Authors: Liz Curtis Higgs
“Aye, she does.” Lachlan chuckled, though he did not sound amused. “You’ll have time enough to examine the buildings later. First, you’ve a family to meet.”
Before they reached the entrance, the front door swung open. A woman of some forty years perched on the threshold. With her short, round figure, ruddy face, and fawn-colored gown, she looked so precisely like a goldfinch that Jamie was prepared for her to burst into twittering song.
“Mistress Douglas,” Lachlan said, hand outstretched, lengthening his stride. She no doubt heard the cordial note in Lachlan’s voice and marked him as a pleasant man. Jamie heard his warbling for what it was: the smoothest of deceptions. His uncle continued, “I am delighted to see you again.”
Again?
There
was
that business with the five cows, a transaction to which Lachlan had not confessed. Did he think Duncan wouldn’t take note of the ledger entry?
They were ushered through the doorway, where they put aside the plaids that had kept them warm astride their mounts. His uncle spoke using overstated gestures, common to hawkers and horse traders at
Keltonhill Fair. “James Lachlan McKie of Auchengray, my nephew and namesake, I am pleased to introduce you to Mistress Morna Douglas of Edingham, whom I have had the delight of seeing at more than one social gathering in Galloway.”
Jamie heard little after
McKie of Auchengray
. Glentrool claimed his allegiance, not a bonnet laird’s farm in Newabbey, however prosperous. Three months, four at most, and he’d bid Auchengray good riddance. For the moment he would be polite to this woman and smile as he bowed, for the plump bird had a kind face.
“Mr. McKie.” Her voice was soft and high, like a child’s, and her hands fluttered about her face. “How good of you to come.” She blinked her eyes so often he thought at first she’d caught a bit of lint in her lashes. “Mr. McBride tells me you have a clever way with numbers and a keen eye for land.” The widow beamed at Lachlan. “As your uncle is a trustworthy and honorable gentleman, I must assume he speaks the truth.”
“You leave me no choice, Mistress Douglas. For were I to disagree with his praise, I would be calling my uncle a liar.” Jamie turned toward Lachlan, letting his eyes say what his lips could not.
Liar
. It felt good to simply think the word in his direction.
She picked at her sleeve, her gaze darting toward an open doorway. “My sons are waiting in the parlor and eager to meet you.” The widow led them into a room so densely furnished there was little room to sit. “Mr. Douglas was fond of carpentry,” she explained, waving them toward a small, upholstered settee. “Always fashioning something whenever he could find the wood.”
Amid the flotsam of tables and chests, three young men rose as one. Taller than their mother, muscular where she was soft, they looked anything but eager for this meeting. Wary, Jamie decided. Suspicious. They had something in common then.
“Mr. McKie, this is my oldest son, Malcolm Douglas, who celebrated his twentieth birthday December last.” Malcolm bowed slightly, and his mother curtsied with him. Habit, perhaps. “And Gavin Douglas, my middle son, who will be nineteen in April.” Another paltry bow. “And my youngest, Ronald Douglas, who is newly seventeen.” He brushed the hair off his forehead.
Jamie bowed properly to all three, already aware he’d have a hard time keeping them straight, so close were the lads in age, size, and features. Curly, matted hair the color of wet clay. Freckled skin without much evidence of a beard. The broad backs and rough hands of farm laborers. Despite their mother’s diffident manner, it seemed she worked her sons as hard as Lachlan worked him. Jamie sensed the three of them assessing him as well and found himself squaring his shoulders. “My own property is in Monnigaff parish,” he said, avoiding Lachlan’s stare. “Glentrool is the estate of my father, Alec McKie.”
Malcolm, the oldest, seemed surprised. “So you’ll be leaving Auchengray?”
“Not for some time,” Lachlan answered for him smoothly, “for as you might imagine, since I have no sons of my own, James is invaluable to the running of the farm.” Lachlan had the nerve to clap his hand on Jamie’s shoulder, though it did not remain there long. “Suppose we see to your mother’s property, lads, for that is why we’ve come.”
The widow’s mouth flew open. “Will you not take some refreshment first?”
“ ’Tis dry for the moment with a fair sky.” Lachlan glanced out the window. “I suggest we take advantage of the weather and walk the boundaries now.”
“Very well, Mr. McBride,” she said demurely. “As you wish. My sons will escort you while I tend to matters in the kitchen.”
The men trooped out the door, Malcolm leading the way. From the moment they emerged into the cobblestone yard of the steading, Malcolm began pointing out its features—the
doocot
and granary, the barns and the byres. His voice rang with the pride of their accomplishments. Even in January there were a good number of farmworkers busy about their duties. “We raise black cattle for market,” Malcolm said, though ’Twas hardly necessary to mention it when the beasts stood about the fields.
Jamie took note of various details as they strode about the steading, calculating the price such a property might command. Surely that’s what this secretive business was about: selling Edingham. Lachlan insisted it belonged to the widow, not the sons, already an odd arrangement.
Did they intend to pocket their profits and sail to America as so many in Galloway had already done? Would the poor woman be forced to join them? It was not at all clear what this family’s plans might be.
Climbing to a higher vantage point, the men were better able to survey the land, a rolling terrain of hills and mosses. To the east stood the granite remains of Edingham Castle. Once a tower house, now a ruinous shell, the keep appeared to be guarded by an enormous elm and held together with an overgrowth of ivy. A single gable rose from the rubble, its two blank windows staring into the Urr parish countryside. Portions of the other walls remained, and in the far corner a turnpike stair climbed into thin air.
“ ’Twas built for the Livingstones in the sixteenth century,” Malcolm explained, walking up beside him. “But they were hardly the first to claim the property. We’ve found Roman coins in the peat mosses.”
Jamie turned toward him, ignoring the others, who continued on. Perhaps he might draw the lad out before Lachlan paid attention to their conversation. The air off the Solway was brisk, tinged with salt, blowing hard against his face. “Tell me, Malcolm.” Jamie kept his voice low. “Do you ken what interest my uncle has in your property?”
The younger man’s eyes narrowed. “Shouldn’t you be asking him?” Malcolm stalked off before Jamie could respond. No help to be found there. Either the lads didn’t know, or they didn’t approve of Lachlan’s presence at Edingham. No matter how mannerly his uncle might be with the Widow Douglas, it was apparent he had no genuine feelings for the woman or for her sons.
Jamie stamped across the hard soil, kicking at loose rocks as he went. He’d had a dull headache since they had left Auchengray; now it pounded at his temples. The pain did not ease when they returned to the house for a late dinner. Potted herring, smoked beef rump, roasted partridge—fish, flesh, fowl—were spooned onto their pewter plates in alarming amounts. The three brothers shoveled down their food with little concern for etiquette. Jamie ate what he could, though the dishes were not seasoned to his palate. Neda had a more deft hand with spices; the Douglases’ cook reached for pepper in lieu of anything else.
After swallowing a round of shortbread so dry he feared choking,
Jamie was relieved when Lachlan seemed about to end their visit. His uncle offered a second lengthy grace—more intent on impressing the widow than on blessing either the Lord or the meal, Jamie suspected—then rose before the others could push back their chairs.
“I believe I left my gloves in your spence,” Lachlan declared, already heading for the room. “Jamie, tell them something of our flocks at Auchengray. I’ll not be a moment.”
Jamie did as he was told, describing the long, coarse wool of the blackface breed, their mottled faces, the curved horns on both tups and ewes, until his uncle’s lengthy absence became awkward. “Suppose I find my uncle
and
his gloves,” Jamie offered, standing.
With the family half a dozen steps behind him, Jamie arrived at the door to the spence in time to see Lachlan shuffling through a stack of papers. Whatever was the man looking for? His uncle spun round at once, waving the gloves he’d no doubt pulled from his coat pocket moments earlier.
“There you are, lad. I feared you might tarry at table for another hour.” He strode out of the room without a word of explanation, calling for their mounts.
After strained farewells, the two rode north toward home. His uncle’s self-satisfied demeanor so sickened Jamie he could not carry on a civil conversation. Instead he rode in silence while Lachlan talked endlessly of cattle and sheep, of market prices and rising fuel costs.
Only when they made the final turn into Auchengray did his uncle broach the subject of Edingham. ’Twas not a comment he offered nor a question but a simple command: “On the Wednesday next, we shall visit Edingham again, Nephew.” If a badger could smile, it would look like Lachlan McBride. “Truth be told, I believe the Widow Douglas enjoyed having two gentlemen with guid manners at her table.”
Twenty-Three
Jane borrow’d maxims from a doubting school,
And took for truth the test of ridicule.
G
EORGE
C
RABBE
’T
was the last Monday of January, as damp and dreary a winter’s day as any Rose had seen in Dumfries. An icy rain pelted the windowpanes of the kitchen as the young ladies of Carlyle School attempted to create puff paste. Their schoolmistress had engaged the veteran baker from Drumlanrig Castle to teach them.
“A cool day is best,” the cheerful woman insisted, her sleeves already covered in flour. She nudged back a loose strand of toffee-colored hair with her shoulder, then talked them through the process. “Sift the flour, add the salt, then make a little well for the lemon juice and a bit of water. Not too much!” The sticky mess became a stickier dough, which needed to be rolled and folded and dotted with butter and rolled again. “This is called the first turn,” the baker said. “We’ve two more turns to do.”
Not a groan escaped anyone’s lips, but Jane’s eyes did a slow roll. When the baker was busy helping another pupil, Jane whispered in Rose’s ear, “What do you say we strike out on an errand this afternoon?”
“In this weather?” Rose gave her a quizzical look. “What errand?”
Jane’s mouth curled into a sly grin. “Have you heard of the Globe Inn?”
“
Heard
of it?” Heat traveled up Rose’s neck. “ ’Tis where Jamie proposed to me on Martinmas.”
“So that’s where it happened.” Jane eyed her, compassion plain on her face. “I’ve not forgotten, Rose. And neither should you. When Jamie McKie sees your pretty self at week’s end, I have no doubt he will seek to amend the situation. Seeing the very spot where he proposed should give you all the courage you need to remind him of it.”
Rose shook her flour sifter, even as she shook her head. “We cannot
possibly visit the Globe, Jane. ’Tis a public house and no place for gentlewomen without an escort.”
“Indeed,” Jane said evenly, plunging her hands into the dough as the baker strolled past to assess their labors. “Leave everything to me.”
Not long past three o’ the clock, their lessons for the day behind them, the two were bundled in their cloaks and heading north on foot toward the High Street. Though the rain had stopped, a cold wind appeared to take its place. “The school overlooks Queensberry Square,” Jane explained, “though we’ll stop there only long enough to drop this off.” She held up a slender volume with streaks of flour ground into the grain of the leather. “A
New and Easy Method of Cookery
, written by the schoolmistress at Queensberry. I was meant to leave it in her able hands, but by some coincidence it ended up in my trunk.” She winked knowingly. “I truly cannot imagine how it landed there, for I do not intend to cook a single meal in my lifetime.”
Rose sighed. “I will have to cook many a meal unless I marry well.”
Jane, her cheeks reddened by the wind, looked down at her with mock disdain. “And why would you marry otherwise, my dear? Your Jamie is a man of means and quite capable of hiring a good cook. Let us make quick work of our errand. I promised Etta the Grim our visit to Queensberry would include a severe reprimand by my old schoolmistress, which seemed to please her to no end. ’take an hour then but no more’ were her last words.” Jane hooked Rose’s arm in hers and pulled her closer as they crossed the slippery flagstones of Nith Place. “Five minutes for Queensberry. And the rest for the Globe.”
Rose tried to swallow her fears, but they caught in her throat, straining her voice. “The innkeeper must know your family. Won’t people recognize you there?”
“Aye, they will.” Jane’s deep, rippling laugh rolled out more smoothly than pastry. “That is to our advantage, Miss McBride, for Mr. Hyslop will tuck us in the Globe’s snuggery where we can sip whisky without threat of discovery.”
Rose could not speak, so stunned was she with Jane’s audacious plan.
Whisky!
Aye, she had tasted it, and Neda always stirred some into her
het
pint for Hogmanay. But to sit sipping whisky like a man …
och!
Rose prayed the Queensberry’s schoolmistress would not let them come and go in so brief a fashion, detaining them until it was too late to visit the Globe. Perhaps Mr. Hyslop would not welcome a bonnet laird’s daughter without her father. Or better still, the proprietor might be otherwise engaged, and Jane would have no means of securing a table. Two young women of quality drinking alone in a tavern? Unthinkable. And also, Rose realized with a twinge of guilt, deliciously tempting.
Shaking off the cold mist that wrapped itself round their shoulders in a ghostly embrace, Rose and Jane hurried up the street, ducking their heads to ward off the worst of it. Rose found herself laughing, whether from nervousness or excitement, she could not decide. What a
bauld
friend she’d found in Jane Grierson! They passed English Street, heading toward the Midsteeple. The masonry courthouse with its pointed white cupola was a bittersweet reminder of the day Jamie had proposed to her. Hadn’t she stood at the base of those very steps searching for her father and Duncan? She hurried past it now, noting the time on the clock face. If they were to return to Millbrae Vennel before the skies grew dark at half past four, they must make haste.