Johanna was aghast by the men’s insults against her character. She jerked her hand away from her husband’s hold and turned to the soldiers.
“How can you say I’m mean?” she cried out.
“ ’Cause you are, m’lady,” Bryan cheerfully told her. She turned back to Gabriel. She fully expected him to come to her defense.
He fully expected her to tell him what the hell was the matter with her.
“Gabriel, how can you allow your men to defame me?”
“It’s a compliment they’re giving you, damn it. You will give me your full attention. When I ask a question, I expect to have it answered.”
“Yes, of course you do,” she agreed, trying to soothe him. “It’s just that now isn’t the time. . .” Her mind was still focused on the soldiers’ opinion of her. “I cannot believe you think I’m mean!” she cried out.
“You killed our pet and three others,” Calum reminded her.
“That was necessary, not mean.”
“You came up with the plan to blind the noser,” Keith said.
“Blindfold him,” she corrected.
“You put an arrow in the Maclnnes soldier. That was damned mean, m’lady.”
“I’d do it again,” she announced. She wasn’t about to pretend she was sorry she’d injured the soldier. He had meant to kick Clare MacKay, and she couldn’t let that happen.
“Aye, you would do it again,” Keith agreed. “And that’s the reason we’re all thinking you’re a mean one, m’lady. It’s an honor to have you for our mistress.”
Grunts of approval followed Keith’s compliment. Johanna became flustered. She brushed her hair back over her shoulders in an attempt to act as though she hadn’t been overly affected by Keith’s remarks. “I suppose it’s all right for you to call me mean, men, but you won’t be saying such things in front of my mama. She wouldn’t understand.”
“Johanna!”
Gabriel shouted her name. She decided he’d run out of patience. He had waited a long while to get her full attention. She turned back to her husband and smiled up at him.
“Did you want something, m’lord?”
His eyelid twitched. He’d used up all his patience all right. Johanna braced herself and then blurted out, “I didn’t pretend to faint the first time and I did faint again this afternoon. However,” she quickly added before he could start in bellowing again, “I’m really not sick. Glynis explained what was wrong with me.”
“You’re going to bed.”
“I knew you would overreact!” she cried out.
He took hold of her hand and turned to drag her across the hall. She wasn’t being very cooperative. She kept trying to pull away. “How long must I stay in bed?”
“Until you’ve recovered from whatever it is ailing you,” he commanded. “Damn it, I knew you weren’t strong enough to last a full year.”
Her gasp filled the hall. She’d taken grave exception to his remark. The soldiers were all watching, of course, and when they heard their lard’s comment and his wife’s reaction, they smiled in unison.
“If you believed I was such a weakling, you shouldn’t have married me.”
He grinned. She jerked her hand away from his and backed up a space before he could catch hold of her again.
“I’m wagering she’s about to get mean again,” Lindsay said.
Father MacKechnie shook his head. “Not with our laird,” he told the soldier. “She’s partial to the MacBain.”
“She doesn’t look partial to him now,” Bryan said. “Her scowl’s every bit as set as his is.”
Johanna wasn’t paying any attention to the soldiers’ mutterings. Her concentration was centered on her stubborn husband. “You’re sorry you married me, aren’t you?”
He didn’t answer her fast enough. “You only married me to get the land, and after I’m dead and gone, you’ll have to remember to marry a big giant of a woman, preferably one who can belch as loud as any of your men.”
The look on his face gave her pause.
“You will not die.”
He’d whispered his command in a harsh voice filled with anguish. She was stunned. Gabriel sounded terrified.
“I will not lose you.”
“No, you will not lose me.”
She walked forward and took hold of his hand. Tears filled her eyes as she stared up at the wonderful man trying to glare some sense into her.
He loved her. He hadn’t given her the words yet, but the proof was there in his eyes. Johanna felt overwhelmed.
They went up the steps leading to the entrance together. She could feel him shaking. She didn’t want him to worry any longer, and so she stopped at the foot of the stairs leading up to the bedchambers and turned to her husband.
The men were all craning their necks to see what was happening, but they were too far away to hear the conversation.
“Gabriel, do you remember my concern before we were married?”
“You had too many concerns for me to keep track of, wife. Don’t push my hands away. I’m going to carry you upstairs. Don’t you realize you could break your neck if you fainted while trying to climb these steep steps? You may not be worried about your welfare, but I sure as hell am.”
He knew he was wearing his heart on his sleeve. He didn’t like feeling this vulnerable. “What will your mother say when she arrives and finds her daughter dead?” he muttered.
She smiled. “Mama’s going to like you, Gabriel.”
Her husband looked exasperated. He lifted her into his arms. She immediately kissed him.
“You’re still going to bed,” he announced.
“On the night after we were married, I told you I was barren.”
“No, you didn’t. Nicholas told me.”
She nodded. “On our wedding night, I’m certain I mentioned it.”
He nodded. “Yes, you did,” he said. “Several times in fact. ”
He started up the steps. She rested her head against his shoulder. Her fingers were fully occupied stroking the back of his neck.
She wondered if their baby would have her husband’s coloring. She thought she might like to have a little girl, then decided she would be just as happy with a boy.
“I’m not,” she whispered with a sigh.
She waited for him to understand. He didn’t say anything until they reached their bedchamber.
“Did you hear what I just said? I’m not,” she repeated.
“You’re not what?”
“I’m not barren.”
He opened the door but hesitated at the threshold. His gaze was fully directed on his wife. He slowly lowered her to the floor. “Do you honestly believe it matters to me? You and Alex are all the family I want. I don’t need another child. Damn it, woman, haven’t you realized yet how much I . . . you mean more to ...”
Hell, he was rambling like an old woman. He motioned for her to go inside. “Warriors do not concern themselves with matters of love,” he muttered.
He looked miserable. She didn’t smile. She knew he didn’t like telling her what he was feeling.
It was a trait they both shared, she realized.
“Gabriel ...”
“I don’t ever want you to bring up the fact that you’re barren, Johanna. Now quit fretting.”
She strolled into their chamber. “You may not need another child, m’lord, but I do declare in six or seven months you’re going to be getting one.”
He didn’t understand. He shook his head. She nodded. “We’re going to have a baby.”
For the first time in his life, Gabriel MacBain was rendered speechless. His wife believed that was a most appropriate reaction.
They had, after all, just been given a miracle.
CHAPTER 16
You’re certain?”
Gabriel whispered his question so his son wouldn’t wake up. Alex was sleeping on a mat across the chamber. Only the top of his head was visible above the mound of covers Johanna felt he needed to stay warm.
She and her husband were in bed. Gabriel held Johanna in his arms. She was so relieved he was finally reacting, she let out a little sigh. She’d given Gabriel her good news over an hour ago, then waited for him to tell her how happy she’d made him. He hadn’t said a word until now.
“I have all the symptoms.” she whispered back. “I was disbelieving at first, of course, because I thought I was barren for a very long while. Are you happy about the baby, Gabriel?”
“Yes.”
She sighed again. It was too dark in the chamber to see his face, but she guessed he was smiling.
“Glynis told me a woman can be barren with one man and fertile with another. Do you know what that means?”
“What”
“Men can be barren, too.”
He laughed. She hushed him so he wouldn’t wake Alex. “Your first husband obviously was.” he said.
“Why does that please you?”
“He was a bastard.”
She couldn’t fault his reasoning. “Why don’t men acknowledge that they could be the barren ones in a marriage?”
“Such an admission would wound their pride, I suppose. It’s easier to blame the women. It isn’t right, just easier.”
She let out a loud, lusty yawn. Gabriel was stroking her back. The caress made her sleepy. He asked her something, but she was too tired to answer him. She closed her eyes and was dead to the world a minute later.
Gabriel didn’t fall asleep for another hour. He held Johanna close and thought about the baby. He should have wanted a boy as his first choice, for a man couldn’t have enough sons to help with the building of an empire, but he really hoped for a baby girl. She would have blue eyes and yellow hair, like her mother, and if God was willing to recreate perfection, his daughter would be every bit as sassy.
He fell asleep with a smile on his face.
Laird MacBain told his clan about the baby the following morning. Johanna stood next to her husband on the top step outside the doors. Alex stood next to her. Both the Maclaurins and the MacBains cheered the news. Johanna and Gabriel had already told Alex. The little boy didn’t seem overly interested about a new brother or sister, and his lack of interest convinced his parents he was feeling secure.
He could barely stand still during the announcement. His father had promised to take him riding, and to a four-year-old, a minute of waiting seemed to feel as long as an hour.
After Gabriel dismissed the well-wishers, Johanna turned to Calum and Keith.
“I’ve come up with several names I’d like to ...”
“Good God, lass, you can’t tell us the baby’s name,” Keith blurted out.
The Maclaurin soldier was horrified by her ignorance. Didn’t she realize the bairn’s name should never, ever be told to another person before the baptism? As soon as he was able to stop sputtering, he asked her just that question. She told him she guessed she didn’t realize.
“I was never concerned about the traditions regarding babies,” she explained.
“What is that, m’lady?” Calum asked. “Most married women are careful to follow every tradition.”
“I thought I was barren.”
“You’re not,” Keith remarked.
She smiled. “No, I’m not,” she agreed.
“We’ll have to do our best to instruct you, then, on the importance of the name you select.”
“A man’s name is far more important than just a name,” Calum announced.
Before she could ask what in heaven’s name he meant by that statement, Keith turned her attention. “If another person has knowledge of the name before the christening, he could use it to work magic on the babe.”
Calum nodded agreement.
Johanna could tell from their serious expressions they weren’t jesting with her. They really believed their nonsense. “Is this tradition or superstition you’re giving me?” she asked.
Glynis stepped forward to join the conversation. She wanted to add a few important reminders of her own.
“If the babe cries during the christening, then it is sufficient proof the devil’s been driven out, m’lady. Did you already know that truth?”
Johanna shook her head. She had never heard of anything so preposterous. She didn’t want to injure Glynis’s feelings, however, and for that reason she didn’t smile.
“Then I shall hope the baby cries,” she said.
“You might also give the wee one a tiny pinch to ensure he does cry out,” Glynis suggested.
“Some mothers probably do,” Keith speculated.
“If your baby’s born at midnight or at the twilight hour, he’ll have the gift of second sight, of course. Heaven help the babe if he comes during the chime hours, for then he’ll have the ability to see ghosts and spirits hidden from the rest of us.”
“Papa, aren’t you ready to leave yet?” Alex asked.
Gabriel nodded. He leaned down, ordered Johanna not to exhaust herself, and then lifted his son on his shoulder and started for the stables.
Leila walked across the courtyard, bowed her head to her laird when she passed him, and then hurried over to Johanna to offer her congratulations.
“It’s joyful news,” she said.
“Aye, it is,” Glynis agreed. “I was just giving m’lady a few suggestions,” she told Leila.
“And I shall try to remember every one of them,” Johanna promised.
Keith shook his head. “I doubt you’ll remember,” he said. “You’ve forgotten what day this is,” he added. “You’re wearing the wrong plaid again.”
“I’m beginning to wonder if she’s doing it on purpose,” Calum remarked. There was a hint of amusement in his voice. As soon as the MacBain soldier spoke, Leila deliberately turned so that her back was to Calum. She kept her gaze directed on the ground. Johanna noticed the action and was intrigued by it.
“Glynis, Megan told me you had a good hand at cutting hair,” Johanna said.
“ ’Tis the truth I do have a talent for the task.”
“Clare MacKay could use your assistance,” Johanna said. “The Maclnnes men made a mess out of her hair.”
“I know they did,” Glynis said. “They meant to make a mess so anyone seeing her would know her shame.”
Johanna didn’t want to get into a long discussion about Clare now. “Yes,” she agreed. “But Clare’s father is coming here today, and I was wondering if you could . . .”