Read Border Lord Online

Authors: Arnette Lamb

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

Border Lord (29 page)

    "Spirited child," murmured the baron. "Takes after her mother, my dearly departed second cousin. A great loss to me, but one I've learned to bear. I, of course, saw to the expense of the poor woman's funeral and took in her child."

    Alpin whirled, her delicate fingers clutching the handle of a large wicker basket. "My mother was your third cousin," she grumbled, marching toward them. "You never even set your beady eyes on her. You had her buried in a moth-ridden horse blanket."

    The baron chuckled. "The child has a bizarre sense of humor."

    "Huh," huffed the girl. "I didn't want to come here today. Kildalton castle stinks like a sewer."

    As she came closer, Malcolm whimpered.

    The baron reached down to clasp Alpin's shoulder, which only reached his knees. She jerked away and craned her neck to sneer at him. "Get your grimy hands off me, Baron Sin."

    God, the little child had spunk, thought Miriam.

    "Smile, Alpin, and give Malcolm the gift."

    Her mouth widened in a grin so false it made Miriam wince.

    Malcolm took a deep breath and said, "You—you lo-look very pretty today, Alpin."

    She set the basket down. "You're a sniveling cur, Malcolm. I hate you."

    He swallowed loudly. "Then why'd you bring me a present? Is it poison?"

    "Twasn't my idea. There."

    As fearful as his father had been at his first meeting with Verbatim, Malcolm stretched out an arm and lifted one side of the basket. A fat brown hare, its ears laid back, blinked and wiggled its whiskered nose.

    Malcolm sighed with delight and said, "Thank you. I've never had a rabbit for a pet."

    "Her name's Hattie." Alpin picked up the animal and cuddled it to her breast. "She likes dried berries and fresh berries, and… and carrots with the tops on. Lots of carrots. Every day." Alpin bit her lip, squeezed her eyes shut, and buried her face in the rabbit's soft fur.

    Miriam's heart ached for the lively, brave girl who had no real family to care about her. She glanced up at the baron, who was busy surveying the row of merchants' huts that compromised the commerce of Kildalton.

    Miriam saw Saladin near the smithy, Betsy Lindsay at his side. The woman took one look at the outriders and slapped her hand over her mouth. Saladin moved in front of her, blocking her view. The feather in his turban jiggled as he spoke. Betsy nodded, then allowed him to lead her away.

    Miriam had to struggle to keep her temper in check. The baron had lied when she questioned him about the two men. He would regret it.

    Knowing she now had hard evidence against him, Miriam turned her attention to the meanest child she'd ever met.

    "She only has three legs," Alpin went on. "But she can hop as fast as anything. Here. Take her." She held out her hands.

    Malcolm took the rabbit. "Thank you. But isn't she yours?"

    Alpin stared at his toga. "I don't want her anymore."

    "Alpin loves to share with the other children," said the baron.

    "Oh." Malcolm stroked the hare's ears. The furry creature wiggled in his arms. He sought a better hold. "What happened to her leg?"

    Dusting her hands and trying desperately not to cry, Alpin said, "She lost it in a trap, but she's all healed now."

    "How did you find her?"

    "The Night Angel brought her to me. He watches out for little girls and animals. He swears Hattie's not really a cripple, no matter what anybody says."

    "Always patching up some wounded beast," said the baron. "The stable's full of them—birds with broken wings, a blind lamb, a toothless badger. She even has a litter of fox kits."

    Alpin pretended to spit on the ground. "That's because you and that fat magistrate ran their mother to death."

    "If it were up to Alpin, hunts would be outlawed," the baron commented dryly. "We'd all spend our leisure spinning yarns about the Border Lord."

    "He's the Night Angel," Alpin spat.

    "Mind your manners, child," said the baron.

    To Malcolm, Alpin said, "Don't forget to scratch her— there—under her chin. If you want to, I mean. She kind of likes it. She's yours now. You can scratch her anywhere you want or not at all." She sniffled a little and wiped her nose on her fancy sleeve.

    Malcolm said, "I want to. I like her ever so much."

    In a thick voice, Mrs. Elliott said, "Don't you fret, Mistress Alpin. He'll take the very best care of Hattie. We've plenty of carrots with the tops on."

    "You won't cook her?" asked Alpin.

    "Alpin, please remember your manners," the baron scolded.

    A smile of pure kindness wreathed Mrs. Elliott. "Of course we won't, Alpin. I promise." Then to the baron, she said, "I'm certain his lordship would want me to offer you refreshment."

    It was a lie, Miriam thought, but a necessary one. Duncan and the baron might never be friends, but they must learn to tolerate each other. Civility seemed an excellent place to start.

    "How very hospitable of you," he said and headed up the steps. Turning back, he glared at Alpin. "Behave yourself or I'll give away your fox kits."

    Alpin leveled him a look that said, I dare you to try. "If Malcolm puts his smelly lips on me again, I'll wallop him good."

    Malcolm blushed. Saladin, who'd returned to his place, chuckled.

    All too conscious of her role as neutral observer, Miriam smiled at Mrs. Elliott. "I'll show your guest to the keeping room, if you like."

    The housekeeper cast a sad glance at Alpin. "Aye. And thank you, my lady. I'll bring a tray."

    Miriam followed the baron through the castle, watching him duck beneath door frames and chandeliers. He stopped just inside the keeping room and stared at the empty dais. "Where's the mighty Kerr throne?"

    He referred to the great chair in the earl's bedchamber. She had wondered why it wasn't in the public room. "Throne, my lord?"

    He prowled the room, picking up a silver box to examine the engraver's mark on the bottom. "A monstrosity of a thing, all carved with lions and blazing suns. It was on that dais the last time I was here." Putting down the box, he moved on to a pair of ruby glass candlesticks, which he held up to the light. A spray of crimson dots splashed his face. "Primitive in the extreme as are most things here."

    "Where did the throne come from?"

    He strolled to the pedestal table that held a lantern clock. Bending, he peered at the timepiece. "'Twas a gift from one of those barbarous Scottish kings, I suppose."

    "The earl must have redecorated this room."

    "No. This John Bowyer clock hasn't been moved, and the pre-Delian candlesticks are in the same—" He stopped and gave her a sly smile. "How clever you are."

    "Clever? Hardly, my lord. 'Tis seldom I meet someone with a better memory than mine. I do enjoy our visits. After the formality of the Europeans…" She let the sentence trail off to see what he would make of it.

    "I know precisely what you mean." Fluffing his lace cravat, he swaggered across the room and levered himself onto one of the straight-back benches, his long legs stretched out. "I must agree. People who can't remember the gist of a conversation bore me to tears."

    She gave him the same soft chuckle that had proved effective in disarming him during their prior meetings. "I know precisely what
    you
    mean. Goodness, that dais looks bare, doesn't it?"

    He didn't
    seem
    to notice that she had to remind him of the topic, for he said, "That depends on one's taste. I am surprised that Duncan would part with the beastly thing. Like his father, he loved to hold court in it, or so I'm told. Those half-naked clansmen seem to enjoy worshiping him."

    The men respected Duncan, but worship was way off the mark. In demure fashion, she said, "I've been away from Scotland for a long time. I know little about the seventh earl of Kildalton, except the tidbits Lord Duncan reveals."

    As if gathering an audience of children, the baron leaned forward and draped his arms over his legs. "What would you like to know? I've heard all the stories about Kenneth Kerr." Flapping his arms in exaggerated obeisance, he added, "The Grand Reiver."

    He hadn't even known Kenneth Kerr except through gossip, which he'd been free with in the past. Hoping he'd shed new light on the old problems here in the Border, she said, "What kind of father was he, I wonder?"

    "A rough bully, and he taught his son to carry on the family traditions. I worry about dear Malcolm. Duncan has become a master."

    Miriam thought him an indulgent father, but what was the crime in that? "A master at what?"

    She must have spoken too sharply, because he patted the place beside him and in a friendly tone said, "I truly didn't come here to dredge up the bitter past or tell tales on my noble son-in-law, the earl."

    At least the negotiations hadn't stopped him from claiming Duncan as his relative. At Sinclair, she had used the association as an inducement to make the baron see how important it was to reach an agreement with his neighbor. "Answering a direct question can hardly be called gossiping," she said. "You know how curious a woman can be about lineages, especially noble ones."

    "Don't I?" He chuckled. "With fourteen of them under my roof, I know their peculiarities well."

    "You certainly deal with Alpin." And poorly, she thought.

    He fished a silver toothpick from his waistcoat and began poking at his teeth and noisily smacking his lips. "She worshipped dear Adrienne. Hasn't been the same since the girl was kidnapped."

    "You still think Duncan was responsible for her disappearance?"

    "Well, I don't believe Kenneth Kerr arose from the dead to do it. The Border Lord didn't either."

    Miriam felt her heart trip fast. But she casually said, "Who is he? Do you know?"

    With his tongue, he roiled the silver pick to the corner of his mouth. "He's an excuse my tenants use to keep from paying their rents. The house servants use his presence to escape their duties. Just last week the dairy maid took to her bed all day, complaining that he'd come to her the night before and wrapped her in that magic cape. He drained her will to resist, she says, and spirited her away to Hadrian's Walls. Two days later, he seduced her sister."

    Miriam's stomach bobbed like a boat adrift. Could Ian be so fickle as to take another woman to their special place? He'd said he loved her to distraction. He'd seduced her so easily. What about her feelings for Duncan Kerr? Wasn't she being fickle by desiring one man and giving herself to the other? Absolutely. Only a slut would act so disreputably.

    "Then the cows' milk dried up," the baron went on. "We haven't had a dollop of decent cream since the Border Lord supposedly paid us a visit."

    She put aside her personal dilemma. She'd have time later to examine her own poor behavior. "Then you don't believe the Border Lord exists."

    "I don't believe the romantic tales of seduction, and I'm too practical to fall prey to the suspicions of peasants. How could a man return from the grave to seduce women and steal my livestock? I think he's a mercenary hired by Duncan Kerr."

    "Why would the earl do that? I thought you said he was like his father."

    He sighed, as if summoning patience. "I told you before. Because he's spiteful and greedy, and he
    is
    just like his father. Only Duncan's methods differ. He knows the queen won't tolerate barbarous behavior. So he pays someone else to do it. Too busy writing fish tales in his journal."

    "But if Duncan were truly like Kenneth Kerr, he wouldn't hire someone to fight his battles."

    "Of course he would. He'd stoop to any depths to bedevil me and trick you. But you've taught me the importance of compromise. So I've thought of a way to make sure the situation improves."

    The certainty in his voice alarmed her. "How will you improve it?"

    "With this. I also have a proposition of sorts." From his breast pocket, he produced an envelope.

    Miriam pried open the wax seal and slipped the card free. The baron was having a ball, and to her surprise, the guests of honor were the earl of Kildalton and his heir, Malcolm Andrew Kerr.

    "You're frowning," he said. "Do you think it's presumptuous of me? I mean—you made me see the logic in resolving my differences with Duncan. You
    have
    managed to make him see reason, haven't you?"

    All Miriam had done was alienate Duncan, but since their meeting she had taken steps to correct the situation. Alexis would speak to the queen and buy some time. The baron, however, made her wary. "What do you mean by make him see reason?"

    "I chose the wrong word. Surely you understand why Roxanne insisted I foster the boy."

    She wasn't quite ready to address the fostering issue. "Roxanne was your stepdaughter. She sought peace by willing the land to her son. The people who live on the land between here and Hadrian's Wall want Duncan for their overlord. They told me so when I visited them."

    "Roxanne was ever naive, and so are those tenants. They will obey whoever has jurisdiction over them. Who better to guide Malcolm than I?"

    His arrogant presumption disappointed her. Lord, now she'd have to coddle him out of his black and white thinking. She couldn't summon the patience. She was tired of bickering, backbiting men. "Legally the governing hand belongs to Malcolm's guardian. I tell you, Baron, the crux of it is, the law will prevail here."

    "Exactly," he said, oozing confidence. "I do so long to make a lasting peace with Duncan. Fostering his son is one way."

    He believed that by fostering Malcolm, he would gain control of the land. He was correct; all of the revenues from a minor's property reverted to the guardian, and all Baron Sinclair cared about was the money. Because Malcolm was born before the Act of Union, he might be viewed as a Scottish citizen and exempt from the law. His mother's wishes wouldn't matter. But the baron needn't know that.

    Until she heard back from the queen, Miriam had no intention of making a commitment on custody of the boy. "Peace will be made, Baron. Mark my word."

    Mrs. Elliott entered the room carrying a tray with goblets and a pitcher of beer. Under her arm she carried a bunch of carrots with the tops on. She served the beer, then quietly left the room.

    "We're fortunate," said the baron, holding up his mug in salute, "that the queen sent you to strike the peace. Will you come to the ball?"

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