money, Jessie. You wonât ever have enough money.â
âWhen I own my own racing stable I will. Iâm going tobe the most famous and richest racehorse owner in America.â
Oslow stood up, too. âI wouldnât be at all surprised, Miss Jessie, no, I wouldnât. You be good now, girl. Remind me to tell you about Grimalkin the cat.â Oslow walked away, whistling.
âHow long have you been conferring with Oslow?â
âIâve known Oslow since I was born. Heâs a friend, and he knows everything about every horse all the way back to the Byerly Turk, the Darley Arabian, and the Godolphin Arabian. Did you know that Sober John goes tail-male all the way back to the Godolphin Arabian?â
âI know. Iâve never seen you here before. How often do you come to see him?â
She scuffed her boots in the dirt.
âJessie, Iâm not accusing you of spying or putting poison in one of the horseâs oats.â
âIâd put poison in your oats before Iâd ever hurt a horse. All right, Iâve been coming here since I was a little girl. When Mr. Boomer lived here, he always gave me a glass of claret watered down with lemonade.â
âGod, that sounds gruesome.â
âIt was, but he tried to please me. He didnât know anything about children. Poor Mr. Bankes, he didnât make a good criminal. He was too nice.â
âHe was a sniveling coward, pleading on his knees that no one challenge him to a duel. He preferred jail to facing any of the men heâd cheated.â
âHe wasnât a sniveling coward to me.â
âYou didnât have anything to steal. Now, enough of that. I assume you didnât break anything from your fall?â
âNo, I was just a bit sore. Papa had the ceiling repaired yesterday. The damned wood was rotted through right where I put my knee.â
âI donât suppose that taught you anything?â
He used his obnoxious drawling English accent again, knowing it enraged her. Her jaw twitched, her shoulder actually jerked, but she kept her head down. âYes,â she said, then finally looked up at him. âI learned that Iâve got to scout out my terrain before I venture into it.â
He laughed; he couldnât help it. âWould you like to come to the house for a glass of claret?â
She looked suddenly like a child whoâd been offered an unexpected treat. He drew back from that glowing smile. âWith lemonade in it, naturally.â
Jessie Warfield was back, in spades. She looked away from him, toward the overgrown rose garden. âI must go home, but thank you for your kind offer. The garden is a mess, James. You should have someone fix it.â
She didnât wait for him to say anything to that, just turned and strode away, those long legs of hers eating up the graveled drive until she got to Rialto, the damned horse whoâd beaten Tinpin. He watched her stroke Rialtoâs muzzle, check the saddle girth, then swing herself gracefully onto his back. She pulled her hat over her eyes, lightly kicked Rialto in his muscled sides, and rode down the drive. She never looked back. One long tail of red hair had escaped her hat and hung down her back.
He would swear heâd smelled cucumbers. He wondered if she carried them around in her coat pockets; they certainly bagged out enough.
4
G LENDA W ARFIELD STARED at James Wyndhamâs crotch. She knew it didnât matter if a man wasnât looking at her, as James wasnât now. He would look at her soon enough, even if he was in the deepest conversation with someone else, as James was now, speaking with Allen Belmonde, that dark-haired, swarthy man whose crotch sheâd never stared at because he frightened her with those dark, lightless eyes of his. She couldnât stand his weak, fluttery little wife, Alice, who, strangely enough, seemed to adore Jessie, always praising her independence,
Charlaine Harris, Patricia Briggs, Jim Butcher, Karen Chance, P. N. Elrod, Rachel Caine, Faith Hunter, Caitlin Kittredge, Jenna Maclane, Jennifer van Dyck, Christian Rummel, Gayle Hendrix, Dina Pearlman, Marc Vietor, Therese Plummer, Karen Chapman