Authors: Lisa Plumley
âYou only told Aidan part of it when you admitted that she asked for your help.'
âI told him the truth,' he argued.
âLiar.' She leaned closer to him. âAye, Catriona came to you when she discovered what she thought was the truth from Gowan's sonâthat Aidan sent him away to seduce her.'
âHe did.'
âYou sent the man. You could have stopped it. You could have told Aidan from the start and it would never have got to this point, Connor.'
âYour point, lady?'
âThat she asked for your help in escaping. She asked for your help because she also discovered she is carrying Aidan's child, our kin, and she could not face him, knowing...' Jocelyn paused. âOr believing what you let her believe.'
Connor pushed out of the chair and began walking around the perimeter of the chamber, beginning and stopping whatever words he wanted to say several times before any came out of his mouth.
âI thought he would tire of chasing a woman who did not want him. I thought that if he tried and failed, he would move on to another woman, as he always had before.' Connor raked his hands through his hair and stared at her. The thorn was still there, waiting to be pulled free.
âI thought he would see the wisdom in choosing another woman, a woman better than her in so many ways. Yet, he clung to her.'
âHe loved her, Connor,' she whispered.
âThen, when Munro told her his version of what had happened, the one Aidan also believed, she asked me to help her leave. She would make no claim on our son if I found a new place for her to live. The daft woman would take nothing more than a small settlement and did not even admit to me that she was carrying.' He paused and looked at her then. âIt was exactly what I wanted to happen. So, I did as she asked.'
âSo, why did you not reveal her secret to him? That she knew she carried his child when she left him?'
His voice shook with sadness and resignation as he said the rest. âBecause it would have broken him to let him know he would lose her and his child. I could not stand to have him suffer that way.'
âSo, you kept that very important matter to yourself?'
â'Twas better not to reveal it.'
When he met her gaze, she saw the pain of a father trying to protect his son. Yet, he'd put them together when he thought they would fall apart. Then, in separating them, he forced his son away.
Now she needed to come up with a way to bring them allâAidan and Catriona, father and son, kith and kin, back together. Jocelyn walked to the door and called several servants to her.
âWhat are you doing?' Connor asked.
âPreparing to visit my daughter.'
âLilidh? Now? Why?' he asked, watching as she gave orders that would see trunks packed and horses and supplies prepared.
âBecause I also discovered where you sent her and sent Aidan there. Now, you have to devise a plan to heal this breach before we arrive there.'
âHe is the pigheaded, wrong...'
âStubborn one. I know. He is the very image of you, my love,' she said, walking to him now. âHe is the best of you and the worst. And if you do not mend this tear, you will never survive it. We will never survive it.' She smiled as he considered her words. âYou may even have to apologise.'
âJocelyn!' he drawled out. âI should not have toâ' She reached up and put her hand over his mouth to stop him.
âAh, but you are the stronger, the wiser, the more experienced man in this situation. It is your place to lead by example.'
He mulled over her words, but the doubtful expression in his amber eyes showed he did not think much of it. So, she used the threat she kept away for those times when reason and rational thought did not work.
âIf my son does not return to his home, I will not return either.'
She needed Connor as she needed the air to breathe and she knew he needed her in the same manner. Their love was tempered by fire and challenged and strengthened over the decades since their marriage. But part of that love included their bond with their children. Breaking that bond damaged everything between them. This was no idle threat and she held her breath, praying he understood it the same way that she did.
He walked past her, pulled the door open even wider and called out in his battle voice to those outside. It took little time for their journey to begin.
She did not ask and he did not say what his plan was, but she knew her husband and little that he set his mind to do was ever left undone.
The thorn was loosening a bit.
Chapter Twenty-Three
T
hey circled each other over the next sennight, acknowledging the other with the slightest of nods or glances. But Aidan had decided not to press her at this point. He did, however, find ways to observe her when she did not know he was there.
The people in Rob's clan had accepted this stranger into their midst and seemed to have a care for her. A small girl brought messages and bundles of food to her from the girl's mother and other women in the village. A strong older boy helped her with the harder tasks, such as cutting and carrying peat and wood for her fires. She spent time during the day working in the new garden she'd carved into the small plot next to her cottage. He wondered if she grew betony yet.
Aidan accepted the duties he was given and let everything else ruminate while he looked for a solution. The one thing that had not changed was his love for Catriona.
And when a note passed to him from someone in the keep informed him that his parents were now travelling towards Keppoch Keep, his path became clear to him and the cost of his youthful stupidity must be paid by him and no other.
* * *
Catriona finished her tasks, put away her mending and put out some of the candles. She poured the last of her tea into her cup and sat sipping it before going to bed. Tired from staying busy and from the demands that pregnancy put on her body now, she had been finishing up and seeking her bed earlier each night.
Her cold, empty, lonely bed.
The one in which she tossed and turned every night, examining her conscience and the same questionâcould good come from a bad beginning? Or did the bad taint everything that came from it?
Though she would love the babe as much as she loved his father, could she accept him and be happy when a man's death had been caused by them?
She was no closer to an answer, in spite of knowing he was there in Keppoch village and keep.
Though she'd seen Lady Matheson and now knew of the connection between her and Aidan, she could not figure out why Lord MacLerie had sent her here. If Aidan had not found her, she could have been happy here among these people.
Since that night when he'd recognised her, she waited for him to appear at her door, demanding that she listen to his side of things. Instead, he gave her a wide circle, not approaching directly or even too closely. It was almost as though he was giving her the time and distance she wanted.
The problem was that she wanted him. Now that this babe seemed firmly in place and growing well, she wanted to share the small joys with the man she loved. The last time, she had lived in fear through the whole time, never knowing what to expect and then getting worse than she could have imagined. What would it be like to go through this with Aidan at her side? With both of them wanting this babe? With both of them...
The soft scratching on the door startled her. She put her cup down and went to open it. Sometimes, one of the village women, Seonag or Isobel or one of the others, would send over their leftover food from their suppers for her. When she put her hand on the latch, he whispered through the door.
âCatriona? I would speak with you, if you would grant me a few moments?'
Damn her traitorous heart, for it raced in reaction to his voice, his whispered words, and even just knowing he was so close to her now. She tugged the door open and forgot how to breathe once again.
He looked wonderful and terrible at the same time. She wanted to push him away and take him in her arms. She loved him and wanted to hate him in the same moment, but love won out. She knew then that she could not hate him, not even knowing that he thought he was responsible for Gowan's death. For in the long and lonely nights filled only with time for thinking, she'd realised that Munro played just as much a part in his father's death, maybe more so than even Aidan.
If Munro had not believed the worst, for whatever reason he chose to do so, he would have let things lie and never summoned his father home. In his attempt to punish her and humiliate Aidan, he'd sent the message that forced Gowan on to that road that night and to his death.
Up to that time, nay, up until Gowan was long dead and buried, she was a faithful wife to him. Aidan's sins were of lust and pride and for coveting a woman who was not his to covet.
With that knowledge in her heart, she waited on his words, hoping he would ask for her forgiveness so she could do so. Instead his words shocked her.
âI have come to say farewell to you, Cat.' He did not try to come in, but only stood there outside her door. âIt is unfair for me to disrupt the life you have found here on your own. I thought...I thought that if I could say the right words, you might...' He paused then and gazed at her. âI have realised that I expected what every other man has expected of youâthat you would do what I wanted because I wanted it so. I thought that if I came and said the words I wanted to tell you, you would accept them and forgive me.'
He looked away then and she felt the tears beginning to gather in her eyes. âBut I was wrong. The things I did were wrong. The way I forced you into my protection and manipulated you into caring for me was wrong.' Aidan laughed sadly. âI thought you were like all the others and, in that, I was truly and completely wrong.' He cleared his throat and glanced back at her then.
âAidan, I...'
He shook his head. âI pray you let me finish first?' She nodded.
âOn the morrow, I journey to a cousin's lands in the north. I will tell my sister where I am so that if you have need of anything...' His gaze fell to her belly and she instinctively placed her hand there. âShe will know where I can be found. My father is supporting you and the bairn?' he asked.
âAye,' she forced out, the tears now tightening her throat and spilling over and down her cheeks. âHe paid me for the house.'
âI am sorry for devastating your life and causing Gowan's death. It does not change anything, but I am sorry. Farewell, Catriona MacKenzie.'
With those simple words, he began to tear down her defences. But the next ones destroyed them.
âI hope you are happy about the bairn?' he asked. She could only nod then. âGood. Have a care for yourself, Cat.'
And he walked away. He did not look back. He did not stop. And Cat knew if she did nothing, she would regret it for the rest of her life. For the one thing she had always ever wanted was to be loved and Aidan did love her.
Bad beginning or good one, she was loved.
âAidan,' she called out, running after him. âDo not leave me.'
He stopped and turned, the nearly full moon above lighting the ground where he stood.
âI was wrong, too,' she said. âYou had the right to know about the babe and I kept it from you.'
âI think you had good reason, Cat. How could you trust me not to take it from you when that is my nature?'
âI know that you sent Gowan away, but you did not cause his death. You never intended him harm.'
He sucked in a breath at her words. âWhat are you saying?'
âI know not how this will work out, but I would stay with you, so you can see and know your bairn.'
That was not the only reason. Cat would take his love however she could. If that meant being his leman, she would do that. She did not want to give him up.
âHow this will work? If you will have me, I would marry you.'
Now it was her turn to stand wordlessly before him. âMarry? Your father would never permit such a thing!' She almost laughed, the thought of a penniless, unlearned, twice-married daughter of a whoremonger as the wife of the MacLerie's son.
âI should make it clear, that if you say aye, you get only the man before you. I have given up all claim to my father's titles, lands and wealth. He has disowned me likewise.' He sounded light-hearted and happy, if such a thing was possible.
âWhy would he do such a thing? Why would you?' she asked. It was simply a thing not done.
âI wanted to marry you. He refused permission. Now, I do not need it.' He shrugged it off as though an everyday occurrence. âNow, I have accepted a position with my sister's husband and work for my living. It is not a bad thing, to have to prove myself instead of expecting it as my due.'
âAye,' she said.
He realised what she'd said and still did not move.
âTruly?'
âAye.'
He crossed the gap between them and pulled her to him, lifting her off the ground and swinging her around. His laugh echoed through the lanes and around the cottages and she tugged on his arms so he would put her on her feet.
âWill you regret this? How can you give up your family? You love them and I know you will miss them.' She did not want to come between them or have him hate her for causing this break.
âNow, we will begin our own family,' he said, drawing her close. He held out his hand as though to touch her belly and stopped just inches from her. âMay I?'
Cat covered his hand with hers and placed it where he could feel the bairn within her. As if the most obedient child, the babe pushed against the weight of their hands. He laughed then, pressing gently where the babe had pushed and waiting to feel it move again.
Then, as she tilted her head back to watch the joy that covered his face, he leaned down to kiss her. Catriona closed her eyes and waited to feel the touch of his mouth on hers.
âI love you, Catriona MacKenzie. I think I have from the first time I saw you,' he whispered. Then his mouth took hers as she'd wanted him to do. She wrapped her arms around him, holding him close.
âI love you, Aidan.'
How long they stood there, in the moonlit night, she did not know, but when she felt the night air's chill, she tugged him towards the house.
âNo, lass,' he said, not budging from the spot. âYou know what will happen if we go inside together.'
Sinfully, she did and she hoped he would banish the memory of all those lonely nights without him.
âIf we are to be married, we should wait,' he said.
âWait, my arse!' she said, then she covered her mouth after saying such a coarse thing. âI have a mind to seduce you, Aidan MacLerie. To have my way with you.' For this time it was her choice and he was the one she'd chosen.
âI may let you,' he promised. He bent over and lifted her in his arms.
No words were spoken nor needed through the rest of that night. Though Catriona worried over the changes in her body wrought by the pregnancy, Aidan did not seem to mind at all. His attentions drove her mad with desire and then he satisfied her. And she satisfied him from the sound of it.
Now, lying together, with him wrapped around her, she slept soundly and dreamlessly for the first time since she'd left him. For why dream of him when she had him with her now?
* * *
She woke for some reason just past dawn and found him staring at her. Cat did not move, enjoying the feel of his body next to hers, his heart beating under her hand. She could have remained like that for hours or days, but the arrival of a large, noisy group of people outside her door told her that would not happen. When she would have climbed from the bed and found a gown, the door burst open and the Earl of Douran strode in.