he robbed her of the trust and support of her family retainers.
Mr. Turner, however, didnât seem to realize his cruelty.
He removed his riding coat, revealing broad, straight shouldersâshoulders that ought to have bowed under the sheer villainous weight of what heâd done. He turned back to the majordomo. He acted as if he were not stealing onto Parford lands, as if he hadnât won the grudging right to come here in Chancery a bare few weeks ago to investigate what he had called economic waste.
Smith, the traitor, was already beginning to relax in response.
Margaret had assumed that the servants were hers. After all those years running the house alongside her mother, sheâd believed their loyalties could not be suborned.
But Mr. Smith nodded at something Mr. Turner said. Slowly, her servantâher old, faithful servant, whose family had served hers for six generationsâturned and looked in Margaretâs direction. He held out his hand, and Mr. Turner looked up at her. This time, his gaze fixed on her and stayed. The wind blew, whipping her skirts about her ankles, as if heâd called up a gale with the intensity of his stare.
She couldnât hear Smithâs commentary, but she could imagine his words delivered in his matter-of-fact tenor. âThatâs Anna Margaret Dalrymple there, His Graceâs daughter. Sheâs stayed behind on Parford lands to report your comings and goings to her brothers. Oh, and sheâs pretending to be the old dukeâs nurse, because theyâre afraid youâll kill the man to influence the succession.â
Mr. Turner put his head to the side and blinked at her, as if not believing his eyes. He knew who she was; he had to know, or heâd not be looking at her like that. He wouldnât be stalking towards her, his footfalls sureas a tigerâs. Now, she could see the windswept tousle of his hair, the strong line of his jaw. As he came closer, she could even make out the little creases around his mouth, where his smile had left lines.
It seemed entirely wrong that someone so awful could be so handsome.
Mr. Turner came to stand in front of her. Margaret tilted her chin up, so that she could look him in the eyes, and wished she were just a little taller.
He was studying her with something like bemusement. âMiss?â he finally asked.
Smith came up beside Margaret. âAh, yes. Mr. Turner, this is Missâ¦â He paused and glanced at her, and in that instant, the growing bubble of betrayal was pricked, and she realized he had not given her secrets away. Ash Turner didnât know who she was.
âMiss Lowell.â She remembered to curtsy, too, ducking her head as a servant would. âMiss Margaret Lowell.â
âYouâre Parfordâs nurse?â
Nurse; daughter. With his illness, it came to the same thing. She was the only protection her father had against this man, with her brothers scattered across England to fight for their inheritance in Parliament. She met Mr. Turnerâs gaze steadily. âI am.â
âI should like to speak with him. Smith tells me youâre very strict about his schedule. When would it least inconvenience you?â
He gave her a great big dazzling smile that felt as if heâd just opened the firebox on a kitchen range. As bitterly as she disliked him, she still felt its effect. This was how this man, barely older than her, had managed to make a fortune so quickly. Even she wanted to jumpto attention, to scurry just a little faster, just so he would favor her with that smile again.
Instead, she met his eyes implacably. âIâm not strict.â She drew herself up a little taller. â Strict implies unnecessary, but I assure you the care I take is very necessary indeed. His Grace is old. He is ill. He is weak, and I wonât brook any nonsense. I wonât have him disturbed just because some fool of a gentleman bids me do so.â
Mr.