Название: The Regency Season Collection: Part Two
Автор: Кэрол Мортимер
Издательство: HarperCollins
Жанр: Исторические любовные романы
Серия: Mills & Boon e-Book Collections
isbn: 9781474070638
isbn:
‘Please saddle the grey for Miss Trethayne, Dacre,’ his lordship ordered as if it was an everyday occurrence for a lady to ride astride.
‘He’s feeling his oats,’ the little man argued.
‘Miss Trethayne usually rides the black cob, so Cloud will seem like a docile pony in comparison.’
‘Cloud it is then, ma’am,’ the small groom said with a nod of limited approval.
‘Thank you,’ she said, trying not to feel self-conscious in front of the stable lads while she waited for the animal to be saddled. ‘Oh, you’re a handsome lad and a true gentleman, aren’t you, sirrah? I warrant you’d hunt all day if you had to,’ she greeted the powerful-looking animal as he arched his neck at her like a circus horse and waited to be admired.
He was as big a rogue as his master from the look of him and her opinion of Lord Mantaigne rose as he laughed at the grey’s antics and told him not to be such a commoner. He sobered as he cupped his hands to take her booted foot and boost her into the saddle.
‘I don’t hunt,’ he said, eyes flicking in the direction of the tumbledown kennels Polly knew lay on the far side of the yard so as not to disturb anyone in the castle with the restless baying of the hounds.
‘You don’t enjoy the exercise then, my lord?’ she asked a little breathlessly, trying not to be impressed as he boosted her into the saddle as easily as if she was a foot shorter and as slender as a fashion plate.
‘Perhaps I pity the quarry,’ he said lightly.
She was still wondering about that remark as they set off. She’d heard whispers that a miserable childhood had led to his hatred of Dayspring, but all that had mattered then was that he stayed away. Eyeing the powerful figure of the now very real Marquis of Mantaigne, Polly tried to see past it and wonder about the man under the careless elegance.
He was relaxed in the saddle of his fine horse as if he hadn’t a care in the world, but she sensed wariness in him, an unwillingness to feel the appeal of this fine place on such a beautiful spring morning. Would a bright but abused boy learn to guard his thoughts and emotions from his persecutor? Yes, she decided, and any woman tempted to love him would have to fight her way past the shield wall he still kept them behind. She pitied her, whoever she turned out to be. To throw your bonnet that far over the windmill would mean being prepared to risk everything without any guarantee he would even want her once she’d done it.
* * *
Tom expected the parkland to be overgrown and small forests to blur the beautiful landscaped gardens his grandfather had paid Lancelot ‘Capability’ Brown to design for him. Instead the park was close-cropped by sheep and a herd of cows grazed the meadow by the lake that dreamed under the spring sun as he remembered it doing on days when he’d escaped his prison to wander his own land like a poacher in constant fear of discovery.
Not even that sense of such freedom being short and forbidden spoiled the joy of a spring morning in this wide landscape then, but that was quite enough of the past. Today the trees looked as if they’d been kept tidy by foresters. He ought to ask Miss Trethayne how that could be when he didn’t have any, but he let himself feel all the promise of spring about them instead and saved the argument for later.
‘Where are we going?’ Peters asked and saved him the trouble.
‘To the Home Farm, through Cable Woods, then down into Days Magna,’ Miss Trethayne said concisely.
‘A neat slice across the closest parts of the estate,’ Tom conceded and saw from the tightening of her lush mouth how his pompous reply annoyed her.
Since he couldn’t make her his mistress, and she was nothing like any marchioness he’d ever come across, he told himself it was good to see the look of impatient contempt back in her fine eyes. He must do his best to keep it there for the next couple of weeks and then he could return to London or Derbyshire, leaving them both more or less unscathed.
‘Who has the Home Farm?’ Peters asked, and it was a reasonable enough question, so why did Tom feel jealous, as if he was the one who should be having easy conversations with Miss Trethayne and not Peters?
Perverse idiot, he condemned himself and urged his horse a little ahead, so he could leave them to talk while he watched this once-familiar landscape for changes. Yet he took in very little of it for listening to their conversation and keeping enough attention on the road in front of them to make sure he didn’t fall in the dust and make himself even more of a fool than he already felt as he fought the need to have all her attention focused on him and him alone.
‘The Allcotts have held it for generations,’ he heard her answer Peters question obliquely and wondered why she was uneasy about it.
‘And do I have a forester?’ he turned in the saddle to ask.
‘Several, my lord,’ she said, and there was that sense she wasn’t telling him the whole story again to pique his interest and let him convince himself his interest was nothing personal.
‘Don’t expect me to believe they come from the same family who felled trees here from the dark ages on, then. I well remember my guardian railing that he couldn’t keep a male worker on the estate thanks to the press gangs and fishing boats and quarries robbing him of manpower.’
‘I suppose those alternatives were more attractive,’ she said so carefully he knew her thoughts were busy with all the rumours she’d probably discounted about him and Grably and how bad it had been at Dayspring once upon a time.
‘Yet they came of their own free will once I ordered the place kept empty? Perhaps they fell my timber for nothing out of the goodness of their hearts,’ he said blandly, and her gaze slid away from the challenge, as if she didn’t want him to read secrets in them.
‘Maybe they wanted to keep faith with the Banburghs?’ she suggested.
‘My father died, and I turned my back on them. I can’t see the locals feeling aught but contempt for the Banburghs,’ he admitted harshly, conscious of Peters’s shrewd gaze as well as her discomfort with the subject.
‘Maybe they felt guilty?’
‘I hope not; the fifth marquis is dead and I don’t care.’
‘No, of course you don’t,’ Peters said, and Tom sensed the two of them exchanging rueful glances behind his back and fought temper and something a little less straightforward—surely it couldn’t be jealousy?
To be jealous he’d have to want Miss Trethayne as irrationally as Luke and Chloe Winterley had wanted each other during their decade of estrangement. So that meant he simply could not be jealous. He didn’t want to ruin or marry her, so he must be immune to her smoky laugh and everything that made her unlike the pursuing pack of would-be marchionesses he dodged so carefully at ton СКАЧАТЬ