he should not have done.”

“I know, but he learned I do act with yer authority, and I am confident he won’t challenge me again. Besides, what I said was true. The system he uses is excellent. I just thought praising his work in front of others would undo a bit of the damage.”

“I am impressed, Mairead. Ye are firm but have a tender heart. Still, if ye are having trouble, I don’t want ye to hide it from me. Now, I believe yer lips were interrupted moments ago, and it would be unfair to make them wait any longer.”

He kissed her deeply again and all thoughts of playing her harp that evening fled.

Chapter 11

 

Mairead did not have the opportunity to play her harp for a while. After Jock’s revelations regarding the chilly reception she had received from the clan, Mairead knew she needed to win their respect and doing so was going to require more than just quietly running the household. She had no doubt she truly loved her husband and felt loved in return. She needed to do this for him. She wanted to win the hearts of his clan.
Mairead, ye will just have to work harder
. She had to make herself more visible, and retreating to her solar alone would not help her accomplish that.

As planned, she met briefly with Oren the next morning to review inventories and discuss the household’s needs. Although, after her attempts to soothe his ego yesterday, he had softened a little, he was still far from friendly. She checked the previous day’s entries while he sat somewhat stiffly beside her. She glanced at him surreptitiously, noting his rigid disapproval. Yes, Oren was as good a place to start as any. “Hmmm. We appear to be running a bit low on candles.”

“Yes. Many were used during the wedding.” His tone clearly suggested he believed
too many
were used.

“Aye, I can see that. There were an awful lot of guests—more than I ever imagined. I was surprised really, but the laird told me he felt it was important to invite his many allies. I can only believe he was right. We wouldn’t have wanted to insult anyone.”

Oren’s face reddened a little. “Aye, I suppose that is true. It wouldn’t do to cause offense.”

“And, ye and Elspet did a wonderful job making everyone feel welcome. Inviting lots of guests is one thing, catering well to them takes skill and an eye to detail. Still, we will need to replenish our stores, don’t ye think?”

“Oh, aye. As a matter of fact, I was planning to pay a visit to the chandler today.”

“Were ye?”

“Aye. We also need to replenish stores of salted meat, flour, ale, and wine.”

“Perhaps ye would let me go with ye so I can learn more about the clan?”

“I suppose ye can if ye’d like to.”

The offer was made somewhat grudgingly, and she had the feeling she was the last person Oren wanted trailing after him. Still it was exactly what she wanted to do. “That would be wonderful. I truly appreciate it, ye are very kind.”

She supposed after having called him “very kind” it must have encouraged him to rise to her positive assessment. As she went with him to meet the various craftspeople, she couldn’t actually say he was particularly warm, but he no longer treated her with the antagonism he had originally. She also found when she was with Oren, the clansmen and women generally regarded her with a bit more warmth and less hostility.

In truth, over the next few weeks she believed Oren himself was developing a grudging respect for her abilities. Although pleased she seemed to be making some small headway with him, the lack of open hostility from the rest of the clan was a far cry from warmth or kinship. She still felt very much alone. She rarely had the opportunity to speak to Flan during the day and, while he did take his meals at the laird’s table again, he seemed preoccupied and was unusually quiet. He generally disappeared soon after meals were over.

It embarrassed her to admit this, even to herself, but she wanted her mother.
Mama would know what to do
.
She always knows what is happening among the MacKenzies. But how?
Mairead tried to remember the things her mother did. Images of her mother as she went through the day came to her. It finally dawned on her. Her mother talked to everyone, from the elderly to the very young, about the smallest details of their lives.
But I’m not good at talking to people
. She thought more about how her mother did this. It wasn’t that she just chatted with people. In fact, her mother didn’t actually do most of the talking. She gave people the opportunity to talk to her. She asked general questions, truly listened to the answers, and made an effort to remember details. She remembered to follow up on everything from a child’s skinned knee to a new mother’s anxiety.

I have been worried about what to say, but I don’t really need to talk much at all. I just need to listen
. With her mother as an example, Mairead made the effort to speak with everyone she met, even if just to ask after their health. Initially she received short, curt answers but she persisted and soon many members of her new clan began to open up and chat. Each new victory bolstered her self-confidence, and she became more and more comfortable talking to members of the clan whom she hadn’t met yet.

One afternoon she was on her way to the kitchen to get a basket of food to take to Eilis, who had been feeling poorly. When she entered the kitchen, a young woman, perhaps a few years younger than herself, sat at the table drinking a herbal tisane with Ide. The lass jumped up from her seat when Mairead entered. She looked embarrassed. “I’ll be going, Ide. Thank ye for the tisane. Good afternoon, my lady.” The flustered lass started toward the door.

Mairead stopped her. “Oh, ye needn’t go on my account. I’ll only be a minute. By the way, I don’t believe I have met ye.”

“I’m called Caitlin, my lady, and I really must be getting back.”

“Are ye Oren’s daughter, Caitlin?”

“Aye, my lady.”

“Well, if ye are going home, I am on my way to visit Eilis. I would enjoy company on the walk. Would ye wait for me a moment while Ide fixes a basket for her?”

Caitlin seemed pleased but still a bit flustered. “Certainly, my lady.”

When Mairead had the basket of victuals over her arm, they walked toward the village.

“I’m surprised we haven’t met before now,” said Mairead.

“I’m not at the keep often. My mother prefers for me to stay at home. She is a weaver and she is
trying
to teach me the craft.” Caitlin blushed, looking almost ashamed. Caitlin’s embarrassment confused Mairead. The emphasis Caitlin but on the word “trying” also puzzled her. “Trying? Is it not going well?”

“Truthfully, my lady, nay. My mother is an excellent weaver. Her cloth is among the finest made here.”

“Ye sound proud of her.”

“I am, but she has tried to teach me for years. It’s just that I can’t quite get the hang of it and she is not extremely patient.”

“Do ye like weaving, Caitlin?” Caitlin stopped walking and looked at Mairead with an almost stunned expression. “No one has ever asked me if I liked weaving before.”

“Well, do ye?

“Nay, my lady. Maybe if I was better at it I would, but I hate it. I think if I have to spend the rest of my life weaving I will go mad.”

Caitlin’s honesty surprised Mairead. She supposed it would be very hard to be trained to do something yer whole life that ye never wanted to do.
Like marrying a stranger and running his household?
She smiled to herself. “Is there something ye like to do at which ye have more skill?”

“Not really, I suppose.” The wistful tone in her voice told Mairead that the opposite was more likely true.

“Now why do I think there really
is
something else ye would like to do.”

Caitlin smiled bashfully. “Well, I like to cook but I’m just learning how. My Da loves to eat, and I like to make things for him.”

“Is that why ye were visiting Ide?”

“Aye that, and well, sometimes it is easier to talk to her than to my mother.”

“Hmm. I see.” Mairead considered this for a minute. “Would ye like to work in the kitchens and learn more? Perhaps it can be arranged?”

“Oh, my lady, I would love to learn from Ide, but my mother thinks...well, it’s not important.”

“Aye, it is important. What does yer mother think?”

Caitlin looked even more embarrassed. She looked away, not meeting Mairead’s eyes. “She thinks kitchen work is beneath me, what with her being a fine weaver and Da being the steward and all.”

“Oh, I understand.” Mairead remembered what Cael had said about her mother being a problem. “But ye would want to work in the kitchens if ye had the opportunity?”

“Aye, I would, but I don’t want to upset my parents.”

“I’m sure ye don’t and I wouldn’t want to, either. But perhaps there is a way this can be arranged. I can’t make any promises, but leave it with me for a bit.”

“Oh, my lady, do ye really think it is possible?”

“Honestly, I don’t know. But it absolutely isn’t possible if we don’t at least try.”

~ * ~

The next morning, when Mairead met with Ide, she brought up the subject of Caitlin’s desire to learn to cook.

“Caitlin is a fine lass, my lady. Aye, I would love to have her working here.”

Meriel was in one corner scrubbing burnt porridge from the bottom of a large pot, and she gave a derisive snort. “Clearly, my lady, ye can see Meriel doesn’t understand why anyone would want to work here, but I suspect Caitlin wouldn’t have let the porridge burn in the first place. As I was saying, I would love to have her here, but I doubt her parents would allow it.”

“But she is so unhappy working with the weavers and by her own admission, she isn’t very good at it. Surely her parents can see that?” Another snort came from Meriel.

“Meriel, is there something ye would like to say?” asked Mairead.

Meriel shrugged and huffed. “Ye don’t want to hear what
I
have to say.”

“Keep a civil tongue in yer head, lass, or ye will lose this job too,” warned Ide.

Mairead gently touched Ide’s arm, shook her head slightly, and said, “Meriel, I do want to hear what ye have to say.”

“Do ye? Well, then, it is beyond me why anyone would want to work in the kitchens.” She wrinkled her nose in disgust. “I hate it, but my father makes me stay here. Why should Caitlin be different?”

“And ye loved being a chambermaid, lass?” asked Ide sarcastically.

“Nay, but it was better than this. Why would someone who has the opportunity to learn a skill like weaving throw it away to work in the kitchens?”

Mairead considered Meriel’s words for a moment. “Would ye like to learn to weave?”

“Why do ye care? Ye are the reason I am here anyway.” Meriel’s eyes began to fill with tears.

“Meriel, ye are here because of yer own actions,” scolded Ide.

Mairead quietly but firmly repeated her question. “I asked if ye would like to learn to be a weaver.”

“Aye. I would, but I will never get the chance. My mother was a weaver and apparently a very good one, too. I remember watching her and thinking it was magic the way she turned thread into beautiful fabric. But she died when I was a little girl, and there is no one to teach me the skill. Caitlin should count her blessings, but instead she wants this.” Meriel motioned to the pots to be washed.

“If there was someone who was willing to train ye, would ye put yer heart into it?”

Meriel’s chin quivered; the tears spilled down her cheek, and she dashed them away with the back of one hand. “Aye. But that isn’t likely, is it?”

“Honestly, I don’t know. But I’m willing to consider it. If it is what ye truly want to do and ye are willing to put in the effort to learn, maybe we can find a way.”

“Ye would do that for me? After what I did?”

“What did ye do, Meriel?”

Meriel had the good grace to look embarrassed. Still wiping tears from her cheeks, Meriel confessed. “I entered the laird’s chamber without knocking. I did it on purpose.”

“Why?”

“I don’t know. I wanted to embarrass ye, I guess. Until ye came, I thought—I thought—I guess it doesn’t matter what I thought.”

“It does matter. Please tell me.”

“I thought maybe I had a chance to wed the laird. I guess I was jealous, but in truth, I’m not the only one who was disappointed.”

Ide snorted, “Every one of ye was daft to think there was any chance of that happening. Besides, ye surely must know Laird Matheson and Laird MacKenzie struck this deal. Lady Mairead likely had no say in the matter at all. Why would ye take yer disappointment out on her?”

“I don’t know. What I did was thoughtless and stupid. I am sorry, my lady. Truly, I am.”

“Well then, I accept yer apology and we will put it behind us. As I said, I am not certain of anything, but I will see if there is a way for ye to train as a weaver.”

“Thank ye, my lady.”

“Ye are welcome. Well, if I am going to visit Eilis, I should be going.”

“I’ll walk to the keep with ye. Meriel, keep working on those pots.”

Mairead suspected Ide had something she wanted to say out of Meriel’s hearing. When they were out of the kitchen, as Mairead expected, Ide stopped for a moment. “That was a real kindness, my lady, and not one I’m sure she deserves. Nevertheless, I will be glad to see the back of her. She hates the kitchen more than a cat hates water.”

“I would much rather have both of ye happy, but do ye know of anyone I could ask about training her as a weaver?” After all Mairead had learned, clearly it was too much to hope Oren’s wife would.

“Aye, my lady, Pol’s wife, Mae, is a weaver. She and Meriel’s mother were friends, and she might consider taking her on. Yer bigger problem will be convincing Oren to let Caitlin work in the kitchens.”

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