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"Very well, Lady MacGregor."
"If you're a man such as I know, you'll be wanting to break your fast."
With a smile, she laid a hand on his arm and began to walk. "Would you care to sit in the parlor? It's warmer than the dining hall, and when I have a solitary meal I find it less lonely."
"Thank you."
"Molly, tell the cook that Lord Ashburn is awake and hungry." She led him into a parlor where a table had already been set for him. "Shall I leave you now, or would you prefer company?"
"I always prefer the company of a beautiful woman, my lady."
With a smile, she accepted the chair he held out for her. "Coll said you were a charmer." Ap.r.o.n or not, she sat as gracefully as any drawing room miss Brigham had known. "I wasn't able to thank you properly last night. I'd like to make up for that now and give you all my grat.i.tude for delivering Coll home."
"Would that I had delivered him under better circ.u.mstances."
"You brought him." She offered her hand. "I owe you a great deal."
"He's my friend."
"Aye." She squeezed his hand briefly. "So he's told me. That doesn't lessen the debt, but I won't embarra.s.s you." Molly brought in coffee and Fiona poured, pleased by the opportunity to make use of her china. "Coll asked for you this morning. Perhaps after you've eaten you would go up and speak with him."
"Of course. How does he?"
"Well enough to complain." Fiona's smile was maternal. "He's like his father, impatient, impulsive and very, very dear."
They spoke idly while his breakfast was served. There was porridge and thick slabs of ham, portions of fresh fish with eggs and oatcakes and numerous jams and jellies. Though he chose coffee over the breakfast whiskey, it occurred to him that, while remote, this Highland table could easily rival one in London. The lady sipped her coffee and encouraged Brigham to eat his fill.
He found her burr charming and her conversation direct. While he ate, he waited for her to ask him what he and her husband had discussed the night before. But the questions didn't come.
"If you'll give me your jacket this evening, my lord, I would mend it for you."
He glanced at the ruined sleeve. "I fear it will never be the same."
Her eyes were sober when they met his. "We do what we can with what we have." She rose, bringing Brigham to his feet. Her skirts swished quietly into place. "If you'll excuse me, Lord Ashburn, I have much to see to before my husband returns."
"The MacGregor has gone?"
"He should be home by evening. We all have much to do before Prince Charles makes his move."
Brigham's brow lifted as she left. He'd never known a woman to take the threat of war quite so complacently. When he returned upstairs, he found Coll a bit pale and shadowed around the eyes but sitting up and arguing.
"I won't touch that slop."
"You will eat every drop," Serena said threateningly. "Gwen made it especially for you."
"I don't care if the Blessed Virgin dipped her finger in it, I won't have it."
"Blaspheme again and you'll wear it."
"Good morning, children." Brigham strolled into the room.
"Brig, thank G.o.d," Coll said feelingly. "Send this wench on her way and get me some meat. Meat," he repeated. "And whiskey."
After crossing to the bed, Brigham raised a brow at the thin gruel Serena held in a bowl. "It certainly looks revolting."
"Aye, that's just what I said myself." Coll fell back against the pillows, relieved to have a man on his side. "No one but a thick-skulled woman would expect anyone to eat it."
"Had a rather nice slab of ham myself."
"Ham?"
"Done to a turn. My compliments to your cook, Miss MacGregor."
"Gruel's what he needs," she said between her teeth, "and gruel's what he'll have."
After a shrug, Brigham sat on the edge of the bed. "I've done my bit, Coll. It's up to you."
"Toss her out" Brigham fluffed his lace. "I hate to disoblige you, my dear, but the woman terrifies me."
"Hah!" Coll set his chin and eyed his sister. "Go to the devil, Serena, and take that slop with you."
"Fine, then, if you want to hurt little Gwen's feelings after she nursed you and took the time and trouble to make you something fit to eat. I'll just take it down and tell her you said it was slop and you'd rather have nothing than touch it."
She turned, bowl in hand. Before she'd taken two steps, Coll relented.
"h.e.l.l and d.a.m.nation, give it to me, then."
Brigham caught her smirk as she swept aside her skirts and sat. "Well done," he murmured.
Ignoring him, she dipped the spoon in the bowl. "Open your big mouth, Coll."
"I won't be fed," he said just before she shoved in the first bit of gruel.
"Curse it, Serena, I said I'll feed myself."
"And spill gruel all over your clean nights.h.i.+rt. I'll not be changing you again today, my lad, so open your mouth and be quiet."
He would have sworn at her again, but he was too busy swallowing gruel.
"I'll leave you to your breakfast, Coll."
"For mercy's sake." He grabbed Brigham's wrist. "Don't desert me now.
She'll yap at me, nag and bl.u.s.ter and set me mad. I-" He glared as Serena pushed more gruel into his mouth. "She's the devil of a female, Brig. A man's not safe with her." "Is that so?" Smiling, Brigham studied Serena's face and was rewarded by the faintest rising of color.
"I haven't thanked you for getting me home. I'm told you were wounded," Coll said.
"A scratch. Your sister tended it."
"Gwen's an angel."
"Young Gwen had her hands full with you. Serena bound me up."
Coll looked at his sister and grinned. "Ham-fisted."
"You'll be swallowing the spoon in a moment, Coll MacGregor."
"It takes more than a hole in my side to devil me, la.s.sie. I can still put you over my knee."
She wiped his mouth delicately with a napkin. "The last time you tried you walked with a limp for a week."
He grinned at the memory. "Aye, right you are. Brig, the la.s.s is a Trojan.
Kicked me square in the-" he caught Serena's furious look "-pride, so to speak."
"I'll remember that if I ever have occasion to wrestle with Miss MacGregor."
"Beaned me with a pot once, too," Coll said reminiscently. "d.a.m.n me if I didn't see stars." He was drowsy again, and his eyelids drooped. "Fire- eater," he muttered. "You'll never catch a husband that way."
"If it was a husband I wanted to catch, so I would."
"The prettiest girl in Glenroe." Coll's voice wavered as his eyes shut.
"But the temper's foul, Brig. Not like that pretty Frenchie with the gold hair." What pretty Frenchie? Serena wondered, sending Brigham a sidelong look. But he was only grinning and fiddling with the b.u.t.ton of his jacket.
"I've had the pleasure of discovering that for myself," Brigham murmured. "Rest now. I'll be back."
"Forced that gruel on me. Nasty stuff."
"Aye, and there's more where that came from. Ungrateful oaf."
"I love you, Rena."
She brushed the hair from his brow. "I know. Hush now, and sleep."
Serena tucked him up while Brigham stood back. "He'll be quiet for a few hours now. Mother will feed him next, and he won't argue with her."
"I'd say the arguing did him as much good as the gruel."
"That was the idea." She lifted the tray with the empty bowl and started past him. Brigham had only to s.h.i.+ft to block her way.
"Did you rest?"
"Well enough. Pardon me, Lord Ashburn, I have things to do."
Instead of moving aside, he smiled at her. "When I spend the night with a woman, she usually calls me by my name."
The lights of war came into her eyes, just as he'd hoped. "I'm not some golden-haired Frenchie or one of your loose London women, so keep your name, Lord Ashburn. I've no use for it."
"I believe I have use for yours... Serena." She delighted him by snarling.
"You have the most beautiful eyes I've ever seen."
That fl.u.s.tered her. She knew how to handle flattery, how to accept it, evade it, discount it. Somehow it wasn't as easy with him. "Let me pa.s.s,"
she muttered. "Would you have kissed me?" He put two fingers under her chin as he asked. Serena held the tray like a s.h.i.+eld. "Would you have, this morning, when the need for sleep was all over your face and the light just going gold?"
"Move aside." Because her voice was husky, she shoved the tray at him.
Brigham caught it instinctively to keep it from falling. Unenc.u.mbered, Serena headed for the door with him two steps behind. The sound of running feet stopped them both.
"Malcolm, must you sound like a great elephant? Coll's sleeping."
"Oh." A boy of about ten skidded to a halt. His hair was a deep red that would probably darken to mahogany with age. Unlike the other men in his family, he had fine, almost delicate features. He had, Brigham noticed immediately, the deep green eyes of his sister. "I wanted to see him."
"You can watch him, if you're quiet." With a sigh, Serena shook his shoulder. "Wash first. You look like a stableboy."
He grinned, showing a missing tooth. "I've been with the mare. She'll foal in a day or two."
"You smell like her." She noticed from the mud in the hall that he hadn't done a thorough job of cleaning his boots. She would sweep it up before their mother saw it. She started to speak to him about it, then noticed he was no longer attending.
Brigham found himself being studied and a.s.sessed, quite man-to-man.
The boy was lean as a whippet and smudged with dirt, and there was sharp curiosity in his eyes.
"Are you the English pig?"
"Malcolm!" Both ignored her as Brigham stepped forward. Calmly he handed the tray back to Serena. "I'm English, at any rate, though my grandmother was a MacDonald."
Mortified, Serena stared straight ahead. "I will apologize for my brother, my lord."
He shot her a look ripe with irony. Both of them knew where Malcolm had come by the description. "No need. You would perhaps introduce us."
Serena's fingers dug into the tray. "Lord Ashburn, my brother Malcolm."
"Your servant, Master MacGregor."
Malcolm grinned at that, and at Brigham's formal bow. "My father likes you," he confided. "So does my mother, and Gwen, I think, but she's too shy to say."
Brigham's lips twitched. "I'm honored."
"Coll wrote that you had the best stables in London, so I'll like you, too."
Because it was irresistible, Brigham ruffled the boy's hair-and grinned wickedly at Serena. "Another conquest."
She lifted her chin. "Go wash, Malcolm," she ordered before she flounced away.
"They always want you to wash," Malcolm said with a sigh. "I'm glad there'll be more men in the house."