“I do not fault you at all,” Anne said. This conversation was difficult, the moment too strained. “Only that you never spoke of it.” Hannah had confided in a stranger, but she’d not told her own daughter.
Reason enough for anger.
She’d grown up with one identity and learned to live with who she thought she was. Now, all of her life was suspect. The knowing looks, the whispers that had followed her as a child, they now took on a different meaning.
For the first time, she truly understood what her father had been trying to teach her, about circles, and perspective. Only this time, the circle was her life, and she was standing outside looking in.
The only thing constant, the one thing that had not changed, was Stephen. The visions she’d had as a child, the longing she’d had as a woman, none of that had altered. Yet, in only days he would leave her. Was she supposed to meekly acquiesce to that fate? Accept it with good grace?
“I am not going back to Dunniwerth, Anne,” Hannah softly said.
She glanced over at Hannah. Her face seemed younger somehow, less lined.
“I find I cannot go back to the island,” Hannah said, folding her hands on her lap. “It will be easier for you if I do not return.”
Anne rubbed her palms over her face, pressed her fingers against her eyelids. The back of her neck ached, her shoulders felt stiff. Her breath was tight, and a headache had lodged in her temples and would not be eased.
“It is not because of me,” Anne said, her lips thinned with the effort to contain her anger. It bubbled free, despite her will. “It is because of your own choice. It’s what you wish to do. Do not hide behind good intentions.”
Anne stood and looked to where Stephen was talking to his men. He turned as if he had felt her rage, stared at her. They were too far apart for him to hear her words, but Anne did not doubt he could ascertain her expression well enough.
“It sounds so honorable to think of the betterment of others. So noble.” She glanced down at Hannah. “But it’s only a cloak, Hannah. What is wrong with wanting something simply for yourself? I would welcome pure selfishness at this moment. It seems more honest.”
“There is nothing wrong with wanting something for yourself,” Hannah slowly said. “If you are willing to pay the price for it.”
“Are you?”
“I always have been,” Hannah said surprisingly. “I gave up my life to love your father, and to give you a future.” Hannah looked to where Richard stood. “And now I’m going to do what I truly wish. I am going to marry that silly man. He wants me to debate medicinal practices with him, and brew teas and discuss the works of some idiot by the name of Culpepper.”
She glanced up at Anne. “But you are right, Anne. It’s not for you. It’s for me. And perhaps you are right about the other, too. I was frightened to be on my own with a child. I wanted the best for you, but I also wanted to be near your father.
“I’ve never regretted a moment,” Hannah said. “Or my decision.” She appeared to study Anne. “You are a daughter to be proud of, however it came about. I have watched you grow into a woman any mother would cherish.” She stood, joined Anne. “But I do regret any pain I may have caused you.”
She touched Anne’s arm gently with just the tips of her fingers. As if she feared she would be repudiated. “Forgive me,” Hannah said.
“It will not be the same without you,” Anne said, forcing the words from her lips. The anger was still there, but added to it was a sorrow too deep to measure.
“Life never stays the same,” Hannah said. “A lesson you’re learning even now.” She looked beyond to where Stephen stood. Anne thought she might speak again, but she said nothing more.
Hannah turned and walked away. Richard waited for her, smiled in greeting. Behind him were eighteen men of the regiment. They had families at Lange on Terne to protect and would be returning to the town now that they were sure their lord was at a safe distance.
Anne had the curious thought that the moments of her life were slipping from her grasp like sand through her fingers. In only minutes, Hannah would leave and with her, the opportunity to repair their rift.
She could not allow that to happen.
Hannah had chastised the child and counseled the woman. She’d been her friend and held her se cret, reassured her. Through it all, she’d given her affection and love. Without explanation or even hope of it being returned.
There was one last thing she needed to do. “Hannah,” she called out. The older woman turned. Anne walked to her.
“Will we see each other again?”
Hannah only nodded, her eyes filled with tears. “Yes,” Hannah said. “There are not enough wars in the world to prevent that.”
“Be happy, Hannah.” Anne said, her voice shaking from a surfeit of emotion. The girl would not have said the words, but the woman could not prevent them. “I love you, Mother.”
Hannah closed her eyes, then opened them. She took a few steps, then a few more. Her lips were clamped shut, but her arms opened wide. The tears flowed down Anne’s cheeks. Long moments later, she pulled away, wiped her face with the backs of both hands.
She stepped back, watched as Hannah mounted her horse. It was difficult to swallow and she could not seem to stop crying. But she offered up a watery smile and a wave, then stood and watched until Hannah and Richard and the rest of the men were no longer visible.
She had the oddest thought that in saying farewell to Hannah, she was also saying goodbye to the person she had once known herself to be. No longer Anne of Dunniwerth. No longer the spoiled child of the laird. Not a woman so certain of her own destiny that she reached out and gripped it with both hands and pulled it to her.
Who was she? Perhaps only time would reveal the answer to that question.
“Y
ou look pleased to be in Scotland again,” Stephen said.
“I am,” Ian said. “It’s a more civilized country than England at present.”
Stephen could not argue with that assessment.
Ian rode abreast of him. Stephen had been careful up until now to avoid the man. The brooding look had eased somewhat since they’d entered Scotland, but the dislike was still there in Ian’s eyes. So palpable that Stephen could not help but feel it.
He looked ahead to where Anne rode in the center of his men. She turned back at that moment and glanced at him, as if she’d felt his antipathy for the man at his side. He narrowed his eyes as Ian Sinclair smiled at her.
She turned, faced forward again. She sat erect in the saddle, her skirts folded around her. He would have believed her almost oblivious to him if he hadn’t noticed her glancing at him from time to time with a look of sadness on her face. As if she were finding a way to say farewell to him.
A bit of appreciation for his seeing her safely home and a kiss on the cheek. A sour thought.
Parting with Hannah had been difficult for her. Yet not once had she spoken of it. He decided that he did not like this habit of hers of holding her thoughts tight to herself. In the short time they had been together, she’d never been cautious before of telling him what she thought. But in the last day, she’d been remarkably silent.
He was struck suddenly by how utterly lovely she was. Not strictly in form, but the essence of her, the wholeness of her. Women of artifice are careful to guard themselves and careful to project only their better qualities. She was not wary of showing him her anger any more than she was her fear of storms. Yet now she sat aloof in the dampness.
“She’s been a pest to me ever since she was a child,” Ian said, studying Anne. “Always following me around and then telling the girls that she thought my dimple was cute.”
“Damning to a man’s consequence,” Stephen agreed, his tone amicable, but his smile missing. The absence of it didn’t seem to affect Ian’s sudden, surprising candor.
“I was ten when I first noticed her,” Ian said, “and determined to show that I was as manly as my father. She is my laird’s daughter, and I will protect her with my life.”
“I would expect no less of you.”
“Just so we understand each other,” Ian said.
The two men shared a long look.
“Does she know you love her?” Stephen asked carefully.
A shake of Ian’s head was his answer.
“I doubt I would be as complacent as you, Ian. Or as silent.”
“I will always be part of her life. Can you boast the same?”
No, he could not. In fact, he wasn’t certain exactly what it was she felt for him. It could range from apathy to antipathy.
Would Ian be the man Anne finally chose? The thought was not one he wanted to entertain.
The future had not been a subject of conversation between them. An oversight, he saw now.
There were times in the last few days when Stephen had known they were cutting through Parliamentarian lines, but they had managed to avoid being detected. Leaving England had made him breathe a little easier. Once in Scotland, though, the danger was less by only a degree.
However, Scotland had something that occurred only occasionally in England. Rain. Incessant rain. This morning was no different. It began to rain again as if nature had known the exact moment he’d condemned the weather. For two hours they continued slogging through it, their eyes downcast, huddling in the misery of being drenched to the skin with no surcease in sight. The air was almost white with rain.
Even the horses plodded along with a dispirited air, their necks bowed, mire up to their hocks. It was a graceless day, and one that nicked at the edge of his temper.
The jingle of harness, an occasional equine snort, a cough, and the patter of the eternal rain all served as a backdrop for his thoughts.
He told himself that she was being wise. Their parting would come in days. It was simpler to pull away now. Not to meet his look, not to speak to him in passing. A kind word might well be misconstrued. A smile might bring forth memories that should not be summoned before their parting.
They seeped into his mind with too much ease.
My home is a huge sprawling place of red brick, aged over the years until it is almost black. Nothing as lovely as this place
. Words to describe her Dunniwerth. An apology had prompted a protest.
If I did not feel the same? Would that excuse your honor?
Other words, that spoke of her talent.
My father’s map maker taught me
. She spoke of circles and fears and knowing that it was possible to feel the most alone in the midst of a crowd.
The most precious memory of all, a strong woman’s vulnerability. A confession spoken in a whisper.
For all the years left to me, I don’t want to wish I had come to you tonight and feel regret that I did not
. Yet she did not look at him now, and seemed to barely know his name.
He should congratulate her on her wisdom. Praise her for her foresight. He might, then, be given a small smile, and a whispered farewell. Or did she intend to leave him without a word?
The first sign that there was trouble was a shout from the guard at the rear of the column.
But he’d barely had time to draw his sword before he was surrounded by screaming men.
Stephen berated himself for being so lost in his thoughts that he hadn’t noted them, even as he pulled his sword free.
It was Ian who stayed his hand. “It’s her father, you fool.”
Stephen shouted to his own men to stand down. A command that was met with instant obedience and glances of surprise.
At the center of the shouting Scots sat a mountain of a man. His face was immutable as granite. His beard was white, an odd match for the brown hair on his head.
Nature, that fickle Scottish witch, banished the clouds and dried up the rain. As if she feared the presence of the man who sat staring at him impassively.
It was quite a welcome. Very impressive.
“You’ll be English,” Robert Sinclair said.
Stephen nodded.
He looked over the twelve men who’d moved into defensive positions. “A fighting force,” he said. “But a small one. Do you think yourself such great warriors, then?” He smiled.
“I’m here to escort Anne home, not to fight.”
Sinclair nodded, then turned to his daughter.
He neither moved to greet her nor stayed the men who did. She seemed summoned to him by the very nature of his silence. She moved toward him slowly. Their horses were nose to nose before he spoke.
“So, Daughter,” he said, his voice deep and booming. “You’ve finally come home.”
Anne nodded. But she didn’t look the least cowed. In fact, her chin rose, and she stared at her father.
“With an Englishman who calls you Anne.”
She nodded again.
Robert Sinclair turned and glared at him.
Later, Stephen realized he should have listened to his instincts. They told him that Sinclair’s antipathy was not based solely on a father’s protectiveness. But even if he had known that Robert Sinclair sided with the Parliamentarians, it was too late to do anything about it. He and his men were outnumbered by Scots and in a strange country. Still, he would have chosen a different foe.
It was a pity Sinclair didn’t feel the same way about him.
“Is that your Dunniwerth?” Stephen asked late that afternoon.
The huge red-brick castle squatted on the landscape like a giant in a bad temper.
The voice that answered him was laced with humor. “I told you it was ugly.”
“It’s large,” he said, trying to find something of merit to say. “Sturdy.”
“It’s a fine place,” Robert Sinclair said from behind him. Ever since they’d been surrounded by the Scots, Sinclair had been no more than five feet from him. Stephen wondered if he would have mounted Faeren and sat behind him if his stallion had allowed it.
He smiled, a not altogether humorous smile. He would have liked to have seen Sinclair try.
People began to come out of their homes, neat little dwellings not far removed from a small English cottage. Most of the people of Dunniwerth stood open-mouthed as they passed. One woman cried, then shoved the corner of her apron in her mouth.