“Nothing is ever truly lost if we fight to hold on to its importance. Being duke is a great responsibility full of trials and frustrations, but also fulfillment in helping those dependent on you. I believe your duty as a physician is much the same. Like every man before you, titled or not, you must find the balance between duty and personal desire.”

Wynn ground his toe into the frozen dirt. There was nothing left to balance after he’d mangled his go at being a surgeon. “Father and Hugh made it look so effortless. Duty was never a question for them because it was a role they were born to. I can never be Hugh.”

“No one expects you to be. Hugh was my stalwart sun, ever constant, but you, my dear boy, are my shooting star. My sons are both brilliant in their own unique ways, and I would never change that.” Tears glistened in her eyes. “You must find your own path forward and be sure to avoid the pitfalls of defining yourself as one thing or another, duke or physician.”

“That is who I am.”

Scoffing, she blinked away the tears and fluffed the plaid around her throat. “I shall pretend I did not hear that most pretentious claim and cling to the knowledge that you are smarter than to believe that. People are not mere titles, dear. Why, if I went around believing I only existed as your mother, life would be quite boring for me.”

“Have I not given you enough excitement as my mother?” He nudged her shoulder, eliciting a glimmer of amusement.

“More than enough for two lifetimes, and while I love you more than life itself, being a mother is only part of who I am. Don’t be a one-sided bore, Wynn.”

The truth of her statement dug into his core. He’d made an ivory tower of his ambitions, and when the walls had shaken loose, the bricks fell around him into a heap of disappointment all because he’d put the definition of himself into this one edifice. When the dust settled, he would have two choices. Let the bricks crush him flat on his face, or drag himself from the rubble and start building another life. Svetlana had done it, and if there was anyone to learn from about grace from ruin, it was her.

“I’ll do my best, Mother,” he said at last.

Reaching up, she patted his cheek. “I’m so glad you’ve returned home.”

“Me too. I only wish I could have returned Hugh to you.” He kissed her hand, then slipped his arm around her and drew her to his side. “I miss him. Somedays I look up and expect him to appear around the corner, or I go look for him in the library. Then I remember he’s not here.”

“His spirit is here now. At least we have that. And each other.”

They stared out over the dipping slopes and huddled woodlands dotting their estate. Far beyond Thornhill’s borders, the river rippled under the dying sun’s rays. Life still moved on, oblivious to the world’s woes.

“I should like to erect a monument for him. For all the boys who didn’t return. I believe it could help our people find peace with the losses we’ve suffered. So many of us never got the chance to grieve over a body.” Mother sniffed and wiped at the corner of her eyes with the plaid. “We need a place to honor them.”

“A fine idea. And very fitting. I think Hugh would wish to be remembered with the men he fought beside.”

The scent of burning peat rustled on the breeze as families settled into supper and their warm fires against winter’s chill. Wynn breathed in deeply. It was a unique scent, one he’d never particularly cared for, but it was of Scotland and therefore of home.

Mother shivered and drew her plaid close. “I best get back inside where it’s warm. My half American blood still has trouble appreciating this cold.”

“The cold lets you know you’re alive.”

“Spoken like a man who has the internal temperature of a furnace. Though I’m sure your wife appreciates that commodity, coming from a frozen land herself.”

The mention of Svetlana lanced pain across his heart. “The cold doesn’t bother her as much.”

“She’s a unique woman. Her manner may be a bit . . . stiff at times, but she has a kind heart, looking after her family and seeing to the tenants. I’m glad you’ve brought her to our family.”

The pain boiled and spilled down his insides, scorching him with regret. He’d been raised to honor the truth. Mother would be ashamed to know he’d broken his promise of honesty to his wife in the so-called name of honorable protection.

“Your approval means a great deal to me.”

“Then you have it and my support. Both of you. Be good to one another and the love will never die.” Burrowing into her plaid, Mother started her way down the path she’d come. “Don’t stay out here too long. Mrs. Varjensky is making something called goulash. It sounds dreadful, but the smell from the kitchen is divine.”

Перейти на страницу:
Нет соединения с сервером, попробуйте зайти чуть позже