look that said I don’t get involved, so don’t blame me and a lolloping puppy with some spaniel and a great deal of amiable idiot completed the canine quartet. Even Tom couldn’t bring himself to blame them for the sins of the pack of half-starved beasts his guardian had once used to terrorise the neighbourhood and his small charge.
‘Not in the house, I don’t,’ Lady Wakebourne asserted, as if it was her house to be pernickety over if she chose.
Tom frowned as he searched his mind for a reason why the widow of a disgraced baronet was living in his house without his knowledge. ‘I expect several carts and their teams before dark, my lady. Can anyone help us make more of the stabling usable?’ he asked the simplest of the questions that came into his mind.
It felt strange to be so ignorant of his household, especially when there wasn’t supposed to be one. Two coachmen, several stalwart grooms and three footmen were on their way with supplies to make camping in a ruin bearable and they would need somewhere to bed down as well. It would be too dark to do much more than sleep by the time they arrived, but he’d often sought the warmth of the horses at night as a boy and one more night in the stables wouldn’t hurt him.
‘No, but the northern range is better than the west. It takes less battering from the winds that come in from the sea,’ Polly-Paulina said with a sly glance at Tom’s riding breeches, shining top-boots, snowy white shirt and grey-silk waistcoat. He wasn’t dressed for heavy labour, but she seemed happy about the idea of him doing some anyway.
He had no old clothes here and wouldn’t don them now if he had, so he hoped there was a copper of hot water over the fire betrayed by its smoking chimney. Tom met the girl’s hostile gaze, determined not to prove as useless as she clearly thought him.
‘We’ll need pitchforks and a wheelbarrow, buckets and a couple of decent brooms. You will have to remind me where the well is,’ he prompted as she stayed stubbornly silent.
‘The boys can come in from the gardens this late in the day to help, Paulina. They are probably disgracefully dirty by now anyway,’ Lady Wakebourne said with a caution in her voice to remind her fellow interloper some tact was needed when dealing with the owner of a house you were living in without his knowledge or permission.
For a long moment Paulina the Amazon glared at Tom, as if quite ready to lay aside any pretence of civility and risk expulsion. He raised one eyebrow to question her right to be furious with him, but she seemed unimpressed.
‘Very well,’ she finally agreed without taking her eyes off him, as if he might steal the silver if she did so.
He couldn’t help the mocking smile that kicked up his mouth, because it was his silver, or it would be if it hadn’t been taken away years ago.
‘Lunar, go and fetch Toby,’ she told the huge beast, as if he would understand. ‘Go on, boy, go fetch him in,’ she added when the bigger-than-a-wolf dog put his head on one side and eyed Tom and Peters as if not sure it was safe to leave them here.
‘Maybe he’d feel better if we went with him?’ Tom suggested lightly.
‘The boys would run away from such a dandy,’ Paulina-Polly muttered darkly, shooting him a look that said she wouldn’t blame them.
‘Perhaps it would be better if you went yourself then,’ he said blandly.
The hound sat on his mighty haunches and eyed first him, then his younger mistress, as if awaiting his cue to protect her to the last breath in his amiable body.
‘Or you could make it a clear to your mixed pack of hell-hounds we’re not going to rip each other to pieces when their backs are turned?’ he added.
‘I would have to be certain myself,’ he thought he heard her mutter under her breath, but then she seemed to make a huge effort to be civil and held out her hand as a sign to their canine audience that peace reigned.
Tom took it, wondering at the state a lady could get her hand in and not care. A glance at her short nails and tanned skin, nicked and scarred here and there from her labours, did nothing to warn him how it would feel in his broad, well-manicured palm. Ah, here she is, at last, an inner voice he ordered not to be so foolish whispered. He felt emotions he didn’t want to examine stir and threaten something impossible at the feel of work-hardened calluses on her slender fingers and finely made palm.
She shouldn’t have to work at anything more strenuous than pleasing herself and me, his inner idiot whispered in his ear. A shock of something hot and significant he’d never felt before shot through him like a fiery itch. It was too much of an effort to shake her slender hand then let it go as if she was just a new acquaintance.
‘I’m honoured to meet you, Miss Paulina,’ he said as lightly as if they had met in a Mayfair ballroom or, heaven forbid, Almack’s Club. He’d long ago resolved never to venture there again for fear of the tenacious matchmaking mamas and their formidably willing daughters.
‘Trethayne,’ Lady Wakebourne said abruptly. ‘Her name is Miss Trethayne and since she has no elder sister that is all you are required to know.’
Tom felt the girl’s hand tug insistently in his, realised he was still holding it like a mooncalf and relaxed his grip with unflattering haste. No wonder she was glaring at him now, and the vast hound was growling under his breath, rather than running off to fetch Toby from the garden as he was bid, whoever Toby might be.
‘Three tired teams and their drivers will be arriving here in the next couple of hours, so I suggest we put aside questions of what a Trethayne and you, Lady Wakebourne, are doing here under my less-than-comfortable roof and get on with preparing the stables to lodge them as best we can.’
‘Something you should have thought about when you set out,’ Miss Trethayne informed him, and Tom bit back an urge to defend his right to visit his own house if he wanted to, or even if he didn’t.
‘And if you expect me to put off examining your presence here, perhaps you should lay aside your hostility,’ he suggested coldly.
Part of him wanted to trade words with her until the sun went down, for the sheer pleasure of gazing at her scandalously displayed form and extraordinary face, but the rest knew better. She had fascinating eyes and then there was that strong nose that should make her a character, not a beauty, but didn’t. Her mouth was too wide to fit an accredited beauty as well, but it was as full of unstudied allure as the rest of her. There, hadn’t he just ordered himself not to catalogue her graces? Fully recognising his desire to kiss her deeply and urgently would be folly; best not think of such fiery needs when dressed in tight buckskin breeches—for all they concealed of his errant masculine urges he might as well stand here buck naked.
‘You’d best get on with cleansing the Augean Stables before it’s pitch dark and you can’t see what you’re doing, then,’ she said with a shrug, opening the stable doors with a glance of contempt at his once-spotless linen and expensive tailoring.
He was glad to see it contained none of the cynicism in Lady Wakebourne’s gaze as she silently challenged him to keep any lustful thoughts he might harbour about Miss Polly Trethayne strictly to himself. Bracing himself to meet the assorted hounds at closer quarters with suitably manly composure, Tom stepped out in Miss Trethayne’s wake and blinked in the late-afternoon sunshine. The four dogs sat to attention at a stern word from Lady Wakebourne, looking more comical than threatening as they watched her as if they knew they’d violated the laws of hospitality by being uncivil to guests.
‘Lunar, Zounds, Ariel and Cherubim, otherwise known as Cherry,’ the lady introduced them. ‘Lunar, give a paw,’ she commanded the great hound, who was clearly reserving the option to bite Tom if he misbehaved.
The terrier, Zounds, let out a gruff bark; Ariel looked regally indifferent, and Cherry rolled onto her back and waved all four feet in the air in a frantic plea for attention.
‘Hussy,’ Lady Wakebourne said with a sad shake of her head that didn’t deceive anyone, and the half-grown spaniel-cross waved her paws to tell her mistress she still wanted her