Home > The Highlander's Christmas Countess(3)

The Highlander's Christmas Countess(3)
Author: Anna Campbell

“Thank you, Uncle,” Kit said and turned to collect the sled from where it had landed upside down in the snow.

Quentin rushed to take it from the stable lad. “Go and sit on the cart. Nobody expects you to help pack up.” He hadn’t missed the way movement had made Kit hide a wince. “I think we should get the doctor in.”

Huge eyes fastened on him with horror. “No!”

Kit’s hands clenched on the sled. Just before fighting over the sled turned into a wrestle, the lad surrendered. He dropped his head and mumbled, “Thank ye for your concern, Mr. MacNab. I’m just a wee bit knocked about. My uncle has some liniment that will have me right as rain tomorrow.”

“Liniment for horses,” Quentin said, knowing that Kit wished him to Hades for his fussing.

Yet again, the lad didn’t meet his eyes. “We are all creatures under God’s eyes, I believe, sir.”

As Quentin burst into laughter, Kit turned away and moved with surprising speed toward the cart.

***

After supper in the servants’ hall, a meal enlivened by excitement about the looming Christmas celebrations, Kit slipped away from the cozy big house to the scarcely less cozy stables. At Glen Lyon, the horses lived in luxury. But then the estate was a good example of just how to manage a property. All the crofters’ cottages were in good repair, fencing and equipment were in fine fettle, nobody complained under Hamish and Emily Douglas’s authority. At the last place Kit had been, things hadn’t been nearly so well-run.

Aching from the aftereffects of his accident, he climbed the stairs to the room he’d been given near the head groom’s apartment. Because of his privileged position as Laing’s nephew, he didn’t have to share his quarters with anyone else.

Kit entered the room and bolted the door behind him. With a weary sigh, he sank against the door. He was sore and bruised, and his adventures with the runaway sled had roused far too much interest at dinner. Not to mention that Quentin MacNab’s kindness after the spill had left him thoroughly unsettled.

Quentin MacNab, handsome as the devil, with his thick, tawny hair and sharp hazel eyes that never missed a trick. Since Hamish’s nephew had evinced an interest in the new stableboy, Kit had done his best to stay out of the way. But today’s exploits had placed him firmly in Mr. MacNab’s sights, plague take it.

With another sigh, Kit straightened and stepped into the middle of the floor to undress. First to come off was the thick coat, followed by the woolen jerkin and the linen shirt. Then, very carefully, he unwound the binding that constricted his chest, swearing under his breath as he noted the purple marks blossoming over his white skin.

And just like that, Kit Laing became Christabel Urquhart.

 

 

Chapter 2

 


Along with most of the Glen Lyon household, Kit set out on the next afternoon’s expedition to gather greenery to decorate the house for the festive season. As they did most years, the laird and his lady were hosting a big house party for Christmas, and the guests were due to start arriving on Christmas Eve for a gala ball.

Kit had heard so many tales below stairs of an event brimming with glamour and fun. Because Emily was English and Hamish had spent most of his childhood in London, Christmas at Glen Lyon was a joyous mixture of traditions, unlike anything Kit had ever experienced before. The guests stayed over until Boxing Day, then there was a huge ceilidh that night for the servants and the crofters, where jigs and reels were more likely to feature than fashionable waltzes and quadrilles.

Kit looked forward to being part of that. The servants at Glen Lyon were a contented lot and had given her a warm welcome when she arrived a month ago, ostensibly as Joseph Laing’s nephew. There had been some mild grumbling from the other junior grooms, when she received the privilege of a room to herself, but Laing had jumped on that straightaway and scotched the trouble at the source.

That private room had helped her to maintain her disguise, and she’d done her best to avoid too much notice while she worked. Until yesterday, when an overturned sled had nearly brought her to grief.

After those dramas, she intended to keep her head down during this visit to the woods that grew up behind the house and spread over into the next glen. She’d already noticed Mr. MacNab looking at her in a way that made her fear he might have guessed that she wasn’t what she appeared.

Kit blushed to recall his gentle, efficient hands on her when he’d dug her out of the snowdrift. He’d never touched her before and when he did, it had been difficult to remember that she was a stableboy and not a young lady. Not to mention a young lady who had noted from the first how handsome the MacNab heir was.

Hamish Douglas, the laird, was also handsome, but somehow he was a little too much the king of the beasts to make Kit’s heart beat faster. Which was a good thing when Hamish was besotted with his wife.

But Quentin MacNab? Now there was a fine figure of a man.

Tall and lean and with a mass of untidy honey-brown hair. More, he was always ready with a laugh and an encouraging word, and she noticed how good he was with the children and the servants and the horses. All of that spoke to a good heart. He was clever, too, but not enough to overawe her. A contented man, easy in his rangy, elegant body. A man who looked at advantage on a horse or striding across the wild hills around Glen Lyon.

Kit already had more problems than she could count. She shouldn’t waste her time mooning over the laird’s nephew. But she couldn’t help it. He seemed such a perfect example of his sex.

After yesterday, she knew he had hazel eyes, a fascinating mixture of green and gold. Until the sledding accident, she hadn’t ventured close enough to discover that. When those eyes had stared directly at her, they’d set her heart racing with very un-servant-like excitement.

But Mr. MacNab had seen too much yesterday, and wisdom dictated that if she wished to preserve her disguise, she should stay out of his way. Every instinct insisted that she could trust him, but for the moment, it was safer to maintain the illusion that she was Kit Laing, stableboy extraordinaire.

Which made it irritating in the extreme that so far today, Mr. MacNab had dogged her footsteps. Andy and William had followed her about since she’d arrived. She now discovered the completely different effect of a six-foot-tall man doing the same thing.

“Kit, will you carry me?” Andy whined from behind her. For once, William wasn’t trailing Kit. Instead, he was over with the grooms, making a mess of stacking some pine cones. “I’m tired.”

Now Kit hid a groan and summoned a smile for the little girl. Kit was stiff from yesterday’s mishap with the sled. Today, hauling the laird’s daughter about was too much to ask.

“I willnae carry you, Miss Andy. I’ll give ye a ride on the handcart. That will be fun.”

“It would be more fun if you carry me.” A mutinous expression settled on the fairylike face as happy laughter and shouting echoed from the woods around them.

Miss Andromeda Douglas promised to grow up to become a hoyden, Kit thought, and liked her the better for it. She only wished that she’d managed to find her own spirit earlier. It might have changed the way things had played out.

Or perhaps not.

“What is it, Kit?” Mr. MacNab asked from a few feet away. Despite her best efforts, she hadn’t been able to shake him. “Are you still sore from yesterday?”

Hot Books
» House of Earth and Blood (Crescent City #1)
» A Kingdom of Flesh and Fire
» From Blood and Ash (Blood And Ash #1)
» A Million Kisses in Your Lifetime
» Deviant King (Royal Elite #1)
» Den of Vipers
» House of Sky and Breath (Crescent City #2)
» The Queen of Nothing (The Folk of the Air #
» Sweet Temptation
» The Sweetest Oblivion (Made #1)
» Chasing Cassandra (The Ravenels #6)
» Wreck & Ruin
» Steel Princess (Royal Elite #2)
» Twisted Hate (Twisted #3)
» The Play (Briar U Book 3)