against all odds, she’d run into his arms…in light of his earlier thoughts of her, in light of the obsession that had been building over the past weeks while, from the library of Number 12, he’d watched her walk her garden, the abrupt introduction had left him adrift.
The obvious direction of her thoughts rapidly hauled him back to earth.
He raised a brow, faintly haughty. “My friends and I merely wish for a quiet place in which to meet. I assure you our interests are in no way nefarious, illicit, or…” He’d been going to say “socially unacceptable”; the matrons of the ton would probably not agree. Holding her gaze, he glibly substituted, “Such as to cause any raised eyebrows even among the most prudish.”
Far from being put in her place, she narrowed her eyes. “I thought that’s what gentlemen’s clubs were for. There are any number of such establishments only blocks away in Mayfair.”
“Indeed. We, however, value our privacy.” He wasn’t going to explain the reasons for their club. Before she could think of some way to probe further, he seized the initiative. “These people who tried to buy your uncle’s house. How insistent were they?”
Remembered aggravation flared in her eyes. “Too insistent. They made themselves—or rather the agent—into a definite pest.”
“They never approached your uncle directly?”
She frowned. “No. Stolemore handled all their offers, but that was quite bad enough.”
“How so?”
When she hesitated, he offered, “Stolemore was the agent for the sale of Number 12. I’m on my way to speak with him. Was it he who was obnoxious, or…?”
She grimaced. “I really can’t say that it was he. Indeed, I suspect it was the party he was acting for—no agent could remain in business if he habitually behaved in such a manner, and at times Stolemore seemed embarrassed.”
“I see.” He caught her gaze. “And what were the other ‘incidents’ that occurred?”
She didn’t want to tell him, was wishing she’d never mentioned them; that was clear in her eyes, in the way her lips set.
Unperturbed, he simply waited; his gaze locked with hers, he let the silence stretch, his stance unthreatening, but immovable. As many had before, she read his message arright. Somewhat waspishly replied, “There have been two attempts to break into our house.”
He frowned. “Both attempts after you’d refused to sell?”
“The first was a week after Stolemore finally accepted defeat and went away.”
He hesitated, but it was she who put his thoughts into words.
“Of course, there’s nothing to connect the attempted burglaries with the offer to buy the house.”
Except that she believed the connection was there.
“I thought,” she continued, “that if you and your friends had been the mystery purchasers interested in our house, then that would mean that the attempted burglaries and”—she caught herself, hauled in a breath—“were not connected but to do with something else.”
He inclined his head; her logic, as far as it went, was sound, yet it was plain she hadn’t told him all. He debatedwhether to press her, to ask outright if the burglaries were the sum total of the reasons why she’d come barreling out to do battle with him, deliberately disregarding the social niceties. She cast a quick glance toward her uncle’s gate. Questioning her could wait; at this juncture, Stolemore might be more forthcoming. When she glanced back at him, he smiled. Charmingly. “I believe you now have the better of me.”
When she blinked at him, he went on, “Given we’re to be neighbors of sorts, I think it would be acceptable for you to tell me your name.”
She eyed him, not warily but assessingly. Then she inclined her head, held out her hand. “Miss Leonora Carling.”
His smile broadening, he grasped her fingers briefly, was visited by an urge to hold on to them for longer. She wasn’t married after all. “Good afternoon, Miss Carling. And your