Regina Scott Read Online Free

Regina Scott
Book: Regina Scott Read Online Free
Author: An Honorable Gentleman
Pages:
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myth of the siren? Her beauty and enthusiasm called to him, but he had a feeling they’d lead him far from his intended course.
    “You’re not going to give me a moment’s peace until I’ve agreed to this, are you?” he asked, certain he knew the answer.
    Her dark eyes crinkled up as if she was laughing inside. “Why, Sir Trevor, I simply want to make sure you are well taken care of. My father would insist on nothing less.”
    He was beginning to think her father was at home, hiding from her determination. If anyone insisted on anything in that house, he was certain he was looking at her.
    “And will your father be here to greet me in the morning?” he countered.
    Her smile widened. “I guarantee it. I’m certain once you see the estate in the morning light, you’ll be pleased to call it yours. Would you prefer to ride to the village or shall we walk? It isn’t far.”
    He didn’t like losing, even an argument, but hehad to agree with her that the house needed work before it would be comfortable.
    He wasn’t sure why that so disappointed him. He’d decided on the way north that he would only use the place for the income it could provide. He’d never intended to make it home. Home was London, the social whirl, the acquaintances he’d made in school and afterward. The sooner he could settle his affairs in Blackcliff Hall, the sooner he could return.
    “I’ll ride,” he said, striding for the door. “That is, if the groom can be bothered to saddle my horse.”
    “I’m afraid the groom gave notice ages ago,” she said in that calm, conciliatory voice. She followed him out the door, the mastiff bounding down the stone steps ahead of them while she turned to lock the door. “Colonel Umbrey decided he was too old to move from the Hall and sold his carriage and horses.”
    Was that what would become of him if he stayed? Would he grow to be a fat, complacent old man with no interest in even making the short ride into town?
    “Then the fellow who’s staying in the stables,” Trevor all but snapped.
    She handed him the ornate brass key, which weighed more heavily than it should in his hand. “No one lives at the estate except me and my father, Sir Trevor.”
    He stared at her, feeling as if her great bear of a dog had sat on his chest. “Then who on earth took charge of my horse?”

Chapter Three
    L ord, please protect his horse!
    Gwen threw up the prayer as she led Sir Trevor around the side of the house and through a door in the stone wall for the stables. She could tell the animal meant a great deal to him. In the light of her lantern, his face was tight, his jaw hard. His long legs ate up the ground as they crossed the garden at the back of the house. She had to scurry to keep up.
    Dolly obviously thought it was as great game, this rush through the growing dark, the garden silent around them. She bounded alongside Sir Trevor, veering off from time to time into the shadows to snuff at something under the weed-choked plants. Sir Trevor, on the other hand, had his eyes narrowed in such a fierce look that Gwen could only pray the person who’d taken charge of his horse was either a highly competent stranger looking for work, or was miles away by now.
    “We’ve had a little trouble with vagrants,” she offered as they approached the long, two-story building of dark stone at the back of the garden. “Nothing’s been stolen, mind you. I’m sure it’s just men out of work, on their way to the next village and needing a place to stay the night.”
    “And a horse to ride,” he said, voice as tight as his look.
    Lord, not his horse! She needed Sir Trevor to love the place; she needed him to want to stay. It was the only way to save the village.
    She hadn’t done more than check the stables for vagrants in the past two months, so she wasn’t surprised to find it dark as they approached. Her lantern’s light glinted off the half-moon windows that topped the arches in the stone. More weeds poked up
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