Her Highland Boss: The Earl's Convenient Wife / In the Boss's Castle / Her Hot Highland Doc. Marion Lennox

Her Highland Boss: The Earl's Convenient Wife / In the Boss's Castle / Her Hot Highland Doc - Marion  Lennox


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market price. He could also settle a substantial amount on Jeanie when her bankruptcy was discharged, but he knew instinctively that saying that now would count for nothing. Right now, he had enough sense to know it would make things worse.

      This woman—his wife—had married for a reason. She knew the good the company did. She knew how much the castle and the company meant to Eileen. He just had to hope those reasons were still strong enough.

      ‘Jeanie, do you really want to get on that ferry tomorrow?’ he asked. ‘The dogs want you back at the castle. The guests want you. This does seem like cutting off your nose to spite your face. Please?’

      ‘So...it’s not just the porridge.’

      ‘Not even the black pudding.’

      ‘Alasdair...’

      ‘There’ll be no strings,’ he said and held up his hands. ‘I promise. Things will be as you imagined them when you agreed to this deal. You’ll have a year’s employment. You can use the year to sort what you want to do next and then you can walk away. There’ll be no obligation on either of our parts.’

      ‘No more insults?’

      ‘I won’t even comment on your footwear.’

      She managed to smile again at that. It was faint but it was there.

      And then there was silence. It was so deep and so long that Dougal opened the door again. He stood uncertainly on the doorstep. He made to say something but didn’t. The silence lengthened. Finally he was dragged inside again by Maggie.

      Maggie, at least, must understand the value of silence, Alasdair thought. The last light went off inside. Even if, as Alasdair suspected, Maggie was still lurking, she was giving them the pretence that they were alone.

      The night was still and warm. The numbers of nights like this on Duncairn could be counted on less than a man’s fingers. Everyone should be out tonight, he thought. The stars were hanging brilliant in the sky, as if they existed in a separate universe from the stars he struggled to see back in Edinburgh. The tide was high and he could hear the waves slapping against the harbour wall. Before dawn the harbour would be a hive of activity as the island’s fishermen set to sea, but for now the village had settled back to sleep. There was no one here but this woman, standing still and watchful.

      Trying to make her mind up whether to go or stay.

      ‘Can I have the dogs?’ she said at last, and he blinked.

      ‘The dogs?’

      ‘At the end of the year. That’s been the thing that’s hurt most. I haven’t had time to find a job where I can keep them, and I can’t see them living in an apartment in Edinburgh with you. If I stay, I’ll have twelve months to source a job where they can come with me.’

      ‘You’d agree to keeping on with the marriage,’ he said, cautiously because it behoved a man to be cautious, ‘for the dogs?’

      ‘What other reason would there be?’

      ‘For the company? So Duncairn Enterprises will survive?’

      ‘That’s your reason, not mine. Dogs or nothing, My Lord.’

      ‘Don’t call me that.’

      She tilted her chin. ‘I need something to hold on to,’ she said. ‘I need the dogs.’

      He stared around at the two dogs with their heads hanging out of the window. Abbot was staring down at the road as if considering jumping. He wouldn’t. Alasdair had been around this dog long enough to know a three-foot jump in Abbot’s mind constituted suicide.

      A moth was flying round Costello’s nose. Costello’s nose was therefore circling, too, as if he was thinking of snapping. He wouldn’t do that, either. Risk wasn’t in these two dogs’ make-up and neither was intelligence.

      ‘They’re dumb,’ he said, feeling dumbfounded himself.

      ‘I like dumb. You know where you are with dumb. Dumb doesn’t leave room for manipulation.’

      ‘Jeanie...’

      ‘Dumb or not, it’s yes or no. A year at the castle, no insults, the dogs—and respect for my privacy. The only way this can work is if you keep out of my way and I keep out of yours.’

      ‘We do still need to share the castle.’

      ‘Yes, we do,’ she agreed. ‘But you’ll be treated as a guest.’

      ‘You mean you’ll make the porridge?’

      Her expression softened a little. ‘I kind of like making it,’ she admitted.

      ‘So we have a deal?’

      ‘No more insults?’ she demanded.

      ‘I can’t think of a single insult to throw.’

      ‘Then go home,’ she told him. ‘I’ll be there before breakfast.’

      ‘Won’t you come back now?’

      ‘Not with you,’ she said flatly. ‘I’ll follow separately, when I’m ready. From now on, Alasdair McBride, this is the way we do things. Separately or not at all.’

      * * *

      How was a man to sleep after that? He lay in the great four-poster bed in the opulent rooms his grandmother had done up for him during the renovation and he kept thinking...of Jeanie.

      Why hadn’t his grandmother told him of her plight?

      Because he’d never asked, he conceded. Eileen had known of the bad blood between the cousins. Revealing the mess Alan had left Jeanie in would have meant revealing even more appalling things of Alan than he already knew.

      So she’d let him think Jeanie was a gold-digger?

      No. Eileen wouldn’t have dreamed he’d think Jeanie was mercenary, he conceded, because anyone who met Jeanie would know that such a thing was impossible.

      Except him. He’d met her, he’d judged her and he’d kept on judging her. He’d made the offer of marriage based on the assumption that she was out for what she could get, and he’d nearly destroyed his chances of success in doing it.

      Worse, he’d hurt her. He’d hurt a woman who’d done the right thing by Eileen. A woman Eileen had loved. A woman who’d agreed to a marriage because...because he’d told her of the charities Duncairn supported? Because she could spend another year acting as a low-paid housekeeper? Because she loved two dopey dogs?

      Or because she’d known Eileen would have wanted him to inherit. The realisation dawned as clear as if it were written in the stars.

      She’d done it for Eileen.

      Eileen had loved her and he could see why. She was a woman worthy of...

      Loving?

      The word was suddenly there, front and centre, and it shocked him.

      Surely he was only thinking of it in relation to Eileen—but for the moment, lying back in bed in the great castle of his ancestors, he let the concept drift. Why had Eileen loved her?

      Because she was kind and loyal and warm-hearted. Because she loved Eileen’s dogs—why, for heaven’s sake? Because she was small and cute and curvy and her chuckle was infectious.

      There was nothing in that last thought that would have made Eileen love her, he decided, but it surely came to play in Alasdair’s mind.

      When she’d almost fallen, when he’d picked her up and held her, he’d felt...he’d felt...

      As if she was his wife?

      And so she was, he thought, and maybe it was the vows he’d made in the kirk so few hours ago that made him feel like this. He’d thought he could make them without meaning them, but now...

      She was coming back here. His wife.


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