range, while I go and make up your bed?â
She gathered up the sheets and departed, returning a few minutes later to find the meal almost ready.
âThe Earl really ought to eat in the dining room,â she suggested.
âNo thank you,â he replied without hesitation. âWeâll eat out here. Whatâs the wine cellar like?â
âIâve never seen it.â
He took the lamp and disappeared, returning a few minutes later covered with cobwebs but with a bottle under his arm and a triumphant smile on his face.
âGlasses!â he intoned. âWeâll dine in style.â
She fetched some glasses from the dining room, cleaned them, and laid them out ceremoniously beside their plates. The Earl uncorked the bottle with a flourish and filled the glasses with a delicious looking ruby red liquid, and they toasted each other.
âTo us!â he declared. âTo finding each other, and all the wonderful things that are going to happen now!â
âI wonder if they will!â she sighed.
âThey will because weâre going to make them. And this magnificent vintage wine is the first wonderful thing. Sip it slowly and with appreciation, for you may never taste the like again.â
Together they sipped.
And together they choked.
âThunderbolts and lightning!â he exploded. âWhat is this?â
âVinegar,â she whispered between gasps. Her eyes were streaming.
They patted each other frantically on the back.
âMiss Colwell, I really am very sorry,â he said hoarsely. âI thought it would have â aaaarh! excuse me â matured over the years. But itâs only soured.â
âYou said Iâd never taste the like again,â she reminded him. âI only hope you may be right. No, give that to me â â He was about to pour the wine down the sink but she stopped him. âIf what itâs doing to my insides is anything to go by, itâll probably clean the range very efficiently.â
âYouâre a marvel,â he said admiringly.
She poured tea and they both drank it thankfully. Then Rena served the meal and they ate it companionably at the kitchen table.
âThe news is getting around the village that youâre here,â she told him. âTheyâre afraid youâll be scared off by the ghost. I said that was nonsense because of course there was no ghost.â
âShame on you!â he said at once. âWhat is an ancestral home without a ghost. I think it very unkind of you, Miss Colwell, that you should attempt to deprive me of my birth right in this way.â
His droll manner caught her off guard, and she had to peer at him to make sure how to take his words. The gleam of amusement in his eyes was shocking, she decided. But very delightful.
An answering mirth growing inside herself made her say,
âForgive me, sir. I had forgotten that among every noblemanâs patents of nobility a ghost is essential. However I fear that you may find The Grangeâs extensive choice a little too much to cope with. Thereâs the Floating Lady, the Wailing Lady Anne, the Headless Horseman â or is it the Headless Horse? Well, I expect it amounts to the same.â
âYou donât mean I might meet them all at once?â he asked in alarm. âI mean, one Headless Horseman plus one Floating Lady, a man can cope with, but the rest â have a heart maâam.â
She fixed him with a baleful eye. âWould you be afraid?â
âAbsolutely terrified.â
They laughed together.
âAs soon as Iâve washed the dishes Iâll lay the fire in your room, and then Iâll leave,â she said.
âLeave? I thought you were here for good now?â
âI am, that is, Iâll work for you, but perhaps I had better not stay here at night.â
She blushed slightly as she said this, and could not meet his eyes. The village would be shocked if she,
Yvette Hines, Monique Lamont