behind him with the door wide open, waiting for instruction.
Sir Thomas sighed and sat heavily again, looking past him briefly. âThatâll be all, John,â he said to his secretary.
âAnd we donât wish to be disturbed,â Colin added without glancing over his shoulder.
Sir Thomas almost smiled. âNo, we donât wish to be disturbed.â
âVery well, sir,â Blaine replied matter-of-factly before closing the door behind him.
Colin never moved his eyes from the older man, his mentor, who sat across from him now, watching him in return. Sir Thomasâs officeâindescribably small and cramped, cluttered with stacks of paperwork and overflowing shelves of dust-covered books and odd trinketsâfelt unusually stuffy and cold today, the windows closed because of a lingering drizzle and chill in the air. But Colin paid no attention aside from a passing notice. His mind stayed focused on getting to the truth.
âWell?â he prodded, keeping his gaze fixed on the man.
Sir Thomas relaxed a little and fussed with the tie at his thick neck, then perched his elbows on the wooden armrests, his fingers interlocked in front of his chest. âActually, Iâm surprised you didnât confront me at home yesterday,â he said casually.
That blasé reply irritated him, and he stretched one leg out, folding his arms across his chest. âI considered it, but decided I wanted to collect my thoughts first.â
âAh. I see.â
He snorted. âNo, you donât.â After wiping one palm harshly down his face, he added, âDo you have any idea what trouble youâve caused me?â
The older manâs brows rose innocently. âTrouble? You wanted to meet Lottie English. I made that possible.â
Colin shook his head, closing his eyes briefly before gazing back at the man. âYou could have told me her identity. As it was, you left me unprepared.â
âUnprepared for what?â
âUnprepared for what? For her, for Christâs sake,â he replied harshly.
Sir Thomas continued to watch him closely for a moment, then leaned forward, still clutching his hands together as he placed them on the desktop. âWhat exactly happened thatâs got you so riled up, Colin?â
Although Sir Thomas was technically his employer, the man also remained his inferior by title, and almost never used his Christian name. Doing so now surprised him almost as much as it made his irritation worse.
No longer able to sit still, he rose abruptly and shoved his hands in the pockets of his rain-dampened topcoat as he walked to the window, peering out to the grayness of early afternoon.
âSheâs cornered me,â he said soberly.
Sir Thomas chuckled, and he flipped his head around to stare the man down.
âIt isnât funny. The woman wants to marry me, for Godâs sake, and sheâs using herâ¦Lottie English persona to entice me into it.â
â Entice you?â
âYes, entice me.â
Silence reigned for a moment or two and he looked back outside, seeing nothing as the rain picked up once more, splattering the glass and blurring his vision.
Finally, Sir Thomas said, âYou donât have to marry anyone not of your choosing. Iâm sure I donât need to tell you that, your grace. So whatâs the real problem?â
Colin rubbed his eyes. âIâm not ready to encumber myself like that yet.â
âYes, youâve made that perfectly clear,â Sir Thomas replied. âTo everybody, I should think.â
He ignored the second part of that comment. âI donât want to marry someone I donât even know. Especially a plain girl who plays the piano better than I do.â
âEverybody plays the piano better than you doââ
âThatâs not the point.â
ââand sheâs not all that plain, either.â
He grunted. âSheâs
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