had at any one time before. Aside from when she had been boarding in Mexico.
She managed to cram everything she was taking into her rucksack, and Stephanieâs first words on seeing her at ten past nine on the Saturday morning were, âIs that all youâre bringing?â
Destiny slung her bag into the back seat and then folded her long body into the car next to it.
âItâs only a weekend,â she pointed out. âHello, Callum.â She belatedly addressed the back of his dark head. It seemed that meeting Stephanie for lunch had not managed to put some vital perspective on her wayward feelings because, as their eyes met in the rearview mirror, she could feel her skin tingle.
âMy make-up takes up nearly as much room as that,â Stephanie was saying cheerfully. âDoesnât it, Callum?â
âIf not more.â He pulled out of the enclosed cul-de-sac, and reached over to hand her an envelope. âOne or two photos of your little house,â he said drily. âThought you might be interested.â
The bundle of twenty-odd photos, rescued fromStephanieâs photo album from the times she had gone there years previously, before her mother had joined the line of ex-Felts, showed a sprawling mansion with a series of outbuildings, curling around a swimming pool. From the front seat, Stephanie craned backwards to explain the photos. The outbuildings had apparently been used for stabling horses but were now empty and the swimming pool had been put in at the insistence of her mother, who had seen it as adequate compensation for being deprived of living full-time in the city. The grounds were extensive and included a wood, a stream and orchards of fruit trees.
âWho looks after it now?â Destiny asked, still puzzled by the need her uncle had felt to possess a house of that size in which people could lose each other without a great deal of trouble.
âDerek kept on a skeleton staff,â Callum said from the front. âHe assumed that youâd probably want to sell but, if you didnât, I suppose he thought that you might want the retainers to stay. I have no idea how many people heâs kept or what theyâre doing there for that matter. We havenât been to the place for months. They could have hijacked the silver and cleared off for all I know.â
âI thought you said that the contents were willed toâ¦lots of other people?â
âCertain of the contents, yes. Which would still leave quite a bit in situ. â
âSo is there anyone there now?â She had visions of arriving at an inhospitable mansion, stone-walled and freezing cold.
âStephanie got in touch with Harold and his wife to open up and get the place ready. Or, should I say, get a small part of the place ready. A lot of the rooms have never been used.â
âWhat a waste.â
She noticed that they were now leaving London and was heartened by the sight of greenery. It must be easy to forget the existence of open land when you were constantly surrounded by buildings.
âWhat would you do with the house ifâ¦I decided to go ahead with your proposal?â
âConvert it into something, I expect.â
âConvert it into what?â
âA hotel.â
âYouâd convert this beautiful old mansion into a hotel? â
âI would convert a beautiful old mansion into a beautiful old hotel, â he said, with a trace of impatience in his voice. âAt least it would be used. What difference would it make to you, anyway? Do you intend staying in England?â
âNo, of course not.â
âThis is all premature speculation anyway. Letâs just get to the damned place and see how you feel about it then.â He accelerated as they cleared the outskirts of London and hit the motorway, and Destiny lapsed into silence, watching the scenery flash by. Summer was still holding its own and the blue, cloudless skies made
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