“I realize that,” Catriona shot back, “but your nephew is hardly going to marry all three of the other young ladies.”
“I have two nephews,” Taran muttered.
“ Taran,” Catriona ground out.
But Taran Ferguson had never been one for logic or consistency. He crossed his beefy arms, jutted out his chin, and stared down at her like a hawk.
An infantile hawk.
“Fine,” Catriona said with a sigh. “I’ll come with you, there’s no need to be so dramatic.”
“No!” the duke said suddenly.
Catriona turned. So did Taran.
The duke pointed his index finger at her. “You promised.”
Taran’s head whipped back and forth between the two of them. “What is he talking about?”
Marilla.
“I have to go with him,” Catriona said, tipping her head toward Taran. She had told Bretton that she could not spend the day alone with him. Finovair might be remote, and the circumstances of their gathering might be unusual (to say the least), but the rules of propriety could not be abandoned completely. When all was said and done, the Duke of Bretton was not going to marry Miss Catriona Burns of Kilkarnity. And Marilla Chisholm would still be the biggest gossip north of Dunbar.
Catriona might be headstrong, but she was no rebel, and she did not think she could face a life as a social pariah. More to the point, she did not think her parents could face it.
She would not shame them that way. She could not.
With a weary sigh, she looked at the duke, willing herself not to drown in his blue eyes, and said, “Taran is right.”
Taran uncrossed his arms and let out a sound that would have put a crow to shame.
“Much as it pains me to admit it,” Catriona ground out.
“Then I’m coming with you,” the duke said.
Catriona tried to ignore the warm bubble of pleasure his words brought forth. She liked the Duke of Bretton. It didn’t matter if he sought her company as protection from Marilla. Because somewhere, deep down where she was afraid to acknowledge it, she knew that Marilla wasn’t the only reason he was insisting upon remaining by her side.
He liked her, too.
And even though nothing could ever come of it, Catriona decided that for once she was going to be utterly impractical and seize the day. Well, perhaps not utterly. She had, after all, just agreed with Taran that she should not remain alone in Bretton’s company. But if she was going to be stuck here at Finovair for heaven only knew how long, then by God she was going to enjoy herself.
“Taran,” she said, turning back to the older man with a devilish smile, “do you have a caber?”
“I’m cold,” Marilla whined.
“Stuff it,” Catriona said, without sparing her a glance. The men—Bretton, Oakley, and Rocheforte—were gathered around Taran, who was clearly relishing his role as man-in-charge. Catriona couldn’t hear what he was saying, but he was waving his arms with great vigor.
“Oh, look,” Marilla said, with a decided lack of interest. “Here comes my sister.”
Catriona pulled her attention away from the men to see Fiona Chisholm dashing across the snow-covered lawn, hugging an ancient cloak around her. Catriona could see that she, too, had chosen to wear the same long-sleeved gown she’d had on the night before.
“Have they started yet?” Fiona asked breathlessly.
“I thought you were planning on remaining in your room all day,” Marilla said in a sulky voice.
“I was, but then Mrs. McVittie told me that they were bringing out a caber.” Fiona’s eyes danced merrily behind her spectacles. “There is no way I would miss this.”
“Taran won’t let us get too close,” Marilla complained. “He said the caber field is no place for the sexes to mingle.”
“When did he become such a stickler for propriety?” Fiona asked.
“You’d be surprised,” Catriona muttered.
The three ladies stood in silence for a few moments, instinctively huddling together for warmth as they watched the men from afar. Catriona still couldn’t believe they were going to try to toss a caber, although truth be told, it hadn’t required much prodding on her part. The men had been almost absurdly eager to show off their prowess; truly, the only difficulty had lay in obtaining a caber. And even that hadn’t been that difficult. Taran’s men were presently hauling it up from the west field.
Taran said something that made the men laugh, and then Rocheforte grinned and raised his arms as if to make his muscles bulge. Catriona felt herself grinning along with him. She’d had no cause to speak with him this day, but he certainly did seem an easygoing sort.
“Do you know where Lady Cecily is?” Fiona asked.
“No, I haven’t seen her at all,” Catriona replied. “Of course I’ve been stuck with Taran since breakfast.”
“Except when you ran off with the duke,” Marilla said in a waspish voice.
Fiona turned to Catriona with unconcealed interest.
“I didn’t run off with the duke,” Catriona retorted. “We merely finished breakfast at the same time.”
“And left me alone,” Marilla sniffed.
“With the Earl of Oakley!”
“You had breakfast with Lord Oakley?” Fiona asked her sister.
“I washaving breakfast with the Duke of Bretton until Catriona ran off with him,” Marilla said.
Catriona let out an exasperated sigh. There had never been any point in arguing with Marilla. Instead, she turned to Fiona and asked, “What have you been doing all day?”
“Altering dresses,” Fiona told her. “That’s probably what’s caught up Lady Cecily, too. Did no one tell you about the trunks that were brought down from the attic?”
“Not until I saw Marilla at breakfast,” Catriona told her. “My room is in an entirely different part of the castle.”
“The servants’ wing,” Marilla murmured, not taking her eyes off the men. Lord Oakley was laughing at something that his cousin had said. He looked quite different when he smiled. Much more pleasing to the eye, Catriona decided.
Although still nothing compared to the duke.
Fiona gave her sister an annoyed glance before turning back to Catriona. “If you’re comfortable in the dress you came with, you’re not missing out. Most of the gowns in Taran’s attic were for ladies of more ample endowment than we possess.”
Marilla shot her a supercilious look.
“Well, than some of us possess,” Fiona corrected. “You really should have let me take your gown out a bit, Marilla.”
Marilla ignored her. Fiona shrugged and turned back to Catriona. “Do you think they know what a caber is?” she asked, the corners of her lips tilting into a tiny smile.
“His Grace is aware that it is a log,” Catriona replied, biting back a smile of her own. “Of what length or girth he imagines it, I do not know.”
“The other two are part Scottish,” Fiona mused. “They must be, if they are related to Taran.”
“I’ve never seen them here before.”
“Nor I.” There was a beat of silence, then Fiona murmured, “It’s possible . . .”
“. . . that they have absolutely no idea what they’re getting into?” Catriona finished for her.
Fiona grinned in response.
“Well, I think you’re very unwise to have suggested this,” Marilla announced. “When they see the caber and realize they can’t lift it, they are going to feel like fools. And men do notlike being made fun of.”
“That presupposes that none of them are in possession of a sense of humor,” Catriona responded. She looked over at the men again. Or rather, still. She hadn’t taken her eyes off them even once. The duke appeared to be having a grand time, laughing heartily at something Mr. Rocheforte had said.
Then he turned, and their eyes met.
And he smiled. Grinned, really.
Catriona’s heart stopped. She felt it, thumping loud, then skipping three beats.