The Prince's Outback Bride. Marion Lennox

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he said but he didn’t go. They were gazing at him, Marc with curiosity and slight defensiveness, Pippa with calm friendliness and the dog with the benign observance of a very old and very placid mutt. Pippa was reaching over to wind up the window. ‘Don’t,’ he told her.

      ‘Don’t?’

      ‘Why are you sitting in a truck in the middle of a cattle pit?’

      ‘We’re stuck.’

      ‘I can see that. How long do you intend to sit here?’

      ‘Until the rain stops.’

      ‘This rain,’ he said cautiously, ‘may never stop.’ He grimaced as a sudden squall sent a rush of cold water down the back of his neck. More and more he felt like a drowned rat. Heaven knew what Pippa would be thinking of him. Not much, he thought.

      That alone wasn’t what he was used to. Women normally reacted strongly to Maxsim de Gautier. He was tall and strongly built, with the Mediterranean skin, deep black hair and dark features of his mother’s family. The tabloids described him as drop-dead gorgeous and seriously rich.

      But Pippa could see little of this and guess less. She obviously didn’t have a clue who he was. Maybe she could approximate his age—thirty-five—but it’d be a wild guess. Mostly she’d be seeing water.

      ‘Forty days and forty nights is the rain record,’ he told her. ‘I think we’re heading for that now.’

      She smiled. ‘So if I were you I’d get back in your car and head for dry land.’

      ‘Why didn’t you go back to the house instead of waiting here in the truck?’

      Until now Marc had stayed silent, watching him with wariness. But now the little boy decided to join in.

      ‘We’re going to get fish and chips,’ he informed him. ‘But the cattle-grid broke so we’re stuck. We have to wait ’til it stops raining. Then we have to find Mr Henges and ask him to pull us out with his tractor. Pippa says we might as well sit here and whinge ’cos it’s warmer here than in the house. We’ve run out of wood.’

      ‘The gentleman doesn’t need to know why we’re sitting here,’ Pippa told him.

      ‘But we’ve been sitting here for ages and we’re hungry.’

      ‘Shh.’

      Marc, however, was preparing to be sociable. ‘I’m Marc and this is our Pippa and this is our dog, Dolores. And over the back is Sophie and Claire. Sophie has red hair ribbons and Claire’s are blue.’

      Sophie and Claire. Over the back. He peered through the tiny slot of wound-down window. Yes, there were two more children. He could make out two little faces, with similar colouring to Marc. Cute and pigtailed. Red and blue ribbons. Twins?

      Sophie and Claire. He hadn’t heard of any Sophie and Claire.

      Were they Pippa’s? But they looked like Marc. And Pippa had red hair.

      No matter. It was only Marc he needed to focus on. ‘I’m pleased to meet you all,’ he said. This was a crazy place to have a conversation, but he had to start introductions some time. ‘I’m Max.’

      ‘Hi,’ Pippa said and put her hand on the window winder again. Dismissing him. ‘Good luck. We may see you tomorrow.’

      ‘Can’t I help you?’

      ‘We’re fine.’

      ‘I could tow you.’

      ‘Do you have a tow-bar on your car?’

      ‘Um…no.’ It was a hire-car—a luxury saloon. Of course he didn’t. ‘Can I find Mr Henges and his tractor for you?’

      ‘Bert won’t come ’til the rain stops.’

      ‘You’re planning on sitting in the truck until then?’

      ‘Or until it’s time for milking.’

      The thought of milking cows in this weather didn’t bear considering. ‘You don’t think maybe you could run back to the house, peel off your wet things, have a hot shower and…oh, I don’t know, play Happy Families until milking?’

      ‘It’s warmer here,’ Marc said.

      ‘But we want fish and chips,’ one of the little girls piped up from the back seat.

      ‘There’s bread,’ Marc said, in severe, big-brother tones. ‘We’ll make toast before milking.’

      ‘We want fish and chips,’ the other little girl whimpered. ‘We’re hungry.’

      ‘Shh.’ Pippa turned back to Max. ‘Can you move away so I can wind up the window? We’re getting wet.’

      ‘Sure.’ But Max didn’t move. He thought of all he’d come to say to this woman and he winced. Back home it had seemed simple—to say what needed to be said and walk away. But now, suddenly, it seemed harder. ‘Isn’t there anything I can do for you first?’

      What was he saying? The easiest thing to do right now would be to walk away from the whole mess, he thought. Someone else could tell these people what they had to know. But then, he’d have to remember that he’d walked away for a long time.

      ‘We don’t need anything,’ Pippa told him, oblivious to his train of thought, and he dragged his attention back to the matter at hand. Truck stuck. Fish and chips.

      ‘I’m thinking I should talk to Marc about this,’ he said, focusing on food. ‘This is, after all, men’s business. Hunting and gathering. You were heading to the shops when your truck got stuck. Looking for fish and chips.’

      ‘Yes,’ said Marc, pleased at his acuity, and Sophie and Claire beamed agreement, anticipating assistance. ‘We’ve run out of food,’ Marc told him. ‘All we have left is toast. We don’t even have any jam.’

      Right. He could do this. Jam and fish and chips. But not drowned like this.

      ‘I have a car that’s not stuck in a cattle-grid,’ he told them. ‘But I’m soaking wet. You have a house where I can dry off, and I’ve come a long way to visit you. Let’s combine. You let me use your house to change and I’ll go into town and buy fish and chips.’

      ‘We can’t impose on you,’ Pippa said. But she looked desperate, and he wondered why.

      First things first. He had to persuade her to let him help. ‘I’m not an axe murderer,’ he told her. ‘I promise. I really am a relation.’

      ‘But…’

      ‘I’m Maxsim de Gautier. Max.’ He watched to see if there was recognition of the name, but she was too preoccupied to think of anything but immediate need—and maybe she’d never heard the name anyway. ‘I’d really like to help.’

      Desperation faded—just a little. ‘I shouldn’t let you.’

      ‘Yes,

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