Our Sunday excerpt series continues!
Susan here, with an excerpt from my story, "A Scottish Carol," from our Word Wenches anthology, The Last Chance Christmas Ball . . .
On the way to Lady Holly's Christmas Ball at Holbourne Abbey, Dr. Henry Seton, Laird of Cranshaw, and Clarinda Douglas, Lady Hay, the widowed daughter of Henry's old mentor – meet again at Cranshaw's home in Scotland, awaiting others to travel to the ball. But a blizzard strands them alone together--and while Clary yearns to go to the grand ball, Henry is secretly relieved to miss it. As the snow flies and hearth flames crackle, both must face a shared past of passionate first love, heartbreak never forgotten, and the fear of starting over . . . .
December 1815
Scotland
“Sir.”
Firelight glowed and snow fell, and Dr. Henry Seton, Lord Cranshaw, dozed in the chair. The remnant of a dream stirred yearning, loneliness. He frowned.
"Sir.” A whisper.
Henry opened his eyes. A vision stood in the dim light of the doorway, an angel or a ghost clothed in frost and mist. A tall guardian hound stood by her side. The exquisite spirit watched him gently. Henry went still, wrapped in her spell.
“Lord Cranshaw. Pardon me. It is Yule Eve, and I am expected.” Slowly the figure came toward him. She limped, the dog buttressing her carefully. His dog. And—Clary? Could it be? He had not seen her for years—well, not like this. Actually he had seen her recently; she had been disguised as one of his medical students. Best not mention that, he thought.
He sat up, cleared his throat. “Pardon me,” he said gruffly.
“My fault,” Clarinda Douglas protested. “I did not mean to startle you.”
He got hastily to his feet. “I was just…reading.”
“I apologize. You looked quite as if you saw a ghost.”
Henry tipped his head. “In a way I have,” he murmured, “Miss Douglas. Greetings. I believe it is Lady Hay now?”
“Yes. Though I am widowed.” She moved, a tap of the cane, a slow step.
“I had heard. My condolences.” He took her hand, cool and slim in its soft little glove.
“Thank you.” She watched him. With those gray-blue eyes and flaxen hair, that pale coat and bonnet, she looked a fragile ice princess. No wonder he had thought her a ghost.
How strange to stand so close to her in the intimate warmth of his study, neither of them knowing what to say. He released her hand. “To what do I owe the pleasure?”
“I expected to meet your sister here.” She smiled—tremulously, he saw. He knew the spectrum of her smiles, anxious, sweet, mischievous…seductive. “Mrs. Seton-Graham and I are going to Lady Holbourne’s ball down in England.”
“You are my sister’s traveling companion?” He blinked, surprised. “She never said.”
“We are good friends,” she explained. Henry nodded, aware, though Fiona rarely mentioned Clary. “I was also invited to the Christmas ball at Holbourne Abbey, and Mrs. Seton-Graham kindly offered to share her coach. She said you…”
“Would not be here?” he supplied quietly.
Her fingers flexed on the cane’s ivory handle. A gift from her father when she turned sixteen, he remembered. “When your sister arrives we will leave, and be no bother to you.”
“You have not heard? Have a seat, Lady Hay. Here, Maximilian, out of there.” He moved the dog away from a low, scroll-end settee beside the fire.
She sat tentatively, primly, gloved hands clasped. “Heard what, Lord Cranshaw?”
She gasped. “The little girls, are they very ill?”
“Only chickenpox. They will soon be hale again. I take it you did not receive word?”
“No.” She pulled at her gloved fingers. “Oh, dear.”
“Indeed,” he murmured, watching her.
“But my coachman just left,” she said faintly. She straightened her shoulders. “Perhaps your coachman could bring me to him? Kendrick has gone to see family who live nearby. And Fiona lives west of here, I think. I could go there perhaps. I would not trouble you, but...I have no other transportation.” She frowned, chewed at her lip a little. An old habit that he remembered.
“My own coachman has left for the holiday, but I can take you to meet your man,” Henry offered. Hastening Clary away seemed a very good idea. Memories were crowding him already. “Fiona’s home is fourteen miles west, quite far in bad conditions. And if you have not had the chickenpox, I would not advise visiting. I can easily run you to meet your coachman.”
“I could not impose.”
“You must, if you wish to leave here,” he said, “and go to your ball.”
“Your sister said you were attending too. I thought you might be gone already.”
“I agreed to escort Fiona, but with her message and the worsening weather, I sent my own regrets by courier this morning.” He stopped. “Do you—require an escort to the ball?” He craved his solitude, but time was, he would have done anything for Clary Douglas. That was still true, he realized in dismay.
“My driver can take me to my cousins’ home near Holbourne.” She glanced at the window. “I am not sure what to do. The weather is turning rather poorly.”
“Nothing to worry over. I will take you to meet your coachman.” What the devil was in that brose, to make him so biddable? But it was Clary, he knew. She always had a damnable effect on him. He felt so--willing around her. Would do anything for her. The feeling came back now, here, seeing her again.
“Thank you, Lord Cranshaw.”
“Where is your coachman’s family home?”
“I do not know. The name is Kendrick.”
“Tenants of mine. They live a few miles from here. I can run you there. First, take some refreshment. You must be cold after your journey.”
“Should we not go now, before the roads are too slippery?”
Henry glanced out to see trees already whitening. “Perhaps your driver should return you to Edinburgh instead, Lady Hay.”
“He is a sensible driver, and we are expected down in England.” Clary shivered. “Oh. A hot drink first would be nice, if the cook or the housekeeper has something ready.” She glanced toward the door. Max now lay flopped over the threshold, a guardian decidedly off duty.
“My servants,” Henry said, “are gone.”
She blinked. “All of them?” She sat ramrod straight on the settee.
“Most. The forester—my groundskeeper—and his wife have a house on the property. Their son is one of the grooms. I’ll have him harness the chaise. With luck, he is in the stables looking after the horses. The other servants have left for the holiday. I expected to be away the week, but plans changed. We are alone here,” he finished, “but for Max.” He glanced at the dog.
“We should leave soon. It is—improper.”
“A bit awkward,” he admitted. “But we will be off soon enough. My housekeeper left a good brose, and there is claret. Or we could manage tea.”
“I do not want to be any trouble.”
Trouble? He nearly laughed. She had always been the sweetest form of trouble. But those days, and those feelings, were gone.
“Tea, then,” he said, sensing she wanted it. “I’ll go down to the kitchen.”
“Let me prepare it,” she offered.
“I am quite self-sufficient. It comes of having been in a regiment.”
“Yes—I heard. And heard that you made a good showing.”
“Quite,” he said curtly. He stepped over Max, who leaped up to pace between his master and his new friend. Then the deerhound trotted over to sit beside Clary.
Henry paused. She was having the same damnable effect on the dog.
I read this story last night and loved it. I enjoy second chance romances.
Posted by: Pamela DG | Sunday, November 25, 2018 at 12:59 PM
Thank you, Pamela, that's lovely to know. Dr. Henry Seton is one of my favorites among my heroes - so fun to match that very reserved sort with a heroine who challenges him to extend himself and learn something...even while he's teaching her something too. ;)
Posted by: Susan King | Sunday, November 25, 2018 at 01:30 PM
I enjoyed this story when I read The Last Chance Christmas Ball last year; I'm starting to think it must be time to re-read! Thanks for whetting my appetite.
Posted by: Kareni | Sunday, November 25, 2018 at 06:08 PM