Chapter 3
“Hunter, you’re home!”
Scarlett didn’t think she had ever see Lavinia so animated as when she ran through the door of the dining room, stopping with her skirts still billowing around her as she looked about in bewilderment for her brother.
Her face fell when she found only Scarlett sitting there.
“I heard Hunter was home,” she said by way of apology, sitting down at the table.
Scarlett shrugged. “Apparently he did not wake in time for breakfast,” she said, but her comment was slightly presumptuous as the man in question strolled into the room.
Lavinia stood up from the table so abruptly that her Chippendale chair went flying backward.
She ran the few steps remaining between them and all but jumped into her brother’s arms.
“Oh, Hunter, it is so wonderful to see you! I was asking Scarlett just yesterday if she knew whether you were going to grace us with your presence this Christmastide. Isn’t it lovely Scarlett?”
Scarlett forced a smile onto her face. If nothing else, it was wonderful to see Hunter’s sister so joyful.
Scarlett swallowed the piece of toast that was stuck in her throat, momentarily unsure of what to say.
For she had forgotten how devastatingly handsome Hunter was, but now that he stood here before her in the light of day, she found herself reminded.
Last night after she had tackled him to the floor, when he looked at her she felt the intensity of his gaze, but in the dim light she hadn’t been able to appreciate the true allure of his blue-green eyes, which she now remembered much more vividly as the sun streamed in through the window to descend on the masculine planes of his face.
He and Lavinia were alike in coloring, but that was where the similarities ended.
Where she was round, he was angular, and where she was soft, he was hard muscle.
Scarlett hadn’t paid near enough attention to their parents to notice which they favored, but she seemed to recall the marquess reminding her of his son.
“Where is that husband of yours?”
“Oh, you know Baxter,” she said with a wave of her hand. “He had some business or other to attend to” —likely a cheroot and a newspaper, if Scarlett knew well enough— “but said he would be by to see you later on. We will be spending much time together over Christmas, I’m sure.”
“I, ah, I’m not sure how long I will be staying.”
“What?” Lavinia’s joy evaporated suddenly. “You only just arrived, Hunter, and Christmas is but days away. You must stay. Please, say you will. We will have dinner together, and we are even hosting a New Year’s Eve party. It will be great fun.”
“We shall see,” he said noncommittally, before raising his head to look directly at Scarlett. “Good morning, Scarlett.”
“Lord Oxford.”
“Hunter.”
“Well,” Lavinia said after a moment of silence, while she looked back and forth between them. “I think I should probably go. I’m sure the two of you have much to discuss.”
“Please stay,” Scarlett said, trying to keep the desperation out of her voice. “In fact, we actually saw one another last night when Hunt— Lord Oxford arrived, so there is no need for you to go.”
“Last night? I was here until well past dinner. What time did you get in, Hunter?” Lavinia asked.
“Just after midnight.”
“Oh!” Lavinia’s cheeks reddened as she mistakenly assumed the nature of their meeting. “Then you— that’s wonderful! Well, not that I should be saying a thing, I simply hoped — well…”
Scarlett saved her from her rambling. “Lord Oxford and I scarcely said hello, Nia. I was reading in the library and Lord Oxford … happened upon me.”
“I see,” she said, an eyebrow still raised. “Well, ah, yes, I should be going then. Goodbye!”
And then with a flounce of her skirts, she was gone, leaving the two of them to stare at one another awkwardly.
Hunter cleared his throat and walked to the sideboard, loading a plate with ham, eggs, and toast. He poured himself a coffee and sat down across from Scarlett, who simply watched him.
He moved gracefully, despite his height and solid frame.
She watched as he buttered his bread and stirred sugar into his coffee before lifting the cup to his mouth.
“See something interesting?” he asked, and she jumped, startled out of her reverie.
Good Lord, Scarlett, get it together. This was the last thing she wanted — to be inexplicably attracted to the man she was trying so hard to distance herself from.
What if she came too close, if she not only developed feelings for him beyond attraction, but eventually fell in love with him?
Unfortunately, she knew all too well what the end result would be.
He would be back in London, the city she hated, living his life alone, free from her, while she pined away here at Wintervale, her previous enjoyable life now filled with despair.
“Nothing at all,” she finally drawled back, hopeful that he didn’t notice how nervous she was. She needed to get out of here. She placed her hands on the table to push back her chair, but he held up a finger to halt her.
“Scarlett,” he said, playing with her name. “There is something we must discuss. Something that Lavinia touched upon.”
“Yes?”
“You have made it clear you want little to do with me. However, the fact of the matter is, we are married, and I am in line to become a marquess one day. We need children, Scarlett, you must realize that.”
She swallowed hard. She shouldn’t be surprised by his words. As he said, they were married, and that was what was expected. And yet, the thought of him in her bed … well, actually the thought of him in her bed was not altogether an unpleasant one, and that is what scared her the most.
“I think … there are a few things we must first determine before it comes to that,” she said, doing her best to maintain her composure.
“And those would be?” He raised an eyebrow and leaned back in his chair. His curls were haphazardly skewed around his head, and Scarlett felt a strange urge to lean forward and run her hands over them, but, of course, she restrained herself.
“Where would we raise said children? You spend all of your time in London, and I have no wish to live there.”
“What’s wrong with London?”
“It’s so … dirty,” she said, which was partly the truth. “Everyone is so close together all the time, and there is no freedom.”
“You value your freedom,” he observed.
“I do,” she said, leaning forward. “More than you know.”
“Very well,” he said, waving a hand out in front of him. “Raise them here. I enjoy Wintervale and will come home as often as possible.”
“As you have these past few months?”
“Come, Scarlett, that is hardly fair. You all but pushed me from the house.”
She looked down at her plate. He was right. She had been an absolute fiend to him. In trying to protect herself, she had made him believe that she was a monster, one he couldn’t even live with. Whatever was she to do?
Despite feeling like a coward, she chose not to respond to his last statement.
“If you do not want to even stay for Christmas, then why did you come?” she eventually asked.
“My steward tells me there are matters that I must attend to. Urgent matters, actually. I should likely find him post-haste.”
“Mr. Stone?” She allowed disdain to drip from her words. “Is there anything I can do to help?”
“To help? With what?” he asked as he stood, looking down at her with confusion.
“With the estate. I have done all I can to try to improve things while you were gone. In fact, I should like to speak with you about a few matters of importance.”
“Oh?” He looked down at her, still bemused, but finally a small smile crossed his lips.
“I am glad you are enjoying running the household, Scarlett, truly I am. It has been some time since anyone has called Wintervale home for more than a month at a time. I’m sure the staff appreciates having you here.
Well, I will be off now. We will talk again later on this evening. ”
And then he was walking out the door, leaving Scarlett to stare at his back.
She hadn’t meant running the household, not at all.
Mrs. Shepherd did a well enough job of that, and Scarlett left her to it.
Apparently, it hadn’t occurred to Hunter that his wife might have a thought to the estate itself.
He certainly had neglected it, and Stone was completely incompetent, so someone had to do it.
Well, he would find out her thoughts soon enough.
“She what?”
Hunter rose from the chair behind his wide mahogany desk, rounding it to stare at his steward. The man looked up at him with a satisfied expression, his smile marred by his untidy teeth. He seemed pleased with Hunter’s reaction, which irked him all the more.
“Yes, my lord, she’s been giving away the money!
And for nothing. Just handing it to people, like ‘here ya go,’ with them doing nothing for it!
I told her time and again not to, but she told me, she’s the countess, and I’m the steward, so what am I to do?
That’s why I sent for you, my lord, so you could hopefully talk some sense into her. ”
Hunter paused for a moment, staring down at his knuckles grinding into his desk, before walking around it and beginning to pace.
This was why he had a capable steward — so he didn’t have to worry about these matters at home.
He was preoccupied, trying to affect change throughout the country.
There were children working harder than grown men in mills, men and women in prisons and asylums being treated worse than animals.
He should be working to pass bills that would impact the lives of many.
But no, instead he now had to see to his wife, who decided to quench the boredom of remaining here in the country by involving herself in things she knew nothing about.
“How do you know this?” he asked with some resignation, accepting what Stone was telling him.
“There’s been money missing for a couple of months now, my lord.
I tried to ascertain where it had gone but found nothing amiss.
There was but one account it was coming from — the one your wife is able to access.
At first, I thought she was spending it on frivolous things, like dresses and the like, but then I heard a rumor round the village of people who were better off than they were before.
I confronted her about it, and she didn’t even bother to hide it! ”
Well, at the very least, his wife was honest, that was for certain.
“I think this could lead to some very nasty surprises, my lord,” Stone continued, his voice practically dripping with hatred. “Imagine some folks having more than others. They’ll say the earl and his wife are playing favorites. Soon enough she’ll be wanting them all to pay lower rates — ha!”
Hunter sighed and ran a hand through his hair.
He had never had the patience for this sort of thing.
He didn’t want to be here counting figures and dissolving tensions.
He much preferred a good, upfront argument between gentlemen, as he pushed for needed change.
But, here he was. His father had given him this land with the understanding that he would take care of it, and that he must do.
Even if it meant pushing his wife even further away.
“I suppose I best go speak with her,” he said, dismissing his steward, who nodded at him, a smug smile on his face as he departed.
Hunter’s study was, conveniently he supposed, near his wife’s bedroom and sitting area.
It was still mid-morning, and he was sure he would find her there.
What she did with her time, he wasn’t sure, but likely the typical embroidery, or perhaps she was waiting for a neighbor to call. That was what most ladies did, anyway.
He didn’t realize how much of a surprise he was in for.