An Unwilling Conquest - Part 17
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Part 17

Harry snorted.

"Thank you for your a.s.sistance, Mr Lester." Lucinda slanted him a smile.

"I,m really most grateful."

Harry took full note of the quality of her smile. Coolly, he inclined his head and waved her on in Jenkins's wake.

By the end of her tour, Lucinda was impressed. The Barbican Arms, and Mr Jenkins, were a far cry from the Green Goose and Jake Blount. The inn was spick and span throughout; she had found nothing remotely amiss.

Her inspection of the books was a mere formality; Mr Mabberly had already declared the Arms a model of good finance.

She and her host spent a few minutes going over the plans for an extensio re to the inn.

"For we're full to overflowing during race-meets and more than half full at other times."

Lucinda gave her general approval and left the details for Mr "Thank you, Mr Jenkins," 'she declared, pulling on her gloves as they headed for the door.

"I must tell you that, having visited all but four of the fifty-four inns owned by Babbacombe and Company, I Would rank the Barbican Arms as one of the best."

Mr Jenkins preened.

"Very kind of you to say so, ma'am. We do strive to please."

With a gracious nod, Lucinda swept out. Once in the courtyard she paused.

Harry stopped beside her; she looked up at his face.

"Thank you for your escort, Mr Lester--I'm really most grateful considering the other demands on your time."

Harry was too wise to attempt an answer to that. Lucinda's lips twitched; she looked quickly away.

"Actually," she mused,

"I was considering viewing this race-meet."

She brought her eyes back to his face.

"I've never been to one before."

Harry looked down at her ingenuous expression. His eyes narrowed.

"Newmarket race-track is no place for you."

She blinked, taken aback--Harry glimpsed real disappointment in her eyes.

Then she looked away.

"Oh."

The single syllable hung in the air, a potent testimony to crushed antic.i.p.ation. Fleetingly, Harry closed his eyes, then opened them.

"However, if you give me your word you will not stray from my side--not to admire some view, some horse or a lady's bonnet--' He looked down at her, his jaw setting.

"I will engage to escort you there."

Her smile was triumphant.

"Thank you. That would be very kind."

Not kind--foolish. It was, Harry was already convinced, the most stupid move he'd ever made. An ostler came running in answer to his curt gesture.

"I'll have my curricle.

You can tell Grimms to take Lady Hallows's gig back; I'll see Mrs Babbacombe home. " " Yes sir. "

Lucinda busied herself with the fit of her gloves, then meekly allowed herself to be lifted to the curricle's seat.

Settling her skirts, and her quivering senses, she smiled serenely as, with a deft flick of the reins, Harry took the greys onto the street.

The race-track lay west of the town On the flat, gra.s.sy, largely tree-less heath. Harry drove directly to the stables in which his string of racers were housed, a little way from the track proper, beyond the public precincts.

Lucinda, drinking in the sights, could not miss the glances thrown their way.

Stableboy and gentleman alike seemed disposed to stare; she was unexpectedly grateful when the stable walls protected her from view.

The horses were a wonder. Lifted down from the curricle, Lucinda could not resist wandering down the row of loose boxes, patting the velvet noses that came out to greet her, admiring the sleek lines and rippling muscles of what, even to her untutored eyes, had to be some of the finest horses in England.

Engaged in a brisk discussion with Hamish, Harry followed her progress, insensibly buoyed by the awed appreciation he saw in her gaze. On reaching the end of the row, she turned and saw him watching her', her nose rose an inch but she came back, strolling towards him through the sunshine.

"So all's right with entering the mare, then?? Reluctantly, Harry shifted his gaze to Hamish's face.

His head-stableman was also watching Lucinda Babbacombe, not with the appreciation she deserved but with horrified fascination. As she drew nearer, Harry extended his arm; she placed her fingertips upon it without apparent thought.

"Just as long as Thistledown's fetlock's fully healed."

"Aye." Hamish bobbed respectfully at Lucinda. "Seems to be. I told the boy to just let her run--no point marshalling her resources if it's still weak.

A good run's the only way to tell."

Harry nodded.

"I'll stop by and speak to him myself." Hamish nodded and effaced himself with the alacrity of a man nervous around females, at least those not equine in nature.

Suppressing a grin, Harry lifted a brow at his companion.

"I thought you agreed not to be distracted by horses?"

The look she bent on him was confidently a.s.sured. "You shouldn't have brought me to see yours, then.

They are truly the most distractingly beautiful specimens I've ever seen. "

Harry couldn't suppress his smile.