The Prince's Outback Bride. Marion Lennox

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The Prince's Outback Bride - Marion  Lennox


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won’t come ’til the rain stops.’

      ‘You’re planning on sitting in the truck until then?’

      ‘Or until it’s time for milking.’

      The thought of milking cows in this weather didn’t bear considering. ‘You don’t think maybe you could run back to the house, peel off your wet things, have a hot shower and…oh, I don’t know, play Happy Families until milking?’

      ‘It’s warmer here,’ Marc said.

      ‘But we want fish and chips,’ one of the little girls piped up from the back seat.

      ‘There’s bread,’ Marc said, in severe, big-brother tones. ‘We’ll make toast before milking.’

      ‘We want fish and chips,’ the other little girl whimpered. ‘We’re hungry.’

      ‘Shh.’ Pippa turned back to Max. ‘Can you move away so I can wind up the window? We’re getting wet.’

      ‘Sure.’ But Max didn’t move. He thought of all he’d come to say to this woman and he winced. Back home it had seemed simple—to say what needed to be said and walk away. But now, suddenly, it seemed harder. ‘Isn’t there anything I can do for you first?’

      What was he saying? The easiest thing to do right now would be to walk away from the whole mess, he thought. Someone else could tell these people what they had to know. But then, he’d have to remember that he’d walked away for a long time.

      ‘We don’t need anything,’ Pippa told him, oblivious to his train of thought, and he dragged his attention back to the matter at hand. Truck stuck. Fish and chips.

      ‘I’m thinking I should talk to Marc about this,’ he said, focusing on food. ‘This is, after all, men’s business. Hunting and gathering. You were heading to the shops when your truck got stuck. Looking for fish and chips.’

      ‘Yes,’ said Marc, pleased at his acuity, and Sophie and Claire beamed agreement, anticipating assistance. ‘We’ve run out of food,’ Marc told him. ‘All we have left is toast. We don’t even have any jam.’

      Right. He could do this. Jam and fish and chips. But not drowned like this.

      ‘I have a car that’s not stuck in a cattle-grid,’ he told them. ‘But I’m soaking wet. You have a house where I can dry off, and I’ve come a long way to visit you. Let’s combine. You let me use your house to change and I’ll go into town and buy fish and chips.’

      ‘We can’t impose on you,’ Pippa said. But she looked desperate, and he wondered why.

      First things first. He had to persuade her to let him help. ‘I’m not an axe murderer,’ he told her. ‘I promise. I really am a relation.’

      ‘But…’

      ‘I’m Maxsim de Gautier. Max.’ He watched to see if there was recognition of the name, but she was too preoccupied to think of anything but immediate need—and maybe she’d never heard the name anyway. ‘I’d really like to help.’

      Desperation faded—just a little. ‘I shouldn’t let you.’

      ‘Yes, you should. You don’t have to like me, but I’m definitely family, so you need to sigh and open the door, the way most families ask rum-soaked Uncle Bertie or similar to Christmas lunch.’

      She smiled in return at that, a wobbly sort of smile but it was a welcome change from the desperate. ‘Uncle Bertie or similar?’

      ‘I’m not even a soak,’ he said encouragingly and her smile wobbled a bit more.

      ‘You have a great accent,’ she said inconsequentially. ‘It sounds…familiar. Is it Italian or French?’

      ‘Mostly French.’

      ‘You’re very wet.’

      ‘The puddle around my ankles is starting to creep to my knees. If you leave this decision much longer I’ll need a snorkel.’

      She stared out at him and chewed her lip. Then she seemed to make a decision. ‘Fine.’

      ‘Fine what?’

      ‘Fine I’ll trust you,’ she managed. ‘The kids and I will trust you, but I’m not sure about Dolores.’ She hugged the dog tighter. ‘She bites relations who turn out to be axe murderers.’

      ‘She’s welcome to try. How will we organise this?’

      ‘My truck’s blocking your way to the house.’

      ‘So it is,’ he said cordially. ‘Why didn’t I notice that?’

      Her decision meant that she’d relaxed a little. The lines of strain around her eyes had eased. Now she even choked back a bubble of laughter. ‘We need to run to the house. We’ll all be soaked the minute we get out of the truck.’

      ‘I assume you have dry clothes back at the house?’

      ‘Yes but…’

      ‘I’m bored of sitting in the truck,’ Marc said.

      ‘Me too,’ said Sophie.

      ‘Me too,’ said Claire.

      ‘Right,’ Pippa said, coming to a decision. ‘On the count of three I want everybody out of the truck and we’ll run back to the house as fast as we can. Mr de Gautier, you’re welcome to follow.’

      ‘I’ll do backstroke,’ he told her. ‘What’s your stroke?’

      ‘Dog-paddle.’ She pushed open the driver’s side door and dived into the torrent. ‘Okay, kids,’ she said, hauling open the back door and starting to lift them out.

      ‘Let me,’ he told her.

      ‘I’ll take the kids. You take Dolores.’

      ‘Dolores?’

      ‘She hates getting her feet wet,’ Pippa explained. ‘She’s had pneumonia twice so she has an excuse. I’ll carry her if I must but I have a sore back and as you’re here I don’t see why you shouldn’t be useful. After all, you are family.’

      ‘Um…okay,’ he managed, but that was all he could say before a great brown dog of indiscriminate parentage was pushed out of the cab and into his arms.

      ‘Don’t drop her,’ Pippa ordered. ‘And run.’

      ‘Yes, ma’am.’

      The house was two hundred yards from the gate, and, even though they ran fast, by the time they reached it they were all sodden. Max’s first impression was that it was a rambling weather board house, a bit down at heel, but it was unfair to judge when he saw everything through sleeting rain. And over one dog who smelled like…wet dog.

      There was a veranda. Marc led the way. Pippa ran up the steps behind him, holding a twin by each hand. Max and Dolores brought up the rear. He’d paused to grab his holdall from his car, so he was balancing dog and holdall. Where were those servile minions? he thought again. Maybe accepting the crown could have its uses.

      He wasn’t going there, minions or not. He reached the top step, set Dolores down, tossed his holdall into the comparative dry at the back of the veranda, mourned his minions for another fleeting moment, and then turned his attention to the little family before him.

      At eight, Marc was just doing the transformation from cute into kid. Maybe he was tall for his age, Max thought, but what did he know about kids? He had the same jet black curls all the members of the Alp d’Estella royal family had, and big brown eyes and a snub nose with a smattering of freckles.

      Sophie and Claire were different but similar. They were still not much more than tots, with glossy black curls tied into pigtails and adorned with bright ribbons that now hung limply down their back. They were cute and well rounded and they had a whole lot more freckles than


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