with two ridges of lean muscle running down each side of it.
She came round to button the front of his shirt.
You are very gentle, he said softly, and she dared not look into his eyes, lest she betray herself in front of Anna.
His chest hair was thick and crisp and springy as she brushed it almost unintentionally with her fingertips, and the nipples of his flat hard chest were dusky-pink and tiny, yet they hardened and thrust out under her gaze, a phenomenon which both amazed and enchanted her. She had never dreamed that happened to men also.
Come, Centaine, Anna chided her, and she started as she realized that she had been staring at his body.
I came to thank you, Michael said. I didn’t mean to make work for you. It is no trouble. Centaine still dared not look into his eyes. Without your help I might have burned to death.”No! Centaine said with unnecessary emphasis. The idea of death and this marvelous creature was totally unacceptable to her.
Now she looked at his face again at last, and it seemed that the summer sky showed through chinks in his skull so blue were his eyes.
Centaine, there is much work to do. Anna’s tone was sharper still.
Let me help you, Michael cut in eagerly. I have been grounded, I am not allowed to fly. Anna looked dubious, but the Comte shrugged. Another pair of hands, we could use. A small repayment, Michael insisted.
Your fine uniform. Anna was looking for excuses, and she glanced down at his glossy boots.
We have rubber boots and overalls, Centaine cut in swiftly, and Anna threw up her hands in capitulation.
Centaine thought that even the blue serge deNim, or denim as it was colloquially known, and black rubber boots looked elegant on Michael’s tall lean body as he descended to help the Comte muck out the animal stalls in the cellars.
Centaine and Anna spent the rest of the morning in the vegetable gardens, preparing the soil for the spring sowing.
Every time Centaine went down to the cellars on the flimsiest of excuses, she paused beside wherever Michael was working under the Comte’s direction, and the two of them made halting and self-conscious conversation until Anna came down the staircase.
Where is that child now! Centaine! What on earth are you doing? As if she did not know.
All four of them ate lunch in the kitchen, omelettes flavoured with onions and truffles, cheese and brown bread, and a bottle of red wine over which Centaine relented, but not enough to hand over the cellar keys to her father. She fetched it herself.
The wine softened the mood, even Anna took a glass of it and allowed Centaine to do the same, and the talk became easy and unrestrained, punctuated with bursts of laughter.
Now, captain, the Comte turned to Michael at last with a calculating glitter in his single eye - you and your family, what do you do in Africa?
Farmers, Michael replied.
Tenant farmers? the Comte probed cautiously. No, no -’Michael laughed.
We farm our own lands. Landowners? The Comte’s tone changed, for, as all the world knew, land was the only true form of wealth. What size are your family estates? Well- Michael looked embarrassed quite large.
You see, it is mostly held in a family company, my father and my uncle-’Your uncle, the general? the Comte prompted. Yes, my Uncle Sean-’A hundred hectares? the Comte insisted.
A little more. Michael squirmed on the bench and fiddled with his bread roll.
Two hundred? The Comte looked so expectant that Michael could not evade him longer.
Altogether, if you take the plantations and the cattle ranches, and some land we own in the north, it’s about forty thousand hectares. Forty thousand? The comte stared at him, and then repeated the question in English so there could be no misunderstanding. Forty thousand? Michael nodded uncomfortably. It was only recently that he had begun to feel a little self-conscious about the extent of his family’s worldly possessions.
Forty thousand hectares! The comte breathed reverently, and
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