terrible.”
“No, my lady. I think that your sister is lucky to have you.”
She smiled then, that bright, open smile that made his balls tighten and his breath catch. “Thank you. Although I don’t know if she would agree with you at the moment.”
“Why is that, my lady?”
“I don’t know why, exactly,” she said slowly. “But something seems to be wrong. She’s angry at me . . . no, it’s not that plain. She’s distant, as if she’s keeping part of herself back from me.”
He was out of his depth here, but he tried. “Perhaps it is simply that she’s growing out of the schoolroom.”
“Maybe. But Violet has always been such a cheerful, open girl, and we’ve been very close. With Mother the way she is, well, I’ve had to step in. We’re closer than most sisters.” She smiled mischievously at him. “It’s why I’m so sure of the reason she distrusts you.”
“No doubt you’re right about that.” They’d come to a gate, and he pulled the horse to a stop. “But you’re wrong on one other thing.”
“What is that?”
He tied the reins and stood in preparation to swing down from the gig. “I never disliked you, my lady.”
THE KEY TO A SUCCESSFUL alfresco picnic was in the packing. George peered into the wicker basket and hummed in approval. Squishy foods, like cream cakes, for instance, were bound to come to grief no matter how carefully the hamper was handled. She lifted out some smoked ham and placed it on a cutting board next to the cheese and crusty bread. If one forgot important utensils, one was likely to end up having to tear things apart with one’s bare hands. She handed the corkscrew to Mr. Pye. It was also most imperative that the foods not spoil during the day. A pear tart followed. And the little details should not be forgotten in order to have a really splendid picnic. She took out a small jar of pickled gherkins and sighed in satisfaction.
“I just adore picnics.”
Mr. Pye, wrestling with the cork in a bottle of white wine, looked up and smiled at her. “So I see, my lady.”
For a moment, George felt lost in that smile, the first full one she’d ever seen on his face.
The cork let go with a soft pop. Mr. Pye poured a glass of the translucent liquid and handed it to her. She took a sip, savoring the tart bite on her tongue, and then set the glass down on the throw where they sat. A white butterfly that had been resting on the throw took off.
“Look.” George gestured to the insect. “I wonder what kind it is?”
“It’s a cabbage butterfly, my lady.”
“Oh.” She wrinkled her nose. “What an awful name for such a pretty thing.”
“Yes, my lady.” His tone was grave. Was he laughing at her?
The last farmer they’d visited hadn’t been home, and as they’d driven away from the lonely cottage, she’d insisted that they stop for luncheon. Mr. Pye had found a grassy hill beside the road. The view from the top of the hill was glorious. Even on a cloudy day like this one they could see for miles, maybe all the way into the next county.
“How did you know of this place?” she asked as she fished for pickles with a fork.
“I used to come here as a boy.”
“All alone?”
“Sometimes. I had a little pony as a lad, and I used to go wandering. Packed a picnic, not as grand as this one, of course, but enough to satisfy a boy for the day.”
George listened with her pickle, speared on a fork, held in midair. “That sounds lovely.”
“It was.” He looked away.
She frowned at her pickle, and then popped it into her mouth. “Did you go alone, or were there other boys in the area to accompany you?” She squinted over his shoulder. Was that a horseman coming up the road?
“I usually had a mate.”
Definitely a horseman. “I wonder who that is.”
He twisted to look behind him. His back stiffened. “Damn.”
“Do you know who it is?”
The rider was nearing, and by the narrowness of his shoulders, it wasn’t Lord
Chogyam Trungpa, Chögyam Trungpa