"I've a lovely little black mare with me you might enjoy," Rory said to Fortune, releasing her hand.
"I'd prefer that fine dappled gray gelding," Fortune said pointing, and quickly recovering from her earlier sensitivities.
"He's a wee bit unpredictable," the estate manager cautioned.
"So am I," Fortune-replied with a mischievous grin.
Rory Maguire laughed heartily. "Do you think you can handle him, my lady? I'll not have you being tossed about. 'Twould be a poor welcome home, I'm thinking."
"There's not a horse alive I can't handle," Fortune boasted.
Maguire looked to the duke and duchess, and when James Leslie nodded his approval, the Irishman said, "His name is Thunder, my lady. Come, and I'll give you a hand up."
"My baggage?" Fortune queried.
"We'll need several carts," Jasmine said. "Fortune brought all her possessions as she hopes to remain here in Ireland."
"We can hire them here in town," Rory replied. "I wasn't certain the lassie would be remaining or not."
"Is William Devers a bad catch then?" Fortune asked boldly.
Rory chuckled again. "Nay, my lady. He's considered quite the pick of the district. Tall and handsome, he is, with a fine estate up in Lisnaskea which will one day be his own. Not as big as Maguire's Ford, mind you, but more than respectable. There'll be a lot of disappointed lassies the day he picks a wife and marries, I'm thinking."
Fortune grew silent now. So William Devers was considered desirable by the ladies. He probably had a large head to go with his large estate. She walked across the dock to where the gray gelding stood stamping his feet with impatience. Taking the animal by his bridle she looked directly into his eyes, her other hand rubbing his velvety muzzle. "Well now, laddie, you're a handsome fellow. I do believe we'll get on just fine. Ready for a good long run? I surely am, but you must behave yourself until we get out of the town and onto the high road. Then we'll race the wind, you and I!"
Rory Maguire watched the girl speaking softly with the horse. He had felt a strange feeling when he had first looked upon her. It was as if he knew her, and yet that was not possible. He had not quite yet shaken off the sensation but he approved her actions with the animal. Cupping his hands together he helped her to mount Thunder. "Up you go, my lady." Only as he boosted her was he suddenly aware that the horse did not have a lady's saddle, but the girl mounted astride, obviously used to riding that way. He untied the animal from its hitching ring.
Thunder danced a bit as he accepted the new weight upon his back. He tossed his head to test her mettle, but she held him firm, her hands resting with seeming lightness upon the reins, her knees pressing against the horse's sides, warning him, guiding him. "Easy, laddie," she soothed him, and his ears pressed back, listening to the soft voice, new but a moment ago, now familiar. He quieted.
Rory Maguire smiled and nodded, pleased. The girl was a natural horsewoman. Turning he looked to see the boxes and trunks being unloaded off the ship. "Mary, Mother of God," he muttered beneath his breath. "I've never seen such a muck."
The duke laughed. He had had the same reaction when he first saw all of Fortune's luggage. "I've had the captain send into the town for wagons to transport my daughter's belongings. We dinna have to wait. Do ye hae horses for my wife and for me?"
"Aye, my lord. The lady can ride the black mare. 'Twas a black mare you last rode to Maguire's Ford," he recalled with a quick smile at Jasmine, and she nodded. "And I've a fine stallion for you, my lord. He's just trained. I couldn't bear to geld him, and so I must keep him separate from the breeding stock. We'll probably sell him to someone who needs a new breeder. He'll fetch a fine price as do all our animals. The descendants of Nightwind and Nightsong are very valuable animals. Who's to ride in the coach?"
"Adali and Rohana," Jasmine said.
"So they're still with you, eh? What happened to the other little lass you had, my lady?"
"Toramalli is a married woman now," Jasmine answered him. "She and her husband are at Glenkirk, our home in Scotland, making certain our three sons behave themselves. Patrick is fourteen now, while his younger brothers are thirteen and ten. We thought to bring Adam and Duncan with us, but they preferred having a summer without us."
"Then you expect to return home fairly quickly?" Rory asked.
"Aye," Jasmine replied. "William Devers has been recommended by both my priestly cousin and by the Reverend Mr. Steen. If he and Fortune please each other there will be a wedding before summer's end, Rory. If that happens, the daughter born at Maguire's Ford will make Ireland her home. I hope he will turn out to be Fortune's future, for I should like my daughter to be happy and settled."
" 'Tis every mother's wish," Rory answered her. Ahh, how lovely she was despite her years. He almost sighed aloud.
"Good day, Master Maguire," the voice said, and Rory was pulled from his reverie.
Startled, he looked up, and into the face of Jasmine's faithful servant, Adali. The man never changed, he thought a bit irritably. The light brown face was still bland and smooth. The dark eyes piercing. "I thought not to see you again, Adali," he replied.
"Yet here I am like a bad penny," Adali smiled, showing a row of even white teeth. "All is in readiness for our journey?"
"Aye."
"Then let us depart," Adali said. He turned. "Rohana, get into the coach. I will shortly join you." He swiveled about again, speaking to the duke. "The wagons for my lady's possessions will be here shortly, my lord. Rohana has gathered everything that we will need for the journey and stored it in the coach. The wagons will travel more slowly than we will. I do not expect them at Erne Rock until at least a day after our arrival, but the ladies will certainly want to rest for a few days before entertaining, I am certain."
"Excellent," the duke replied as he swung himself into the saddle of the young stallion.
The day, which had been bright, now turned gray once again as a fine misty rain began to fall.
"A soft day, just like my first day in Ireland," Jasmine said, smiling at Rory Maguire. "Tell me how my cousin fares."
"He is well, and content as a mousie in its winter nest," came the answer. "He's a good man, Cullen Butler, for all he's a priest. He's not judgmental, or small-minded like so many of the others. As he so often admits, Rome would not approve of him at all, but Rome is very far away. At Maguire's Ford he is a blessing."
"And the Protestants we settled with their minister?"
"Good people, and hard working," Maguire replied. "Samuel Steen is cut very much from the same cloth as your cousin, my lady. He's sensible and open-minded. We've had no difficulties although others have, but then we both know the reasons for it."
"Pray God, Rory, that we can keep Maguire's Ford a place of peace for good people," Jasmine told him.
They rode for several hours, finally stopping at a small inn.
"This is a familiar place," Jasmine said, "and yet it was not here the last time. There was a farmhouse. A deserted woman and her poor bairns, Rory. What happened to her?"
He chuckled. "You don't know? Yer late husband, the English marquess, sent me back a month or so after you had settled in at Maguire's Ford. He purchased the farmhouse from Mistress Tully, and then hired her to run an inn here. With the monies he paid she did just that, and was able to keep her land to farm as well. Look at the name of the place, my lady. The Golden Lion. Mistress Tully said that's what the Englishman reminded her of, a lion. Hers is the only decent stopping place between here and Maguire's Ford. A lot of the English don't like it, but there's naught they can do since the place is owned by the most English marquess of Westleigh and his family."
"My son never said anything about this," Jasmine observed.
"He probably doesn't know, either. The administration of the inn and its business was assigned to me at Maguire's Ford. The marquess thought I would be better handling it than an absentee manager."
"My God, all these years, and I never knew! Rowan had such a good heart. I remember that poor woman with her big belly, and those wee ones crowding about her. I remember how poor the place was with its dirt floor and two wooden benches. I remember you telling me that her husband had deserted her to go with the earls, but that she would not leave the land. And yet look at it now," Jasmine concluded as they clattered into the courtyard of the inn. She could just make out the original farmhouse in the quadrangle of buildings that made up the inn.
It was all whitewashed, and neat as a pin with roses and other flowers growing about it. There was a large stable for at least two dozen horses. There was glass in the windows of the place, and several chimneys smoking gently. She could smell the aroma of roasting meat and poultry. The scent of good ale wafted out from the taproom. Several young men ran from the stables to take the horses.
"Come along," Rory Maguire said, helping Jasmine from her mare. "Come in and renew your acquaintance with Mistress Tully. She can speak English now. She quickly found it necessary to her survival."
The duke of Glenkirk found himself a bit piqued by the Irishman's easy manner with his wife. Then he consoled himself with the knowledge that other than Adali and Rohana, Maguire was only acquainted with Jasmine. His was a difficult position. He was not really a servant, having been born to the nobility. Yet he no longer possessed his lands, but rather managed them for an English landlord, who just happened to be the duchess of Glenkirk. I must get to know the man better, James Leslie thought to himself. He seems a good fellow after all, and has been honest with my wife's lands and retainers.
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