Chapter 22
Jules entered the Davisons’ ballroom silently. His gaze immediately went to Claire. She stood on a ladder, her head tilted back, facing the ceiling, a paintbrush in her hand.
He said nothing, made no sound, and yet she stopped as if sensing a presence and looked toward the door. He started toward her, all the while trying to discern the expression on her face. Did she look happy to see him?
In the long, lonely nights without her at his side, he had rehearsed so many speeches—all the things he’d longed to say. Yet not one word he had practiced came to him now as he watched her slowly descend the ladder.
Left without a place to start, he took the only course available to him and tipped his head back to study the painting she was creating on the ceiling of Brightwood Hall.
It was of the heavens parting to reveal a burst of bright light, surrounded by a host of angels.
“An interesting scene for a ballroom,” he replied, not knowing what else to say to his wife.
“It’s what Lady Davison wanted,” she said with a shrug. “I do not always have the freedom to choose what I paint.”
The sound of her voice was like music to his ears. Had anything ever sounded so sweet? “You can paint whatever you like at Kildare Manor.”
He looked back at her, saw the shock on her face, and knew he had to proceed now or lose the moment.
“You look well,” he said coming close enough to her to take the paintbrush from her hands.
He set it on the closest wrung of the ladder behind her, then took her hands in his.
The scent of paint and turpentine did not hide the fragrance he had come to know and love—the scent of lavender that always reminded him of her.
“I have been better,” she said nervously, her expression one of fear mixed with hope. “And you?”
He gently clutched her hands, praying the subtle pressure communicated what he was finding difficult to say. “Fine, if you take into account that I have been half dead for the past three and a half weeks.”
It took her a moment to comprehend what he was saying, and when she did, tears filled her eyes.
“I’ve been working hard at the manor. The tenants are back, and with what money I had left from selling my mother’s ring, I was able to purchase seed for the crops.
If we can just hold on until next fall, our finances will be much better.
I hope that you will take that into consideration when I ask you to come home with me. ”
Tears shimmered in her glorious golden eyes, as did joy and relief. One tear broke free to roll down her cheek. “The money never mattered to me. It still doesn’t. As I got to know the laird of Kildare Manor, I wanted a different outcome from the one I’d been sent to obtain.”
His breath caught as he dared to hope. “What was that?”
“You. True love. A real family.” She dropped one of his hands and reached inside the bodice of her gown to pull out a gold chain that held her locket as well as another object. On that chain dangled his mother’s ring.
“How? Where?”
“I saw it in a store window in Edinburgh, and I realized what you had done in order to keep the estate afloat. I know how much this ring meant to you, as the only reminder you had of your mother. And as the only reminder I had of you, I bought it back.”
He frowned as he reached out and fingered the metal that still possessed the warmth of Claire’s body. “How did you get the money to buy it back?”
Releasing his other hand, she slipped the chain over her head and placed the ring, the locket, and chain in his hand. “I hired myself out as a painter, and since I did not intend to ever go back to Edinburgh, I moved us out of my studio.”
With a raw ache in his voice he said, “That studio was your livelihood, your life.”
She shook her head. “Something else took its place not too long ago as the center of my world.”
He hid a smile as he unhooked the chain and slipped the ring off.
The rubies caught the light, sparkled as though they had suddenly come back to life.
He took her left hand in his. “I know I have no right to ask you this, not after everything I put you through, but you would make me the happiest man in the world if you would take a second chance with me. You as you. Me as me. No secrets. No ulterior motives. What do you think?”
Tears spilled onto her cheeks. She nodded. “It is an honor to meet you, Lord Kildare,” she said, her voice rough with tears.
“This question is long overdue, but Claire Elliot MacIntyre, it would mean the world to me if you would wear this ring as a sign of my love and be my wife.”
“I already am your wife.”
“Then let me marry you again, and be by your side as we take our vows. No proxy. Only me. Will you do it, Claire?”
“Yes, Jules, I will marry you again and live the rest of my days in your company because without you, the sun does not shine.”
Moved by her tears, Jules slipped the ring on her finger and pulled her against his chest. He did not feel so empty anymore. Nay, his soul felt full to overflowing with love and joy.
“I will need a lifetime to make up for all the pain I’ve caused you,” Jules spoke the words in his heart. “I am so sorry for my hurtful words the last time we were together. I did not mean—”
She kissed him, cutting off his words. “Don’t torture yourself,” she said several moments later.
“We hurt each other. And that is in the past. Second chances mean a fresh start. There are no ghosts of the past to haunt us any longer. It’s just you and me and the girls—” She pulled back suddenly as her eyes filled with concern. “The girls. I cannot abandon them.”
He smiled and cupped her face between his palms, wiping her tears away with his thumbs. “The girls are already on their way back to our home,” he whispered, his voice raw with his own unshed tears. “I do not want just a wife, Claire, I want a family. That includes the girls.”
Fresh tears glistened in her eyes. “How did you know we were here?”
“Penelope.”
“Remind me to thank her later,” Claire said as she valiantly tried to hold back her tears.
“Much later,” Jules said with a smile as he gathered Claire to him. He bent to kiss her.
“Can I ask you something?” she asked, stalling his movements.
His eyes widened as he stopped midway to her lips. “Now?”
She nodded as determination flared in her golden eyes.
He released a frustrated sigh. “Anything for you, my dear. What would you like to know?”
She hesitated for a heartbeat then said, “I want to know what happened between you and Agatha, but only if it will not hurt you to disclose that secret.”
“I have no secrets where you are concerned. Not anymore.” Jules threaded his fingers through hers.
“Agatha demanded my father bring me home from the Lennoxes. She did so under the pretense that she wanted us all to be a family.” He could feel his lips twist into a bitter smile. “She did not want a family.”
Claire looked at him, her brow furrowed. “What did she want?”
“Agatha came to my bed two days after I returned. I turned her away. She came again the next night, and I did the same. She begged, she pleaded, she teased. She knew exactly what she was doing to me, the torment she caused. She kept at it every night for weeks, months, then years.” He shook his head at the unpleasant memory. “I would not cuckold my father.”
“No one around you knew the truth?”
He shrugged. “No one saw what Agatha did not want them to see, but the servants all knew I was angry with her. They could see my hatred, and that only fed into the lies she told them about me.”
“That must have been very hard for a young man to be so alone with such a big secret weighing on him,” she said with sympathy instead of the repulsion he had feared.
“One day I told Agatha I’d had enough. The torment would stop or I would go to my father and tell him what she was.” He could feel one corner of his lips lift in a twisted smile. “She wasn’t pleased.”
“What did she do?”
“The next day she was found dead. I know now she’d arranged everything to look like I’d poisoned her. She played upon the anger I felt for her and pitted the servants against me. Without proof otherwise, I was convicted of murder and sentenced to hang. But Jane changed that outcome.”
She shivered and held his hand more tightly. “How?”
“Because I could no longer look at my father without wanting to harm myself, I left Kildare Manor that night. I rode all night to reach Bellhaven Castle, Jane’s home. She testified that I could have been nowhere near my own home when the murder took place.”
“Then why did they charge you at all?” Claire asked.
“Because shortly before I left for Bellhaven, I had purchased poison. I had intended to kill her. For that, I was sentenced to time in gaol until someone could pay my ransom. I deserved what punishment I was dealt, because if I had stayed at Kildare Manor that night, I would have killed her.”
“Thinking of something and doing it are two very different things.” Claire looked at him in astonishment.
“Your father brought that woman into your household and let her hurt you. If anyone is to blame, besides that monster who pretended to be your mother, it was your father for closing his eyes to what was before him.”
He nodded his agreement. “I came to that same conclusion this morning. And despite it all, I forgave my father. Just like the two of us, he made mistakes. If I was ever going to move forward with my life, I had to let go of the anger I felt toward him, and even toward Agatha.”
His brow furrowed as he held Claire’s hands. “You’re trembling.”
“I’m not as forgiving, I fear. I don’t like what that woman did to you.” Her voice was raw. “She hurt you. She can hurt you still.”