Bedazzled. Bertrice Small
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“I hope I compare favorably, madame,” Jasmine answered.
Lady Stewart-Hepburn laughed. “Isabelle was a sweet child, but a moon to your sun, my dear. Now, I want to meet my grandchildren! All of them! I consider your bairns mine, too, as my Jemmie has been father to them longer than their own sires, eh?”
For a brief moment, Jasmine was speechless, and her turquoise eyes grew misty. Then, recovering herself, she beckoned her offspring forward. She was truly touched that Jemmie’s mother could be so generous.
“Madame, may I present my eldest child, Lady India Lindley.”
The young girl curtsied prettily.
“And my eldest son, Henry Lindley, the marquis of Westleigh. My second daughter, Lady Fortune Lindley. My son, Charles Frederick Stuart, the duke of Lundy.”
While the girls curtsied, the young boys bowed.
Lady Stewart-Hepburn acknowledged them graciously, saying to the eleven-and-a-half-year-old duke of Lundy, “We are distantly related, my lord, on your late father’s side.”
“My grandfather spoke of you once,” the young duke replied. “He said you were the most beautiful woman in all of Scotland. I see he did not lie, madame.”
His stepgrandmother burst out laughing. “God help us all, my lord, but you are surely a true Stuart!” She wondered what this boy would say if he knew that the now-deceased old man who had been his grandfather had once been an unstoppable satyr who had destroyed her first marriage.
“And these are Jemmie’s bairns,” Jasmine was continuing. “Our eldest, Patrick, then Adam, and Duncan. We had a little lass, but lost her almost two years ago. She caught measles and died a month after my dearest grandmother. She was named for that lady, and for Janet Leslie. Janet Skye.”
“I remember my great-grandmother, Janet,” Cat told Jasmine. “We called her Mam. She was a very formidable woman.”
“As was my grandmother,” Jasmine replied.
“Is it true you were once in a harem?” India Lindley suddenly burst out.
Cat turned to look at the girl. She was easily on the brink of womanhood, and every bit as beautiful as her mother with black hair and the most wonderful golden eyes. “Yes,” she answered. “I was in the harem of the sultan’s grande vizir.”
“Which sultan?” India persisted.
“There is only one sultan,” Cat said. “The Ottoman.”
“Was it exciting or awful?” India’s eyes were alight with unbridled curiosity.
“Both,” Cat told her.
“India!” Jasmine was mortified by her daughter’s outrageous behavior, but then, India was so damned headstrong, and always had been.
“My mother was raised in a harem,” India volunteered.
“Was she?” Now it was Cat’s turn to be intrigued.
“My father was the Grande Mughal of India,” Jasmine explained. “My mother was English. She is married to the earl of BrocCairn.”
“I remember your mother,” Cat replied. “Velvet is her name. She stayed with us at Hermitage years ago. You don’t really look like her, do you?”
“I have some of her features, but I am mostly a mixture of my maternal grandmother and my father,” Jasmine answered.
That would indeed account for the slightly Oriental tilt of Jasmine’s unusual turquoise eyes and the faint golden tint of her skin, Lady Stewart-Hepburn thought. She let her gaze wander to the pert India. The girl had skin like milky porcelain and a faint blue sheen to her midnight-colored hair, but where had she gotten those eyes? They were like a cat’s. Gold, not amber, and with tiny flecks of black in them. The older woman settled herself into a chair by the fire. France in April was a chilly place. The fuss of her arrival had died about her. Her children and their mates had ensconced themselves about her on a settee, a chair, and a stool. Her grandchildren were amusing themselves.
“How old is India?” she asked.
“She will be seventeen at the end of June,” Jasmine said, suspecting what her mother-in-law would next ask. She was not disappointed.
“And she is not married?”
Jasmine shook her head.
“Betrothed?”
“Nay, madame.”
“You had best see to it soon then,” came the pithy observation. “The wench is ripe for bedding. Close to overripe, and susceptible to trouble, I would wager.”
James Leslie laughed at his mother’s words. “India has nae yet met a man to attract her attention, Mother. I want my girls to wed for love. I did, and I hae never been happier.”
“Mam had me betrothed to your father at four, and we married but moments before your birth when I was barely sixteen,” Lady Stewart-Hepburn noted. “Love was not a consideration in making the match, although I came to care for your father.”
“But you loved Lord Bothwell unconditionally,” the duke of Glenkirk reminded his parent. “Besides, yer first marriage took place forty-seven years ago. Times have changed since then, Mother.”
“And you would allow your stepdaughter to make an unsuitable match in the name of love?” Cat was surprised to find she was appalled. I am obviously growing old, she thought.
Jasmine interposed herself between her husband and his mother in the conversation. “India will never choose unwisely, madame, for she is most proud, and extremely aware of her heritage. She is the grandchild of a great monarch, and her father’s family was an old and very noble one. It pleases her that my stepfather, and her stepfather, both have ties to the royal family. She adored my grandmother, Madame Skye, and was weened upon the tales of her adventures, and her relationship with Great Bess. When the time comes, India will pick the right man.”
“Have you had no offers for her?” Cat was curious.
“Several, but they did nae please India. In most cases, she felt the families involved were simply looking to her fortune, and nae to her,” the duke of Glenkirk told his mother. “She was correct. India can be very astute.”
“A girl in love for the first time is not always careful or wise,” Cat cautioned.
“Well, as no one has yet caught India’s fancy, I do not believe we have cause for worry,” Jasmine replied.
The Leslies of Glenkirk had come to France to represent their country at the proxy marriage of the new king, Charles I, to the French princess, Henrietta Marie. King James had sickened, and died unexpectedly on the twenty-seventh of March. The marriage negotiations had already been concluded, although there was some difficulty about the princess’s religion. Charles Stuart had no time to argue with his government. He was suddenly king, and without an heir. While he did not feel