The Black Knave (35 page)

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Authors: Patricia Potter

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #General, #Historical, #Scottish

BOOK: The Black Knave
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She looked up at him through thick lashes. She was flirting with him, and she cringed inwardly at doing so. She saw his eyes darken.

Did he really read her mind as she so often thought he was doing? How could he?

“Have you eaten, my lord?”

“Aye, with Cumberland before he left. He had a few last instructions.”

She swallowed back the bile. She knew what some of those instructions were. Bed her. Produce an heir for the English nobility her mother and father detested—people who would do anything to take a child from its mother. Now she knew why her mother never spoke of her own family.

She lost what little hunger she had, and stood. “I will get my cloak.”

“You look well this morning.”

She curtsied. “Thank you, my lord.”

“I speak only truth,” he said solemnly.

She felt flustered. She was determined not to trust him, not to lower her guard, and yet when he spoke with that serious edge to his voice, she felt herself melt a little. She allowed him to help her put on the cloak, then her gloves. Black Jack panted heavily next to her, obviously afraid she was leaving without him.

She looked up at the marquis. “Can we take Jack with us? He does so love adventures.”

“He takes after his mistress.”

She decided not to reply to that. She just looked at him.

“He will stay out from under the hooves?”

“I will take him in the saddle with me.”

“If that will please you.”

Nothing but her brother’s safety would please her now. But she nodded.

If he saw anything else in her eyes, he did not mention it. He only nodded. “The three of us, then.”

The horses were already saddled, and Jamie was holding the reins. The marquis handed Jack to the boy. “Hold him until she is in the saddle.”

He then helped her into the saddle, his hand remaining on hers a second longer than necessary, then handed Jack up to her. She noticed that his hands were gentle, that one hand ruffed the fur of Jack, as he lifted him up to her.

Then he mounted and they rode down the lane.

“Where are we going?”

“To a loch. I asked the cook to put together a meal. I thought you might enjoy getting away for a while.”

Forever was more like it. But her husband was at his most likeable. Even though she did not trust him entirely, Bethia found herself caught up in a charm he used so effectively … when he so chose.

They rode for an hour, passing through one patrol before reaching the loch. Nestled between high heather-filled hills, it was a dark blue and lay shimmering in the sun. She could not contain a gasp of pleasure. She loved the heather and the wild hills, the plentiful lochs and streams and rivers.

She warned herself about her companion. He could turn charm on and off like a Highlands storm. He had listened to her, admitted that her concerns were most likely correct, but he had not offered to help in any way. The only thing he
had
done was keep her secrets.

Could she really expect him to risk anything at all for her? Especially when he had married an unwilling stranger for a fortune?

He helped her dismount under a birch tree, then spread out a blanket. She walked over to the loch. “It is beautiful.”

“Aye, I used to come here as a lad.”

She looked up at him. “I canna imagine you as a lad.”

He shrugged. “I sometimes wonder if I was ever really one. I remember little except the yelling between the marquis and my mother. I was fostered to an English family and was grateful for the respite.”

“When first did you come here?”

“My mother brought me here when I was seven. After that, I came every time I could. ‘Tis the peace of the place. I would sit for hours and watch the deer come to drink. I thought…”

He stopped as if he were telling secrets that were to remain that way.

“Does anyone else ever come here?”

“An occasional shepherd with a flock.” He looked toward a steep wooded hill sheltering the lake. “There are caves up there. I used to hide in them, play the part of Robert Bruce.”

“And then you fought against all he believed in?” She could not stop the sharp retort. He always lulled her into a fantasy of safety. She had to do something to remind herself that he was no loyal friend. Yet a small voice suggested that perhaps he was suggesting a hiding place. Why was he always so oblique?

“That was more than twenty years ago, madam, before my family declared itself for the Hanover.”

“Hanover?”

The Jacobites had called the king that with no little derision. She was surprised to hear the word from his mouth. But then he often seemed to have no loyalties, not to the side on which he fought, nor the other. He seemed to consider himself equally bemused by both sides, an uninvolved onlooker.

“Aye,” he said with that curious smile that tipped only one side of his lips. “The Hanover.”

“Why did you fight?”

“There are some that say I did not. That I ran at the first sound of cannon.”

“Did you?”

He went to the rugged edge of the loch. He picked up a stone and flipped it into the water, watching as it skipped once, then twice, before sinking. “You are wanting to know the mettle of your husband?”

“Aye,” she admitted wryly. “You so oft confuse me. I donna know what I think much of the time.”

“I did not run, lass. I walked from the battlefield when Cumberland ordered no quarter. I had no taste for slaughter.”

It was one of the first times she had heard real emotion in his voice. She was stunned by the depth of it, and even more that he shared it with her.

“Is that why you dinna tell Cumberland about my absence.”

“Perhaps I just did not wish him to think how ineffectual I am as a husband.”

She took several steps toward him and looked into his eyes. God’s breath, but they were mesmerizing. Green and gold and gray. Always changing, always intriguing. And always secretive.

“Why do you allow everyone to think you are a coward?”

“I care not what they think.”

And he did not. She saw that clearly enough. But strangely, he apparently cared about what she thought.

Her fingers started to tingle. She found herself moving toward him. A step, then two. He was also moving. A step. Then two.

They faced each other. Only a breath of air separated them. And that air crackled with emotion. Desire. Her limbs froze in place, then melted as his breath mingled with hers. His lips touched hers with a sweetness that contradictorily jarred every one of her senses. She felt his arms go around her, and she was pulled willingly against him, her cheek resting against his heart. She felt its beat, felt the warmth of his body.

Her body was responding to him again, in so many betraying ways. She felt the hunger, the need to have him become a part of her. She heard the gentle lap of the water against shore, the sound of birds rustling from trees. She heard all the music of the earth, and it was made more glorious by the melody in her body.

She also heard an unwelcome echo.
The marquis will do anything for money
.

He must have felt her instinctively drawing away, for he released her, his eyes at once curious and wary.

She did not want him to go away. Why did she always feel so safe with him, when she should feel the opposite? Feeling split in half by desire and fear of betrayal, she started to turn away.

Then she heard splashes. Frantic, panicked splashes.

She turned toward the loch. Jack was thrashing in the water. He must have tumbled from a rock into the lake, and in frantic efforts was moving away from the shore. She started to run toward the water.

He caught her. “The water is very cold and very deep,” he said. “I will get him.”

She watched as he pulled off his wig, then his coat, and finally his boots. ‘Twas done in a matter of seconds, with more speed than she thought possible. Without hesitation, he plunged into the water, swimming with strong strokes to reach the pup, which had disappeared from view. Rory went down, too, came up, then went down again.

Her heart seemed to stop beating. Jack was
her
charge. How could she have not paid the proper attention? Just as she had not gotten her brother out of Scotland in time.

Then she saw a dark head surfacing. He held the dog. He swam back with one arm, the other holding tightly to the puppy.

He reached the shore, and stood. His body was shivering, and the pup was still.

He sat down and rubbed Black Jack, putting two thumbs at his chest and kneading it. Water dribbled from the pup’s mouth, then it wriggled, emitting the little mewing sounds he had as a few weeks’ old puppy. She took Jack from her husband’s hands and bundled the pup in her cloak. She put a hand on Braemoor’s drenched arm. It was freezing.

“We need a fire,” she said.

He shrugged. “I have no flint.” But he took off his shirt and put on the dry coat. His dark, wet hair clung to his face. She handed him the puppy and reached down, tearing off a piece of her petticoat. She used it to wipe the water from her husband’s face. She was thinking of him more and more like that.
Husband
.

“Sit,” she commanded.

Looking startled, he did. She used the cloth to try to dry his hair. She could do nothing about his wet breeches. She looked down. He was drying the pup in his elegant coat.

Her hands kneaded his hair, her fingers lingering to allow a clump to curl around them.

“You will ruin your coat,” she said, distressed to find that her voice broke with emotion.

“He is chilled.”

“So are you.”

“But I know I will be warm soon, and he does not.”

She stared down at the dark head, grateful he could not see her face, nor what was in it. She did not want him to see the emotion, nor the fear, nor the utter gratefulness she felt.

Nor the surge of something more than gratitude.

“We had better ride back,” she said.

“And miss our meal?” he said with mock horror.

“Is there somewhere warmer?”

“Nay. Naught but Braemoor, and I do not think I wish to go there. ‘Twas the water that was cold, lass. ‘Tis still summer. The sun is out, and I will dry out soon enough.”

“Thank you,” she said simply. “Thank you for Jack.”

“Mayhap that will teach him to be more cautious about water.” Despite his cavalier tone, though, she noted his hands tightened around the pup. His waistcoat had darkened with moisture. “And you, lass, are about to rub all my hair off.”

Bethia suddenly realized she had been rubbing harder and harder. Embarrassed, she dropped the wet cloth from her hands. She stooped beside him and took the pup from him, cradling him in her own arms. He was still shivering and making piteous little sounds, looking up hopefully. “You are a little fraud,” she said, yet terribly grateful that he was still among them.

She did not know how to swim. She knew she could never have saved him.

As one hand held the pup, she put another up to Rory’s face. Her land lingered on his cheek. How could she have believed he would allow a child of his to be bartered away? But why had he not offered his help yesterday when they had talked? Why had he just listened to her?

He put on his boots, then started stomping around on the sun-warmed grass. She thought he looked a little like a bull ready to mate.

She giggled, and he looked over at her, a smile tugging at his lips. “Do I look so foolish, then?”

“Nay, you look quite heroic to me.”

“You have small standards, then.”

“I have high ones,” she contradicted. “Jack believes so, too.”

“Umm,” he said dubiously. He resumed his stomping as she watched. She would always remember him this way. A wicked little demon made her wonder whether Mary saw him regularly like this, his dark hair freed from a wig, breeches clinging to strong legs. Pain rippled through her.

She looked away, toward the lake. Black Jack licked her cheek as if he suddenly realized she needed comfort more than he. But though she could no longer see her husband, every part of her was aware of his presence behind her. Every time she saw him now, she felt controlled by totally unfamiliar emotions, desires, feelings.

Even if he was a Scotsman who had fought with Cumberland, a man who at Cumberland’s order married a woman not of his choice. Even as he kept a mistress nearby.

The pain grew deeper inside. She wondered what it would be like to be truly loved by the marquis.

Do not think of that. You canna hold on to something you have never had. Think of Dougal.

And did she really want a man who seemed to take nothing seriously, not death, not the proposed theft of a child, not loyalty?

Nonetheless, she would miss him. She would even miss the outrageousness of his clothes, the competence only she seemed to notice, the small kindnesses he either tried to hide or smooth over with some barbed remark.

She turned back toward him. He was still stomping back and forth. He looked irresistible in his dripping breeches and spoiled coat. Always before, even in his casual clothes, he’d looked elegant. Arrogant. Now he looked mussed and approachable and incredibly sensual.

The marquis will do anything for money. Remember Cumberland’s words.

He might have drowned saving Jack.

Rory swerved and went toward the horses, untying a bag from his saddle. He took a cloth from it, spreading it on the bank, then triumphantly placed a bottle of wine, two roasted pheasants, cheese and fruit on the cloth.

“I still think you should find dry clothes,” she said.

“I do not,” he retorted with the arrogance she remembered so well from the first few days.

She still wanted something from him, so she said nothing as he parceled out the food and poured wine into two silver goblets. She sipped it, and found it very good. She looked up at him. His hair was drying, the thick strands slightly curling. His coat was rumpled, but he paid no attention to it. Instead, he seemed immensely pleased with himself.

Bethia could not stop staring. Of all the Rory Forbeses she had seen, this one was the most appealing. He did not care about his appearance. He had unhesitatingly risked his life for an animal. Now he appeared uniquely pleased with what had happened this afternoon, despite his physical discomfort.

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