The Heir's Chosen Bride. Marion Lennox

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answer to that. ‘Sell.’

      Her face stilled. ‘Can you do that?’

      ‘I’ve checked.’ Actually, Marcia had checked. ‘If I put the money into trust, then, yes.’ The capital needed to stay intact but the interest alone—plus the rent rolls from the land in Scotland—would keep him wealthy even without his own money.

      ‘You don’t need me to help you sell it,’ she snapped, and then bit her lip. ‘I’m sorry. I know selling seems sensible but…but…’

      She took a deep breath, and suddenly her voice was laced with emotion—and pain. ‘I’ll stay tonight. Tomorrow I’ll pack and go stay with my sister until I can arrange a flight home.’

      ‘Susie, there’s no need—’

      ‘There is a need,’ she said, and suddenly her voice sounded almost desperate.

      ‘But why?’

      ‘Because I keep falling in love,’ she snapped, the desperation intensifying. ‘I fell so far into love with Rory that his death broke my heart. I fell for Angus. And now I’ve fallen for your stupid castle, for your dumb suits of armour—they’re called Eric and Ernst, by the way, and they like people chatting to them—for your stupid compost system, which is second to none in the entire history of the western world—I’ve even fallen for your worms. I keep breaking my heart and I’m not going to do it any more. I’m going home to the States and I’m going back to landscape gardening and Rose and I are going to live happily ever after. Now, if you’ll excuse me, I need to finish my work. Bring your gear in. You can have any bedroom you like upstairs. The whole top floor is yours. Rose and I are downstairs. But I need to do some fast digging before Rose wakes from her nap. Dinner’s at seven and there’s plenty to spare. I’ll see you in the kitchen.’

      And without another word she brushed past him, out of the conservatory and back into the brilliant autumn sunshine. She grabbed her spade she’d left leaning against the fence and headed off the way they’d come. Her back was stiff and set—her spade was over her shoulder like a soldier carrying a gun—she looked the picture of determination.

      But he wasn’t fooled.

      He’d seen the glimmer of unshed tears as she’d turned away—and as she reached the garden gate she started, stiffly, to run.

      ‘Kirsty, he’s here. The new owner.’

      Susie had been crying. Kirsty could hear it in her voice, and her heart stilled.

      ‘Sweetheart, is he horrid? Is he another Kenneth? I’ll be right there.’

      ‘I don’t need you to come.’ There was an audible sniff.

      ‘Then what’s wrong?’

      ‘He’s going to sell.’

      Susie’s sister paused. She’d known this would happen. It was inevitable. But somehow…somehow she’d hoped…

      Susie had come so far. Dreadfully injured in the engineered car crash which had killed her husband, Susie had drifted into a depression so deep it had been almost crippling. But with this place, with her love for the old earl, with her love for the wonderful castle garden and her enchantment with her baby daughter, she’d been hauled back from the brink. For the last few months she’d been back to the old Susie, laughing, bossy, full of plans…

      Angus’s death had been expected, a peaceful end to a long and happy life, but Kirsty knew that her twin hadn’t accepted it yet. Hadn’t moved on.

      Kirsty was a doctor, and she’d seen this before. Loving and caring for someone to the end, watching them fade but never really coming to terms with the reality that the end meant the end.

      ‘So…’ she said at last, cautiously, and Susie hiccuped back a sob.

      ‘I’m going home. Back to the States. Tomorrow.’

      ‘Um… I suspect you won’t be able to get travel papers for Rose by tomorrow.’

      ‘I have a passport for her already. There are only a couple of last-minute documents I need to organise. Can I come and stay with you and Jake until then?’

      ‘Sure,’ Kirsty said uneasily, mentally organising her house to accommodate guests. They were extending the back of the house to make a bigger bedroom for the twins—and for the new little one she hadn’t quite got round to telling her sister about—but they’d squash in somehow. ‘But why? What’s he like?’

      ‘He’s gorgeous.’

      Silence.

      ‘I…see.’ Kirsty turned thoughtful. ‘So why do you want to come and stay at our house? Don’t you trust yourself?’

      ‘It’s not like that.’

      ‘No?’

      ‘No,’ Susie snapped. ‘It’s just… He’s not like Rory and he’s not like Angus and I can’t bear him to be here. Just—owning everything. He doesn’t even know about compost. I said we had the best compost system in the world and he looked at me like I was talking Swahili.’

      ‘Normal, in fact.’

      ‘He’s not normal. He wears cream suede shoes.’

      ‘Right.’

      ‘Don’t laugh at me, Kirsty Cameron.’

      ‘When have I ever laughed at you?’

      ‘All the time. Can I come and stay?’

      ‘Not tonight. Tomorrow I’ll air one of the new rooms and see if I can get the paint fumes out. You can surely bear to stay with him one night. Or…would you like me to come and stay with you?’

      ‘No. I mean…well, he offered to stay at the pub so he must be safe enough. I said he could stay.’

      ‘Would you like to borrow Boris?’

      ‘Fat lot of good Boris would be as a guard dog.’

      ‘He’s looked after us before,’ Kirsty said with dignity. OK, Boris was a lanky, misbred, over-boisterous dog, but he’d proved a godsend in the past.

      Faint laughter returned to her sister’s voice at that. ‘He did. He’s wonderful. But I’m fine. I’ll feed Lord Hamish Douglas and give him a bed tonight and then I’ll leave him to his own devices.’ The smile died from her words. ‘Oh, but, Kirsty, to see him sell the castle…I don’t see how I can bear it.’

      The castle was stunning.

      While Susie finished her gardening Hamish took the opportunity to explore. And he was stunned.

      It was an amazing, over-the-top mixture of grandeur and kitsch. The old earl hadn’t stinted when it came to building a castle as a castle ought to be built—to last five hundred years or more. But into his grand building he’d put furnishings that were anything but grand. Hamish had an Aunt Molly who’d love this stuff. He thought of Molly as he winced at the truly horrible

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