“It’s the same thing. The old women are gone. I’m not letting an inconvenient American ruin everything. All you have to do is give her the collywobbles for a couple of days. She’s a healthy young woman. Nothing can go wrong. Marlowe is poking into things. We’re all set to take care of him. You get our Dixie out of action.”
Color drained from her face. “Sebby, that’s going too far.”
Sebastian turned her face up to his again. “I’m counting on you, Emily.” She nodded and he let her kiss him again. He watched her find her shoes, gather up her handbag and let herself out.
He needed her to come through.
He wondered what she’d use. Bryony root? Rhubarb leaf? He didn’t want to know. If it went wrong, he preferred ignorance. He hoped it wouldn’t. He still fancied a go at Dixie.
Dixie looked up at the uneven ceiling beams over her bed. It took a couple of sleep-muddled minutes to place the sound—rain drumming on the pitched roof. Pulling herself from under the duvet, she padded over to open the chintz curtains. Rain wasn’t the word. A steady downpour beat a tattoo on the roof, gutters and street. Orchard House was half-obscured and a lone car drove down the lane, spraying water from every puddle. She’d heard about English rain and this was it. So much for a nice stroll up to church and a morning reading the paper on the Green.
Change in weather, change in plans. She’d spend the day going through her book room. She had all the time in the world. She only hoped that Aga-thing hadn’t burned the house down.
Coming out of the shower, she smelled cooking.
“Good morning.” Emily’s round cheeks spread in a wide smile. “I thought I heard you up. I thought we could have a nice chat over breakfast. Sunday is such a nice, leisurely day, isn’t it?”
“Perhaps a cup of coffee…” Dixie began. She tried to place the smell. It wasn’t sausage or bacon.
Emily pressed down the toaster, turning on another smile for Dixie. “No, I insist you must have something to eat. I fixed something special: veal kidneys.”
Kidneys! Dixie felt the bile rise from the lowest point in her innards. She could drink coffee while the woman munched on bacon but watch while she chewed kidneys? Never!
“Thanks, but I’ve got to go out early.” She squelched her guilt at Emily’s disappointment. She didn’t stay for toast or cereal either. She had instant coffee in her kitchen and a packet of cookies. She’d make do with that.
The Aga hadn’t gone out. In fact, the kitchen offered a warm welcome after the damp outside. Nothing like breakfast in her own house—but the milk had gone sour in the pantry. Mug of black coffee in hand, Dixie added “refrigerator” to her shopping list. Her handwriting jumped back at her. She was crazy. A refrigerator wasn’t a purchase for a month’s stay. How about staying longer? No way. Not with traffic on the wrong side of the road, unfamiliar currency, and no telephone.
She made another cup of coffee and carried it upstairs.
The repeated ringing of the doorbell broke Dixie’s concentration. For over three hours, she’d lost herself among the books. Resisting the temptation to ignore the bell, she pushed the dusty volumes aside. Halfway downstairs, she paused. Who was it? Christopher? Comments about vandals and teenage intruders flashed through her mind.
The mahogany mirror in the hall showed the angle of the front door. Dixie paused to glimpse the reflection—nothing but steady rain. Pranksters ringing and running away? Yobs, as Emma called them. Dixie was ready. She’d dealt with teenagers for a living.
Hand on the brass knob, Dixie waited for another ring and peered through the window beside the door. Christopher! “Come on in, you’re getting soaked!” She flung the door open.
Better than he’d ever imagined, she didn’t just invite him in, she grasped his hand and pulled him over the threshold. After all these months, he was inside the house. Now he could come and go as he pleased, but Dixie’s welcome triggered misgivings in the heart he didn’t possess. “I got Alf to pack us lunch. A fair exchange for a look at your library.”
Her warm hand brushed his as she took the basket. “For lunch you can have more than a look. All I have in the house is a pack of cookies…. Sorry, biscuits. I’m famished for something more.”
So was he. A smile as warm as her skin could lead them both to disaster.
Dixie unpacked asparagus quiche, a Greek salad with olives and Feta cheese, something that looked like meatballs but Alf had promised wasn’t, and a tub of fresh fruit.
“This is enough to feed a family,” Dixie said, taking plates and knives from the oak dresser.
“You eat, I’ll skip. I have severe food allergies and have to be careful what I eat.” The practiced lie slid out. For the first time in his long life, it stung.
“I feel guilty pigging out while you watch. Could I at least make you coffee?”
She felt guilty? What was he supposed to feel after she’d rushed to his rescue last night? He’d better stop feeling at all if this was going to work. “Coffee would be great.” His metabolism could handle liquids. “Sit down and eat.” The sooner she ate, the sooner he could go through that room.
She insisted on making his coffee first. “Sure I can’t tempt you?” she asked, looking at the food on the table.
Temptation? Sweet Abel! For over three years, he’d had no desire to feed from humans. Now it came in great smashing waves and he had a whole afternoon to survive.
“Wonderful.” She closed her eyes as she bit into a “meatball.” “These are fantastic, I’m sorry I can’t share with you.”
“What are they?”
“Falafel—chick pea flour, garlic, herbs and something extra I can’t place.” She smiled up at him. “I can see vegetarianism isn’t your choice.”
No. He fed on smooth flesh and warm pulsing blood. He wanted hers and he’d never take it. Need like this made him vulnerable and he couldn’t afford any risks. Not here. Not now. Not after her embrace last night. To business. “Let’s take the coffee upstairs.”
“You want to see the books? Fair enough.”
She packed the leftover food into the walk-in pantry. “Hope it keeps. I was thinking about buying a fridge, but wonder whether it’s worth it. I won’t be here more than a month.”
A month! Could he really be that lucky? “Didn’t realize you were staying that long. Caughleigh said something about your leaving next week.”
“Sebastian doesn’t make my decisions for me. I need a holiday and this is as good a place as any—and rent free.”
“I’m very glad you’re staying.”
The blood rose up her neck. Her eyes flickered and looked away. “Upstairs,” she said, “I’ve something to show you.”
She’d pulled back the shutters and turned on the lights. It did little for the decor. Ninety years’ accumulation of books was stacked on shelves, heaped in corners and piled on the tables and chairs. “Someone went through everything,” she said through a clenched jaw. “There’s dust all over the floor and shelves but the books have been moved.”
“You knew that already.” Had she forgotten last night?
“Yes.” Her dark eyebrows curled together. “I was pretty sure that first night and certain yesterday, but I’d only glanced in here before this morning. I thought they might have been going through the whole house.”
“They haven’t?”
“The other upstairs rooms haven’t been touched since Sebastian closed the house. This one had footsteps in the dust