Miss Winthorpe's Elopement. Christine Merrill

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his arm to her. She took it, and found herself leading him, steadying him, more than he ever could her. But he went along, docile as a lamb.

      She led him to the blacksmith, and listened as Jem explained to the man what was required.

      ‘Well, git on wi’ it, then. I have horses ta shoe.’ He looked critically at Penny. ‘Da ya mean ta ha’ him?’

      ‘I do,’ she said formally, as though it mattered.

      ‘Yer sure? He’s a drunkard. They cause no end a trouble.’

      ‘I wish to marry him, all the same.’

      ‘And you, sir. Will ya ha’ the lady?’

      ‘Marriage?’ Adam grinned. ‘Oh, I say. That is a lark, isn’t it?’ He looked down at her. ‘I cannot remember quite why, but I must have intended it, or I wouldn’t be in Scotland. Very well. Let us be married.’

      ‘Done. Yer married. Na off with you. I ha’ work ta do.’ He turned back to his horses.

      ‘That is all?’ Penny asked in surprise. ‘Is there a paper to be signed? Something that will prove what we have done?’

      ‘If ya wanted a licence, ya coulda staid on yer own side o’ the border, lass.’

      ‘But I must have something to show to my brother, and the solicitors of course. Can you not provide for us, sir?’

      ‘I canna write, so there is verra little I ca’ do for ya, less ya need the carriage mended, or the horse shoed.’

      ‘I will write it myself, then. Jem, run back to the carriage and find me some paper, and a pen and ink.’

      The smith was looking at her as if she were daft, and Adam laughed, patted the man on the back and whispered something in his ear, offering him a drink from the brandy flask, which the Scot refused.

      Penny stared down at the paper before her. What did she need to record? A marriage had taken place. The participants. The location. The date.

      There was faint hammering in the background and the hiss of hot metal as it hit the water.

      Their names, of course. She spelled Felkirk as she expected it to be, hoping that she was not showing her ignorance of her new husband by the misspelling of her new surname.

      She glanced down at the paper. It looked official, in a sad sort of way. Better than returning with nothing to show her brother. She signed with a bold hand and indicated a spot where Jem could sign as witness.

      Her new husband returned to her side from the forge, where he had been watching the smithy. He held a hand out to her. ‘Now here, angel, is the trick if you want to be legal. Not married without a ring, are you?’ He was holding something small and dark between the fingers of his hand. ‘Give over.’ He reached for her.

      ‘I think your signature is all that is needed. And that of the smith, of course.’ She smiled hopefully at the smith. ‘You will be compensated, sir, for the trouble.’

      At the mention of compensation, he took the pen and made his mark at the bottom of the paper.

      ‘Here, here, sir.’ Her husband took another drink, in the man’s honour. ‘And to my wife.’ He drank again. ‘Your Grace.’

      She shook her head. ‘Now, you are mistaking me for someone else, Adam. Perhaps it would be best to leave off the brandy for a time.’

      ‘You said I could have all I wanted. And so I shall.’ But there was no anger as he said it. ‘Your hand, madam.’ He took her left hand and slipped something on to the ring finger, then reached for the pen.

      She glanced down. The smith had twisted a horseshoe nail into a crude semblance of a ring, and her hand was heavily weighted with it. Further proof that she had truly been to Scotland, since the X of the smith held no real meaning.

      Adam signed with a flourish, beside her own name. ‘We need to seal it as well. Makes it look more official.’ He snatched the candle from the table and dripped a clot of the grease at the bottom of the paper, and pulled out his watch fob, which held a heavy gold seal. ‘There. As good as anything in Parliament.’ He grinned down at the paper and tipped the flask up for another drink.

      She stared at the elegant signature above the wax. ‘Adam Felkirk, Duke of Bellston.’

      ‘At your service, madam.’ He bowed deeply, and the weight of his own head overbalanced him. Then he pitched forward, striking his head on the corner of the table, to fall unconscious at her feet.

      Chapter Three

      Adam regained consciousness, slowly. It was a mercy, judging by the way he felt when he moved his head. He remembered whisky. A lot of whisky. Followed by brandy, which was even more foolish. And his brain and body remembered it as well, and were punishing him for the consumption. His head throbbed, his mouth was dry as cotton, and his eyes felt full of sand.

      He moved slightly. He could feel bruises on his body. He reached up and probed the knot forming on his temple. From a fall.

      And there had been another fall. In the coach yard.

      Damn it. He was alive.

      He closed his eyes again. If he’d have thought it through, he’d have recognised his mistake. Carriages were slowing down when they reached the inn yard. The one he’d stepped in front of had been able to stop in time to avoid hitting him.

      ‘Waking up, I see.’

      Adam raised his head and squinted into the unfamiliar room at the man sitting beside the bed. ‘Who the devil are you?’

      The man was at least twenty years his senior, but unbent by age, and powerfully built. He was dressed as a servant, but showed no subservience, for he did not answer the question. ‘How much do you remember of yesterday, your Grace?’

      ‘I remember falling down in front of an inn.’

      ‘I see.’ The man said nothing more.

      ‘Would you care to enlighten me? Or am I to play yes and no, until I can suss out the details?’

      ‘The carriage you stepped in front of belonged to my mistress.’

      ‘I apologise,’ he said, not feeling the least bit sorry. ‘I hope she was not unduly upset.’

      ‘On the contrary. She considered it a most fortunate circumstance. And I assure you, you were conscious enough to agree to what she suggested, even if you do not remember it. We did not learn your identity until you’d signed the licence.’

      ‘Licence?’

      ‘You travelled north with us, your Grace. To Scotland.’

      ‘Why the devil would I do that?’ Adam lowered his voice, for the volume of his own words made the pounding in his skull more violent.

      ‘You went to Gretna, to a blacksmith.’

      He shook his head, and realised immediately that it had been a mistake to try such drastic

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