by Aileen Adams
As if the three of them were merely looking for a fight! Was that what the English thought of the Scots, that they roamed the streets in search of someone to attack? Or was it Highlanders in particular? Broc knew the reputation men from the Highlands carried.
And it was based in little more than rumor and half-truths. Yes, they were rough, from the way they carried themselves to the way they dressed and spoke. Yes, they were good in a fight and never backed down from a challenge. Broc had certainly come to appreciate these truths.
But they weren’t beasts. They weren’t animals intent on raping any woman in sight. He was particularly sensitive to the misgivings people had toward those unlike themselves because he, too, had been an outsider for so long. Men from the Highlands weren’t necessarily all they were rumored to be.
He was careful to make eye contact with each and every man they walked past and just as careful to keep an even, neutral expression on his face. They were merely going about their business, as any other man in Silloth on that warm, pleasant day.
Only when the tavern was well behind them did Derek let out a deep breath. “Well, if there was any question as to how we’d be received here, I believe we’ve found the answer.”
“I don’t understand it,” Hugh grumbled. “There are bound to be countless men wandering these streets on any given day, thanks to the presence of the harbor. Why is it such an occasion for us to be here?”
“Perhaps there was recent trouble with Scots in the village,” Broc mused, his mind going back to earlier times. “The memory is fresh enough for them to remember.”
“Aye,” Derek agreed, latching on to this theory. “And we’ll be the ones to pay for it. Mark my words.”
When they reached the stables, the owner proved Derek right. “I’ve nothing to give ye.”
The stalls were full, the sound of neighing horses filling the space. Broc and Hugh exchanged a look, and Broc cleared his throat. “We’ve no wish to start trouble with you and have more than enough silver to cover the cost. If we could bring the ship closer into harbor, we’d be able to unload the horses we sailed with, but the water is too shallow.”
“How is that a problem of mine?” the man asked, spitting near their feet as if to add further insult. He reeked of horses and manure and his own sweat, yet somehow considered himself better than the three of them.
The twins looked as though they were ready to prove the man right and start a fight, so Broc stepped in front of them. “The problem is, if we don’t have horses, we can’t leave your village. We have quite a lot of riding to do and would like to get started at first light. As charming a village as you have here, we would like to get out as soon as possible, and it seems as though you share that opinion.”
“I do. I don’t like your lot. Coming to our home, dirtying the place up, starting trouble.” The man’s eyes narrowed until they were nearly closed.
“We’re here to start no trouble,” Broc assured him. “We’re merely passing through on our way elsewhere, and will come back through before boarding our ship and sailing home.”
He had guessed correctly. There had been trouble in the past—whether it was the recent past or not made no difference to the villagers. Like as not, their memories were long, and stories found their way down through generations until the truth of them was nowhere near the version told.
The owner eyed them. “It’ll cost ye,” he decided before spitting again.
“We had expected nothing less,” Broc replied, managing a halfhearted smile before the man led them inside to choose from the animals.
He didn’t want to bring voice to his doubts, but the experience was enough to make him wonder once again how receptive Beatrice would be to their sudden appearance at her door.
Chapter 5
The funeral arrangements were simple and somber, as she had expected.
The memory of Winifred’s wailing would live in Beatrice’s memory for years to come, she was certain. While there was no doubt as to Cedric Brown’s qualities as a good, honest man and friend to all who knew him, his daughter’s show of grief seemed a bit overmuch. Even her husband and small children had appeared embarrassed by her nearly hysterical weeping.
Beatrice promised herself she would offer extra prayers on Sunday as penance for wondering if Winifred would begin tearing at her hair and clothing in abject grief.
Daniel Bowman was a kind man, if a bit cowed by the much stronger personality of his wife, and Beatrice had offered her sympathies to him on her way out of the church. Cedric would rest not far from where her father and mother rested; she could visit all three at once.
Everyone who’d ever cared about her was right there, in the little graveyard. All except…
She shook her head, willing away the tears which prickled behind her eyes at the thought of her sister. It did no good to dwell. If she had no choice but to get on with her life, that was all there was to it.
The only question was how to go about that.
She was deliberate in turning her attention to the cowslips and bluebells which lined the fields on either side of the road home. How long had they grown there? Had they been planted and tended to and loved by someone long before she was born, or had they naturally taken over the land and turned it into a profusion of deep blue and yellow?
Their sight normally cheered her, when she wasn’t in such a dark mood. They were enough to give flight to her imagination, and she’d spent many long walks and rides to and from the church deep in thought about the men and women who had once called Thrushwood home—long before it was ever called Thrushwood. Perhaps that was how old the flowers were, just as old as the towering trees with their thick trunks, thick enough to crush a man or even a cottage if they were to fall.
But the flowers renewed themselves every year. That was the difference. They were never the same, just as the leaves which grew then fell from the trees changed from year to year. Whatever kept the flowers coming back was deep beneath the grass and soil, just as the trees were what kept the leaves budding into life after winter passed.
The trees had watched her over the years as they had watched so many others, keeping silent vigil over the road and its travelers. How many had they seen? And what difference had any of those lives made?
Were people meant to only live and die? To eat and sleep and do chores until they were too old to do them anymore? Was that the entire purpose of life?
She didn’t think so. Neither had her sister. That was why they had dreamed. That was why Margery had left, so the two of them might build a better life elsewhere.
Look where it had gotten them. Perhaps it was better to be one of the nameless, faceless people the trees had outlived.
“Whoa, Cecil.” She pulled in the reins, halting the horse. He wasn’t walking at a very fast pace and she doubted he even could at this stage of his life.
There was a thick patch of grass, studded with clover, at the edge of the road. She left him there to chew to his heart’s content while she wandered off to pick a handful of flowers for her table. Anything to bring a little life to the otherwise empty, sad little house.
It had never been empty and sad when Margery was there, even while their mother was alive and demanding so much of their time. They had been each other’s consolation for so long, sometimes thinking as one. They even used to finish each other’s sentences.
The tears came up again, and this time Beatrice allowed them to flow unfettered. What difference did it make? She had already cried against Cecil’s neck more times than she could count, sorrowful to the point where she had needed to rely on an old, mute horse for comfort. Just to have something to hold on to.
“Do you feel this is a wise decision?”
Her head snapped up at the sound of the strident male voice. An unfamiliar one, she knew so few men, and one of them had been buried that very day. It certainly wasn’t Deacon Eddard who called out to her from the road.
She might not have known his voice, but she knew him by sig
ht. And she was hardly impressed. Lord Geoffrey Randall sat astride an enormous beast of a horse, black as soot and shining in the midday sun. Lord Randall shone, too, from his golden hair to the sleek fur-trimmed cape about his shoulders all the way down to his polished leather shoes.
He smiled, and she knew he thought he was being chivalrous and charming. Had anyone ever found the nerve to tell him he wasn’t? That he looked for all the world like a wolf about to pounce on his prey?
She swallowed back her tears, ashamed that he’d found her in such a state. “What decision would that be, Lord Randall?”
“To leave your noble steed unhobbled, on his own, while you pick flowers.”
She forced a smile. “I assure you, old Cecil is far past the age of running away, especially when there’s clover to be enjoyed.”
His laugh was deep, rich, and strangely out of place. Mirthless, as well. His blue eyes were cold and empty, as he favored her with another smile. “Pardon my intrusion, then. I felt it my place to assist a young lady when I saw the possibility of her being stranded so far from home.”
She blinked. “You know how far I am from home?”
It seemed unlikely. The only explanation was his desire to seem helpful, to engage her in conversation though she had no idea why he’d deign to converse with her. He was at least fifteen years her senior and a far more important personage than she could ever hope to be.
His eyebrows arched. “Why, naturally, Beatrice, daughter of Erich Woodson. I know where your farm is located. It shares a border with my own land.”
“Yes. That is correct.” The lord’s land stretched over many leagues, including forests and a lake. His family had been purchasing parcels and expanding for as long as she could remember.
It was only upon the death of Geoffrey’s brother, who’d been the oldest son, that the expansion had ceased. Once Lord Randall had taken over the title and with it the land, he’d stopped expanding. No one knew why, but then again, no one had known why his older brother had been obsessed with buying up every bit of land in the vicinity, either.
“And yet we have never met before now,” he marveled, shaking his head. His hair seemed to glow. She had never seen hair so lustrous before, not even her sister’s. Margery’s hair had always been so beautiful…
No. Not was beautiful. Not past tense. Margery was still alive. She had to be.
Beatrice struggled to remain in the conversation, rather than allowing her thoughts to get away from her. “This is true. But you’re a very important person, and I…”
“You flatter me.” His smile was genuine this time.
Good thing she’d chosen her words carefully, for she might otherwise have accused him of caring nothing for his neighbors. Never once had he paid them a call, not even on the deaths of her parents.
But he’d been through enough tragedy of his own. It was uncharitable to hold a grudge against him.
He looked down the road, in the direction from which she’d come and in which he headed. “I was passing through with the intention of paying respects at the church. I understand old Cedric Brown has passed on. The Randall family milled their grain with him for as long as I can remember, and with his father before that.”
This was a surprise, the idea that a nobleman would attend the services of a lowly man such as the miller. “Yes, the family might still be present.”
Winifred would never allow anyone to forget the fact that Lord Randall had come to pay his respects to her father’s memory. She would take it as a personal compliment.
There’s another prayer this Sunday, if not more, Beatrice reminded herself. Ever since Margery’s departure, she’d been far less charitable. And much less patient.
“I ought to be on my way, then, before I miss them.” He touched his heels to the horse’s sides and took off at a trot. “Until we meet again, Beatrice, daughter of Erich Woodson.”
She nodded mutely, lacking anything of substance to offer in reply. Why would they meet again when they’d never once met in her entire life up to that moment? She had seen him several times, normally in the village on Market Day. He seemed to like riding through the throngs of villagers, pretending not to notice as they admired his beautiful horse and fine clothing.
Perhaps she was being uncharitable again. As she mounted Cecil and clicked her tongue, signaling him to continue on, she reflected on the fact that he was paying his respects to the miller’s family. He didn’t have to do any such thing.
And he’d experienced great loss in his life, too. She hadn’t heard many of the details in the murder of his nephew several years earlier—it wasn’t the sort of thing a young woman should discuss—but she knew it led to the decline and eventual death of his older brother, too. Those two deaths, coming within months of each other, had passed the lordship on to him, but at what cost?
It was little matter. She hardly expected to see him again.
Hours later, she was just about to sit down to a simple dinner of vegetable soup and fresh bread when the sound of approaching hooves caught her attention. Instead of passing and growing quieter, the horse came to a stop.
For one wild, breathless moment, she imagined her sister being just outside. She had returned home with money to get them started on a new life, somewhere far away.
It mattered little that this fantasy made no sense. How would Margery have come into so much money in such a short time?
The sight of the deacon as he approached her front door caused Beatrice’s hopes to blow away like dried leaves on the wind, but she didn’t allow her disappointment to show. “Have you come to share supper with me?” she asked with a smile. “I have more than enough soup and would greatly enjoy the company.”
He offered an apologetic smile. “It was not my intention to disturb your evening meal. I received news earlier today which I didn’t feel could wait until morning.”
“Please, come in.” She had never seen him look so off balance, even when he’d announced Cedric’s passing. He sat at the table across from her as-yet-untouched meal, his hands clenched on the tabletop.
He waited until she took her seat before speaking. “Lord Randall paid a call on me earlier today.”
“Oh, yes.” She nodded. “Our paths crossed while on the road.”
“Did they?” One corner of his thin mouth quirked up in a halfhearted smile. “That seems fitting.”
“Why?”
His eyes met hers, and for the first time she noted the apology in them. “I’ve tried to dissuade him. This is not the first time we’ve spoken of what he wanted to discuss this afternoon.”
Cold certainty flooded her.
She didn’t want to hear what he’d come to say, for there would be no unhearing it.
She wanted him to leave and not come back.
She wanted to go to bed and perhaps not get up in the morning, regardless of what her absence would do to the animals.
Anything to avoid hearing what she was suddenly certain she was about to hear.
She drew a deep breath, letting it out slowly before nodding. “You can tell me.”
He wrung his hands, taking a deep breath of his own. “Lord Randall has wished to acquire your land for quite some time. Ever since your mother’s passing, since before then, honestly.”
This was news to her. “Why did you never share this with me?”
“Because the land is all you and your sister have to your names now. A home of your own, land of your own. It is unusual for women to be in this unique position, and I didn’t wish to complicate matters for you.”
She blinked, unable to speak for a long time. When she did, her words came out in a thin whisper. “I do wish you had shared this with us. Margery might never have left if she knew we had a possible buyer who was interested in purchasing from us.”
Inside, she screamed. How could he not tell them? Who did he think he was? And why would Lord Randall go through him and not through her sister and herself?
Margery need never have left. They m
ight have sold to him and gone on with their lives elsewhere, anywhere else. Someplace where they’d have a future. Homes of their own, husbands and babies.
Instead, the deacon had decided for them that they didn’t need to know there was a possibility of a future in store for them. He’d made their choices on their behalf and most likely expected thanks for it.
Deacon Eddard’s forehead creased even more deeply than usual when he frowned. “You don’t understand, my child. He does not wish to purchase the land from you for any price.”
The screaming in her head stopped. “He thinks we’ll give it away? Is that what he expects?”
“It is not only the land he wishes to acquire. In fact, he behaves as though it is a secondary concern.”
There was that certainty again, spreading through her, making her head throb. Her instincts had been correct the first time. And she finally understood why Geoffrey Randall had been so kind to her on the road.
He shook his head. “No, my child. He wishes to take you as his wife and absorb the land into his holdings. He intends to marry you.”
She nearly choked on fear, disgust, and the brief, mad impulse to laugh. To laugh and never stop laughing because surely, this was a terrible joke. No one could seriously make such an offer.
“He asked to marry me?” she breathed, struggling to make sense of it.
The deacon winced, now wringing his hands. “No, Beatrice. He announced to me that the two of you will marry.”
I hope you enjoyed A Captain’s Heart!
Next in the series...
A Highland Sailor.
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Copyright © 2017 by Aileen Adams