Kate eyed Malcolm across the room. “Some things will always stay the same, like dour Scotsmen. Some of those traits define us. Some are more tolerable than others. Some even comforting.” Her eyes glowed with a fire that matched her tone. “This family will stay together. For Imogen’s sake. For her memory. Without her, we would never have found each other. This group formed because of her.”
Charlotte looked up at Kate, suddenly her countenance a bit brighter. “That’s right! You found me because you were looking for Imogen.”
Kate smiled at the young girl. She felt Simon take her hand and she looked back at him. “Imogen brought us together as well,” she told him, her voice breaking ever so slightly.
The deep creases in Simon’s face finally relaxed. “You’re right. Of course.”
Penny let out a long relieved breath and went to a table where she pulled a sketchbook out of her satchel. “Since we’re all staying, it wouldn’t hurt to show you the new project I’ve been working on.” She opened the portfolio and handed out a piece of paper to each of them. The sketches on them showed decorated keys, each with a unique crest on the bow, distinctive in its design and linked to the individual holding it. A pair of crossed pistols for Malcolm. A pentagram for Charlotte. And, for Kate, an open book with one page inscribed with a stylized initial I to represent Imogen.
“Penny, they’re beautiful,” Kate replied, staring at the sketch with a wistful smile on her lips.
Penny toed the fringe on the rug. “They’re just my ideas of what suited everyone.”
Charlotte clutched the drawing tightly with both hands. She squirmed so much the little hedgehog crawled across her and settled in Kate’s stationary lap. “You mean I get one too?” The child’s bouncing made the entire settee shake.
Her infectious joy was so welcome that Kate didn’t even reprimand her.
Penny took a final drawing from the case and extended her arm toward a small figure sitting in the corner. Jane seemed to glance up in surprise from her knitting but didn’t react otherwise. Penny walked over and pressed the paper into the woman’s hand.
Jane stared at the sketch. “But I didn’t think to stay. I was only tarrying while—”
“You’re here, Jane,” Kate interrupted. “You will stay as long as you like, which I hope will be a long while. Your father is actually quite at home here. He seems to think he is supervising the construction.”
“I’m sorry, Miss Anstruther,” Jane replied. “I’ll tell him again to stay away.”
“Not at all.” Simon laughed. “He’s doing a marvelous job. And some of his unusual suggestions lend extra character to the house.”
“God bless you all.” Jane smiled gratefully, glancing from Simon to Penny to Malcolm. She immediately returned to knitting. “I shall have to make each of you something.”
Malcolm patted the grey scarf Jane had given him months before. It hung from his coat pocket, as it usually did. “I’ll take a case of these damn things. Saved my life before, and that’s not bad for a bloody scarf.”
“Language, please, Mr. MacFarlane,” Jane murmured.
Malcolm nodded contritely. “Sorry.”
Simon chuckled as he kissed Kate’s hand with unspoken praise and gratitude. He came to his feet and faced the small congregation. “Penny, you are, as always, the marvel of our age.”
The engineer shrugged and waved a cavalier hand. “We can start on the keys whenever you’re ready. It will take all three of us.”
“They will be the miracle of our combined powers, an example of how we work together never against each other.” He lifted the gold key. “For Imogen.”
Everyone came to their feet, following his lead. “For Imogen,” they echoed.
Kate’s eyes shone bright and her throat tightened. She had never felt so proud of her sister.
A knock sounded on the door and Hogarth entered. He stood on gleaming metal struts, rudimentary steel legs powered by tiny motors of Penny’s ingenious design. He bowed awkwardly, still learning to maneuver with the strange devices. He straightened with a wink at Penny, who grinned broadly at his progress.
“I’ll forge up a nicer set than these in no time.” She pulled a screwdriver from her pocket and knelt beside him to make an adjustment on the knee. Penny’s face lit with possibilities as she eyed the metal. “Now that I have you up and about, I should be able to modify these plans for Charles. I can’t wait to see his face when I tell him he can throw away that chair of his.”
Kate said, “Your mother would be proud, Penny. I want to be there when Charles takes his first steps.”
“You will.” Penny kept her faced turned toward her work but dragged her sleeve across her sniffling nose. Then she tapped the leg with her screwdriver. “So, Hogarth, you want to be able to jump across the Thames?”
Hogarth looked uncomfortable to have the engineer working on his legs. “Merely leaping a trout stream should suffice, miss.”
Kate regarded Simon. “You mentioned a private little stream in Scotland once. Does it have trout?”
The corners of Simon’s mouth lifted. “I believe it does.”
“I think then we are in need of visiting it.”
Charlotte immediately began jumping up and down, and squealed, “A holiday!”