Bridegroom Wore Plaid (9 page)

Read Bridegroom Wore Plaid Online

Authors: Grace Burrowes

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

“Hester is the very best sister, but she is a
little
sister, if you take my meaning. She embarrasses me with her pithy observations—always in company, of course—without even intending to, but she’s also my staunchest ally.”

“I think your cousin, your brother, and your aunt are all allies too. In his own way, even your papa takes your welfare seriously.”

“Oh, he’d better. Mama will sulk for ages if this excursion at Balfour doesn’t go well.”

The smile was gone, and Ian wondered if Miss Genie recalled with whom she walked. He steered her past another upthrust root.

“What can I do to ensure your visit goes well, Miss Genie? I am your host, after all. Your pleasure is my first concern.”

That might have been laying it on a bit thick, but she nibbled her lip and glanced over at him, a considering, somewhat fretful gesture. He waited, hoping they were on the verge of some genuine honesty, a small step in the direction of betrothal, but an important first step.

She dropped her gaze and then stumbled hard, pitching into Ian with an unladylike yelp. He caught her around the middle before she could hit the ground and hauled her up against him.

She stood awkwardly, one foot raised, letting Ian keep her balanced by virtue of leaning into him.

“I am so sorry, my lord. I’m not usually clumsy. I’m never clumsy, in fact, but I can be preoccupied… oh, blast. Excuse my language, but it hurts.”

She was going to cry. Ian scooped her up against his chest and carried her to a fallen tree lying sideways along the path. When he had her seated, he fished for his handkerchief, wondering all the while if this was a ploy or a genuine mishap.

“Genie?” Miss Augusta came bustling up, Gil at her side. Ian had never been so glad to see a decent woman in his life. “Dear heart, have you come a cropper?”

“I twisted my ankle, Gussie. I feel so terribly stupid.”

“We can heal your ankle,” Augusta said, patting her cousin’s shoulder. “The stupid part is a chronic facet of the human condition.”

Gil whipped out his handkerchief and passed it to the lady, while Ian wondered when his brother had started using monogrammed linen.

“Here, now. Let’s have that boot off.” Gil knelt on one knee like some damned parfit gentil knight and started on the laces of Genie’s walking boot, while Augusta—what was wrong with the woman?—stepped back to allow him.

“Oh, that cannot be comfortable,” Augusta murmured, taking the boot from Gil’s hand. “You did yourself an injury, my dear.”

“I feel so stupid.”

Yes, they knew that.
Ian was beginning to feel rather stupid himself. He shifted to Augusta’s side.

“We can have the grooms bring a pony cart for you,” he said. “Or I can simply carry you back to the house.”

Genie blushed. Gil’s hand on her foot hadn’t caused her to color up like that, but Ian’s very gallant offer—if he did say so himself—had her cheeks flaming.

“Of course we can’t put his lordship to that trouble,” Augusta said. “Gilgallon will carry you back to the house, and Lord Balfour and I will locate the others and inform them of your accident.”

“You mustn’t cut short the outing.” Looking fragile and brave, Genie pressed Gil’s handkerchief to the corners of her eyes.

“We won’t.” Hester spoke up from Augusta’s other side. “We’ve a way to go yet before we’re along the Balmoral property line. I’ll tell Her Majesty you were otherwise detained, shall I?”

“Give her my regrets,” Genie said. “His Highness too.”

Hester saluted, straightened, and walked off in the direction of the Queen’s holding. And just like that, Gil was hefting Genie into his arms, while the lady—Ian’s intended—looped her arms around Gil’s neck and laid her cheek against his shoulder.

“Only to the edge of the woods, Gil.” Ian put some sternness in his voice as Augusta tucked the boot into Genie’s lap. “Hail a groundsman to have the pony cart brought along for the sake of the lady’s dignity.”

“Put ice on that ankle,” Augusta added, looping her hand over Ian’s arm. “White willow bark tea would be a good idea too.” She dropped her voice as Gil moved off with his burden. “Do come away, my lord. Genie is mortified enough.”

“What about me?” Ian asked, letting himself be marched on down the path. “What about my mortification? I was the lady’s escort, and I was supposed to keep her from harm.”

“Genie is not at her best just now, and you did keep her from harm. What if she’d pitched to the earth and struck her head on a rock? No, don’t look at them. She would never want you to see your prospective bride so discomposed.”

Illumination flared in Ian’s brain. Pride he could understand. Genie saw Gil more as a henchman, perhaps, and that was why she’d allowed him to aid her while Ian stood around, surreptitiously stuffing his plain handkerchief back in his pocket.

“I bungled that,” he said. “We’d just started a real conversation, and I damned near dropped her on her head. Beg pardon for my language.”

He felt a shiver go through Miss Augusta. Perhaps he’d shocked her.

Another shivery little tremble, and then he heard her snort.

“You’re laughing at me, Miss Augusta Merrick. A belted earl on his own demesne, and I am an object of ridicule.”

“You are
pouting
,” she said, letting her mirth become audible. “A great, grand, strapping, handsome man, complete with title, gorgeous green eyes, and loyal minions, and you’re pouting because your younger brother stepped into the breach.”

“Was her ankle really turned?” He’d been too much a gentleman to inspect it himself. Hadn’t even felt an inclination to peek with his gorgeous green eyes, truth be known.

“Oh, yes. There’s a lovely bruise rising right below her ankle. She wasn’t bamming us, my lord. But if she had been, perhaps it would have been a ploy to find aid and comfort in your arms, had you but offered.”

Had he but
offered
? When the lady was cuddled in Gil’s embrace as if a dragon were in pursuit of her virtue? “Let’s find the others. My sister is loose without supervision in the company of a guest far too much a gentleman for his own good.”

Augusta kept up easily with Ian’s stride. “Matthew
is
a gentleman, you know. He won’t take liberties with your sister unless invited to do so, widow or not, Englishman or not.”

“It isn’t my sister I’m worried about.”

***

Augusta closed the door to her bedroom, leaned against it, and smiled broadly.

Wasn’t it lovely, to go striding through the woods with a handsome man at her side, one who apparently enjoyed his own property and wasn’t bound by the notion that a lady must mince about, clinging helplessly to his arm.

Though she had clung, just a little. How easily Ian had lifted Genie into his arms. How adorable he’d looked, standing by, wanting to help but letting his brother be the one to aid the lady.

Augusta glanced around at the plaid decor surrounding her and decided Scotland was good for her. The MacGregors were good for her, getting her out in company, providing her handsome escorts, putting hearty fare before her at meals… Augusta tried to recall why she’d been so reluctant to join this family journey in the first place.

Uncle Willard hadn’t urged her to come, but Aunt had—had insisted in fact, and Augusta had sought desperately for some sign from her uncle that he was willing to spend the coin to bring her along. He’d been particularly unforthcoming, his silences considering and unnerving. Julia had asked for her assistance, though, because two girls with one chaperone would always have to be in company, and such an arrangement was not conducive to fostering a betrothal.

Augusta was pleased to see a tea service waiting for her on the escritoire by the windows. The earl’s staff was very thoughtful. She must compliment Lady Mary Frances on this, and find a way to do it that wouldn’t offend the woman’s pride.

Mary Fran was also making an effort to bring Matthew out of the grim mood he’d brought back with him from the Crimea. Uncle had prevailed on Matthew to come home before the official fighting was underway, though everybody spoke of war as if it were inevitable.

Matthew had been smiling at Mary Fran as they’d all wandered back to the house—all save Con and Julia, who’d gotten off to God knew where—and Matthew’s smile had been more like the easy, charming smile he’d sported to such advantage as a younger man.

All in all, it had been a wonderful outing. Augusta sat on her big, fluffy bed and bent to unlace her old walking boots. She paused to pet her cat, who was motionless on the floor beside her bed, probably exhausted from chasing every mouse in the Balfour stables.

***

Ian knew better than to ask a servant where his sister had gotten off to. They were loyal to her, the lot of them—the grinning footmen, the giggling maids, the cheerful tyrant in the kitchens referred to simply as Cook. The stable lads were the worst, mooning after Mary Fran like a pack of schoolboys, when to a man, they were old enough to be her father, some of them old enough to be her grandfather.

But Mary Fran was either in hiding or seeing to the guest chambers, so Ian took himself in that direction only to stop abruptly in the corridor.

Weeping.
The sound was quiet but distinct, coming from the other side of… Miss Augusta Merrick’s door. Ian recalled the location of her room because she’d had that great, fat black cat, and had requested access for him to the outdoors.

He rapped lightly on the door. “Miss Augusta? Shall I send my sister to you?”

He had to strain to hear her words. “Please just go away.”

Ian had only the one sister, but she’d trained him properly. That had not been a particularly emphatic command, and in the way of females, it had strongly implied its opposite. Cautiously, he opened the door—the woman hadn’t had time to discard her clothing after their walk, or so he hoped.

“Miss Merrick?”

“For pity’s sake, close the door.” Her breathing hitched. Ian heard it, and he saw it in the twitch of her shoulders where she lay curled on her side on the bed. Her back didn’t tell him much, except that she was upset enough to be in tears.

And she was not a crying type of female. “Was it something I said in the woods?”

He hadn’t said much really. She was the kind of woman a man didn’t feel the need to chatter with. A restful woman, easy to be with.

She pushed up and scooted around, cuddling the furry black beast that had taken such exception to being transported in a hatbox.

“I’m being ridiculous.” She pushed her way one-handed to the edge of the bed, and laid the unmoving cat beside her on the quilt. “He was very old, even for a house cat.”

“Your cat has gone to his reward?”

She sniffed and nodded as she stroked a hand over the animal’s fur. “I’m being maudlin. He was happy to be here, and I don’t think he suffered.”

And then she curled in on herself, losing her composure again. It broke Ian’s heart to see it, to see her struggling against tears when it was just the two of them…

In her room, behind a closed door. Good God. The ramifications if somebody came upon them were too awful to contemplate.

His indecision lasted but a moment. If this wasn’t a damsel in distress, then such a lady didn’t exist. He locked the door behind him and crossed the room.

“You were attached to him,” Ian said, wanting to take the mortal remains from the room, but understanding he couldn’t yet. He shifted to lean against the bedpost. “When my first pony died, I wouldn’t let Grandfather bury him until the parson came from the kirk to bless the ground.” He passed her his handkerchief, somewhat the worse for having been balled up and stowed in his pocket earlier.

She took the linen from his hand. “Ulysses was my friend. My only…” She fell silent again as weeping overtook her, giving Ian the sense Augusta Merrick would not cry often, but she’d grieve bitterly when tears befell her. She reminded him of Mary Fran in that, so he sat beside her on the bed, the cat between them.

“You’ll miss him.”

She nodded. “I live in a modest house, not even a real manor, and my third cousin is elderly and rarely leaves her rooms. Ulysses would not let me be alone. He’d come wherever I was when I was home, and when I was not, he’d wait on the porch for me no matter the hour.”

“Loyal, then. A good friend.”

“He would sleep at my feet on the coldest nights. I’d let him have a little cream when I sat down to tea, like a little girl, having a tea p-party.”

She covered her face with her hands while Ian gently shifted the cat. These were confidences wrested from her because she was upset. He had no business hearing them, and she’d be embarrassed to have shared them unless he somehow conveyed that he understood her misery.

He moved closer and put an arm around her waist.

“When I was young, we had a dog. He was
my
dog, given to me because Asher had been given his own horse, and Grandfather said I wasn’t yet old enough for that honor. I suspect we simply couldn’t afford to feed another mouth in the stable. The dog’s name was MacTavish, and he went everywhere with me, though he’d been pronounced too lame to hunt. Asher offered to trade the horse for him, but I wouldn’t give up my dog.”

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