By February, the days were beginning to grow longer again, but the weather remained cold and snowy. By March, the snow came less frequently, more often than not mixing with the rain. India's belly was now enormous, and she waddled when she walked, but she never complained. Instead, she would lie upon her bed, her hand protectively cradling her stomach, a dreamy expression upon her face as she wondered what her child would look like. It would be a boy, of course. Her instinct told her that. What would she call him? She knew that Caynan Reis had been a European by birth, but that was all she knew. His origins, and his name remained a mystery to her. If she had known his name, she would have named her child after his father, but she hadn't a clue.
Finally, she decided. "I shall call him Rowan after our own father," India told her younger sister one rainy March afternoon.
"Rowan what?" Fortune asked frankly.
"He'll have to have my name, as I don't know his father's," India replied just as frankly. "Rowan Lindley. I like it!"
"And what will you do after Rowan Lindley is born? You don't still mean to go off by yourself with your child, India, do you?" Fortune was beginning to worry about her sister.
"It is what I want to do," India replied calmly. "I will not bring shame upon you, and ruin your chances of marriage because of my adventures."
"God's blood!" Fortune swore. "Do you think I care what people may say? I am Lady Fortune Lindley, daughter of the late marquis of Westleigh, an heiress in my own right, and anyone who does not love my family-all my family-can go to the devil. Think about it, India. Our heritage is greater than anyone's. Our grandfather was a great ruler of a great land. Our great-grandmother bested a mighty queen, and lived to tell the tale. What a woman she was, Madame Skye! We are women who make our own rules in life, and then live by them. We are not mealymouthed, pious little kirk-goers who live dully, and sin in the shadows. We live as we please, do as we please, and the devil take any who would dare to criticize us!"
India burst out laughing. "Do you know how much I missed you when I was away, Fortune?"
"Well," Fortune replied. "I am your sister!" Then she jumped up. "It isn't raining hard. Get your cloak, and let's go for a walk."
"Take your boots off before you come into this house then," Meggie warned them. "I'll nae hae you two tracking mud all over my clean floors!" She glared at them sternly.
"Come with us," India begged.
"I'm nae a duck, my lady," Meggie said, "and besides I hae to start the dinner. Rabbit stew."
"Again?" the sisters chorused.
"Be glad spring is here," Meggie said sharply. " 'Twill be the last of the carrots and onions you see in that stew tonight, and lucky we are to hae it. Almost everything is gone, and only that Diarmid trapped the rabbit this morning, we'd be haeing bread and toasted cheese."
The sisters walked through the forest to a high meadow. The light rain stopped, and the sun peeped out now and again from behind the thinning clouds.
When they returned to the lodge, Meggie's stew was bubbling in the pot, and it smelled wonderful. India slowly climbed the narrow little staircase to the bedchamber to lie down, for she was tired and her back hurt. She awoke to a piercing pain.
"Meggie! Fortune!" she called, struggling to sit up.
Hearing her call, the two girls raced up the stairs, and into the bedchamber. One look told them that India was probably about to have her child early.
"Do you know what to do?" Fortune asked Meggie.
Meggie swallowed hard, saying, "I think so. I was there when my mother birthed her last child. We'll need hot water, clean clothes, and, for God's sake, send Diarmid down to Glenkirk to tell the duchess. She'll want to come and be with my lady India. This could take hours."
Fortune flew from the room, dashed down the stairs, filled the cauldron with water, and set it to boil. Then out into the stable yard she ran, calling to Diarmid as she went. The big man took one look at the girl, and knew the reason for her fright and excitement.
"Get yer horse, Mistress Fortune, and ride to fetch yer mam and yer da. Ye're no use here, I can see. I'll be more help to Meggie than ye will, lassie, meaning no offense to ye."
Fortune didn't argue with the big man. She knew he was being kind, and, more important, speaking the truth. "I've put a kettle on to boil, and there's a stack of clean cloths we prepared for this occasion in the cupboard in the fireplace wall, Diarmid."
He nodded, and walked toward the lodge as she hurried into the stable to saddle her gray. It was a two-hour ride to Glenkirk, but she would make it before sunset. Still Mama would be coming up the ben in the darkness, but come she would. Fortune tightened the cinch on the gray, and clambered onto his back, riding him right out the stable doors and onto the track that led down the ben toward Glenkirk.
India's labor was hard, but very, very short. She sweated, and she swore blue oaths that turned Meggie's face bright red, and set Diarmid to chuckling as he encouraged her onward.
"Ohh, m'lady, dinna let the bairn hear such words, and him just coming new into the world," Meggie pleaded with her mistress.
"Bloody hell!" India snarled. "It hurts, damn it! Why won't the little wretch be born? Ahhhhh! Merde! Merde! Merde!"
"Ye're doing fine, lassie," Diarmid said quietly. "Now, when ye feel the pain again, gie us a hard push to help the wee laddie along."
India nodded.
"I dinna think you should be here," Meggie fretted.
"He stays!" India snapped. "He obviously knows more about this than you do. Besides, I suspect there's nothing I have that Diarmid hasn't already seen. Ooooooooh!"
"Push, lassie! Push! Ah, there's a good lass," Diarmid said calmly in the very same tone India had heard him use with the collie. "And here's his wee head, dark as a raven's wing, it is. Gie us another push, lassie." And when India complied, he said, "he's half born now," and, bending, he opened the infant's mouth and pulled a clot of mucus out of it.
The baby took a breath, and began to wail.
"Ohhhh! Ohhh! Ohhhh!" India cried, and, feeling herself swept by another spasm, she pushed hard again, and felt the baby sliding fully from her body. "Is he all right? Let me see him!" she cried out to them.
Meggie had caught the child in a linen cloth as it was born. She wrapped it about the baby, and lay him on his mother's belly. "Here he is, my lady," she said, tears in her eyes.
India cradled her son for a long moment. He did have black hair, and the blue eyes that looked up at her were the eyes of Caynan Reis. Tears slipped down her face as she looked at this miracle their love for each other had wrought. The baby had stopped crying now. "Rowan Lindley is your name, my son," she whispered to him.
"Gie me back the laddie, my lady," Diarmid said. "I must cut the cord, and ye must let Meggie finish what ye hae started. Ye dinna need me here now." He took the child, neatly cutting and knotting the cord. Then, without another word, he left the bedchamber.
"Thank you, Diarmid More-Leslie!" India called after him.
Meggie now wiped the baby free of the birthing blood with warmed oil and wine. Then she swaddled the infant, giving him back to India, who pushed the afterbirth from her body into the basin Meggie held. Setting the ewer aside, the servant took the child again, and set him in his cradle by India's side. Then she helped her mistress up, bathed her, gave her a fresh shift, settled her in the chair by the fire, and changed the linens on the bed. Finally she helped India back into the bed, returning the baby to her to cuddle. Then, gathering up all the debris of the birthing process, she said, "I'll leave you wi the bairn, m'lady. I'll come back shortly wi a nice hot posset to nourish you, and put wee Master Rowan in his cradle then."
India lay quietly cuddling her newborn son. He was everything Caynan Reis would have wanted. Beautiful and strong of limb. She searched his small face for some sign of his father, but only the blue eyes reminded her of her husband. The little baby face was entirely unfamiliar, but the look he suddenly gave her was direct and fierce. "We will do fine, you and I, Rowan, son of Caynan Reis," she told him. The infant closed his eyes, and was immediately asleep, safe in the comfort of his mother's arms. Looking through the window, India could see a magnificent sunset.
She was half dozing when Meggie returned, bringing with her a mixture of herbs, eggs, and rich red wine. The servant took the baby and set him in his cradle which she moved to the warmth of. the fireplace. India drank down the nourishment, and, handing the goblet back to Meggie, fell asleep. Meggie tiptoed from the room, and back down the stairs to join Diarmid in the common room.
"I'll get us some supper," she said. "My lady and the bairn are sleeping. "Tis been a long day. Do you think the duke and duchess will come tonight, Diarmid?"
"Aye," he answered her. "The duchess will be anxious over her eldest lass. They'll come. Mistress Fortune will hae reached Glenkirk long since, I'm thinking. 'Tis only sunset now, and the twilight will last a bit longer. They'll come wi torches up the ben. The dogs will let us know when they approach."
She served them up plates of rabbit stew, bread, and cheese. They toasted Rowan Lindley in the last of the brown October ale. He helped her with the washing up, and then together they sat companionably by the fire, talking low.
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