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English Tea and Bagpipes
by Pamela Griffin
1822—When
Fiona’s sister and Alex’s brother run off to marry, the families oppose the
match between a poor Highlander and an English nobleman. Fiona impulsively goes
after her sister, and Alex follows. Joined only in their determination to stop a
wedding, both are surprised to find the other quite appealing. Can they find
common ground?
Only
by pride cometh contention: but with the well advised is wisdom. —Proverbs
13:10
one
Scotland,
1822
Fiona
moved up the slippery path with care, clutching a plaid underneath her chin to
block her head from the light shower. The long rectangular cloth did little to
keep her completely dry, but then, she was accustomed to rain. It was her
previous talk with the Finlays that gave her distress. Frowning, she paused to
look up and study the familiar landmarks.
Endless steep-sided hills speckled with gray granite rose on either side
and before her in the deep glen, adding their distinct signature to the untamed
beauty of the region. Peaks of distant snow-covered mountains could be seen in
the gap between hills at her right. To her left, a loch glimmered as drops
ruffled the surface of the lake’s waters. The cool, soft rain touched the
rugged land, watering the earth of her Highland home.
Directly ahead, Fiona spotted a man sitting bolt upright on Ian
MacGregor’s shaggy nag, Dunderhead. From the navy coat, top hat, and black
shiny boots he wore, the man must be a stranger, though she could only see him
from the back. Why he was on Ian’s horse was the real puzzle. Still, Fiona
kept herself far removed from her neighbors’ affairs, and likewise they left
her to her own. The gentleman didn’t seem the type to be a horse thief.
What’s more, who would want to steal old Dunderhead?
Fiona pulled her plaid farther over her hair as she walked past, her
shoes squelching in the puddles.
“I say—wait a moment!” he called.
Fiona grimaced in her distaste for anything English.
“Can you help me?” he yelled more loudly over the tapping rain.
“There’s nae need t’ screech like a banshee.” Fiona pivoted to
face him. “I’m no’ deaf.”
She forced herself to calm. Often, when she was excited or upset, the
thick Highland brogue rolled off her tongue rather than the proper speech
she’d been taught as a child. She took her first real look at the dark-haired
rider. Even wet, his countenance and form appeared pleasing to the eye, she had
to admit. For an Englishman, that is.
“Thank you.” He tipped his hat, civilly inclining his head. “I have
twice been given erroneous directions to the place I seek and feel as though
I’ve traversed this entire countryside. To make matters worse, I made the
dreadful mistake of purchasing this nag that seems to know only one speed. Slow.
So if you could assist me, I would be most obliged.”
Fiona hid a smile. “Any halfwit knows just t’ look at the beast that
Ian’s horse isna worth a shilling.”
“Yes,” he said, his voice bearing a slight edge. “I, too, have
arrived at that conclusion. However, as much as I would like to stay and hold a
discussion concerning the idiosyncrasies of the locals, I don’t relish doing
so in a downpour.”
“What? This wee bit of rain?” she asked with an innocent smirk,
lifting her palm to shoulder level to catch the drops.
He shook his head slowly, as though dealing with a backward child. “In
that assessment we most assuredly differ, Miss. Yet perhaps my view is colored
by the fact that I’ve been traveling in this ‘wee bit of rain’ for a
matter of hours. That said, I would be most grateful if you could tell me, is
this the way to Kennerith Castle?”
“Kennerith Castle?” Fiona repeated in bewilderment.
“Yes,” he said wearily. “Kennerith Castle.”
Suddenly suspicious, Fiona took several seconds to examine his upright
bearing and expensive attire. She gave a curt nod. “Aye. ’Tis that.”
“Thank you ever so much,” he replied, sarcasm coating his
words.
Narrowing her eyes, Fiona left him and took a shortcut near a stand of
birches that forked off the road. Englishmen! He could go and get lost in a bog,
for all she cared.
When she reached home a short time later, she hurried through the
entryway of the crumbling gatehouse to the living quarters beyond and slipped
off her plaid. Squeezing the water from the tartan wool, she hung the cloth over
the back of a chair near the peat fire to dry, all the while assessing her
meager surroundings. Her grandmother huddled in a chair close to the hearth.
“Gwynneth has not yet come down from her chambers, and it’s nearing
noonday. Go and see what keeps her.”
“Aye, Seanmhair,” Fiona said, using the Gaelic endearment for grandmother.
Though the language had trickled away and all but disappeared, her family had
passed down the dialect over the generations. Fiona was proud of that, intending
never to let it fully die.
Exasperated with her irresponsible sister, mostly because searching her
out was an interruption she didn’t need, Fiona headed for the east tower. If
Gwynneth were immersed in one of those idealistic novels with which she wasted
her time, she would receive an earful from Fiona—that was certain!
The repeated bangs of the doorknocker resounded through the area, halting
Fiona’s steps. Deciding that Gwynneth could wait, Fiona whirled around and
hurried to the entryway before old Agatha could get there. Checking to see that
her tunic was properly tucked in, Fiona noticed that mud covered the bottom of
her ankle-length skirt. She grimaced, but there wasn’t time to change into
another. Smoothing her damp, riotous curls away from her face, she straightened
her shoulders and, as she opened the huge, heavy door, assumed the dignified air
befitting the granddaughter of the earl of Carnassis.
The Englishman stood in the rain and stared, shock written in eyes that
Fiona could now see were blue-gray. An impish hint of satisfaction swept through
her, but she struggled to keep her face expressionless and inclined her head
graciously. “Welcome to Kennerith Castle.”
****
The
rain continued to beat down on Alex as he took in the smug expression of the
bright-eyed wisp of a woman standing inside the door. Her eyes, a shade lighter
than the overcast sky, glistened silver. Briefly he wondered how the slim column
of her neck could hold up her head, as weighed down as it was by the mass of
ginger-colored ringlets trailing to her waist. The plaid she’d worn earlier
had hidden them. Yet what she lacked in size, she made up for in spirit.
“You could have told me,” he said, giving her a mildly reproving
look.
She shrugged. “You didna give me the chance. You were not exactly of a
cordial mind.”
“Nor were you.”
She gave a grudging nod. “ ’Tis true enough, I suppose.”
Despite his irritation, Alex couldn’t help but appreciate the lilting
way she spoke and rolled her Rs. Of course everyone in Scotland spoke in
such a manner, but with her smooth, pleasantly pitched voice, it sounded
especially nice. If only her disposition were as sweet.
“I am Dr. Alexander Spencer, recently arrived from England, and I have
need to speak with your mistress, Miss Gwynneth Galbraith, on a most urgent
matter.”
She straightened to her full height—the top of her head still only
coming to his shoulders—and glared at him with disdain. “Now see here, Dr.
Alexander Spencer of England—Gwynneth Galbraith isna me mistress, nor will she
ever be. I am Fiona Galbraith, Gwynneth’s elder sister and the granddaughter
of Hugh Galbraith—the sixth earl of Carnassis, eighth viscount of Dalway, and
eleventh baron—and laird—of Kennerith. If ye have need to speak with
Gwynneth—though for what reason I canna ken—ye will need t’ speak through
me.”
Her sister! Alex sobered. “Forgive my error. Actually, the matter
concerns Gwynneth. It is your audience I desire.” He motioned with one hand.
“Might I come inside, out of the rain?”
The mystified expression on her face proved that she’d not yet heard
the news. A measure of relief swept through Alex. Perhaps he wasn’t too late.
Her manner still suspicious, Fiona stepped back, allowing him entrance.
With a quick, calculating glance, he pulled off his hat, shook water from its
brim, and surveyed the interior of the drafty citadel. The imposing exterior of
the stone fortress, with its four square towers, moat, and keep, didn’t reveal
the true condition of the ivy-covered castle. Furnishings appeared worn and in
need of replacement. The flagstone floor was in dire need of repair. Everywhere
he cast a glance, evidence of neglect and poverty was visible, and Alex imagined
the other chambers fared just as badly.
As though she discerned his thoughts, Fiona stepped into his line of
vision, blocking his quiet perusal. “Ye wish to speak with me?” she asked,
narrowing her eyes.
“Fiona?” a woman called from somewhere nearby. “Who is that
you’re talking to?”
“Only a strange Englishman who wandered here in the rain,” Fiona
retorted, her rigid gaze never leaving his face. “He soon will be leaving.”
“Bring him to me!”
Fiona blew out a breath. “Aye, Seanmhair.” Her eyes narrowed
at Alex. “Come on with ye, then. But I warn you, if it’s mischief you’re
aboot, you’ve come t’ the wrong place!”
The woman was impossible. Alex just managed to hold his tongue and
followed her to a nearby chamber. The obvious scarcity of furnishings made the
room seem larger. Near the fire, an elderly woman sat in one of four chairs in
the room and looked at him, narrowing her eyes over her half-moon glasses. Two
portraits hung side by side over the mantel. The one on the left was of a
kind-faced gentleman in a plain, gray tie-wig, the other of a fierce-looking
warrior with curly ginger-colored hair much like Fiona’s. Both men and the
girl shared the same feature of silver-gray eyes. The warrior in the painting
wore a kilt with a long plaid of matching red, black, yellow, blue, and green
clasped to his shoulder, and he bore a broadsword in his hand.
“That is my grandfather, Angus MacMurray, once a clan chieftain,” the
old woman said, following Alex’s gaze. “And the first portrait is of my
husband’s father, Allan, who was also Angus’s nephew.” Her sober gaze
turned his way. “Angus MacMurray fought—and died—at Culloden.”
The stern words carried with them a warning Alex recognized. He was
English; they were Scots. And though close to a hundred years had passed since
the battle at Culloden Moor, these people had not forgotten it. That being the
case, they would never approve of what Gwynneth Galbraith had done. Alex’s
lips turned upward in a dry smile. Without the women realizing it, they were on
his side.
He quickly introduced himself to the old woman and withdrew the letter
from his coat pocket, grateful to find the message only slightly damp. “While
on an unannounced visit to my brother, Lord Beaufort Spencer, a scholar at the
University of Edinburgh, I did not find him but came across this instead,”
Alex explained. “My brother had delivered it into the hands of a friend along
with directions to mail it to our father next week. In short, the letter states
that Beaufort met a woman visiting there, fell in love, and they have eloped. He
doesn’t say where they’ve gone.”
“I dinna see what that has to do with us,” Fiona argued.
“The woman is your sister—Miss Gwynneth Galbraith of Kennerith
Castle.” At Fiona’s gasp of disbelief, Alex added, “It’s all here in the
letter, if you care to see it.”
Glaring, she covered the short distance between them and snatched the
paper from his outstretched hand. She scanned the missive, her face paling.
“Fiona?” the old woman rasped. “Tell me it’s not true, Lass.”
“Aye, Seanmhair,” she murmured. “ ’Tis that.”
“Perhaps it’s not too late,” Alex said, understanding their shock,
for he’d been rocked by the same emotion. “Beaufort left only the day before
I arrived, and surely, if this is as much a surprise to you as it was to me,
then there’s a strong chance Gwynneth might still be on the premises?”
Fiona’s countenance lightened. “Aye! She must be. I was on my way
t’ talk with her when your knock came.”
Without waiting for a response, Fiona whirled around and headed for the
opposite end of the castle. She took the winding and narrow tower stairs,
passing a portrait of the ghoulish-looking Olivia Galbraith, who’d once
occupied this same tower chamber. Many female ancestors had stayed in the
well-fortified east tower, including Fiona’s great-grandmother, Lady Celeste,
whose love for a servant brought peace between the once-feuding Clan MacMurray
and Clan Galbraith, and her other great-grandmother, Beryl, who’d been a
simple ladies maid. Now Fiona’s sister occupied the tower that legend said had
a reputation for bearing doomed women.
Fiona threw open the door to Gwynneth’s sitting room. Seeing it
unoccupied, she moved to the adjoining bedchamber, disheartened to find it
empty, as well. She mustn’t jump to conclusions. Perhaps the lass had gone to
the crag that jutted out near the loch. She often enjoyed sitting there and
looking out over the lake’s waters.
On a nearby table, atop a copy of Sir Walter Scott’s Ivanhoe,
lay a novel Fiona had never seen—Pride and Prejudice. Beneath its
title, the cover only said: “by the author of Sense and Sensibility.”
Fiona grimaced at the book, whose script lettering seemed to accuse her, and
wondered how her sister had come by it. She spotted a paper rectangle peeking
from within the pages. With heavy heart, she slid it out and read her name on
the parchment in Gwynneth’s flowery hand. Fingers trembling, she opened the
note.
Dearest
Fiona,
When you read this, I will long be gone. I have fallen in love with a
most wonderful man, Lord Beaufort Spencer of Darrencourt. Aye, he is an
Englishman. I met him when I visited our cousin in Edinburgh last spring. I knew
you and our grandmother would not approve, so I thought it best to keep our
acquaintance secret. Beaufort also thought it wise not to inform his family of
our wedding plans. Yet the love we share is strong, and we’ll not be denied a
life together due to prejudices that are centuries old. As you read this, we are
on our way to Gretna Green, and when next you see me—if you will see me—I
will be Lady Spencer. I pray that you can look beyond your intolerance for
anything English and can share in my happiness. . . .
Fiona’s
hand holding the letter dropped to her side as she sank against the four-poster
bed. After awhile, the stunned feeling dissipated, and she marched to her
chamber, resolute.
There was nothing to be done but go after the foolish girl. And Fiona was
up to the task.
****
Wondering
what was keeping the young woman, Alex stood, clasping his wrist behind his
back, his hat in his hand, and gazed at the paintings, though he was very aware
of the elderly matriarch’s stern eye on him. The musty scent from the smoky
fire coupled with the faint odor of mildew fit in well with these primitive
surroundings. From the little Alex had seen, it was a wonder the castle still
stood.
A quick, light tread on the flagstones made him turn, and Fiona rushed
into the room. She stopped short at seeing Alex, as if just remembering he was
there, narrowed her eyes at him, and moved toward her grandmother. Alex noticed
Fiona had taken time to change from her muddy clothes into a serviceable, dark
blue, wool dress. He wondered why. Certainly she hadn’t done so for him.
“Well, Child—speak.” The old woman leaned forward. “Dinna keep me
in suspense.”
Fiona’s woebegone expression told all. “She’s gone, as he said. I
found this letter in her room. She must have taken the secret stairway.”
The woman put a hand to her heart, skimming the parchment. “Gretna
Green! Such news may give your grandfather another stroke. . .though likely
he’s beyond understanding.”
“She willna get far,” Fiona assured her grandmother, retrieving the
letter from the woman’s limp hand now lying in her lap. “I’ll see to
that.”
“Excuse me.” Alex stepped forward, earning him a cold stare from both
women, as though he’d been the one to steal their relation away and not his
brother. From the little he’d seen of the castle, he doubted Gwynneth
Galbraith had needed much enticing. “Might I see the letter? If I’m to find
them, I’ll need to know what it says.”
“That willna be necessary.” Fiona folded the letter and stuck it
within the high neckline of her dress. “I’m capable of findin’ my own
sister.”
Alex could barely restrain a laugh. “You? Surely you jest. Traveling to
Gretna Green in this weather could take many days, even weeks.”
“Perhaps for an Englishman,” Fiona retorted, a gleam in her eye.
“But no’ for a Scot.”
“I’m sorry, Miss Galbraith, but I simply don’t have the time or the
inclination to act as companion—which is preposterous in any case. Surely you
realize the impropriety of a man escorting an unmarried woman without a
chaperone present?” He didn’t add that should she produce such a chaperone,
the two would only slow him down.
Challenge sparked her eyes. “Who said anything about me goin’ with
the likes o’ you? I’m perfectly capable of findin’ the place on my own.”
“What?” Alex couldn’t believe what he was hearing. “You can’t
travel alone!”
“And why not?” She faced him, hands balled on her hips. “Because
I’m only a wee slip of a lass and not a laddie?” she challenged.
“Yes—no.” Alex twisted his hat around in his hands. The girl was
confusing him. “It’s a hazardous journey. You might not be safe.”
“To be sure, I’m well able to take care o’ myself.”
“Fiona, you are certain?” her grandmother interrupted.
Incredulous, Alex glanced at the old woman. Surely, she couldn’t be in
favor of such a preposterous plan!
The expression in the girl’s eyes softened. “Aye, Seanmhair.
I’ll find her.”
“And how do you propose to get there?” Alex inserted triumphantly.
“Obviously you’ve no horse, or you wouldn’t have been walking in this
downpour. And I certainly won’t give you the nag I was saddled with, poor
beast that she is.”
After a long silence, Fiona lowered her head in evident defeat and turned
her back to him, shoulders slumping. “Aye. Perhaps ye speak wisely. Perhaps
’tis best I stay. For surely, I canna walk across all o’ Scotland and make
it there in time to stop the wedding.”
A little off balance by her unexpected change of heart, Alex paused
before replying. “I’m relieved that you see things my way at last. It’s
best for all concerned. Do not fear; I shall see to it that your sister returns
safely.”
“How good of ye.”
Alex stared hard at the mass of ginger-red curls flowing down her back.
Had he detected a note of mockery in the words?
“Grandmother, ye’ve not yet had your broth,” Fiona said, as though
the thought had just occurred. “I’ll see what keeps Agatha.” She directed
a cool gaze toward Alex. “I suppose you’ll be wantin’ food as well before
continuin’ your search?”
Alex considered the prospect. “That would be splendid. Also a cup of
tea, if you have it.”
“Ye’ll not be findin’ English tea at Kennerith Castle,” she said
proudly. “As to the other, I’ll see to it.”
Alex watched Fiona whisk from the room. Though the offer for refreshment
had been less than charming, Alex looked forward to a quick, hot meal to warm
him before heading into the chill rain again. Moreover, somewhere he must find a
better piece of horseflesh if he were to catch up to his brother in time.
Alex’s father wouldn’t tolerate failure in accomplishing this task.
Minutes passed, the low crackle of fire in the hearth the only sound
heard. The old woman sat upright, staring out a nearby window as though looking
for someone. Evidently she desired no idle drawing room chitchat, if this indeed
could be considered a drawing room. Alex eyed every object in the sparse chamber
twice, fiddling with his hat, turning it round and round, wishing the girl would
hurry so he could be gone from this place.
From outside, the clatter of galloping hooves followed by muffled
pounding—the sound of a horse exiting the drawbridge and tearing up
sod—caught his attention. He rushed to glance out the same window the woman
stared at. Through the paned glass, he made out a cloaked figure astride a fine
gray mount flying like the wind. The hood fell away, and an abundant banner of
long red hair unfurled behind the rider.
The old woman chuckled and turned her proud gaze toward Alex. “My
granddaughter isna easily crossed, Dr. Spencer. She has the spirit of her
forebears. You would do well to remember that.”
Alex stared in disbelief and watched Fiona ride away along the high moor.
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