“Pat the dirt o’er the seed verra gently, Meggie.”
Annora smiled
as the little girl patted the dirt as slowly and carefully as she patted
her cat Sunny. Margaret, who stoutly preferred to be called Meggie, was
all that kept Annora at Dunncraig. Her cousin Donnell had wanted someone
to care for the child and her family had sent her. That was no surprise
for she was poor and illegitimate, a burden every kinsman and kinswoman
she had was quick to shake off whenever they could. At first she had
been resigned, but then she had met little Meggie, a child of only two
with huge brown eyes and thick golden curls. Despite the fact that Annora
thought Donnell was a brutish man, even feared him a little, and had some
doubts about his rights to claim Dunncraig, three years later she was
still at Dunncraig and not simply because she had no better place to go.
She stayed for little Meggie, a child who had stolen her heart almost from
the very first day.
“Seeds are
precious,” said Meggie.
“Aye, verra
precious,” Annora agreed. “Some plants just grow again every spring all
by themselves,” she began.
“Cursed
stinking weeds.”
Bending her
head to hide a grin, Annora quietly said, “Young ladies shouldnae say
cursed.” Neither should ladies of four and twenty, she mused, fully aware
of where Meggie had heard those words. “But, aye, weeds grow all by
themselves in places where ye dinnae want them. Some plants, however,
cannae survive the winter and we must collect the seeds or roots, storing
them away so that we can plant them when it is warm again.”
“Tisnae warm
yet.”
Annora looked
up to find Meggie scowling at the sky. “Warm enough to plants seeds,
love.”
“Are ye certain
we shouldnae wrap them in a wee plaid first?”
“The earth is
their plaid.”
“Annora! The
laird wants ye to go to the village and see how good that new mon makes a
goblet!”
Even as Annora
turned to respond to young Ian’s bellow the youth was already heading back
into the keep. She sighed and carefully collected up all the little bags
of seeds she had intended to plant this afternoon. Ian was probably
already telling Donnell that Annora was going to the village and, of
course, she would. One did not say nay to Donnell. Taking Meggie by the
hand, Annora hurried them both into the keep so that they could wash up
before leaving for the village.
It was as they
were about to leave that Donnell strode out of the great hall to intercept
them. Annora tensed and she felt Meggie press hard against her skirts.
She fought the urge to apologize for not having raced to the village
without hesitation and met his dark scowl with a faint, questioning smile.
Her cousin
should be a very handsome man, Annora thought. He had thick dark hair
and fine dark eyes. His features were manly but not harsh. He even had
good skin and no visible scars. Yet Donnell constantly wore such a sour
or angry expression that his handsomeness was obscured. It was as if all
that ws bad inside of the man left some irrevocable mark upon his looks.
The way Donnell looked now, Annora could not see how any woman could find
him attractive.
“Why arenae ye
going to the village?” he snapped.
“We are going
right now, Cousin,” she said, doing her best to sound sweet and obedient.
“We but needed to wash the dirt of the garden off our hands.”
“Ye shouldnae
be working in the gardens like some common slut. Ye may be a bastard,
but ye come from good blood. And, ye shouldnae be teaching Margaret such
things, either.”
“Some day she
will be the mistress of some demesne or keep with a household to rule.
She will rule it much better if she kens just how much work is needed when
she orders something to be done.”
The way
Donnell’s eyes narrowed told Annora that he was trying to decide if she
had just criticized him in some way. She had, all too aware of how
little Donnell knew or cared about the work he ordered people to do. He
never gave a thought as to how all his needs and comforts were met, except
to savagely punish the ones he deemed responsible if they failed in some
way. Annora kept her gaze as innocent as possible as she met his look of
suspicion, breathing a silent sigh of relief when he obviously decided she
was not clever enough to be so subtle.
“Get ye gone
then,” he said. “I have been hearing a great deal about what fine work
this new mon does and I seek a goblet or the like so that I may see his
skill with my own eyes.”
Annora nodded
and hurried past him, little Meggie keeping step close by her side. If
the fool was so interested in this man’s skill she wondered why he did not
go and have a look for himself. It was the fear of saying that thought
aloud that made her hurry away. Donnell’s response to such words would be
a hard fist and she preferred to avoid those whenever possible.
“Why does the
laird need a goblet?” asked Meggie the moment Annora slowed their fast
pace to an almost lazy stroll.
“He wants to
see if the man who carves them is as good at what he does as everyone says
he is,” replied Annora.
“He doesnae
believe everyone?”
“Weel, nay, I
suspicion he doesnae.”
“Then why will
he believe us?”
“A verra good
question, love. I dinnae ken why he should if he doesnae heed anyone
else’s word, but ‘tis best if we just do as he asks.”
Meggie nodded,
her expression surprisingly solemn for one so young. “Aye or he will hit
ye again and I dinnae want him to do that.”
Neither did
Annora. Her cousin had come close to breaking her jaw and a few other
bones the last time he had beaten her. She knew she ought to be grateful
that Donnell’s second-in-command Egan had stopped him from continuing to
punch her, but she was not. Egan did not usually care who Donnell beat
or how badly he did so, was in truth just as brutish as Donnell was. The
fact that the man did not want her beaten, at least not too severely, made
her very nervous. So did the way he always watched her. Annora did not
want to owe that man anything.
“Neither do I,
love,” she finally murmured and quickly distracted Meggie from such dark
thoughts by pointing out the cattle grazing on the hillside.
All the way to
the village Annora kept Meggie entertained by drawing her attention to
every animal, person, or plant they passed by. She exchanged a few
greetings with a few people, yet again regretting how closely watched and
confined Donnell kept her and Meggie. Although she would have preferred
choosing the times and reasons she traveled to the village, Annora enjoyed
the pretense of freedom, able to ignore the guards she knew were right
behind her. She only wished she would be given enough time and freedom
to come to the village more often and get to know the people of Dunncraig
better.
Annora
sighed and inwardly shook her head. She had not been given any chance to
become a true part of Dunncraig, but that was only part of her regret
about not getting to know the people as well as she would like.
Something was not right about Donnell’s place as laird, about his claim to
these lands and to Meggie. Annora had sensed that wrongness from the
start, but after three years, she had not uncovered any truth to give some
weight to her suspicions. She knew someone at Dunncraig knew the answers
to al the questions she had, but she had yet found a way around Donnell’s
guard long enough to ask any of them.
Approaching the
cooper’s home and shop, Annora felt her spirits lighten just a little.
Edmund the cooper’s wife Ida might be at home and Annora knew the woman
would readily sate her need to talk to another woman. Her pace grew a
little faster in anticipation. She dearly loved Meggie but the child
simply could not satisfy the need for a good, long woman to woman talk.
“Rolf, she is
coming,”
This time James
did not hesitate to look up from his work when Edward called him by his
assumed name. It had taken James longer than he had liked to become
accustomed to being called Rolf. He hated to admit it but Edmund had
been right when he had counseled patience, had warned him that he would
need time to fully assume the guise of Rolf Larousse Lavengeance.
Then what
Edmund had just said fully settled into James’ mind. “Meggie?”
“Aye, but to ye
she must be Lady Margaret,” Edmund reminded him.
“Ah, of
course. I shallnae forget. Who comes with her?”
“Mistress
Annora and, a few yards behind, two of Donnell’s men.”
James cursed.
“Does the mon think there is some danger to the woman or Meggie here?”
“Only to him, I
am thinking. MacKay doesnae allow the woman to talk much with anyone.
Nor the bairn. Some folk think the lass thinks herself too good for us
and is teaching the bairn to be the same, but I think Mistress Annora is
forced to keep to herself. E’en when she has a chance to talk to someone
there are always some of MacKay’s men close at hand to try to hear all
that is said.”
“Tis his own
guilt making him think everyone is eager to decry him.”
“I think that
may be it. My Ida says the lass is clever and quick. MacKay may fear she
has the wit to put a few things together and see the truth. Tis a big
lie he is living and it has to weigh on the mon.”
“I hope it
breaks his cursed back,” James muttered as he tried to clean himself up
just a little. “Better still, I want it to hang him.”
“So does most
everyone at Dunncraig,” said Edmund.
James nodded.
He had quickly seen how cowed his people were. Donnell was a harsh,
cruel laird. He was also unskilled in the knowledge needed to keep the
lands and the stock thriving. There were all too many signs that the man
glutted himself on the riches of Dunncraig with little thought to how his
people might survive or the fact that care must be taken to ensure that
there is food in the future. The people might be afraid of the man seated
in the laird’s chair but they did not hold silent when they were amongst
themselves and James had heard a lot. Donnell was bleeding the lands dry
to fill his belly and his purse.
Ida stuck her
head into the room. “The lass says the laird sent her. He is wanting a
goblet made by Rolf.”
Before he could
say anything, Ida was gone. For a moment James simply sat at his work
table and breathed slowly and evenly to calm his excitement and
anticipation. This was the first step. He had to be careful not to
stumble on it. He knew Donnell spent a lot to make Dunncraig keep as fine
as some French king’s palace. That required a skilled woodworker and he
wanted to be the one who was hired.
“That one,”
said Edmund, pointing toward a tall, richly carved goblet.
“Aye, I think
ye have chosen the perfect one, old friend,” James said and smiled.
“I havenae seen
that expression for a while.”
“Tis
anticipation.”
“Aye. I can
fair feel it in the air. The mon is a vain swine who spends far too much
of your coin on things he doesnae need, things he thinks make him look
important. Ye guessed his weakness right. Do ye really think the mon
would leave some proof of his guilt around though?”
It was a
question Edmund had asked before and James still was not confident of his
feeling that the truth was inside the keep. “I cannae be sure but I think
there has to be something. He cannae be rid of all proof. Mayhap I will
but hear something that will aid me.” He shrugged. “I cannae say. All I
do ken is that I must be inside Dunncraig if I am to have any chance of
getting the truth.”
“Weel, then,
let us get ye in there then.”
Annora looked
up as Edmund and another man stepped out of the workrooms in the back of
the little shop. She stared at the man with Edmund wondering why he so
captivated her attention. He was tall and lean, even looked as if he
could use a few goods meals. His hair was a light brown and hung past
his broad shoulders. There was a scar on his right cheek and he wore a
patch over his left eye. The right eye was such a beautiful green she
felt a pang of sorrow for the loss of its mate. His features were
handsome, cleanly carved yet sharpened a little by the signs of hunger and
trouble. This man had known hardship and she felt a surprising tug of
deep sympathy for him. Since she had no idea what sort of trouble may
have put that harshness on his handsome face, she did not understand why
she wanted to smooth those lines away. The way his slightly full lips
made her feel a little warm alarmed her somewhat. The man was having a
very strange effect upon her and she did not think she liked it.
Then she saw
his gaze rest on Meggie and put her arm around the child’s shoulders.
There was such an intensity in his look she wondered why it did not make
her afraid. A moment later, Annora realized that the intensity held no
hint of a threat or dislike. There was a hunger there, a need and a
grieving, and she wondered if he had lost a child. Again she felt a need
to soothe him and that need began to make her very nervous.
She looked at
the goblet he held in his elegant long-fingered hands and gasped softly.
“Is that the one ye wish to sell to the laird?” she asked.
“Aye,” the man
replied. “I am Rolf, Rolf Larousse Lavengeance.”
Annora blinked
and had to bite her lip not to say anything. It was a very strange name.
It roughly translated to wolf, redhead, and vengeance. It was also
strange for a poor working man to have such an elaborate name. There had
to be a story behind it and her curiosity stirred, but she beat it down.
It was not her place to question the man about his name. As a bastard,
she was also all too aware of the hurt and shame that could come from such
questioning and she would never inflict that upon anyone else.
“It is verra
beautiful, Master Lavengeance,” she said and held her hand out. “Might I
have a look?”
“Aye.”
As she took the
goblet into her hands, she decided the man had been in Scotland long
enough to lose much of his French accent and pick up a word or two of
their language. If Donnell hired the man to do some work at the keep that
would make life a great deal easier. Donnell had absolutely no knowledge
of French and could easily become enraged by a worker who had difficulty
understanding what he said. And, looking at the beautiful carvings of a
hunt on the goblet she suspected Donnell would be very eager to have the
man come and work at Dunncraig keep. The thought that she might have to
see a lot of the man in order to translate orders for him made her feel a
little too eager and Annora felt a sudden need to get away from this man.
“I believe this
will please my cousin weel,” she said. “Your work is beautiful Master
Lavengeance. The stag on this goblet looks so real one almost expects to
see him toss his proud head.”
James just
nodded and named his price. The woman named Annora did not even blink,
but paid it and hurried Meggie out of the shop. Moving quickly to look
out the door James watched her lead his child back to the keep, two of
Donnell’s men in step a few yards behind them. He felt a hand rub his
arm and looked to find Ida standing at his side, her blue eyes full of
sympathy.
“Annora loves
the wee lass,” Ida said.
“Does she? Or
is she but a good nursemaid?” James asked.
“Oh, aye, she
loves the lass. Tis Lady Margaret who holds Mistress Annora at Dunncraig
and naught else. The child has been loved and weel cared for whilst ye
have been gone, Laird.”
James nodded
but he was not sure he fully believed that. Meggie had looked healthy and
happy but she had said nothing. There was also a solemnity to the child
that had not been there before. Meggie had been as sweet and innocent as
her mother but had had a liveliness that Mary had never possessed. There
had been no sign of that liveliness and he wondered what had smothered
it. He would not lay the blame for that change at the feet of Mistress
Annora yet, but he would watch the woman closely.
He inwardly
grimaced, knowing he would find it no hardship to watch the woman.
Mistress Annora was beautiful. Slender yet full-curved, her body caught
and held a man’s gaze. Her thick raven hair made her fair skin looked an
even purer shade of cream and her wide midnight blue eyes drew a man in
like a moth to a flame. After three years alone he knew he had to be
careful not to let his starved senses lead him astray, but he was
definitely eager to further his acquaintance with Mistress Annora.
Suddenly he
wondered if Mistress Annora was Donnell’s lover and wondered why that
thought enraged him. James told himself it was because he did not want
such a woman caring for his child. It might be unfair to think her
anything more than she seemed, but her beauty made it all too easy to
think that Donnell would not be able to leave her alone. Mistress
Annora’s true place in Dunncraig keep was just another question he needed
to answer.
Stepping more
fully into the open doorway of Edmund’s shop, he stared up at the keep
that had once been his home. He would be back there soon. He would
enter the keep as a worker but he meant to stay as the laird. For all
her beauty, if Mistress Annora had any part in Donnell’s schemes she would
find that her beauty did not buy her any mercy from him.