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"Stuff," Chloe declared. "It'll make me look taller. Are we to go this morning?"

"We might as well get it over with," Hugo said.

"Then I'll change into my habit."

"Give me strength," Hugo muttered as the door closed on her energetic departure. "A shako! What the hell's she's going to come up with next'"

"Reckon as 'ow ye'U be able to steer 'er right," Samuel observed, biting off a length of thread. He held up the shirt he'd been mending and shook his head. "Ye'd do as well to buy yerself a new shirt. This one's more patches than anythin'."

"Not with the farrier to pay," Hugo said, getting to his feet. He sighed. "Ah, well, into the breach, I suppose. Wish me luck, Samuel."

Samuel gave him a dry smile. "If n ye think ye needs it."

Hugo's answering smile was rueful. "Oh, make no mistake, Samuel, I'm going to need all the luck in the world to steer a safe path through this maze."

Neither of them was referring to the shopping expedition. Hugo rarely had to tell the old sailor anything directly. His friend missed little of what went on around him.

"Tell the lass to bring down that gown and I'll wash it while yer gone."

"I hardly think it's your place to do her laundry," Hugo said, frowning.

"Right 'andy she is wi' the animals," Samuel said, "but I don't reckon they taught 'er much about washin' an' flat irons in that seminary. She 'ad enough trouble washin' the curtains from 'er room… and she didn't know one end of the iron from t'other, as I recall."

"No, I don't imagine an heiress with eighty thousand

pounds would have been expected to learn the finer arts of domesticity," Hugo said. "But then, I don't imagine such an heiress would expect to be living in quite such spartan surroundings either."

"She's 'appy enough," Samuel said gruffly.

"Are you talking about me?" Chloe's clear voice came from the doorway and both men turned toward her.

"Yes, we were," Hugo said calmly. "Samuel is offering to wash your gown."

"Oh, no, I couldn't let you do that." She crossed the kitchen.

She danced rather than walked, Hugo thought, watching as she bent and kissed Samuel's cheek. And what an amazing capacity for love and friendship, a capacity until now starved of recipients except the lonely, injured, and unloved of the animal kingdom.

"Nonsense," Samuel said, his ruddy cheek glowing. "Just fetch it down 'ere and then get along wi' ye. I've enough to do wi'out all this argumentation."

"Do as he says, lass," Hugo said. "And then let's get moving."

Purple shoes with gold rosettes and three-inch heels, Samuel!" Hugo flung himself into a chair at the kitchen table. "And the hats… you would not believe how many milliners we had to visit before we found a hat that the lass liked and I was prepared to tolerate."

He shook his head, massaging his temples. "There was a cartwheel of straw and tulle… you have never seen its like… but the shako… Dear God, I thought we were going to come to blows over that. Can you imagine what such a minute creature would look like in purple shoes and a foot-high shako with a monstrous dyed scarlet plume?"

"The shoes were lovely," Chloe said indignantly.

"Don't take any notice of him, Samuel. They were the most beautiful shoes I've ever seen, and Hugo is the stuffiest, primmest, most… most old-fashioned stick-in-the-mud!"

Perched on the table, she extended one dainty foot and examined with a grimace of disgust the bronze kid slipper enclosing it. "Look at this, it's so boring."

"It's tasteful," Hugo said. "And elegant."

"It's boring, isn't it, Samuel?"

"Don't bring me into this," Samuel said, stirring the contents of a pot on the lugpole. "I don't know nothin' about such flimflam."

"And I don't like the hat nearly as much as the one I lost." Chloe glared at her guardian. From her point of view, it had not been a successful shopping expedition, and Hugo had shown a dismaying propensity to behave as if their relationship had not changed dramatically as a result of the previous morning's activities.

"Well, you shouldn't have lost the other one, lass," he said, refusing to be drawn. "No one forced you into the midst of a melee, as I recall."

"Oh, yes, they did! Crispin and Jasper did."

"But who chose to be so forced?" His eyebrows lifted and his smile was slightly mocking.

"Oh, you make me so cross sometimes!" Chloe jumped off the table. "I'm going to feed Plato."

"Hey! Not in those slippers," Hugo protested as she stalked to the kitchen door. "You are not going to dig up worms in kid slippers. They cost a small fortune."

"The sooner they're ruined, the sooner I can buy a new pair."

The silly challenge fell into a stony silence, and Chloe bit her lip, her cheeks warming as she heard her petulance. In a subdued voice she said, "I'll put on my clunky boots."

As she passed him on her way to the hall door, Hugo

reached out and caught her around the hips, drawing her dose to his chair. "Don't be cross, lass. I really do know better than you." He smiled up at her, his eyes crinkling with amusement and something else that she couldn't yet read with fluency.

"But you don't know what I like better than I do."

"Oh, I think I might take you up on that later," he said softly. "You might well be surprised."

Her knees were suddenly weak, and the day's irritations faded as if they'd never been. His arm tightened around her, his hand flattening on her thigh, and she drew a shaky breath.

"I do like surprises."

He laughed and released her with a light pat. "Find your clunky boots and see to that owl. Samuel's dinner won't wait."

Chloe recovered her good humor with habitual speed and, Plato having been fed, came to the table with a ready hunger. Samuel carved a leg of mutton, ladled boiled potatoes, green peas, and parsnips onto her plate and set it before her as she took her usual seat at the side of the long table.

"Would you like a glass of wine with that, lass?" Hugo raised a questioning eyebrow as he was about to take his own seat at the head of the table.

Chloe shook her head and gave him a quick smile. "No, thank you, just water."

"I think Samuel's dinner deserves accompaniment," Hugo said calmly. "Fetch two glasses." He took the cellar key from the wall and went down.

Chloe looked anxiously at Samuel, who shrugged slightly and said, "Do as 'e says, I should."

She took two wineglasses from the dresser and then stood at the table, uncertain where to place them.

Hugo came up with a bottle of claret. "You and Samuel, lass," he said with a slight smile, pulling the cork.

Deliberately, he examined the cork, sniffed it, nodded, placed it on the table, and filled their glasses. Then he sat down and began to eat.

A collective easing of tension rippled around the table. Hugo had set himself a test and had passed it.

Chloe helped Samuel with the dishes while Vivaldi filled the house from the library; they could both hear the harmony in Hugo's soul as it flowed from his fingers.

Afterward she went into the library and stood behind him, one hand lightly clasping his neck. He looked over his shoulder and smiled at her. "You're tired. You had a long ride. Why don't you go up to bed?"

"I'm not tired," she denied, spoiling the effect with a deep yawn.

Hugo laughed. "No, of course you're not. Go on upstairs." His voice softened. "I'll come up and wake you later."

Some instinctive wisdom told her that she couldn't insist that he accompany her, nor could she stay with him until he was ready. Hugo had too dense a thicket around himself for such a new relationship to penetrate. She had no rights of possession, no right to intrude on his privacy. His age and experience demanded that she respect his ruling on the time, the place, and the manner in which they conducted their liaison.

"Promise?"