Bound by Duty. Diane Gaston

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Bound by Duty - Diane Gaston


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his baser urges.

      ‘It is a little damp, but I feel better wearing it.’ She was still wrapped up in the blanket.

      He lifted the jugs for her to see. ‘These will have to do for tea. Who the devil knows why they are here?’ He placed them on the table. ‘Do you mind waiting for tea? I should check on my horse.’

      ‘Apollo?’ She remembered the name. ‘Of course I do not mind. I should feel terrible if your horse suffered because of me.’

      Was this sarcasm? He peered at her, but saw only concern on her face.

      Consideration of his horse’s well-being was nearly as seductive as her naked reflection and her lowered voice.

      He took his greatcoat off the rope and threw it over his shoulders. ‘I will only be a moment. I’ll tend to the tea when I return.’ He stepped outside.

      The mud beneath his bare feet felt painfully cold, but that was preferable to wearing his sodden boots even if he were able to get his feet into them. The rain had slowed, but the sun was low in the sky. Even if the rain stopped, the roads would not improve before dark.

      He and Miss Summerfield would spend the night together.

      It would be a long, painful night. No matter what his body demanded, he would not take advantage of her. Besides, he well knew a man must keep his passions in check.

      On the other hand, if she approached him...?

      Apollo whinnied.

      ‘How are you faring, old fellow? Are you warm enough?’ He ran his hand down the length of the horse’s neck.

      He and Apollo had been through adventures more dangerous than this one, but Marc was sorry to have subjected the stallion to one more hardship.

      He found a blanket to put over Apollo. ‘This will keep you warm.’ He mucked out the stable and replenished the hay and water before returning to the cabin.

      When he opened the door Miss Summerfield handed him a towel. ‘I found this. You can dry your feet.’

      The cabin was brighter. ‘You lit lamps.’

      ‘Only two, so I could see to fix the tea.’ She walked to the table. ‘It has been steeping. It should be ready.’

      She fixed the tea?

      ‘Come, we can sit.’ She walked over to the table.

      She still wore a blanket, but she’d fashioned it like a tunic and belted it with a rope. ‘You’ve made yourself a garment.’

      She turned and smiled, making her face even lovelier. ‘I devised a way that the blanket will not fall off me if I wish to use my arms. I suppose I should leave a coin to pay for cutting holes in the blanket for my head and for the belt.’

      He hung up his greatcoat. ‘I would say you are resourceful.’

      She smiled again. ‘Thank you.’

      He sat at the table and she poured him a Toby jug of tea.

      ‘I could not find any sugar,’ she said.

      ‘No matter.’ His fingers grazed hers as he reached for the jug. He glanced at her hands and saw no evidence of hard work in them.

      She sat and poured herself some tea. ‘I have never drunk tea from jugs like this. I have never drunk anything from Toby jugs. I have seen some like them in the village shop, though.’

      He frowned. A well-bred young lady might not have used a Toby jug. Perhaps a woman in service would not have used a Toby jug either.

      Who was this Miss Tess Summerfield?

      He took a sip of tea and tapped his jug with his fingers. ‘You said something about Tinmore Hall when I picked you up. Are you employed there?’

      ‘Employed there?’ She looked puzzled. ‘No, I live there. Now, that is. We—my sisters and I—recently moved there.’ She paused as if trying to decide to say more. ‘My sister Lorene is the new Lady Tinmore.’

      But this made no sense. ‘I thought the old lord was still alive. He had a grandson?’

      She met his eye. ‘Lord Tinmore is still alive and he has no grandson. My sister married the old lord.’

      His brows shot up. ‘The old lord? The man must be in his seventies.’

      ‘He is nearly eighty.’ She lifted her chin. ‘How do you know Lord Tinmore?’

      He took a sip of tea. ‘I do not know him. I know of him. My father went to school with his son and I remember my father mentioning the son’s death. It was sudden, as I recall.’ He stared at her. ‘Your sister married a man in his seventies?’

      ‘Yes.’ Her gaze did not waver.

      She was sister to Lord Tinmore’s wife? Well, she certainly was not a housemaid, then.

      He’d wager the old earl did not marry below his station—most men of his social stature did not. Most gentlemen were wiser than that.

      ‘Who is Tess Summerfield that an earl would marry your sister?’ he asked.

      She met his eye. ‘I am the second daughter of the late Sir Hollis Summerfield of Yardney.’

      Sir Hollis?

      Ah, yes. Sir Hollis. He’d heard of him. Or rather, he’d heard of his wife. It was said his wife had had so many lovers her daughters were sired by different men and none of them her husband.

      Even so, they must have been reared as respectable young ladies and now were under the protection of the Earl of Tinmore.

      He rubbed his forehead. ‘This changes matters. We must be very careful not to be discovered together.’

      She sat up straighter. ‘I have no intention of being found with you! I assure you I hope to be gone as soon as the rain stops.’

      He did not have the heart to tell her that it would likely be dark before then.

      She took another sip of tea. ‘I am sorry, Mr Glenville. I did not mean to sound so ungrateful. You might have left me in the road.’

      He opened his eyes and gazed at her. Her expression was soft and lovely.

      ‘You did not sound ungrateful, Miss Tess Summerfield.’ He savoured the sound of her name.

      She blushed, as though she had read his thoughts. ‘I know what you did for me,’ she said quietly. ‘You rescued me. And I do realise that being alone with you in this cabin, especially in my state of undress, is a very compromising situation.’

      She was direct; he appreciated that.

      ‘I have no wish to see you ruined,’ he explained. ‘That is all I meant.’

      She faced him again. ‘All I need is to reach the road back to Tinmore Hall. I will tell no one where I’ve been or who I’ve been with. If you can help me get that far, you can trust that I will say nothing of this. Ever.’

      ‘I will see you to safety.’ He’d always intended to do so. ‘And I, also, will say nothing of this.’

      She extended her hand across the table. ‘Let us shake on it.’

      He placed his large, rough hand in her smaller, smooth one. ‘We have a bargain, Miss Summerfield.’

       Chapter Three

      Up so close, Mr Glenville’s blue eyes shone with such intensity Tess could not look away. Nor could she move her hand from his strong grasp. Her face grew warm.

      ‘Are you hungry, Miss Summerfield?’ he asked, releasing her.

      ‘A little,’ she managed. She was famished.

      He


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