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The Devil Wears Plaid Part 1

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The Devil Wears Plaid.

by Teresa Medeiros.

To our beautiful nieces Jennifer Medeiros and Maggie Marie Parham. Your grace, compa.s.sion for others, and love for the Lord are always an inspiration to me.

For my Michael, who makes every day of our life together a dream come true.

Acknowledgments.



A very special thank you to Andrea Cirillo and Peggy Gordijn, who look after me from sea to shining sea and beyond.

And to Lauren McKenna, for refusing to settle for anything less than my best.

Chapter One.

AH, JUST LOOK AT the dear la.s.s! She's all a'tremble with joy." the dear la.s.s! She's all a'tremble with joy."

"And who could blame her? She's probably been dreamin' o' this day her entire life."

"Aye, 'tis every la.s.s' dream, is it not? To wed a wealthy laird who can afford to grant her every wish?"

"She should consider herself blessed to have snared such an amazin' catch. With all those freckles, it's not as if she's any Great Beauty."

"I'd be willin' to wager she couldn't bleach them away with an entire jar o' Gowland's Lotion! And the copper shade o' her hair does make her look a wee bit common, don't you think? I heard the earl met her in London during her third and final final Season when all hope o' findin' a husband had nearly been lost. Why, she's already one-and-twenty, they say." Season when all hope o' findin' a husband had nearly been lost. Why, she's already one-and-twenty, they say."

"No! So turribly auld?" So turribly auld?"

"Aye, that's what I hear. She was on the verge o' bein' placed firmly on the shelf, she was, until our laird spotted her sittin' with the confirmed spinsters and sent one o' his men o'er to dance with her."

Even as she gazed straight ahead and valiantly fought to ignore the avid whispers of the two women gossiping on the front pew of the abbey, Emmaline Marlowe could not deny the truth in their words.

She had had been dreaming of this day her entire life. been dreaming of this day her entire life.

She'd dreamed of standing before an altar and pledging her heart and her lifelong fidelity to the man she adored. She'd never caught a clear glimpse of his face in those misty dreams but there could be no denying the pa.s.sion smoldering in his eyes as he vowed to love, honor and cherish her for the rest of his days.

She lowered her gaze to the quivering bouquet of dried heather in her hand, thankful the beaming onlookers who crowded the rows of long, narrow pews flanking the center aisle of the church were attributing her trembling to the joyful antic.i.p.ation any eager young bride about to speak her vows might feel. She was the only one who knew it had more to do with the chill that seemed to permeate the ancient stones of the abbey.

And her heart.

She stole a glance at the churchyard beyond the tall, narrow windows. A sky the color of unpolished pewter brooded over the vale, making the day look more like deep winter than mid-April. The skeletal branches of oak and elm had yet to sprout a single bud of green. Crooked gravestones lurched out of the stony soil, their epitaphs worn away by the relentless a.s.sault of wind and rain. Emma wondered how many of those who now slumbered beneath the ground had once been brides like her, young women full of hopes and dreams dashed too soon by choices made by others and the inescapable march of time.

The jagged crags of the mountain loomed over the churchyard like monuments to an even more primitive age. These harsh Highland climes where winter refused to yield its stubborn grip seemed a world away from the gently rolling hills of Lancashire where she and her sisters loved to romp with such careless abandon. Those hills were already green and tender with the promise of spring, beckoning home any wanderer foolish enough to forsake them.

Home, Emma thought, her heart seized by a sharp pang of longing. A place she would no longer belong after today. Emma thought, her heart seized by a sharp pang of longing. A place she would no longer belong after today.

She shot a panicked glance over her shoulder to find her parents sitting in the Hepburn family pew, beaming proudly at her through eyes glazed with tears. She was a good girl. A dutiful daughter. The one they had always relied upon to set a sound example for her three younger sisters. Elberta, Edwina and Ernestine were huddled together on the pew next to their mother, dabbing at their swollen eyes with their own handkerchiefs. If Emma could have convinced herself it was happiness that prompted her family's weeping, their tears might have been easier to bear.

More simpering whispers intruded upon her thoughts as the women resumed their conversation. "Just look at him! He still cuts a strikin' figure, doesn't he?"

"Indeed! It does one's heart proud. And you can tell he already dotes upon the la.s.s."

No longer able to deny the inevitability of her fate, Emma turned back to the altar and lifted her eyes to meet the adoring gaze of her bridegroom.

Then lowered them as she remembered she towered over his wizened form by over half a foot.

He grinned up at her, nearly dislodging the poorly fitted set of Wedgwood china teeth from his mouth. His cheeks all but disappeared as he sucked the teeth back in with a pop that seemed to echo through the abbey with the force of a gunshot. Emma swallowed, hoping the cataracts that clouded his rheumy blue eyes would render his vision poor enough to mistake her grimace of distaste for a smile.

His withered form was draped with the full regalia befitting his station as laird of the Hepburn lands and chieftain of Clan Hepburn. A billowing red and black plaid nearly swallowed his hunched shoulders. The matching tailored kilt exposed knees as bony as a pair of ivory doork.n.o.bs. A mangy sporran hung between his legs, the ceremonial purse balding in uneven patches just like his skull.

The two gossiping old biddies were right, Emma reminded herself sternly. The man was an earl-an extremely powerful n.o.bleman rumored to have both the respect of his peers and the ear of the king.

It was her duty to her family-and their rapidly dwindling fortunes-to accept the earl's suit. After all, it wasn't her papa's fault he had been cursed with a pa.s.sel of daughters instead of being blessed with sons who could have gone out and made their own fortunes in the world. Emma's catching the Earl of Hepburn's eye just before donning the drab mantle of spinsterhood had been a stroke of extraordinary good luck for them all. Thanks to the generous settlement the earl had already bestowed upon her father, her mother and sisters would never again have to be startled from their sleep by the terrifying racket of creditors banging on the front door of their ramshackle manor house or spend their every waking moment in fear of being carted off to the workhouse.

Emma might be the prettiest Marlowe girl among her sisters, but she was not so attractive that she could afford to turn down such an ill.u.s.trious suitor. During their grueling journey to this isolated corner of the Highlands, her mother had discussed every detail of her upcoming nuptials with determined good cheer. When they reached the rolling foothills and the earl's home had finally come into view, her sisters had dutifully gasped with admiration, not realizing their pretended envy was more painful to Emma than overt pity.

No one could deny the splendor of the ancient castle nestled beneath the shadow of the lofty, snow-capped crag of Ben Nevis-a castle that had welcomed the Hepburn lords and their brides for centuries. When this day was done, Emma would be its mistress as well as the earl's bride.

As she blinked down at her bridegroom, she struggled to transform her grimace into a genuine smile. The old man had been the very soul of kindness to her and her family ever since spotting her across that crowded public a.s.sembly room during one of the last b.a.l.l.s of the Season. Instead of sending an emissary on his behalf, he had traveled all the way to Lancashire himself to court her and seek her papa's blessing.

He had conducted himself like a true n.o.bleman during his calls, never once making a disparaging remark about their shabby drawing room with its faded carpet, peeling wallpaper and mismatched furniture or casting a contemptuous eye over her own outmoded and much-darned gowns. Judging by his courtly charm and gracious demeanor, one would have thought he was taking tea at Carlton House with the Prince Regent.

He had treated Emma as if she were already a countess, not the eldest daughter of an impoverished baronet one ill-considered wager away from the poorhouse. And he had never once arrived empty-handed. A stern-faced footman always followed one step behind the earl, his burly arms laden with gifts-hand-painted fans, gla.s.s bugle beads and colorful fashion plates for Emma's sisters; French-milled lavender-scented soap and handsome bolts of muslin and dimity for her mother; bottles of the finest Scotch whisky for her papa; and leather-bound editions of William Blake's Songs of Innocence Songs of Innocence or f.a.n.n.y Burney's latest novel for Emma herself. They might have been only trinkets to a man of the earl's means, but such luxuries had been in scarce supply around the manor house for a very long time. His generosity had brought a flush of pleasure to her mother's wan cheeks and elicited genuine shrieks of delight from Emma's sisters. or f.a.n.n.y Burney's latest novel for Emma herself. They might have been only trinkets to a man of the earl's means, but such luxuries had been in scarce supply around the manor house for a very long time. His generosity had brought a flush of pleasure to her mother's wan cheeks and elicited genuine shrieks of delight from Emma's sisters.

Emma owed the man her grat.i.tude and her loyalty, if not her heart.

Besides, how long could he possibly live? she thought with a desperate twinge of guilt. she thought with a desperate twinge of guilt.

Although the earl was rumored to be nearly eighty years of age, he looked closer to one hundred and fifty. Judging by his grayish pallor and the consumptive hiccup marring each of his breaths, he might not even survive their wedding night. As a fetid blast of that breath wafted to her nostrils, Emma swayed on her feet, fearing she might not survive it either.

Almost as if she had read Emma's grim thoughts, one of the women sitting on the front pew whispered primly, "One thing you can say about our laird-he ought to have ample experience in pleasin' a woman."

Her companion failed to smother a rather porcine snort. "Indeed he should. Especially since he's already outlived three wives and all the bairns they produced, not to mention a gaggle o' mistresses."

The image of her elderly bridegroom gumming her lips in a fumbling parody of pa.s.sion sent a fresh shudder coursing down Emma's spine. She still hadn't quite recovered from having to sit through her mother's painfully earnest instructions on what would be expected of her on the wedding night. As if the act described hadn't been horrid or humiliating enough, her mother had also informed her that if she turned her face away and wriggled a bit beneath him, the earl's exertions would be over that much more quickly. If his attentions became too arduous, she was to close her eyes and think of something pleasant-like a particularly lovely sunrise or a tin of fresh sugar biscuits. Once he was finished with her, she would be free to tug down the hem of her nightdress and go to sleep.

Free, Emma's heart echoed with a throb of despair. After this day she would never be free again. Emma's heart echoed with a throb of despair. After this day she would never be free again.

She averted her eyes from her groom's hopeful face to find the earl's great-nephew glowering at her. Ian Hepburn was the only person in the abbey who looked as unhappy as she felt. With his high Roman brow, dimpled chin and sleek dark hair gathered at the nape in a satin queue, he should have been a handsome man. But on this day the cla.s.sical beauty of his features was tainted by an emotion dangerously close to hatred. He did not approve of this match, no doubt fearing her nubile young body would produce a new Hepburn heir and deprive him of his inheritance.

As the minister droned on, reading from the Book of Common Order, Emma looked over her shoulder again to see her mother turn her face into her papa's coat as if she could no longer bear to watch the proceedings. Her sisters were beginning to sniffle more loudly by the minute. Ernestine's sharp little nose was as pink as a rabbit's and judging by the violent quiver of Edwina's plump bottom lip, it was only a matter of time before she broke into full-fledged sobs.

Soon the minister's ramblings would draw to a close, leaving Emma with no choice but to pledge her devotion and her body to this shriveled stranger.

She cast a wild-eyed glance behind her, wondering what they would all do if she lifted the lace-trimmed hem of her silk wedding dress and made a mad dash for the door. She'd heard numerous cautionary tales of careless travelers disappearing into the Highland wilderness, never to be seen or heard from again. At the moment, it sounded like a wonderfully tempting prospect. After all, it wasn't as if her decrepit groom could chase her down, toss her over his shoulder and haul her back to the altar.

As if to underscore that fact, the earl began to croak out his vows. Too soon, he was done and the minister was looking expectantly at her.

As was everyone else in the abbey.

As her silence dragged on, one of the women murmured, "Och, the puir la.s.s is overcome with emotion."

"If she swoons, he'll naught be able to catch her without breakin' his back," her companion whispered.

Emma opened her mouth, then closed it again. It had gone as dry as cotton, forcing her to wet her lips with the tip of her tongue before she made another attempt at speech. The minister blinked at her from behind his steel-rimmed spectacles, the compa.s.sion in his kind brown eyes bringing her dangerously near to tears.

Emma glanced over her shoulder again but this time it wasn't her mother or her sisters who captured her gaze but her papa.

There was no mistaking the pleading look in his eyes. Eyes the exact same dusky blue shade as hers. Eyes that had for too long looked both haunted and hunted. She would almost swear the tremor in his hands had decreased since the earl had signed over the settlement. She hadn't seen him reach for the flask he always kept tucked in his waistcoat pocket even once since she'd accepted the earl's proposal.

In his encouraging smile, she caught a glimpse of another man-a younger man with clear eyes and steady hands whose breath smelled of peppermint instead of spirits. He would swoop down and whisk her up to his shoulders for a dizzying ride, making her feel as if she was queen of all she surveyed instead of just a grubby toddler with skinned knees and a snaggle-toothed smile.

She also saw something in her father's eyes that she hadn't seen for a very long time-hope.

Emma turned back to her bridegroom, squaring her shoulders. Despite what the onlookers might believe, she had no intention of weeping or swooning. She had always prided herself on being made of sterner stuff than that. If she must marry this earl to secure the future and fortunes of her family, then marry him she would. And she would strive to be the best wife and countess his wealth-and t.i.tle-could buy.

She was opening her mouth-fully prepared to promise to love, cherish and obey him, for better or worse, in sickness and in health, till death did them part-when the double doors of iron-banded oak at the rear of the abbey came crashing open, letting in a blast of wintry air and a dozen armed men.

The abbey erupted in a chorus of startled shrieks and gasps. The men fanned out among the pews, their unshaven faces grim with determination, their pistols held at the ready to quell any sign of resistance.

Instead of fear, Emma felt a ridiculous flare of hope ignite in her heart.

As the initial outcry subsided, Ian Hepburn boldly stepped into the center aisle of the abbey, placing himself between the forbidding mouths of the intruders' weapons and his great-uncle. "What is the meaning of this?" he shouted, his clipped tones ringing from the vaulted ceiling. "Have you savages no respect for the house of the Lord?"

"And which lord would that be?" a man responded in a Scots burr so deep and rich it sent an involuntary shiver down Emma's spine. "The one who formed these mountains with His own hands or the one who believes he was born with the right to rule them?"

She gasped along with everyone else as the owner of that voice rode a towering black horse right through the doorway of the abbey. A shocked murmur went up as the wedding guests shrank back into their pews, their avid gazes reflecting equal parts fear and fascination. Oddly enough, Emma's gaze wasn't transfixed by the magnificent beast with its gleaming barreled chest and flowing ebony mane but by the man straddling the steed's imposing back.

Thick, sable wings of hair framed his sun-bronzed face, presenting a startling contrast to the frosty green of his eyes. Despite the chill of the day, he wore only a green and black woolen kilt, a pair of lace-up boots, and a sleeveless vest of beaten brown leather that exposed his broad, smooth chest to the elements. He handled the beast as if he'd been born to the saddle, his powerful shoulders and well-muscled forearms barely showing a strain as he guided the horse right up the aisle, forcing Ian to stumble backward or be trampled by the animal's deadly hooves.

From beside her, Emma heard the earl hiss, "Sinclair!" "Sinclair!"

She turned to find her elderly groom's face suffused with color and twisted with hatred. Judging by the ripe, purple vein pulsing in his temple, he might not survive the wedding, much less the wedding night.

"Forgive me for interrupting such a tender moment," the intruder said without so much as a trace of remorse as he reined his mount to a prancing halt halfway down the aisle. "Surely you didn't think I could resist dropping by to pay my respects on such a momentous occasion. My invitation must have been lost in the post."

The earl shook one palsied fist at him. "The only invitation any Sinclair is likely to receive from me is a writ of arrest from the magistrate and a date with the hangman."

In reaction to the threat, the man simply arched one bemused eyebrow. "I had such high hopes that the next time I darkened the door of this abbey, it would be for your funeral, not another wedding. But you always have been a randy auld goat. I should have known you couldn't resist buying another bride to warm your bed."

For the first time since he'd muscled his way into the abbey, the stranger's mocking gaze flicked toward her. Even that brief glance was enough to bring a stinging flush to Emma's fair cheeks, especially since his words held the undeniable and d.a.m.ning ring of truth.

This time it was almost a relief when Ian Hepburn once again sought to impose himself between them. "You may mock us and pretend to be avenging your ancestors as you always do," he said, a sneer curling his upper lip, "but everyone on this mountain knows that the Sinclairs have never been anything more than common cutthroats and thieves. If you and your ruffians have come to divest my uncle's guests of their jewels and purses, then why don't you b.l.o.o.d.y well get on with it and stop wasting your breath and our time?"

With surprising strength, Emma's groom shoved his way past her, nearly sending her sprawling. "I don't need my nephew to fight my battles. I'm not afraid of an insolent whelp like you, Jamie Sinclair," he snarled, marching right past his nephew with one bony fist still upraised. "Do your worst!"

"Oh, I haven't come for you, auld mon." A lazy smile curved the intruder's lips as he drew a gleaming black pistol from the waistband of his kilt and pointed it at the snowy white bodice of Emma's gown. "I've come for your bride."

Chapter Two.

AS EMMA GAZED INTO the stranger's glacial green eyes over the mouth of his pistol, it suddenly occurred to her that there might be worse fates than agreeing to wed a doddering old man. The thick, sooty lashes framing those eyes did nothing to veil the unspoken threat glittering in their depths. the stranger's glacial green eyes over the mouth of his pistol, it suddenly occurred to her that there might be worse fates than agreeing to wed a doddering old man. The thick, sooty lashes framing those eyes did nothing to veil the unspoken threat glittering in their depths.

At the sight of the pistol pointed at Emma's breast, her mother clapped a hand over her mouth to m.u.f.fle a broken cry. Elberta and Edwina clutched at each other, the cl.u.s.ters of silk violets on their matching bonnets trembling and their blue eyes wide with shock, while Ernestine began to paw through her reticule for her smelling salts.

Her father leapt to his feet but made no move to leave the pew. It was as if he was frozen in place by some force more powerful than his devotion to his daughter. "I say, man," he barked, steadying his hands on the back of the pew in front of him, "what in the devil is the meaning of this?"

While the minister backed toward the altar, deliberately distancing himself from Emma, the earl lowered his clenched fist and slowly shuffled backward, leaving a clear path between Emma's heart and the loaded pistol. Judging by the expectant hush that had fallen over the rest of the guests, she and Sinclair might have been the only two souls in the abbey. Emma supposed some response was required of her as well-that she ought to swoon or burst into tears or plead prettily for her life.

Knowing that was exactly what the villain probably expected her to do gave her the courage to tamp down her own budding terror and stand straight and tall, to lift her chin and meet his ruthless gaze with a defiant glare of her own. She dug her fingernails into the bouquet to hide the violent quaking of her hands, crushing the lingering perfume of the heather from the crisp blooms. For an elusive second, another emotion flickered through those frosty green eyes-one that might have been amus.e.m.e.nt... or admiration.

It was Ian Hepburn's turn to march past his uncle, his dark eyes smoldering with contempt. He stopped a healthy distance from the man on horseback. "So now you've sunk to defiling churches and and threatening to shoot helpless, unarmed women. I suppose I should have expected no better from a b.a.s.t.a.r.d like you, threatening to shoot helpless, unarmed women. I suppose I should have expected no better from a b.a.s.t.a.r.d like you, Sin, Sin," he added, hissing the nickname as if it were the vilest of epithets.

Sinclair briefly shifted his gaze from Emma to Ian, his grip on the pistol unwavering. "Then you're not to be disappointed, are you, auld friend?"

"I'm not your friend!" Ian shouted. Ian shouted.

"No," Sinclair replied softly, his voice tinged with what might have been either bitterness or regret. "I suppose you never were."

Even in retreat, the earl remained defiant. "You're living proof that it takes more than studying at St. Andrews to turn a mountain rat into a gentleman! It must gall your grandfather beyond measure to know that sending you off to university was such a waste of his precious coins. Coins no doubt stolen from my own coffers by his motley band of rabble!"

The earl's insults didn't seem to faze Sinclair. "I wouldn't exactly call it a waste. If I hadn't gone to St. Andrews, I might have never made the acquaintance of your charming nephew here." That earned him a fresh glare from Ian. "But I will make sure to give my grandfather your regards the next time I see him."

So this brigand had lived among civilized folk for a time. That would explain why the roughest edges had been polished off his burr, leaving it even more dangerously silky and musical to Emma's ears.

"Just what do you plan to do, you miserable pup?" the earl demanded. "Have you come to hasten your own inevitable journey to h.e.l.l by murdering my bride in cold blood on the altar of a church?"

Emma was alarmed to note that her devoted bridegroom didn't look particularly dismayed by the prospect. With his t.i.tle and riches, she supposed it would be a simple enough matter for him to procure another bride. Ernestine and Elberta were both nearly old enough to wed. Perhaps her father would be allowed to keep the earl's settlement if he offered the man a choice between the two girls so the ceremony could proceed without further interruption.

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The Devil Wears Plaid Part 1 summary

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