"My daughter was sick that summer, you twit. She wasn't seeing anyone but her doctor."

"We couldn't have been told that? Instead of having the door slammed in our faces?"

"Bloody hell, you women exaggerate to extremes. No doors were slammed on you, though I swear, I'm going to make sure Mr. Jacobs learns how to do just that."

Hilary huffed off, but Sabrina caught her smirk as she did. So did Alice, who remarked next to her, "She's going to delight in tweaking his goatee on a regular basis now. Be good for the old coot, to get some spice added to his life."

Sabrina grinned. "Speaking of spice, I noticed Archie had you blushing quite a bit earlier. I think he likes you, Aunt Alice."

"Humph, that man would flirt with anything wearing a skirt, I'm sure," Alice replied, though there was a sparkle in her eyes as she said it.

"I'm not so sure about that," Sabrina continued to tease her. "In fact, I wouldn't be surprised if Aunt Hilary finds herself living quite alone soon, poor dear." "Now, don't you worry about my sister. She made the decision years ago that she'd live life to the fullest, which included experiencing more of it than an old maid would."

"You don't mean—?" Sabrina couldn't quite manage to say it.

Alice nodded. "She's been seeing that nice widower Sir Norton Aimsley from over Manchester way for years. In fact, I don't doubt that they were quite put out when you moved that ladder to your side of the house recently."

Sabrina blushed, and not just over imagining her aunt Hilary having trysts with lovers. Alice's remark meant that her aunts hadn't been fooled in the least about the roof needing repairs.

"Why don't they get married?"

"Because she won't leave me, and I refuse to live with her and her husband. But I expect that we'll be rearranging our priorities now that we've seen you so nicely settled."

This was said with a grin, and Sabrina didn't doubt that Alice was thinking about Archibald MacTavish again. She was thinking herself that if those two did happen to get married, Alice would see to it that Archie came often to England to visit, and she knew Duncan would like that.

But before she could tease her aunt about that, her husband came by to claim her attention— goodness, how nice it was to think of him as her husband now—and drag her out of the ballroom where the ceremony had taken place and refreshments were now being served.

She got the distinct impression that he was actually going to leave the celebration with her, to sneak off as it were, so they wouldn't have to go through yet another round of congratulations. But it was still the middle of the day! They were expected to remain in attendance for at least a few more hours.

But he was indeed heading straight for the stairs. So he was quite chagrined to find both his grandfathers sitting there on the bottom steps— she was amazed herself that they would sit mere of all places. They were having a friendly, or not so friendly—it was hard to tell—disagreement over something.

That something was easy enough to figure out when Archie, noticing Duncan with Sabrina's hand in his, said to his grandson, "Tell him. Ye'll hae the first bairn afore the end o' the year."

"Sooner than that if you'll be getting oout o' m'way," Duncan replied.

Archie chuckled and stood up. Sabrina blushed profusely. Neville rolled his eyes toward the ceiling.

But that wasn't all Duncan had to say on the subject. To his grandfathers' surprise, at least to Archie's, he added, "No' that it will matter all that much when the first bairn comes along. 'Tis time you both know that I'll no' be dividing my family as you were planning for me tae do. You both have created these empires, and you currently have one heir quite capable o' seeing tae it all. When one o'my heirs is ready tae share some o' the responsibilities will be soon enough for him tae do so. So stop your worrying aboot it, and let me do the worrying from now on."

He didn't give them a chance to argue with him about it. With Sabrina's hand still in his, he passed between them and marched up the stairs with her.

But behind them, they could hear Archie say, "I told ye he was quite capable o' being our only heir."

"You said no such thing, but as I recall, I did," Neville replied smugly. "Well, I thought it," Archie protested.

At the top of the stairs, Sabrina whispered to Duncan, "That was nicely done."

Duncan paused long enough to kiss her, a possessive kiss, a teasing kiss, a kiss that was very— arousing. "D'you think so?" And then quite huskily, "Then I wonder what you'll have tae say aboot the rest o' what I'm meaning tae do just now, because, lass, I have missed you."

"But you've seen me every day," she pointed out, quite misunderstanding.

"Nae, I've seen you, but I havena seen you."

The "rest" wasn't just more kissing. No, the "rest" began when he tossed her over his shoulder before he continued on the way to his room.

Sabrina wasn't going to say it aloud, but that had been rather barbaric of him. Then she chuckled to herself. It was going to be interesting, having a Highlander for a husband, interesting and so very wonderful. And the only wondering that she actually did, was if she would ever get over the amazement that her dreams really had come true.