attached…’
‘You’re saying if you eat together you guys might fall in love?’
‘No!’
‘You might.’ Harry was an intelligent and perceptive twelve-year-old, and now his face creased into a smile of pleasure. ‘That’d be ace.’
‘Why would it be ace?’
‘You could stay here all the time. We could keep your cool little Morgan. You might even drive me to school in it.’
Some plans had to be scotched, and scotched fast. ‘My life’s in New York.’
‘Why? You’re working here. You work on the telephone and the computer. You don’t have to milk cows for a living.’
‘No, but there are other things.’
‘Like what?’
‘Harry, you don’t have a clue what my life entails.’
‘I bet this life is better,’ he said solidly.
‘I have a Porsche in New York,’ Marcus told him, trying to put his decision in terms Harry could understand. But could he understand it himself? He slammed the cleaver through the steak as if it had personally offended him.
‘But you’ve got your Morgan here already, and we’ve got an ace tractor. Our tractor’s practically veteran.’
‘Wouldn’t you rather have a Porsche?’
‘Why?’
‘All twelve-year-old boys like Porsches,’ he said with an air of near desperation.
‘I know what Porsches are, of course,’ Harry told him. ‘My mate Rodney’s got a bunch of posters up on his wall. And if you brought it out here I’d love to have a ride. But I don’t reckon they’re as good as Morgans. Is that what you want?’ He cocked his head to one side, questioning. ‘For Peta to go back to New York and drive your Porsche?’
‘Peta is staying here,’ Marcus told him and sliced the steak again. Hard. ‘And I’m going back to New York. I’m sticking with my Porsche and Peta’s sticking with her tractor.’
‘Yeah, but Peta’s got more than the tractor,’ Harry said wisely. ‘She’s got the cows and the dogs and the house and me.’ He grinned up at Marcus, confiding. ‘You’re going to have to come up with something better than a Porsche to compete with us.’
‘I don’t want to compete.’
‘Peta’s saying she isn’t going to fall in love with you, too,’ Harry told him, veering off at a tangent that was as stunning as it was perceptive. ‘I think the two of you are nuts.’
Harry and Marcus were down at Hattie’s house making dinner. Peta sat in her dairy longer than she needed. Much longer.
Soon she’d have to go home. There’d be a plate of something delicious in her oven, made by Marcus, brought home by Harry and left for her to eat by herself. Harry thought she was a dope.
He was right. She was a dope.
No. What was happening was dangerous. She knew enough about her own heart to realise how vulnerable she was.
She’d fallen so hard. Well, why wouldn’t she? she asked herself bitterly. He’d saved her world. He’d dressed her as a princess. He’d swept her off her feet and now he was offering her…
He was offering her his world.
So she should take it.
Be contented with crumbs?
That’s what he was offering, she thought. There was no way Marcus was offering his heart. He was holding himself separate, still playing the hero whose life didn’t change with the redemption of his heroine.
Yeah, great.
How did Cinderella cope? she thought. Being grateful for the rest of her life. Knowing you owed the whole of your life to one man.
But she could sleep at night in his arms…
Marcus was hardly even offering that, she thought. Yeah, sleep in his arms when it was convenient. And the rest of the time… Sleeping here in a great house built with his money, being grateful, being endlessly grateful, or sleeping in that dreadful, cold apartment in New York, being more grateful still.
Stupid.
‘The whole thing is stupid,’ she told Ted-dog when his greying head nuzzled her hand in concern. ‘He’s dreaming. He’s playing fairytales and one of us has to be sensible.’
I don’t want to be sensible. I want to go down there and eat with them, and laugh with Marcus and enjoy the work he’s helping Harry with, and walk home with him to my veranda and…
‘Cut it out.’
She had to cut it out. There was no choice.
She gave her dog one final pat and rose to fetch the hose. She’d sluice out the dairy. Slowly.
And then she’d go home to dinner. To bed. Alone.
It was mid-morning when they came.
Peta was down the paddock, cleaning out a water trough. She saw the car turn into the driveway. Marcus was home, she thought. At nine in the morning it was five at night back in New York so he’d be in mid-conference with someone important. Maybe she’d better go back to the house and intercept the visitors before they interrupted him.
Maybe if he was interrupted he’d come out…
No. It had only been that first day that he’d spent time with her. He wouldn’t come out. She’d told him to keep his distance and he obviously agreed.
Who would blame him? That night on the beach had been an aberration. She looked down at herself with a rueful smile. She was coated in mud. The trough had been overflowing and the ground around it was knee-deep mud. The float had blocked-the float that cut off the water flow when the trough was full-so she’d had to wade through mud and realign the float regardless of mess.
Urk.
She wiped her face with the back of her hand and then wished she hadn’t. Yuk.
So who were the visitors?
No one important, she thought. Please.
Marcus was staring at his computer screen and seeing nothing. His razor-sharp mind seemed to have become fluff. Instead of the fierce concentration he applied to his work, his attention kept wandering to the window. Sometimes he’d see her, in her overalls and her gumboots, her hair pulled back from her face but wisping in escaping curls. Sometimes her face would be smudged with dirt. Usually her face would be smudged with dirt. She’d be doing something heavy and filthy, like carting buckets or driving the tractor or…
Or any of the things he’d offered to save her from. She shouldn’t have to do it. She shouldn’t want to!
And there was the rub. He’d envisaged his happy ever after and she wanted no part of it.
‘Are you there, Mr Benson?’ The online teleconferencing was in full swing and he should be concentrating. But Peta…
He could see her. She was down the paddock, delving in a trough of some sort. He could see the mud from here.
It looked…fun?
‘I’m here.’ It took a huge effort to haul his eyes from the window and back to the screen.
And then he heard a car turn into the driveway.
Great. He’d have to wrap it up now. Peta was too far away to welcome visitors.
‘I need to leave this, gentlemen,’ he told the screen, not even caring that the corporate problem they were discussing wasn’t near to being resolved.