Whence Came a Prince (18 page)

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Authors: Liz Curtis Higgs

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

BOOK: Whence Came a Prince
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“My knowledge of Galloway is hardly limited to my own parish. Tell me, what was the cost to hire your chaise?” When she told him, he pressed further. “Is that how much the Scotts paid for the gown?”

“Nae.” Leana reached beneath the table—to open the purse tied at her waist, Rose realized—and produced a generous handful of shillings. Even on a gray and rainy afternoon, the coins shone in the candlelight. “They paid me the full price, as if the gown were new. Two pounds sterling.”

Lachlan held out his hand, like a child wanting sweets. “Give me the coins, Leana. My money bought the gown; the balance should be mine.”

Watching her sister closely, Rose saw the glint of tears. Rarely did a woman have money of her own. For a stayed lass like Leana, a purse full of silver represented a sense of freedom, however fleeting.

Rose could not contain herself. “Father, do you not see your own daughter’s eyes? They shine far more than the coins you are demanding of her.” Inside her slippers, Rose’s toes were curled tight, but she refused to let her nervousness show. “Can Leana not keep what is hers?”

“This is none of your concern, Rose.” Lachlan did not withdraw his empty hand but shook it at her sister as though reminding Leana to do her duty. When Jamie started to speak, Lachlan’s head jerked in his direction. “Not a word, Nephew. Leana kens the debt owed for her months away from home.”

The coins spilled into his waiting hand.

“What need have you for silver?” Lachlan said smoothly, wrapping the money with his handkerchief. When he stuffed it in his waistcoat pocket, the coins formed an unsightly bulge over his heart. “Do tradesmen present you with bills expecting their due? Does Colin Elliot greet you with a tally of purchases when you appear at the grocers door? On Whitsunday past did an endless parade of servants, herds, and
hinds
stick out their grimy hands, waiting to be paid for the term? You are home now, Leana, and have no use for silver. Wealth is for men to earn, manage, and disburse as they see fit.”

Rose could not stomach another word. She stood, pushing her chair back hard enough to scrape the floor. “I have lost my appetite. Should anyone require me, I shall be in my room.” Grabbing her skirts, she swung toward the door just in time to see Leana stand as well.

Her sister lifted her chin, her eyes still moist, but her gaze clear. “I shall be in my room also, altering one of my gowns so I might wear something more appropriate for supper.”

The sisters exited the room without waiting for a response. Leana led the way, with Rose so close behind that she nearly trampled Leana’s hem. Lachlan shouted both of their names, but neither woman turned back. Instead, they hurried through the entrance hall and up the stair as three servants came round the corner from the kitchen, mouths agape.

Rose didn’t dare speak, fearing she might laugh or cry or both at once. They had turned their backs on Lachlan McBride! She was almost ashamed of how wonderful it felt. “Leana,” she whispered when they reached the corridor outside their bedrooms, “will you truly sew this afternoon? My hands are shaking so, I would stab myself ten times just threading the needle—”

“Oh, Rose.” Leana suddenly turned and pulled her into a fierce embrace. “You were so brave standing up to Father like that.”

“Me?” Her voice, pinched by tears, was reduced to a squeak. “You were the
campie
one. ‘I sold it,’ she said. Just like that.”

“Having you in the room helped.” Leana patted Rose’s braid, still holding her close. “My brave sister.”

Rose gave a noisy sniff. “Perhaps ’tis the babe inside me making me strong.”

Leana was quiet for a moment. “ ’Tis Jamie’s love for you and yours for him that make you fearless. Father cannot hurt you now.”

“But what about
you
?” Rose leaned back, her jubilant mood fading. “This is your home. Father could make the years ahead quite miserable indeed.”

“Except I, too, am loved,” Leana reminded her.

A bubble of fear rose in her throat.
Not Jamie.

“Behold, what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us.” Leana hugged her once more before letting go. “Not our earthly father, Rose. Our heavenly one. I am well loved, and so are you.”

Rose pressed her handkerchief to her mouth, too full of emotion to speak. She
was
loved. Not by her father, perhaps, but by everyone important to her. Jamie especially. And Leana always. She peered down the corridor toward the stair. “I’m afraid we’ve left my poor husband to face Father alone.”

“I do not envy Jamie the next hour,” Leana agreed. “We’d best be to our rooms. Unless I am mistaken, Neda will bring us each a tray when Father is not looking.”

“Good.” Rose patted her stomach. “My appetite is
not
lost; it is very much found.”

“Take my tray, then.” Leana leaned forward and briefly pressed her cheek to Rose’s, a tender gesture from their childhood. “Eat well, young Rose. Grow a healthy son or daughter for your Jamie.”

Your Jamie.
Rose wondered what those words cost her sister, fearing the price.

Forgive me, Leana.

Nae, it was time to stop thinking it and start saying it.
Forgive me, Leana.
The words lodged in her throat.
Say it, Rose.

“Leana, I am … so sorry.” Flooded with guilt, Rose could not look
at her sister. She grasped her hands instead. “About Jamie. About Ian. About … oh,
everything.
It must be so … difficult for you. My loving Jamie … my caring for Ian …”

“Rose, ’tis not hard for—”

“But it
is
hard.” She looked up, determined to be heard. “I see it in your eyes. I hear it in your voice. I’ve broken your heart, Leana, time and again. I have, I
have.
And you keep forgiving me, when I do not deserve it.”

“Dearie.” Leana shook her head, squeezing her hands tight. “Mercy is a gift, freely given, freely received.”

“Are you … certain?” Rose searched her face. “Have you truly forgiven me?”

Leana’s smile was grace itself. “How could I not, when I love you? Don’t you see? You are my only sister and my dearest friend.”

“And you … are mine.” She began crying again, harder than before. “Please forgive me. Please … please.”

Chin trembling, Leana kissed her brow. “ ’Tis already done, Rose. Long ago.”

Twenty-One

And is there any moral shut
Within the bosom of the rose?

A
LFRED
, L
ORD
T
ENNYSON

S
uch a long face,” Jamie chided her. “Will you not tell me what troubles you, Rose?”

She strolled beside him down the lane, her skirt hems brushing the wet gravel. After an endless day of rain, the skies had cleared during supper and bathed the countryside with sunlight, making the wet hedgerows glisten. Jamie had suggested Rose join him for an evening walk, allowing Leana to enjoy a quiet hour with Ian. Both sisters had jumped at the chance. Would that he could always make them both happy.

Rose slowed to admire a cluster of wild thyme with its rosy purple heads and long oval leaves. “The next two months will put a dreadful strain on Leana—watching the two of us together, spending hours with Ian, dreading the day she must bid him farewell.” Rose leaned over to pluck a sprig of thyme from the soggy ground, then crushed the leaves and inhaled the aromatic scent. “ ’Tis more than any woman should bear.”

They had talked of little else since Leana’s arrival yestreen. He inclined his head toward the road, hoping to guide Rose’s thoughts in a different direction. “Come, let me show you what I found in one of Glensone’s fields.”

Rose brushed the fragrant wildflowers from her hands as they approached a meadow enclosed by a dry stane dyke. “Jamie, it looks like every other field in Scot—oh!”

Baby rabbits were everywhere, hopping after their mothers, scurrying along the dyke, disappearing down holes no bigger than their tiny bodies. There were dozens of them, their velvety brown ears and white
tails flicking through the wet grass, greener than ever after the rain. Rose clasped her hands with delight. “Aren’t they dear? And so many.”

Jamie grinned at her. “Just the remedy for my
unheartsome
wife.”

She sighed with contentment, her gaze following one rabbit, then another. “We must bring Ian here.”

“Morning or evening—that’s when rabbits are likely to show.” Jamie slipped his arm round her waist. “Though I fear you may have to bring the lad yourself if you’re wanting to come soon. Tomorrow’s the Sabbath, and Monday noon the herds come for the shearing.”

“You’ll be in the sheepfolds most of the week, won’t you?” He heard the plaintive note in her voice. “From daybreak ’til the gloaming, aye?” Whenever he spent a long day on the hills, Rose often waited at the door come nightfall, watching for him with an anxious look on her face. Perhaps because Leana was older, she’d not needed his constant attention quite the same way Rose did. Like the flower she was named for, young Rose seemed to wilt without careful tending.

“Only a few days,” he promised, “and then we’ll have hundreds of fleeces to show for our labors.”

“Hundreds?” She made a face at him. “All of them will need cleaning and carding, I suppose.”

“They will indeed. A summer’s work for you and the lasses. At least Leana can help with the spinning.”

There.
He’d said her name with a fair amount of ease that time. Not hesitating, not stumbling over it. While Leana was in Twyneholm, he’d seldom had that problem. But now that she was home again, her name had flesh to it. Lavender was no longer an herb in the garden; it was the scent of Leana’s gown passing him on the stair.

Rose gazed up the road that led to Troston Hill Farm and the wild moorland beyond. “I’ve not seen Lillias Brown lurking about the parish. Have you?”

“Nae, lass, I have not.” Rose had told him about her eerie conversations with the auld witch last spring and how much they’d frightened her. Jamie felt certain his wife would not knock on the door of Nethermuir again.

“One of her predictions did come true,” Rose said. “Lillias told me, ‘There is ane man for ye, lassie. And ye ken his name well.’ ” She reached up to brush the stray hair off his brow. “I do know his name. In fact, I share it.”

“So you do.” He clasped her hand and kissed the narrow silver band he’d placed there. “Mistress McKie.”

Rose smiled once more at the tiny rabbits, as though they might twitch their noses at her in response, then the couple turned toward home. The evening sun threw long shadows across the road in front of them while they walked. “My sister has yet to touch her wheel, but her needle was busy today. She’s altering one of her older gowns. I don’t have the heart to tell her how plain it makes her look. She will ne’er catch a gentleman’s eye wearing such dreary attire.”

“What gentleman?” Jamie asked a bit too sharply.

“Any proper suitor who might wish to court her.” Rose slipped her hand round his arm and gave him an affectionate squeeze. “Now that things are settled among the three of us, my sister is free to marry again.”

Jamie looked down at her, his steps slowing. “Is that her … desire? To marry?”

“She’s not spoken of it, but ’tis every woman’s desire to marry. And to have children.”

He stared at the rolling pastureland to the south, not really seeing the hillocks and craggy rocks, too stunned by Rose’s offhand suggestion. Would Leana marry again?
Could
she marry after all that had happened? And bear another man’s children?

“He’d have to be very wealthy indeed,” Rose said, “to earn Father’s approval.”

“And be willing to … to accept …” Jamie didn’t let himself finish. Not when his thoughts were unkind and fueled by the worst possible motive. Did he imagine because he could not have Leana, neither should anyone else?

“Be willing to accept what?” Rose teased him. “Leana’s shocking behavior at dinner today? Leaving the table without Father’s permission?”

Grateful for the diversion, Jamie pretended to look stern. “But who bolted to her feet
first?


I
did,” Rose said, proud of herself.

And rightly so. Jamie had all but applauded when the McBride sisters stood up to their father, even if it meant enduring an icy meal across a noticeably empty dining table. Lachlan had choked down his food in a fit of choler and left the table. Jamie had enjoyed a second helping of everything Neda’s kitchen had to offer, soup to pudding.

Rose stopped to shake a pebble from her shoe and held on to Jamie as she wriggled the leather slipper back on her foot. “I’d say Leana’s remark this evening required more pluck than my earlier one.”

Jamie could not remember a shorter hour of family worship. After they’d recited a few brief psalms, Lachlan announced his text for the evening: a single verse chosen with intent. “Children, obey your parents in all things.” He’d read slowly, serving up each word on a plate garnished with bitterness. “For this is well pleasing unto the Lord.”

When Lachlan finished, his blunt finger still stabbing at the verse on the page, Leana had said in her calmest voice, “Will you not read the next verse, sir?” He’d glowered at her while Leana had repeated it from memory: “Fathers, provoke not your children to anger, lest they be discouraged.”

“Can you believe she said such a
bauld
thing?” Rose nearly skipped, so lively were her steps as they approached the mains. “My sister knows her Buik, she does.”

“ ’Twas courageous,” Jamie agreed. Such boldness would serve Leana well when she faced the man alone come Lammas.

His gaze landed on the sheep pastured nearest the house, a healthy flock of ewes and lambs, the latter’s necks still red and easily identified. Only the older sheep would be sheared beginning Monday. The lambs would remain unshorn until next summer, making it easy to count them again next week and be certain of the tally.

Twenty score.
All mine.

“What are you smiling about, Jamie McKie?”

He laughed, pulling her into his embrace, not caring who might see them. “I’m thinking about a certain lamb.”

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