Holly froze. It was Hugh’s mother. She hurried to the door and opened it. ‘Good morning, Lady Darcy. Yes. Please, come in.’
‘Hugh mentioned late yesterday that the two of you are going riding today.’ She strode in, and Holly noticed she had several items of clothing draped over her arm. She eyed her future daughter-in-law expectantly.
‘Erm, yes. That’s the plan.’ Dear God, Holly thought, I hope Lady D doesn’t decide to come along with us as a bloody chaperone, or something.
‘It occurred to me that you might not have the proper riding attire. So I brought these’ – she held out her arm – ‘in hopes they might prove useful. There’s a pair of Phoebe’s old jodhpurs, and a hacking jacket. I think you’re both about the same size. If you need boots,’ she added before Holly could open her mouth to thank her, ‘there’s an assortment of wellies and riding boots by the back kitchen door. Help yourself.’
‘Oh, thank you! I was just wondering what to wear-’
‘Don’t mention it. I’ll see you both at breakfast?’
Holly nodded, and without another word Hugh’s mother deposited the clothes on the bed and took her leave.
‘Well,’ Holly muttered as she picked up the discarded jodhpurs and eyed them in relief, ‘at least that’s one problem sorted.’
With a bit more enthusiasm, she began to get dressed.
***
The dining room was empty when Hugh and Holly entered for breakfast.
‘Looks like we’re the first ones down this morning,’ he observed as he went to the sideboard and picked up a plate. ‘More eggs for me.’
‘Not if I get there first. I’m starving.’ Holly lifted the silver-domed chafing dish of scrambled eggs and piled her plate high.
‘You’d best tuck in, then,’ he agreed. ‘You’ll burn it off riding. I plan to give you and your mount a good workout.’ He leaned over to kiss her.
She couldn’t help but notice that he looked utterly yummy in his breeches and boots and white polo shirt.
‘Perhaps we should go back upstairs,’ she said, and waggled her brows suggestively, ‘and you can mount me.’
‘Holly,’ Hugh said, frowning as he cast an uneasy glance over his shoulder at the door, ‘careful what you say. Anyone might walk in.’
‘Wouldn’t that give your mother a turn,’ she teased, ‘hearing me talk about sex right in front of the eggs and soldiers?’
He did not share her amusement. ‘Holly, really.’
Her smile faded. ‘You’re annoyed with me! Hugh, I’m only joking.’
‘There’s a time and a place.’ He turned away and speared a sausage with a grim expression.
Holly felt a flicker of irritation. ‘Well. I’m sorry. That’s me put in my place, then.’ She reached for a piece of toast with the silver tongs and dropped it on her plate.
He let out a short breath and turned back to her. ‘No, I’m sorry.’ He sighed. ‘Whenever I’m here I revert back to the perfectly behaved specimen I was expected to be, growing up – “Master Darcy”.’ He gave her a rueful smile. ‘He had excellent manners but no sense of humour, I’m afraid.’
Instantly, her anger fled. ‘Poor you. I can’t imagine what it must’ve been like, growing up in a place like this.’
‘It had its perks. It was an easy matter to disappear when I didn’t want to be found, for example.’
Holly laughed. ‘There is that. Do you like my outfit?’ she asked as she carried her plate to the table. ‘Do I look suitably horsey?’
Hugh leaned over and gave her a quick kiss before he sat down next to her. ‘You look beautiful, as always.’
‘Very good answer.’
‘Good morning, everyone.’ Hugh’s father strode into the dining room with his wife following behind. ‘I trust you slept well, Miss James?’
‘Holly, please,’ Holly replied, ‘and yes, very well, Lord Darcy. Thank you.’ How could she do anything but sleep well, she thought irritably, with Hugh in the east wing and herself stuck in the west?
‘Going riding, are you?’ Hugh’s father asked as he went to the silver coffee urn and reached for a cup.
‘Yes. Lizzy’s invited us for a hack across the property later this morning,’ Hugh answered.
‘I’ve loaned Holly a few of Phoebe’s old things so she has the proper riding attire,’ Lady Darcy added, and glanced at Holly. ‘I realise, living in London, you likely don’t have the right sort of clothes for the country.’
Honestly, Holly thought with a flicker of irritation, how did Hugh’s mother always manage to make her feel like Eliza Doolittle, trying – and failing – to pass herself off as a lady?
‘My family actually do own a country place, in Chipping Norton,’ she pointed out. ‘I even had a horse when I was younger, for a time.’
There, Holly thought. Take that, you smug cow.
‘Where’s Harry this morning?’ Lord Darcy enquired as he sat down. ‘Haven’t seen him since yesterday afternoon.’
‘I’m here.’
They all looked up from their plates then as Harry, dressed in jeans and a T-shirt and sockless loafers, appeared in the doorway.
‘Harry,’ his mother cried, and half rose in her seat, one hand pressed to her throat. ‘My God! What’s happened to you?’
Holly let out a gasp.
Harry, his handsome face usually so open and friendly, was scowling.
And no wonder, Holly realised in dismay, as she took in the twin purple bruises that marred his jaw and surrounded his blackened left eye.
‘Harry!’ his father exclaimed, and flung down his napkin in astonishment. ‘What the devil happened? You look hideous.’
‘You should see the other bloke,’ Harry said, in a weak attempt at humour.
No one laughed.
‘Don’t tell me you got into a fight,’ Lady Darcy said in dismay. ‘Harry, honestly! Fighting is terribly déclassé.’
‘I think I know what happened,’ Hugh said as he set his cup down. ‘You got into an altercation with Ciaran Duncan yesterday, didn’t you?’
With a sigh, Harry dragged out a chair and sat slumped at the table. ‘Yeah. I did.’
‘What? You got into a fistfight with that… that awful man?’ his mother gasped. ‘How could you?’
‘I went to the Longbourne marina yesterday to get the Pemberley ready for the race on Saturday.’
‘I told you I already did that,’ Hugh pointed out.
‘I know, but I had to make sure everything was in order, didn’t I? Hugh was there, too,’ he told his mother, ‘and he saw Charli. She was on Ciaran’s yacht.’
Lady Darcy’s eyes widened. ‘Do you mean to say that Charlotte Bennet was on Ciaran’s private yacht? Oh, dear. I wonder if her father knew?’
‘No,’ Harry said grimly, ‘he didn’t. Which I already suspected, so I went aboard