Turner, unlike his brother, was slightânot skinny, but wiry, his muscles ropy. He was a few inches shorter than his elder brother, and in sharp contrast with his brotherâs tanned complexion and dark hair, he was pale and blond.
âMark, this is Miss Lowell, Parfordâs nurse. Undoubtedly, she needs all her patience for that old misanthrope, so treat her kindly.â Mr. Turner grinned, as if heâd said something very droll.
Mr. Mark Turner did not appear to think it odd that his brother had introduced him to a servantâworse, that he had introduced a servant to him. He just looked at his brother and very slowly shook his head, as if to reprove him. âAshâ was all he said.
The elder Turner reached out and ruffled his youngerbrotherâs hair. Mr. Mark Turner did not glower under that touch like a youth pretending to be an adult; neither did he preen like a child being recognized by his elder. He could not have been more than four-and-twenty, the same age as Margaretâs second-eldest brother. Yet he stood and regarded his brother, unflinching under his touch, his eyes steady and ageless.
It was as if theyâd exchanged an entire conversation with those gestures. And Margaret despised Mr. Turner all the more for that obvious affection between him and his younger brother. He wasnât supposed to be handsome. He wasnât supposed to be human. He wasnât supposed to have any good qualities at all.
One thing was for certain: Ash Turner was going to be a damned nuisance.
CHAPTER TWO
M R. T URNER CONTINUED to be a nuisance as Margaret led him up the wide stairway towards her fatherâs sickroom. At first, he said nothing. Instead, he gawked about him with a sense of casual proprietorship, taking in the stone of the stairways, and then, as they entered the upper gallery, the portraits on the wall. It wasnât greed she saw in his gaze; that she could have forgiven. But he was an interloper at Parford Manor, and he looked about him with the jaded eye of a purchaserâsearching out the flaws, as if he didnât want to say too much by way of compliment, lest he raise the price too high in subsequent rounds of bargaining.
He glanced out the leaded windows. âPleasantly situated,â he remarked.
Pleasantly situated. Parford Manor was the center of a massive estateâfifty acres of parkland on the most beautiful rolling hills in all of England, surrounded by tenant farms. The gardens were the labor of her motherâs life, a living, breathing monument to a woman who was even now fading from common memory. And he thought it was merely pleasantly situated?
He was a boor.
âBeautifully maintained,â he said as they passed a tapestry in the stone stairs.
She rolled her eyes, which thankfully, as she walked ahead of him, he could not see.
âThe manor needs a bit of updating, though.â
Margaret stopped dead, afraid to even look in his direction. He came abreast of her and turned to look at her.
âYou donât agree? All that dark wainscoting downstairs. Tear it downâget some bright papers on the wall.â He gestured above to the galleryâs ceiling. âNew chandeliersâLord, it must be dark in here, of a winter evening. Donât you think?â
He was absolutely intolerable. âThe gallery was last renovated by the duchess herself, a decade prior. I shouldnât like to set my tastes against a sensibility as refined as hers.â
His brow furrowed. âSurely you have an opinion of your own.â
âI do. I believe I just expressed it.â
There was a bit too much asperity in her tone, and he looked at her in surprise. Of course; a nurse wouldnât have been quite so bold in her speech. Not to a dukeâs heir. Not even to a wealthy tradesman who held the power of her employment in his too-large hands.
But what he said was âSo. Iâm a lout to think of altering her choices. I suppose