Read Shades of the Wind Online
Authors: Charlotte Boyett-Compo
could not help but draw in her breath at the sensual look he gave her.
“The pleasure is all mine and please call me Kaelin,” the lawgiver replied as his lips
brushed the backs of her fingers. He was staring at her from under his long, dark gold
lashes and as he lifted his head that bold look became hotter still.
Catherine could feel the color rising in her cheeks and she had to turn away. That
her puzzled look met Holly’s knowing one only added to Catherine’s discomfort. “May
I present my companion, Lady Olabishi?”
“It is an honor to make your acquaintance,” Lord Kaelin said. “Is Lord Bahru up
and about yet?”
“I would hope he is by now,” Catherine replied.
“I have a few papers he needs to sign,” the lawgiver said. “There is also one
required of you to sign and Lady Olabishi if she will be staying with us.”
Olabishi had been watching McGregor and vigorously shook her head to indicate
she would not be staying after the Joining of her companion and Lord Bahru.
“Obviously, Ola is anxious to return to her homeland,” Catherine said with a faint
blush. Her blush deepened when Olabishi nodded again, this time emphatically.
“Then may we retire to the library where I may get at least your signature if Lord
Bahru hasn’t risen?” the lawgiver inquired.
“Of course,” Catherine said, and looked to Olabishi who returned to her seat and
sat down.
“Are you staying for dinner, Lord Kaelin?” Holly asked, a challenge in her tone.
Kaelin McGregor winked at her. “You know damned well I can’t pass up one of
your meals, Holly Mae Hawkins.”
“You can’t pass up anything if you ask me!” Holly sniffed. She fanned him away
with her apron. “Get gone. Let a body work!”
Catherine could tell there was great affection between the two and she smiled,
appeased somewhat by the jocularity.
“Unfortunately,” Kaelin was saying as he walked behind Catherine on the brick
pathway leading back to the main house, “I am engaged.”
Catherine stopped, turned and stared at him. Her left eyebrow quirked up. “I don’t
believe I asked your status, milord.”
“No,” he agreed, taking her elbow and moving her forward, up the three steps to
the back door. “But Khenty would be very annoyed if I didn’t tell you.”
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Catherine eased her arm out of his grip as he opened the door for her to enter the
house. “I can’t see that it makes any difference.”
“Believe me, it does,” Kaelin insisted.
“To whom?” she demanded at the library door.
“To Khenty, of course,” he replied seriously. He reached past her and opened the
door.
The room was still dark, the curtains pulled over the tall windows. Catherine—her
lips pursed with silent irritation—walked purposefully over to the drapes and flung
them aside, waving away a cloud of dust that flew out from the material.
“This is unhealthy!” she exclaimed. “No wonder the place smells of mildew!”
Kaelin folded his arms and watched her as she moved from one window to another,
shoving aside the drapes and flinging open the windows to let in the sunshine and fresh
air.
“I’ve been trying to think of ways to occupy my time while His Grace sleeps,”
Catherine mumbled. “I think I’ve just found one.”
“The place could use a thorough cleaning,” Kaelin agreed. He looked about the
room. “I doubt he knows how badly Nyria has let things slide lately.”
“How could he not know?” Catherine grated. She sneezed, sneezed again and then
looked to the heavens for help.
Kaelin laughed. “Something tells me the next time I come to visit I’ll be able to eat
off the floor!”
Catherine laughed as well. “Well, maybe not, but at least
this
room will be clean as I
found the dining room earlier!” She dusted her palms together and then pointed to a
brace of loveseats set at right angles to one another. “Please, sit down.”
“How was your trip down from Holy Dale?” Kaelin asked, referring to her home in
Virago.
“Hot and tiring, but the scenery was nice,” Catherine responded.
“And how did you like our little town?”
“I didn’t get to see much of Devil’s Nest when we landed here in Diabolusia,” she
told him. “Mr. Beasely was waiting at the quay for us as soon as we arrived and it was
pouring rain.”
“Ah, Elmer Beasely,” Kaelin chuckled. He smoothed the crease of his gabardine
breeches. “He had nothing but nice things to say about you this morning at the
Serpent’s Tale.” He smiled. “Our one and only tavern, I’m afraid.”
“That was nice of him,” Catherine said, blushing slightly. “He was very helpful
although…” She looked down at her hands, which were entwined in her lap.
“Although?” Kaelin questioned.
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Charlotte Boyett-Compo
Catherine looked up. “He seemed most anxious to be away from Anubeion before
sundown. I was worried that he wouldn’t make it back to town in that terrible
downpour, but he was more concerned about leaving than his own safety.”
Kaelin’s smile slid slowly away. “Did he say why he preferred not to stay last
evening, Milady Brell?”
“Please,” she asked, making a decision she knew would displease her parents. “Call
me Kate.”
“A lovely name,” he complimented. “And very Chalean.”
“As Kaelin McGregor is very Serenian?” she teased.
“Indeed.” His smile returned for a moment then fled again. “Beasely?” he pressed.
“Did he give you a reason for not wanting to stay the night?”
“No,” she answered. “He just seemed very fearful.” She waved a negligent hand at
the air. “I even asked Nyria if Anubeion might not be haunted to cause such a reaction
in the gentleman.”
Kaelin leaned back against the loveseat and braced his arm across the curved back.
“And what did the inestimable Nyria tell you?”
Catherine lowered her voice. “She told me of the night creature who supposedly
roams the plantation grounds,” she replied, her eyes twinkling.
The lawgiver’s mouth tightened perceptively. “I am sure Khenty was not pleased
with the woman’s foolishness,” he snapped. “She should not be regaling you with
superstitious slave folklore.”
“She dismissed it as such,” Catherine said, feeling a need to defend the absent
housekeeper, although she couldn’t imagine why she should bother.
“Nevertheless,” Kaelin quipped, “she shouldn’t have mentioned such things to
you.”
Sensing this man cared no more for Nyria than did the rest of the household, she
wanted to change the subject. “You said there were papers?” He nodded politely. “I
take it they are Lord Bahru’s employment papers?”
Kaelin’s brows drew together and he seemed puzzled.
“Employment papers?” She looked closely at the lawgiver for the gentleman
seemed not to be hearing her. “Lord Kaelin?”
“Just Kaelin,” the lawgiver corrected absently, turning his head to look past her.
Just as Holly’s eyes had done earlier, McGregor’s pale blue orbs glazed over for a
moment. He blinked and then looked at her before snapping his fingers as though he
had just remembered why he was there.
“Ah, employment papers! Aye!” he agreed. “Where is my mind this morning?”
Catherine watched him bend forward and take up his battered satchel, open it and
rummage through the papers within until he found what he was looking for.
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Shades of the Wind
“Let’s see.” He pulled up a folder, glanced at it and then opened it. He scanned it—
appearing as though he were seeing it for the first time. “Well, here it is then. There is a
contract for the duration of two years for Lord Bahru. Room and board and necessities
provided by the Ben-Alkazar estate, a small salary of two hundred gold sovereigns to
be paid at the end of Lord Bahru’s employment.”
“You said there was a paper for me to sign?”
Kaelin looked up at her expectantly then shuffled the papers until he found one that
had her name on it. He perused it—his face turning a bit pale—then extended it toward
her. “It is an offer for you to teach the children of Anubeion if you would be so inclined.
There is a small annual stipend, of course.”
“I would indeed!” Catherine exclaimed. “With or without a stipend! I really was
wondering how I would spend my time here.”
“Does that meet with your approval then, Kate?”
“Yes, it certainly does.” Catherine wondered why he seemed relieved at her
answer.
Once more McGregor’s brows clashed over his hawkish nose. One blond brow
crooked upward. “There is another clause that offers you the chance to assist the prince.
Would you be amenable to that as well?”
For a reason she was unable to understand, Catherine felt a shiver of reluctance go
down her spine at his words. Just exactly what did “to assist the prince” mean? She
certainly hoped her employment was not meant to be along the lines of what the
housekeeper’s was to the prince.
“I have had nursing training,” she said. “Is that what you mean?”
“That might be of help, but this employment refers to the position of being his
personal assistant,” Kaelin was quick to say as though he had sensed her unease. “There
is a lot of correspondence between the prince and his homeland, and he hates writing.”
Catherine relaxed. “Oh I understand that only too well. Both my father and Lord
Bahru are the same way.”
He gathered the papers together and took them over to the desk, placed them on
the top and took up a quill pen. “If you’ll just sign at the Xs…”
How eager he is to have me put my signature to those
, she thought as she stood and
walked to the desk. Her uneasiness was increasing as she allowed him to pull out a
chair for her to sit. Once seated, she looked up at him.
“May I read the paper first?” she asked, taking the pen from him. She watched as
his face first went deathly pale then became quickly infused with high color.
“You don’t trust me?” he queried, his gaze too sharp and a touch on the frosty side.
“I have always been taught that before I put my name to any legal document, I
should first read it thoroughly and understand it,” she replied. “I mean no offense to
you or His Grace, but I am a very cautious person, Milord McGregor.”
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“Kaelin,” he corrected again, this time with clenched teeth. He started to say
something else then stopped, his head going up as though someone had called his name
sharply to get his attention.
What do these people hear that I do not?
Catherine pondered as she stared up at the
underside of the lawyer’s jaw where a faint white scar puckered the flesh there.
He is
listening so intensely to something, but what?
Then as though nothing at all had happened, the lawgiver lowered his head, smiled
at her and reached out to pat her shoulder much as a much-respected elderly uncle
would.
“You are right, Kate,” he said. “By all means read the paper.” He turned and
reseated himself on the loveseat, crossed his legs gracefully and once more braced his
arm along the back as though he had not a care in the world. He smiled calmly,
encouragingly at her. “Please. Take your time.”
Strange behavior, Catherine thought as she tore her attention from him to look
down at the three-page document. The writing blurred for just a second then
straightened itself out as she narrowed her eyes. Not for the first time did Catherine fear
she would need those spectacles her mother was now forced to wear in order to read.
The contract was simple. It stated everything Kaelin had mentioned. Everything
seemed to be in order. There appeared to be no hidden clauses. If Catherine was not
happy teaching the children of Anubeion or found she could not get along with Prince
Khenty Ben-Alkazar, she could cease her employment at any time with all monies due
her up unto that moment.
“Everything to your liking, Kate?” Kaelin asked.
Catherine looked over at him. “Yes,” she answered, placing the quill on the first
page and scrawling her signature on each of the three pages.
Kaelin stared across the room at her. So much like Kebechet, he thought as his
scrutiny slid up the column of Catherine’s slender neck then touched at length on her
burgundy red hair before moving over the delicate profile.
The emerald green eyes were the same—almond-shaped with long dark lashes. The
two women were of the same height, near the same weight—although Kebechet had
been the slimmer of the two—and curvaceous in those places he knew Khenty
preferred. Even Catherine’s voice was similar to Kebechet’s—missing the dialect and
cultured tones of Upper Kensett, but soft and sultry for a woman who had spent sixteen
years among the barbarians of Virago.
“Didn’t your mother tell you it was impolite to stare, Milord McGregor?”
Kaelin flinched. How long had she been watching him watch her? He had the grace
to blush furiously before smiling his apology.
“She didn’t tell me it was wrong to stare at a beautiful woman,” he chuckled, “just
to never get caught doing it!”
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Shades of the Wind
Catherine stood up and walked toward him, looking up into his handsome face as
he shot to his feet at her approach. She extended the papers to him. “Is there anything
else?”