Second Chance with the Millionaire
Penny Jordan
CHAPTER ONE
'BUT why do we have to move out of the Manor and into the Dower House?' six-year-old Tara protested stubbornly, the full lower lip so like their father's trembling ominously.
Across the tousled fair head Fanny gazed despairingly at her stepdaughter, and Lucy automatically suppressed her own tiredness and irritation.
'Tara, you know why,' she said patiently. 'Now that … Now that Daddy's … gone, we can't live here any longer. The house belongs to someone else now.'
It had been a long day-a long and wearying month in fact since her father's death from a third and long-dreaded heart attack, but then he had never learned to live quietly as his doctor had advised him-but beneath Tara's belligerence she sensed the six-year-old's fear at the way her small world was being destroyed, and it was this fear she sought to ease.
Ironic really that Tara should turn to her and not to her own mother, Lucy's stepmother Fanny, but then, as the late George Martin had known, Fanny was one of the weaker vessels of this life, not the stronger. Some of his last words to his elder daughter had been a warning that she was the one on whom the small family would now have to lean-not Fanny.
'It's not fair.' Another voice joined the chorus, the face of Fanny's ten-year-old son setting in lines of stubborn resentment, familiar to Lucy. 'If you had been a boy we needn't have lost the Manor. You could have inherited it.'
Repressing a sigh Lucy shook her head.
'The Manor has always been entailed to the closest male heir, Oliver,' she reminded her half-brother. 'You know that.'
'Yes.' The boy's gruff admission wrung her heart. Unwittingly her eyes met Fanny's and, reading the guilt and misery in them, slid quickly away. She felt like a conspirator involved in some dark and unseemly crime, and Fanny's attitude of guilty misery only served to heighten her feelings.
She wished more than she had wished anything in her life that her father had not chosen to burden her with his death-bed confessions; but he had, and in doing so had put on her shoulders a responsibility she was not sure she was able to carry.
The promise he had extracted from her to look after Fanny and the children, she could accept; but this other burden, this 'secret' that only she and Fanny shared …
Her mouth compressed slightly as she looked across the packing-case strewn room at Oliver. Up until just over a month ago she had believed Oliver to be Fanny's son from her first marriage to a local MP, but now she had been told that Oliver was in fact her father's child, conceived during an affair with Fanny which had begun while she was still married.
Her father had been quite free to marry Fanny, but it seemed that Fanny had been unwilling to risk the shame of a divorce from her husband who at the time had been newly elected to Parliament.
In the event, Henry Willis had been the one to do the divorcing when his affair with his secretary became public knowledge, leaving her father and Fanny to marry after a decent interval of time had elapsed.
However, by then Oliver had been four years old, and once again rather than risk any scandal Fanny had insisted that he should continue to be thought Henry's child.
In a surge of bitterness during his last hours, her father had confided to her that it was a damn shame that Tara had not been the child to be born outside the marriage and Oliver within it, because then he would not have been put to the necessity of realising as many of his assets as possible to ensure that very little more than the Manor House itself should pass out of his family's hands.
Privately Lucy had been appalled when she learned what her father had done and if he had not been so dreadfully ill, she would have been tempted to point out to him that it was Fanny, rather than Saul Bradford, who had deprived Oliver of his birthright.
After the funeral, Fanny had come to her weeping copiously to plead with her never, ever to reveal the truth about Oliver. She could not endure the trauma of the scandal there would be if the truth were to come out, she had said tearfully, and Lucy had weakly agreed.
Privately, having had a long talk with her father's solicitor, she felt that, even if Oliver had inherited, within a very short space of time the Manor would have had to be sold. The roof was in need of repair, some of the windows needed attention, and it grieved her to walk through the once elegant rooms and see how shabby they had become.
It was far too large to be maintained as a private home, unless of course one was a millionaire, which her father had been far from being.
By anyone else's standards, the Georgian Dower House was a very elegant and spacious dwelling, and much, much more manageable. She herself, the eldest of her father's three children and the one who had lived in the Manor the longest, was the least reluctant to leave it. Perhaps because she had long ago outgrown childhood, and could see all too clearly the headaches attached to owning the Manor.
The oldest part of the house was Elizabethan, its pretty black and white frontage hiding a warren of passages and dark, tiny rooms with sloping floors.
A Stuart Martin had added the panelling and more imposing entrance hall with its Grinling Gibbons staircase, but it had been left to a Georgian ancestor to completely overshadow the original building by adding a complete wing and restructuring the grounds so that a fine carriageway swept round to an impressive portico in the centre of this new wing, leaving the Elizabethan part of the house as no more than a mere annexe to this fine new development.
Now damp, seeping in through the damaged roof, was causing mould to darken the fine plasterwork in the ballroom on the second floor, the creeping tide of deterioration so slow that it was not until quite recently, looking at the place through the eyes of her cousin Saul Bradford, that Lucy realised just how bad it was.
Really the house was more suitable for a hotel or conference centre than a private home, and she privately had little doubt that Saul would sell it just as soon as possible.
She remembered quite well from his one visit to the Manor how derogatory and contemptuous he had been of her home. They had met only once-over twelve years ago now, and the meeting had not been a success.
She had found him brash and alien, and no doubt he had found her equally alien and unappealing. They had neither of them made allowances for the other. She had still been getting over the shock of her mother's death in a riding accident-she had always been closer to her mother than her father-and Saul, although she hadn't known it, had been sent to them by his mother so that he would be out of the way while she and his father fought out a particularly acrimonious divorce.
She sighed faintly, grimacing inwardly. It was too late now to regret the various snubs and slights she had inflicted on a raw and unfriendly American boy all those years ago, but she did regret them and had for quite some time-not because Saul was her father's heir, but simply because with maturity had come the realisation that Saul had been as hurt and in need of comfort as she had herself and it grieved her to acknowledge that she had allowed herself to be influenced in her manner towards him by someone who she now recognised as a vindictive cruel human being.
At twelve she had not been able to see this, and in fact had been held fast in the toils of a mammoth crush on her cousin Neville.
Still, it was too late for regrets now, but not too late hopefully to make amends. Despite the antipathy her father had felt towards Saul, and which he seemed to have passed on to his son and widow, Lucy was determined to make life as uncomplicated as she possibly could for her American cousin and to give him whatever help he needed.
It was not as though, by inheriting, he had deprived her of anything after all-she had known very early on in life that the Manor was entailed; but Oliver, whom her father had spoilt dreadfully, seemed to be finding it difficult to adjust.
Privately Lucy thought the adjustment would do him no harm at all. In the last couple of years she had begun to detect signs in him that her father's spoiling and his mother's complete inability to institute any form of discipline were changing him from a pleasingly self-confident little boy into an unpleasant, self-centred preteenager.
Fortunately she was fond enough of her half-brother and sister for her father's charge that she look after them not to be too onerous a burden. Fanny, however, was another matter. Although they got on well enough, there were times when Lucy found it exasperating to have a stepmother who behaved more like a dependent child.
'I don't want to go to the Dower House.'
Tara's bottom lip wobbled again, tears glistening in the dark brown eyes.