nose.
“Welcome home, Lady Catherine,” the butler said in a voice far too deep and sonorous to come out of a man of such slight proportions. Indeed, it looked as if a stiff wind would knock the man on his posterior.
“Thank you, Milton.” While handing him her bonnet and shawl, she said, “This is Mr. Stanton, my brother’s business partner and a dear friend of the family. He’ll be staying for several days. I’ve instructed that his things be taken to the blue guest chamber.”
Milton bowed his head. “I shall see that the room is readied at once.”
Spencer nodded toward the mahogany table. “Did you see your newest flowers, Mum?”
Andrew noted the slight flush that crept up her cheeks. “They are rather difficult to miss.”
Spencer made a disgusted sound. “That one isn’t nearly as large as the arrangement in the drawing room. They’re turning our house into an indoor garden! Why can’t they leave you alone?” He turned toward Andrew, clearly seeking an ally. “Don’t you think they should leave her alone?”
“They?”
“The
Spencer made a disgusted sound. “I feel as if I’m choking on flowers. Don’t you think they should stop?”
Andrew swallowed the irritated
“Shall I arrange for tea?” Milton asked, wading into the awkward silence.
“Yes, thank you, but just for two. In the drawing room.” She turned to Andrew. “I’ll see you settled in, but then I’m afraid I have a previous appointment.” She touched Spencer’s sleeve. “Will you entertain Mr. Stanton while I’m gone?”
“Yes. Is your appointment with Mrs. Ralston, or with Dr. Oliver?”
“Doctor?” Andrew asked, his gaze jumping to Lady Catherine. “Are you ill?”
“No,” Lady Catherine said quickly. “My appointment is with Mrs. Ralston.”
Spencer turned to Andrew. “Mrs. Ralston is my mother’s greatest friend. Unless the weather is foul, Mum walks to her house every day to visit and help her.”
“Help her?” asked Andrew.
Spencer nodded. “Mrs. Ralston has arthritis in her hands. Mum writes letters for her and tends her flower beds.”
Andrew smiled at Lady Catherine. “Very kind of you.”
She appeared to blush. “Genevieve is a very dear lady.”
“And fortunate to have such a staunch friend.” Andrew returned his attention to Spencer. “And who is Dr. Oliver?” he asked casually.
“
If any other woman besides Lady Catherine were involved, Andrew would have found the boy’s antics highly entertaining. Instead, he grimly noted that Lady Catherine’s cheeks flamed to crimson. He clearly recalled Philip mentioning that one of Lady Catherine’s admirers was a village doctor. Based on her reaction, he strongly suspected this was the man.
“What nonsense, Spencer,” she said. “Dr. Oliver makes no such faces and is merely a friend.”
“Who stops by every day.”
“Not
“It would appear that there is an abundance of polite gentlemen in Little Longstone,” Andrew said dryly.
Spencer looked toward the ceiling. “Yes. And they’re all intent upon courting my mother.”
“It cannot be considered courting if I do not respond,” Lady Catherine said in a firm voice. “Their interest will cease once they realize I am not interested.”
Andrew cleared his throat. “Based on these”-he waved his hand, encompassing the trio of floral arrangements visible-“they have not yet realized that.”
“Lord Bedingfield now knows,” Spencer said. “I told him myself when he called upon you yesterday afternoon.”
“What on earth did you say to him?” Lady Catherine asked.
“I said, ‘My mother is not interested in you.’ ”
A noise that sounded distinctly like a poorly smothered laugh emitted from Lady Catherine, followed by a cough. Andrew bit back a smile of his own. Spencer was indeed a good lad.
“And what did Lord Bedingfield say?” Catherine asked.
Spencer hesitated, then shrugged. “Just something about children being seen and not heard.”
Milton cleared his throat. “Actually, his lordship said something extremely unpleasant which does not bear repeating, at which time I instructed him to leave before I set the dogs upon him.”
Andrew’s jaw clenched at the realization that Lord Bedingfield had clearly said something unkind to Spencer.
“We don’t have any dogs,” Lady Catherine said.
“I did not feel it was necessary to point that out to his lordship, my lady.”
Although there was hurt in his eyes, a smile flirted around the edges of Spencer’s mouth. “Where upon Lord Bedingfield departed, only to trip as he crossed the threshold-”
“-My foot somehow got in his way,” Milton said with a stoic expression. “Most unfortunate.”
“I’d never before seen the shade of red he turned,” Spencer said, his grin now full. “Can’t imagine how angry he would have been if he’d known we don’t actually have any dogs.”
“Yes, I fear his lordship won’t be coming back,” Milton said with a perfectly straight face. “A thousand apologies for my clumsiness, Lady Catherine.”
“I shall endeavor, somehow, to find forgiveness in my heart,” she replied in an equally serious voice. She then turned and shot her son a huge wink.
Well, that was one suitor gone, Andrew thought with an inward grim smile. Unfortunately, there were still quite a few more who needed to go.
While her coachman remained with the carriage, Catherine entered Ralston cottage’s modest foyer.
“Good afternoon, Baxter,” she greeted Genevieve’s imposing butler, tilting back her head to meet his obsidian gaze. “Is Mrs. Ralston at home?”
“The mistress is always at home for you, Lady Catherine,” Baxter announced in his deep, gravelly voice. Relieved, Catherine surrendered her velvet bonnet and cashmere shawl to Baxter’s ham-sized hands.
No matter how many times she saw him, Baxter’s sheer height and breadth never ceased to amaze Catherine. He stood at least six inches over six feet, and his impressive muscles strained the confines of his formal black attire. His proportions, combined with his bald head, not to mention the tiny gold hoops adorning his earlobes, or the fact that he tended to answer questions with a monosyllabic growl, lent him a most intimidating air. Certainly no one encountering Baxter would ever suspect that he loved flowers, clucked over Genevieve’s brood of cats like a mother hen, and baked the most delicious scones Catherine had ever tasted. He guarded Genevieve and her menagerie as if they were the crown jewels, and referred to Genevieve as “the one wot saved me.”
Catherine knew they’d known each other in Genevieve’s “former” life-the one she’d lived before settling in Little Longstone, and she was thankful Genevieve had a strong friend to help her. And protect her. Baxter’s hands alone looked as if they could pulverize rock, and, according to Genevieve, they had on more than one occasion. Catherine prayed they would not need to know such violence again.
Baxter escorted her to the drawing room, then retreated. Five minutes later, Genevieve entered the room, her beautiful face alight with pleasure. A pastel green muslin gown adorned her lush figure, and her pale blond hair was