Epilogue

IT HAS BEEN exactly ten months since Kade and I made our marriage official.

Between that day and this, my life has taken on an enchanted quality that astounds me each and every day with its beauty.

Glenlochie is practically unrecognizable.

Its refurbishment is an ongoing process, but the manor has never looked more magnificent.

The gardens are gloriously lush, the fields bursting with crops that will soon be harvested.

The wider clan has enjoyed a startling transformation.

Gone are the days of resentment and idleness.

Now, as a people, we pride ourselves on hard work and endeavor, and we are, more than ever before, reaping the rewards of both our individual and collective industriousness.

We are sought out by other clans for reasons of bartering and commerce, as our tradesmen are becoming newly recognized as some of the most productive and skilled in Scotland.

Not only the manor but our village and the surrounding orchards and agricultural lands have benefitted from the new prosperity this trade brings.

New shops and houses are being built, of bigger and more elaborate designs.

Experts are taking on apprentices. Bartering stalls are everywhere, offering useful and innovative supplies that are not only necessary but increasingly grand and frivolous, from food to furs, from goats to gold.

The walls of our keep are strong and well kept.

The army is becoming a well-oiled machine, and is more loyal to my husband with each passing day.

In the end, my husband issued the men of the army who disputed his leadership a choice: exile or a challenged duel to the death against him.

One man fled, and several others lost their lives.

After that, there were no more protests about his leadership.

We maintain ironclad alliances, of course, with both the Mackenzie clan and the Stuart clan, who possess the two strongest armies in all the Highlands.

We also have close ties with the Munro, Buchanan and Macintosh clans.

With the combined forces of the six armies, my husband feels confident we could win any war that might be waged.

Laird Campbell’s rebellion died along with him.

Without Campbell to rouse skirmishes across the Highlands, the landscape of our countryside has taken on—at least relative to what we had endured in recent years—a diplomatic, hospitable character.

We are frequently invited to balls and gatherings at nearby keeps, and we entertain more visitors than ever before.

An unprecedented number of interclan marriages have taken place in recent months, and our territories seem to have entered a time of peace and prosperity that is being celebrated far and wide.

Kade and his brothers suspect that small rebellions are discussed and planned among the less-prosperous outliers, and they remain ever watchful, but their confidence and preparation have, for now, proved adequate.

My sisters, as I am, are happier than I have ever seen them.

Clementine decided not to retreat to the nunnery after all.

She has found great satisfaction in the kitchens, and runs them with a flair that I didn’t even know she possessed.

Cooking, and especially baking, has become her passion, and she spends every waking hour orchestrating our family’s shared meals with great success.

My husband even commented once that our menus are now rivaling those even of the Mackenzie cooks—his highest compliment.

Bonnie married Jamie as soon as his recovery allowed. He walks with a limp but has regained his strength almost entirely. He remains one of Kade’s most dedicated soldiers.

Lottie renewed her romance with Aiden Buchanan, married him soon after and was swept away to the Buchanan keep in a flurry of festivity.

Each month she writes us elaborate letters detailing the very boisterous and sometimes scandalous activities of the lively Buchanan clan.

Her husband, she relays with obvious glee, entirely lives up to—and perhaps even surpasses—the Buchanans’ well-known reputation for “exuberance.”

Ann and Agnes have been inspired by the close friendship they have made with Kade’s sister Ailie and have taken up dressmaking, with surprisingly creative and successful results.

Their designs reflect both Ann’s whimsy and Agnes’s style, and they are overrun with requests for their skills, so much so that they now have a number of assistants.

For this reason, and that of our newfound prosperity, the ladies of our clan are looking more refined and fashionable than ever before.

Maisie, of all my sisters, is the one who still lacks a certain calling, save one.

I suspect, however, that the past several days have introduced new and pleasing possibilities.

We have been entertaining a group of Mackenzie and Stuart clanspeople, including soldiers who have come for a special event.

The first evening after their arrival, Maisie met a Mackenzie officer named Rory who just so happens to be Kade’s—and Wilkie’s—first cousin.

The resemblance is somewhat remarkable. Late that evening, I noticed Maisie and Rory in a rather intimate embrace.

I caught my sister’s sparkling eye as she was being led, quite willingly, away. I haven’t seen her since.

I still run into Caleb from time to time.

He has become a respected sword maker. He and Kade have even formed a somewhat stilted working relationship that seems to have eased, especially after Caleb’s betrothal to one of the village girls, a sweet, fair-haired weaver named Hazel. I wish them only joy.

My husband has been true to his word. His love for me infuses my life. He dedicates his every waking hour to my safety and my happiness. And now, in my delicate condition, he refuses to leave my side.

After our initial trials and tribulations smoothed out, I have found that the complex layers of Kade’s personality, once peeled away through patience and gentle affection, expose astounding revelations.

My husband is moody and volatile, aye. He is gruff and aggressive.

These traits are natural by-products of his position and his overt masculinity.

But underneath his strength, at the very heart of him, exists the kindest, gentlest and most loving person I have ever known.

His love is unconditional and overwhelmingly heartfelt.

Over time, as I learned to trust him, Kade, too, has learned to trust me.

He is highly tactile, and likes us to spend our private time together close, touching me and caring for me not only physically but emotionally, as well.

He takes great interest in my innermost thoughts and my feelings, and each evening asks intricate questions about my activities during the day, when we have spent time apart.

If there is something that bothers me, he’ll address it directly and immediately, working through any problem until he is satisfied that I am no longer fearful or distraught.

It is one of the most endearing qualities of him: he notices details, proving to me, time and time again, that he cares for me, and deeply.

I have never felt more treasured or more loved.

In the past few months, however, my husband’s care has become almost manic in its intensity.

I have been appointed a team of not only healers and caregivers, but also guards and attendants.

’Tis not necessary, but I can hardly blame him.

Both our mothers’ deaths, after all, were the result of complications during childbirth.

Kade’s brother Knox, more recently, also lost his wife and child, and I can read the terror in Kade’s expression, late at night as he lies next to me with his hands on my body, caressing and calming as though attempting to smooth away the dangers.

Three days ago, Wilkie and Roses arrived at Glenlochie with their two-month-old baby girl, named Mackenzie Rose Sophia Stuart, and a large entourage of protectors and attendants.

Roses, despite her slender, somewhat waiflike appearance, gave birth without difficulty.

Both she and her baby are strong and healthy: I know they must be or Wilkie would never have agreed to the travel.

Roses’s personal healer and closest friend, Ismay, is never far from her side, nor the baby’s.

And Roses herself is a talented healer. Both she and Ismay have offered to help me at the birth of my child, and although our clan has its own team of gifted healers, I am comforted to know that they will be on hand.

And Kade’s other siblings are also visiting, Ailie with her betrothed, Magnus Munro, the tall and brooding copper-haired laird-in-waiting for the Munro clan.

He is never far from her side. And Knox Mackenzie, much to his siblings’ surprise, has taken an interest in a new arrival at Kinloch—a boisterous, red-headed city lass who, according to Christie, has caused some upheaval which I’ve yet to learn about.

What is clear enough is that Knox Mackenzie seems to be sporting an entirely new personality.

Gone is his stoic sternness; he is more quick to laugh and lighthearted than he’s been, Kade says, since the death of his wife.

Only Christie has yet to find a match as yet, but we have no doubt she will succumb eventually to one of the many men who pursue her.

I don’t believe Kade specifically asked any of them to come for the birth, but he readily agreed to it at their suggestion.

I know my husband is not only relieved but calmed by their presence here, and so am I.

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.