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Samantha James (27 page)

BOOK: Samantha James
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Jeannine’s head bobbed in affirmation. Then she whispered, “Is he still here?”

Egan frowned. “Who? Simon?” he guessed.

“Aye!”

Egan shook his head. “Nay. Simon is gone. Dead. He’ll never trouble us again.” His expression softened. “You may come out now, lass. ’Tis safe.”

Glenda watched as Egan extended a hand and pulled the girl to her feet. Jeannine carefully cradled the ever-present bundle in her elbow. Absently noting it, Glenda slid her gaze back to Egan.

“Egan,” she murmured, “we really should—”

The swaddling shifted.

Glenda caught the movement in the corner of her eye. She broke off her words as her eyes widened in shock. God above, this time there really
was
a babe in the swaddling!

Just then there came a pitiful little cry. Glenda knew that cry, knew it well, indeed…

It was her daughter’s.

“Jeannine,” she said helplessly. “Oh, Jeannine…”

“Simon wanted to take the babe,” Jeannine said tentatively. “I heard him. So I took the babe and hid.”
Her chin lifted proudly. A faint smile appeared. “I-I saved the babe.”

“Aye, dear, you did,” she said in amazement. “You did indeed.” She bit her lip, then reached for Elizabeth.

Jeannine’s arms tightened. Two pair of eyes collided, one pleading, the other suddenly uncertain. Did Jeannine believe it was her own child that she’d rescued? Even as Glenda’s heart filled to overflowing, something twisted inside her.

“Jeannine,” she reminded gently, “you know this babe is Elizabeth.”

“I know,” Jeannine stated quietly. “I’m not daft like they say, ye know.” Carefully she surrendered the bundle into Glenda’s waiting arms, her smile reappearing as Glenda murmured her heartfelt thanks.

It wavered. A stark, stricken look passed over her features. “My babe,” she said quaveringly. “Thomas…he’s dead, isn’t he?”

She began to weep. Glenda slipped her free arm around her, a bittersweet ache inside. “Aye, love. But, God willing, there will be others—look at me.” She held her while she wept, and so did Nessa. They were tears of grief, those tears—but they were also tears of gladness…and tears of hope.

The haze of dawn crept across the treetops when Glenda finally laid Elizabeth in her cradle. For the longest time she gazed at her daughter, who slept with her wee fist tucked beneath the folds of her chin. She gave a fervent prayer of thanks that Jeannine had heard Simon’s threat against the babe and had acted upon it.

But there was a wistful yearning within her as Egan turned her in his arms. It must have shown, for he tipped his head to the side.

“What are you thinking of?” he murmured.

Glenda released a long sigh. “Poor Jeannine. Egan, for so long now, I knew not whether it was a blessing or a curse that she refused to accept Thomas’s death. But now that she has, I-I almost wish she had not! I hurt so badly for her, knowing she has no one to comfort her.”

His lips twitched. “I think it will not be that way for long.”

“What do you mean? Why do you smile like that?”

“Have you not seen Culbert the wainwright making calf’s eyes at her? When we left the hall, I saw him with her, holding both her hands within his.”

Glenda was stunned. “Really?”

“Indeed.” He smiled at her, and in that instant, a rush of emotion surged inside her, so intense it nearly brought her to her knees.

Her lovely smile faded. Her eyes were huge and glistening. Egan felt her tremble.

He exclaimed softly, “Glenda! Sweet, do not cry! The danger is behind us. Our daughter is safe and the future holds naught but promise for us!”

“I know that. But, Egan…there is so much to be said.”

“What, sweet, what?” The sight of her tears speared his heart.

She lifted her face. “I love you…I love you! I did not want to…I was afraid to love you for fear of losing you…but I’ve loved you for so long now. Egan, oh, Egan, I love you so…”

There was not enough room in her for all she felt. It spilled from her soul, unleashed. Unbidden. It spilled from her eyes, a torrent of tears. It spilled from her lips, the chant of his name.

For the space of a heartbeat, Egan could only stare. His eyes scoured hers, but no shadows lurked in those beautiful golden depths; there was naught but a love so pure and shining he felt he would surely burst.

His arms tightened, possessively tender. He lowered his forehead to hers so that their lips were but a breath apart. “And I love you, sweet. I always have.”

She twined her arms about his neck. Their lips met and clung, a kiss that was long and infinitely tender.

She was smiling through her tears when at last he released her mouth.

“Oh, Egan,” she said breathlessly. “I think I knew it since the time I asked why you never married—but I was almost afraid to believe it!”

He laughed huskily. “Believe it, love, for you were the only one I ever wanted.”

With summer nigh, the days had begun to grow longer, the air drier and warmer and filled with the promise of another prosperous year. The high stone walls of Blackstone Keep sparkled in the sunlight that poured down from an azure sky. Voices drifted on the warm spring breeze—along with lilting laughter and childish squeals.

’Twas a lazy afternoon, and the four of them, Cameron and Meredith, Egan and Glenda, sat upon the lush green grass, looking after their little ones as they played beneath the gnarled branches of the ancient oak tree that grew near the bend in the river.

Brodie was tall for a lad of his years, his limbs long, his shoulders sturdy. His sister Aileen, but an infant when Glenda and Egan departed Dunthorpe, was the image of her mother with her halo of fiery red curls and huge, sparkling eyes; much to Cameron’s good-natured vexation, she had adopted her brother’s habit of darting into places to hide, then imploring her father to come find her. Elizabeth, now just over a year old, possessed her father’s thick, dark hair and her mother’s wide golden eyes. With dimpled cheeks and a ready, impish smile, she was a beautiful child.

But Elizabeth was not the only one whose lusty cries had filled the towering walls of the keep in the past year. Not long after Simon’s death, Jeannine had wed Culbert; for a time it had seemed almost odd to see her empty arms. Yet within the year she carried anew a swaddled little bundle, this time full of a squirming little lad…It was Nessa who had delivered the bairn…and Nessa who would no doubt deliver still another before summer’s end…

The second child of the lord and lady of Blackstone Keep.

A smile of contentment curling her lips, Glenda laced her fingers atop the curve of her belly. Egan had propped himself on an elbow beside his wife. Meredith sat next to Glenda, with Cameron stretched out beside her. Aileen sought to stand on her head, her plump little bottom stuck high in the air. Brodie dropped down beside his father, whereupon Elizabeth beamed and squealed with delight at finding Brodie on her own level. Flinging her arms around him, she pressed a sloppy wet kiss on young Brodie’s cheek.

Brodie howled and scrubbed the spot fiercely with his knuckles.

“Mama. Papa…make Elizabeth stop!”

Egan chuckled. “She’s very fond of you, Brodie.”

“But must she always follow me? And must she always
kiss
me?”

“You should be glad that she finds you such a handsome young lad,” Cameron chimed in. “Why, there may even come a time when
you
will be the one chasing Elizabeth.”

Brodie hardly looked convinced. Yet despite his complaints, when Elizabeth tumbled forward in the grass, it was Brodie who reached her, hauled her to her feet with a grunt and brushed the dirt from her tiny gown. She swayed for an instant, then proceeded to follow in his wake when he ambled away. In truth, during the week since the MacKays’ arrival, Brodie was quick to aid the little girl who forever toddled after him, for Elizabeth was still a trifle unsteady on her feet.

In the meantime, the two men had exchanged glances, their thoughts clearly reflecting the other’s. It was Egan who said in a voice of dawning wonder, “God above, wouldn’t it be something if Brodie and Elizabeth were to marry someday?”

“It would indeed.” Cameron sat up.

“I would not be opposed if Elizabeth wished to marry Brodie. He is a good lad. Already he takes care of his own.”

Cameron nodded. “Their children would likely have dark hair,” he mused, thoughtfully eyeing the pair in question, “wouldn’t you say?”

“Oh, I should think so, indeed.” Egan nodded his certainty.

“We could have the wedding at Dunthorpe.” Cameron’s tone took on a note of excitement.

“But Elizabeth is the bride. The wedding should be here at Blackstone!”

Now it was Glenda and Meredith who looked at each other. “Blackstone. Dunthorpe,” Glenda echoed in astonishment, then shook her head. “Do the two of you not hear yourselves? Already you discuss your grandchildren, but I would remind you, Elizabeth is hardly ready to become a bride, and Brodie is scarcely of an age to be a husband!”

Again that look between the men. Their eyes gleamed. “We could betroth them,” said one.

“Nay!” chorused two female voices in unison.

“If they are to find each other, it must be on their own,” said Glenda. “The two of you cannot make them fall in love.”

“Aye,” Meredith pronounced with mock sternness. “If it is to be, it will be, and not because the two of you say it will be so. We shall just have to wait and see, and the two of you must simply content yourselves with that!”

It was not long thereafter that they made their way back to the keep. Egan cradled a sleepy Elizabeth in his arms, while Aileen already slumbered against Cameron’s shoulder. In the hall, Cameron proceeded up the stairs to put the little girl to bed. Brodie marched after him. Meredith glanced over at Egan and Glenda, just as the pair chanced to exchange a tender look above their daughter’s head.

She smiled. Reaching out, she took Glenda’s hand and squeezed it. “I cannot tell you how it fills my heart to see the two of you so happy,” she said softly, then turned to Egan. “’Tis just as Cameron once told me. You belong together.” Stretching up on tiptoe, she pressed a kiss upon Egan’s cheek before making her way after Cameron.

Later that night Glenda nestled close against the side of her husband. A fire burned cozily in the hearth, and the bed was snug and warm.

Peering up at him, Glenda arched a brow. With a fingertip she traced the place on his cheek where Meredith had kissed him. “The women of Dunthorpe do seem to harbor a fancy for you, sir,” she told him tartly. “I wonder…should I be jealous?”

Egan caught her hand and kissed her fingertips. Weaving his fingers through hers, he laid it on the mound of her belly. He laughed, the sound husky.

“Only one woman will ever hold my heart in her hands,” he told her.

“Ah. And who might that be?” Glenda’s tone was grave, but her eyes held the light of a thousand stars.

Egan laughed, the sound husky. “The woman I hold right here in my arms.”

She smiled. “Perhaps you could show me as well, sir.”

“Perhaps I will.”

And, indeed…he did.

About the Author

It was SAMANTHA JAMES’s love of reading as a child that steered her toward a writing career. Among her favorites in those days were the Trixie Belden and Cherry Ames series of books. She still loves a blend of mystery and romance, and, of course, a happily-ever-after ending.

The award-winning, bestselling author of twelve romances and one novella, her books have ranged from medieval to Regency and the American West. Please visit her on the web at www.samanthajames.com.

Samantha loves hearing from readers. You may contact her at her website:
www.samanthajames.com.

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Praise
for the novels of
SAMANTHA JAMES

“A REMARKABLE WRITER!”

Lisa Kleypas

HIS WICKED WAYS

“Readers will adore her endearing, three-dimensional characters…
His Wicked Ways
is sure to win a place on the nightstand.”

Romantic Times

ONE MOONLIT NIGHT

“Satisfying…a nicely written, unabashedly old-fashioned Regency with strong dollops of sensuality.”

Publishers Weekly

“A truly wondrous read.”

Romantic Times

A PROMISE GIVEN

“Powerful. Tender. A beautiful love story.”

Stella Cameron

EVERY WISH FULFILLED

“A marvelous book that tugs on the heart strings.”

Catherine Anderson

This book is a work of fiction. The characters, incidents, and dialogue are drawn from the author’s imagination and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

HIS WICKED PROMISE
. Copyright © 2000 by Sandra Kleinschmit. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.

EPub © Edition NOVEMBER 2005 ISBN: 9780061807367

10 9 8 7

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United Kingdom

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http://www.harpercollinsebooks.co.uk

United States

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New York, NY 10022

http://www.harpercollinsebooks.com

BOOK: Samantha James
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