Chapter Thirteen

Duncan had ridden off, leaving Sabrina on the hill, but then he hadn't known that she would be going in the same direction as he. And she was in no hurry to follow, quite the contrary. She had sat back down and completely lost track of the time as she sorted through each and every single thing he'd said to her and preserved it for all time in her memory.

What an incredibly exciting afternoon for her, quite the most exciting she could ever remember having, but then she'd never before spent time, and discourse, with such a handsome man. And complicated. He hadn’t wanted to smile or laugh with her. She'd had to make an extra effort to get him to. And she wondered, after he'd gone, what could be so bothering him to cause such a sour mood.

But he'd been smiling when he left her, and that pleased her more than she could say, that she'd lightened his mood, because she had liked him. She didn't usually make such a judgment that quickly, but in his case it was hard not to like him, his voice, his smile, his sense of humor when he allowed it loose, and of course, the look of him. He had disturbed her senses in a myriad of ways, but she still had enjoyed every moment she had spent in his presence.

But she wasn't delusional. A man like him was not for the likes of her; he was for the Ophelias of the world. A shame, a pitiful shame really, that it was so, but there you had it. Beautiful for beautiful, and for her, a nice, plain-looking man, intelligent, resourceful, kind, someone who would enjoy taking walks with her, and laughing, and sitting on a hill watching the sunset together ...

Oh, my, the sun really was about to set. Wherever had the time got to?

Sabrina leapt to her feet and ran, nearly all the way, to Summers Glade. She entered the house at the back, so as to encounter fewer people who might see her windblown appearance, and finding the servants' stairs, made it up to her room. Her aunt Alice was there, however, so she wasn't going to escape complete notice. But Alice had been impatiently waiting on her—and packing for her—so she really didn't spare her more than a brief glance before bringing another dress to the open valise on the bed.

She did spare the query, "Wherever have you been? We should have left hours ago with everyone else."

"Everyone else? So Lord Neville didn't like having London descend on him after all?"

Alice tsked. "Whether he did or didn't, he was agreeable to having a house party, then suddenly he wasn't, but no more than to be expected from that senile old coot. And there we were just getting ready to go down, when his housekeeper came round to ask us to leave. Poor woman was quite embarrassed

about it, too."

Sabrina moved to help her aunt finish the packing. "You can't blame Lord Neville, when having this gathering wasn't his idea. He no doubt feels that Ophelia and her fiancé should have some time alone together, to become acquainted—"

"Hard to do that, m'dear, when the Reids have already left to return to London."

"Left?" Sabrina frowned. "Just because the marquis declined to entertain grandly? Ophelia really wouldn't get into a snit about that, would she?"

"I've no idea. Didn't see them before they left. Hilary might have. You can ask her."

Sabrina did that, while they waited in the entryway with their baggage. The housekeeper had sent for one of Lord Neville's own vehicles, since they had no other transportation, having arrived with the Reids.

"Mary said she would write me," Hilary replied in answer to Sabrina's question. "She said she was too upset to talk of it just now, and poor dear, she did look quite upset."

"And Ophelia? Did you see her?"

"Yes," Hilary said, then in a whispered aside, "And she appeared to have finally been chastised by her father, for being so presumptuous. Quite pink, her one cheek was. I don't hold with physical discipline, but Mary's girl has been allowed to take on airs that should have been nipped in the bud long ago."

Sabrina was amazed. "Her father actually slapped her?"

Hilary nodded. "That handprint on her cheek would suggest so."

"But they didn't object when she invited us here," Sabrina pointed out.

"We hardly would have been noticed if it had only been us, but fifty-six people arrived here today, all invited by Ophelia, as if she were already the marquise and had every right to invite whomever she pleased. It's no wonder Neville put his foot down after he finally got a full head count. I would have, too, I don't mind saying, if the guests I do invite happen to invite fifty-six others. M'dear, that just isn't proper form."

Of course it wasn't, and Ophelia did no doubt know that. But then Sabrina had never spoken to her aunts about Ophelia's attempt to sabotage her engagement to be rid of what had been an unwanted fiancé. She just hadn't felt comfortable talking about it, when she so disapproved of it, and Ophelia's mother was Hilary's good friend.

This latest scheme of Ophelia's to have half the ton descending on Summers Glade had likely been done just to infuriate the marquis. But then that was before she had actually met her fiancé, and if she had met him by now, she was undoubtedly regretting what she had set in motion.

It was all very complicated, Ophelia's plans and means of accomplishing them. Sabrina was quite glad to be out of it. She had been raised to be straightforward. Setting up complicated schemes in the hopes that they would have a particular desired effect just wasn't her cup of tea. It had never been dull, being around Ophelia, but Sabrina was actually looking forward to a bit of dullness again.

However, she was hoping for one more sight of Duncan MacTavish before she left Summers Glade, since she wasn't likely to see him again after today, at least not until the wedding, which they were sure to be invited to. With Ophelia gone back to London, he would probably be going there as well. But wherever he was in the big house, it wasn't near the entrance, and they were soon on their way home.

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