“Me.”
One look was all it took for Artan to decide that he neither liked nor trusted the man who stepped up on the other side of Lady Anabel and laid claim to Cecily. Artan made a great show of looking down at the man who was nearly a head shorter and enjoyed the light flush of anger that flared upon the man’s pale cheeks. He looked like one of those whining, grasping bootlickers who constantly danced around the king. Artan sniffed. Smelled like one, too. All heavy perfume spread over an unclean body.
“And who might ye be?” he demanded.
“I, sir, am Sir Fergus Ogilvey,” the man replied, lifting his weak chin enough to glare up at Artan.
“Never heard of ye.” Ignoring Fergus’s soft curse, Artan looked to where Anabel’s hand still clutched Cecily’s arm and scowled at the dark spots slowly spreading beneath those sharp nails. “Let her go. Ye have pierced the skin.”
Cecily breathed a sigh of relief when Anabel abruptly released her. She lightly rubbed her hand over the wounds she could feel beneath the sleeve of her gown. There would be a colorful array of bruises and scabs come the morning, she thought and hoped the bleeding would stop soon before it completely ruined the first new gown she had had in years. She looked from Fergus to Sir Artan and sighed, all too painfully aware of the marked difference between the two men. Sir Artan made Fergus look even smaller and paler than he actually was.
“When is this wedding?” Artan asked.
“In a fortnight,” replied Fergus, crossing his arms over his narrow chest. “Today is the first day of the festivities.”
“Then ’tis best if ye show me to my chambers so that I may wash away this dust and join ye.”
“I dinnae believe ye were invited,” snapped Anabel.
“I did note that rudeness, but I forgive ye.” Artan smiled at Cecily when she released a surprised laugh, but noticed that she hastily silenced it at one hard glance from Lady Anabel.
“Of course he must stay, m’dear,” said Sir Edmund as he joined them and looked at his wife. “The mon has been sent here by Cecily’s maternal uncle. We must nay offend the mon by treating his emissary so rudely, eh?” He smiled at Artan. “Ye can stand in the laird’s stead, aye, and then return to Glascreag with a full report of his niece’s marriage to this fine mon.” He clapped Sir Fergus on the back. “Now”—he waved over a buxom, fair-haired maid—“Davida here will see to ye. The meal will be set out in an hour.”
“I will be here,” said Artan. He turned to Cecily, took her hand in his, and lightly brushed a kiss over the back of it. “When I return we must needs discuss your uncle, lass.”
As Cecily watched Artan leave with Davida, she quickly clasped her hands together behind her back so that she could surreptitiously touch the spot he had kissed. She had never had her hand kissed before. She had certainly never felt so abruptly warm and weak-kneed just because a man had touched her hand. Then again, she had never seen a man like Sir Artan Murray either.
She sighed as she thought of him beingseento by the buxom Davida. A sharp pinch of jealousy seized her, for she knew the very wanton Davida would soon be in his bed. Cecily could not really blame the woman. Davida had probably never seen such a lovely man either and was undoubtedly thinking herself blessed. Understanding did not dim her resentment by much, however. If nothing else, it seemed grossly unfair that the wanton Davida would have Sir Artan while she was left with only Sir Fergus.
“Edmund, how could ye ask that savage to stay here?” demanded Anabel.
“And what choice was there, wife?” Edmund grimaced. “Angus is Cecily’s closest blood kin, and that mon said the laird is ill, mayhap e’en dying.”
“Mayhap I should go to him then,” said Cecily, then nearly flinched when Fergus, Edmund, and Anabel all glared at her.
“Ye are going nowhere,” said Anabel. “That mon hasnae had aught to do with ye until now, has he?”
That was sadly true, although Cecily had always thought that a little odd. She could recall her uncle as a big, rough-speaking man, but one who had been unceasingly kind to her. Even though that last ill-fated visit had been made so that the man could meet her brother, Colin, who was his heir, her uncle had spent time with her, too. As always, she shrugged that puzzle aside and gathered up the courage to argue with Anabel, at least just a little bit.
“That doesnae matter,” Cecily said. “Whatdoesmatter is that my uncle may soon die. Since he is my closest kinsmon, isnae it my duty to go to his side?” She tensed when Sir Fergus stepped up beside her and put his arm around her shoulders, for she sensed no affection in the gesture.
“Aye, ’tis indeed your duty,” he agreed. “But ’tis also your duty to stay here and marry me. Your guardians have gone to a great deal of trouble and expense to arrange these festivities. And now that we are betrothed, your first duty is to me, aye? I shall take ye to see the mon after the wedding.”
Cecily nearly ached to argue that and knew she had some very good arguments to make. The best being that her uncle carried some three score years. At such an age even a very mild illness could kill the man. Waiting until after the wedding could easily mean that all she got to visit was Uncle Angus’s grave. She looked at Fergus, Anabel, and Edmund and could tell by their expressions that even sound arguments would not sway them, however.
“And since ye truly are his nearest kin, there may e’en be a chance that ye are the heir to something, so, of course, we should go and see how matters stand at Glascreag,” Fergus continued.
“Quite right, Sir Fergus,” agreed Edmund. “’Tis a long, hard journey, but there may be some benefit to it.”
As she listened to her guardians and Sir Fergus discuss what her uncle might leave her when he died, Cecily fought to remain silent. She also tried very hard to convince herself that they were not really as cold and mercenary as they sounded. The way they spoke, as if it were Sir Fergus who would benefit, irritated her as well. She did not care if her uncle made her any bequest, but if he did, it should be hers and no one else’s.
Then she recalled that Fergus would soon be her husband, and the law said that what was hers would become his. Cecily doubted her uncle would want the man to have anything for the simple fact that Sir Fergus was a Lowlander, but her uncle had no idea that she was about to be married. She had written to him to tell him of her marriage, but there was a very good chance that he had not received her missive before he had sent Sir Artan to her. If her uncle died before she reached him and Sir Fergus benefited from his death in even the smallest way, Cecily suspected Uncle Angus would be spinning in his grave. He had often made his low opinion of Lowlanders very clear, seemingly forgetting that her father had been one.
Her thoughts fixed upon the last time she, her father, and her brother were together, Cecily was startled when Anabel pinched her on the arm. Rubbing the sore spot those vicious fingers had left behind, she looked at the woman. She was not exactly surprised to find Anabel scowling at her. Sadly, Cecily almost always found Anabel scowling at her.
“Go and tidy yourself,” Anabel ordered, nodding toward the small bloodstains on the sleeve of Cecily’s gown. “Clean off those stains quickly ere they set firm. Ye had best nay ruin that gown. And hurry back. I will be verra displeased if ye are late to the feast.”
As Cecily hurried away to her bedchamber, she wondered crossly if Anabel expected her to apologize for bleeding when her skin was pierced. It would not surprise her. Anabel always seemed to think Cecily should apologize for the times Anabel had to beat her until the blood flowed. Cecily had always been more than ready to accept punishment for any wrong she had done, but she realized she had never fully accepted that she deserved the very harsh punishments Anabel doled out.