This is going to start off on the wrong foot.
Abram—and everyone else as well—is completely in the dark when it comes to Bleu and me. “You know nothing about our relations so you don’t get to have an opinion about its authenticity.”
He slams his hand on the table. “There shouldn’t be an interrelation at all. The Fellowship prohibits any pairing with someone outside the circle of the brotherhood. You know this, yet you’ve chosen to continue seeing her. What do you think they’re going to say when they figure it out?”
“The brothers know,” Jamie says. He looks at me. “Leith called me while I was on my way here. He says it was the only thing being discussed at Duncan’s tonight.”
How very convenient—the brotherhood finds out right before we hold a meeting to discuss a solution. I’m certain I have Abram to thank for that shitstorm.
“Do tell, son. What do our men think about their future leader consorting with an outsider?” Abram looks so satisfied with himself.
“They’re not pleased.”
“As one would expect,” Abram says.
Jamie looks at me instead of his father. “Bleu is seen as a loose end. There’s talk of eliminating her.”
“She can be trusted. She’s more like us than you could possibly imagine. If you knew her, you’d see this.” She never stops amazing me. It’s as though she was born to be a part of us.
“But we don’t know her and there’s a reason for that. She isn’t one of us.”
“I asked the council to meet so we might come together for a solution.” I say.
“You’re breaking one of the most vital rules we have. You want us to pat you on the head and say it’s okay because you’re Thane’s son. We’re expected to roll over and accept this American because you do, but let me ask you this: what’s going to happen when one of the brothers wants us to bend a rule for him and we tell him no?”
I’m not sure how to respond to that. As much as I hate to admit it, Abram’s right. We can’t have the brothers believing they can break the rules.
“Son, being leader of The Fellowship is a double-edged sword.” Finally someone besides Abram speaks up. “As a leader, you are entitled to choices the brothers aren’t—yet you’re accountable to them. A good leader must lead by good example,” my father says.
I can’t believe he’s talking to me as though he didn’t once experience the same issue. “You mean, the way you were a fine example when you were having an affair with the American blackjack dealer?” I need him to remember what it was like to love a woman who isn’t a part of our circle.
“Amanda wasn’t living with me in the middle of the brotherhood. She was in the US where she had no contact with any of them. I kept her secret, as you should have with Bleu. Too late for that now.”
Mitch holds his open palms in the air. “Who are we talking about?”
“Dad’s American lover,” I answer.
“What? Does Mum know?”
“It was years ago, Mitch.” Dad sighs. “Let us get back to the reason we’re here. I think we can all see that Sinclair is choosing to continue his relationship with Miss MacAllister. The floor is open for suggestions.”
“Sinclair’s traineeship will be over very soon. I think it’s critical for the vitality of the brotherhood that he end this affair with the American now so he can marry from within The Fellowship. It’s time for him to choose a wife.”
Mum says Abram wants me to marry Westlyn. Let’s see if my mother knows what she’s talking about. “Do you have a suggestion on the woman I should choose?”
“I do. I believe Westlyn would make you a fine wife.”
“Dad!” Jamie says, clearly outraged. “You can’t be serious. They’re cousins.”
“Not by blood. His union with your sister would strengthen The Fellowship far more than the daughter of another brother.”
He should know now there’s no hope in this plan. “I can never marry Westlyn.”
“Because of the American!”
“My decision has nothing to do with Bleu.”
“If you spent time with her, I think you’d change your mind,” Abram says.
I’ve spent my entire life around her. “I can never see Westlyn as anything but my younger cousin. I can’t do it.” I knew they’d begin pressuring me about a wife, but I thought I’d at least make it out of my traineeship first. “I’ll choose a wife when the time comes but until then, I’m not giving up Bleu.”
“Then I have a suggestion for how to make this work,” Abram says. “Bleu must become one of us.”
He isn’t suggesting I marry her. That wouldn’t suit his plan. “By what means?”
“Initiation.”
“Women aren’t initiates,” Mitch argues. “It isn’t done.”
“It’s never been done. There’s a difference,” Abram says. “We’re living in a world of equal rights. Who says a woman can’t be an initiate?”
I should have expected something like this from him.
He means for her to be beaten—to be put through endurance in the name of the brotherhood. He thinks she’d fail but I know better. No woman in this world is stronger than my Bonny Bleu. But I won’t allow her to be hurt because it’s what Abram wants. “No! No member of this brotherhood will ever strike her.”
“Miss MacAllister will never be accepted as long as she remains an outsider. Initiation is the only way to make her one of us.”
I could force them to accept Bleu by making her my wife, but marriage isn’t something either of us wants. It’s a permanent solution for a temporary problem.
Again, Abram is right. Initiation is the only way the brotherhood will accept her as one of our own. But there’s no way I’ll permit her to be put through the endurance. “Okay. She will become one of us through initiation with me standing in as her substitutionary atonement.”
“No. It has to be her.”
“Our men often stand in their wives’ place for atonement,” I argue. I have him on this one.
“He has a point, Abram,” my father agrees. “It is an acceptable practice for a brother to take the place of his woman if he so chooses. This is no different.”
I don’t give him time to argue. “Then it’s decided. Bleu will participate in a formal initiation ceremony and I’ll stand in as her substitute for the endurance portion. When it’s done, she’ll be one of us and her loyalty will never be questioned again.”