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Authors: Arnette Lamb

True Heart (27 page)

BOOK: True Heart
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Thinking that she'd need help until she found her land legs, he hurried to her side. “Be careful walking as you leave the ship.”

“Why?”

Her smile was friendly, but a new aloofness glittered in her eyes. What had put it there? Probably the prospect of meeting Napier, a man she admittedly held in high regard.

Cameron took the basket from her. “Because you're still wearing your sea legs.” When her expression turned bland, he decided she was much too serious. “Your very beautiful sea legs.”

She gasped and flushed, but the sound was soft and the blush subtle.

“Virginia!” Agnes called out as she stepped on deck. “Come meet Edward.”

Still confused at Virginia's behavior, Cameron let her pull the basket away from him. Without a word, she went to meet Edward Napier.

Cameron followed.

A beaming, teary-eyed Agnes said, “Darling, meet Virginia.”

Reaching out, Edward grasped both of Virginia's hands in his. “Welcome home, Sister. We prayed for your safe return to the family.”

Cameron didn't particularly like the way she smiled at Napier or the length of time they held hands. Then he laughed at his own jealousy. It was just because he faced a separation from Virginia. But they wouldn't be apart for long; he'd make certain of that.

“I'm grateful that Agnes found me.”

Agnes? Cameron's temper flared. How dare Virginia give the credit to Agnes? Fate had led him to Glasgow at the right moment, else Agnes would have been the one to discover the damned kegs.

“Agnes said you suffered a trauma to your cranium,” said Edward, his physician's demeanor in place.

Virginia frowned and Cameron knew why, so he said, “Your head.”

She nodded in understanding but omitted any expression of gratitude toward Cameron. “Yes, my lord. A fall from a horse when I was young.”

“How young?”

“I cannot be sure, but of late, my memories are returning.”

Agnes beamed. “In bits and pieces. She recalled that Cameron used to spit in her hand.”

Napier looked askance at Cameron. “Rather an ungallant lad, weren't you?”

Bits and pieces, ha! She remembered at planned intervals and used her conversations with Agnes during the voyage as an excuse.

All he could think to say was, “My sordid past is behind me.”

Edward turned her hands over and examined her palms, which she tried to withdraw. “Have you experienced any odd memories?” he inquired. “Remembrances that do not fit?”

“Yes.” She took back her hands and glanced at Cameron. “I keep having visions of Cameron as a gentleman.”

Napier and Agnes laughed, but Cameron was slow to grasp the humor. Something in Virginia's demeanor troubled him, not to mention her testy dispostion. What had come over her?

“Cameron, 'twas meant to be funny,” Napier caoled. “Be a good sport and laugh along.”

Excellent advice. Smiling, he shook Napier's hand. ‘After weeks at sea with your wife?” For effect, he rolled his eyes. “Now there is a jest.”

“Hoots! Cameron. You're a troll with scales and parnacles.”

“Shush, Agnes,” said Napier, patting the baby's head. “You'll wake Juliet. She had a fretful night.”

Wide-eyed with alarm, Agnes peered at her downy-haired child. “She's ill?”

“Only from too many cousins feeding her too much clotted cream. The lads can't abide her closing her eyes for more than half an hour. The wee thing's exhausted. I've kept her in the laboratory with me today.”

Agnes relaxed. “Whose lads?”

“Lottie's.” He sent Cameron a pained glance. “She arrived a fortnight ago.”

Cameron chuckled; Lottie had spent three months at his house while decorating it. After a week, he'd moved to Napier House. “My condolences, Napier. I'd say we're fellows evenly tormented by MacKenzie women.”

Putting her palm against her husband's cheek, Agnes murmured, “Poor, dear man. A fortnight with Lottie. Tisk, tisk. You must feel like Job on his last forbearance.”

In his typical, gentlemanly fashion, Napier shrugged. “I should like to boast that I had reformed her bossy ways, alas . . . I failed. But 'tis better with Sarah there. She arrived yesterday.”

Virginia stepped forward. “Oh, Agnes. You said they'd be here. I cannot wait to see them.”

Cameron felt left out. How dare she ignore him completely, family reunion or no family reunion. He moved closer and took her arm. “Shall we go meet them?”

“Yes, but I'll carry my own basket.”

She didn't look at him, so he couldn't see the expression that accompanied that ambiguity. She wasn't referring to any courteous gesture on his part, and she wasn't joking. What had come over her? Did she worry that he intended to keep the kitten? Was that why she'd gone below just moments ago? Come to think of it, he hadn't actually told her the kitten was hers to keep, not in so many words. He'd been too busy thinking of ways to get her alone.

He gave himself high marks for his efforts in that respect. The last three days and nights had been heaven.

“Shall we?” Napier said, holding out an arm toward the smoothest-riding and fastest carriage on earth.

As she exited the ship, Virginia said, “Carriages have certainly changed since I left Scotland.”

Cameron pounced on that. “Do you remember leaving? The name of the ship that took you?”

She kept walking toward the carriage but closed herself off. “No, I haven't remembered that.”

Nor would she ever, he was beginning to suspect. That troubled him, for if she did not unburden herself before word of her father's return reached them, Cameron would have to tell her all he knew. Lachian would take his revenge whether she approved or not. Cameron did not relish her reaction. But he had time to deal with that later. Now he must learn why she sat tiffly beside him in the carriage and spoke not one word to him during the ride to Glasgow.

It couldn't be that she knew about Adrienne; Agnes had sworn herself to silence on the subject, and Agnes MacKenzie never went back on her word. Could it be that Virginia was having second thoughts about him? No, not after her eagerness to evade Agnes and share intimacies with him. Virginia could be apprehensive about meeting Lottie and Sarah.

He was still pondering the subject when the carriage entered the gates of Napier House.

Edward pounded on the roof, and the carriage stopped short of the residence. Taking Agnes's hand, he stepped out of the carriage. “Give our regrets to Lottie and Sarah.”

“Aye,” said his wife. “We are indisposed.”

Napier pulled a laughing Agnes from the carriage. ‘Notch,” he called up to the driver.

“Aye, sir.”

“You and the carriage are at Lady Virginia's disposal.”

“Anytime, my lord.”

Cameron remembered Mary. “Edward, wait. Mary's child. What did she have?”

“A girl.”

Her husband had wanted, demanded a son. “Poor Mary,” Cameron said.

“Nay,” Edward called back. “Through Sarah's husband, Michael, Mary placed a bet at White's that her child would be a girl.”

“How much did she wager?”

He laughed. “A million pounds, and guess who matched the bet?”

“Robert Spencer?”

“Aye, Mary's own husband.”

Mary had gotten the idea of betting a million pounds from Lottie. “Does Lottie know?”

He nodded. “She was inconsolable for days.”

A laughing Agnes said, “Lottie's always inconsolable but especially when someone mentions that wager she lost to her husband.”

Arm in arm they strolled across the greensward and disappeared behind the new greenhouse.

Virginia eyed the empty seat. If she moved, he'd take her back to his ship right now and sail to France. With all his might, he willed her to shift that pretty bottom to the facing seat.

“You were right about this carriage.”

How could Virginia witness the obvious affection between her sister and Napier and not be moved by it?

She glanced up at him, started, then looked away. He had every right to scowl.

“It's a wonderful home. Look, Cameron. There's an old round tower in the back.”

Small talk didn't suit her.

“What is wrong with you?” he blurted.

The carriage began moving again. She checked the position of the cat's basket when it was obviously unnecessary.

“Nothing is wrong with me.”

Oh, he knew that female trick. He just hadn't expected it from Virginia. Since learning of her deception, he'd helped her at every turn. When she grew too comfortable with Agnes and almost let the truth slip, Cameron had come to her rescue.

“Yes, something is. Tell me now, or I'll tell Notch to take us back to the ship.”

“What about Lottie and Sarah?”

She wasn't supposed to ask about her sisters. She was supposed to talk to him. But if she couldn't be honest about her feelings now, she could face her sisters alone. “You're distant to me, and I demand to know why.”

Her expression grew chilly, and she lifted one brow. In that imperialistic MacKenzie way, she said, “You demand?”

He'd earned the right. She loved him. She was just too distracted by her own lies to admit it. “Aye, and with good cause.”

“Remember what I said. You will not rule my life because we . . .”

“Because we made love standing at the ship's wheel 'neath a full moon?”

A blush started at her breasts, which were displayed a little too lavishly to suit him. “Or were you thinking about the bath we shared on the night before last?”

Her neck flushed pink.

“No? Perhaps you were remembering our lengthy inventory of the purser's closet? You were ever so helpful, you know.”

Color blossomed on her cheeks.

“Not that either? Then you must have been thinking about the luncheon we shared in the crow's nest.”

“Haud yer wheesht!”

What an interesting time for her to remember Scottish. That she told him to shut up seemed particularly clever. Now he must recognize it and encourage her or give himself away.

He followed his conscience. “You've remembered how to speak Scottish.”

She gave him a coy smile.

He couldn't help saying, “Although your choice of words is questionable.”

The carriage stopped. She picked up her basket. “Obviously your understanding of the language is poor”—she opened the door—“for you are still talking.”

Virginia left him sitting in the luxurious carriage, his mouth agape, his pride sizzling with offense.

The deceitful troll.

Later, she'd find out where he lived, and she'd go there. She had to see for herself if what she'd read in Adrienne's letters were true. Letters. A dozen or more tucked neatly in Cameron's sea chest. No wonder he hadn't taken her to his cabin during the voyage, the room was a veritable shrine to Adrienne Cholmondeley. Well, that was an exaggeration. But the knowing saddened Virginia. Were it not for her own deception, she might have thought twice about spying on him and certainly regretted it later. And why hadn't he opened the last message the woman had sent?

He stepped out of the carriage, and she fought the urge to stomp on his toe and kick him in his manly parts. Parts he'd spent the last few years sharing with Adrienne Cholmondeley.

“You can be sure we'll visit the subject again, Virginia.” He looked beyond her, at something over her shoulder. Indecision clouded his features, as if he were grappling with something that bothered his conscience.

“What issue?”

Notch and Christopher climbed down from the box. Cameron held up his hand. They kept their distance. “The issue of why you refuse to carry on a conversation with me. What has happened to you?”

Struggling for nonchalance, she shrugged. “Nothing. Nothing at all. Everything is fine. Neither of us has reason to doubt the other.”

Looking completely baffled, he said, “What, in the kingdom of Neptune, is that supposed to mean?”

“Please, Cameron.” She stared at her hands, which were clutching the basket in a death grip. “Don't you see that I'm—I'm apprehensive about meeting Lottie. To hear you, Agnes, and Edward speak of her, she must be a terror.”

He relented. “All right, I confess. In her own way, Lottie is a treasure but only when taken a bit at a time. You'll like her.” The front doors of Napier House opened. “Here she is now.”

Determined to bear up and hide the hurt his lie caused her, Virginia gave him the only smile she could manage, then turned to face Lottie.

Like Virginia, Charlotte Antoinette MacKenzie had their father's blue eyes and auburn hair. But more than her features, Lottie's graceful carriage and queenly demeanor were unmistakable. Thinner than was common for a woman who'd borne four children, Lottie didn't look her age. She wore a stunning gown of lavender blue velvet trimmed in panels of heavy lace that had been tatted to form tulips.

“Cholmondeley's driver said they'd found you—Oh!” Slapping a hand over her mouth, she glanced at Cameron. Then she covered the slip brilliantly by chuckling and saying, “What am I saying? He could have been Lucifer's driver and I wouldn't have uttered a protest so long as his news was true.” She hugged Virginia. “You haven't changed at all except to grow more beautiful. Bless God and all the saints twice.”

A familiar tightness squeezed Virginia's chest. Lottie, who made the beautiful dresses. Lottie, who wagered a million pounds because she loved children.

“Oh, Virginia. What happened to you? Where have you been?”

Lottie didn't know about the loss of memory story; how could she? At least Virginia's show of recalling the past slowly was working. But why didn't Cameron step in and explain as he usually did? Oh, bother him and his noble mistress.

“I had an accident a long time ago. I lost all memory of who I was or where I came from.”

BOOK: True Heart
5.33Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

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