Jack chuckled as he put their mugs on the tray, then shot her a questioning look. ‘Are you having lunch with the Maitlands today?’
Kate shook her head. ‘I’m having supper with them during the week instead.’
He looked at her speculatively. ‘And you’ve finished your painting, so what are you going to do today?’
She shrugged. ‘Nothing much.’
‘Then you can do that here with me, Kate.’
‘I’ll have to if the floodwater hasn’t gone down,’ she reminded him.
‘So you will,’ he said with satisfaction. ‘Until I’m sure it’s safe for you to drive, you’re my captive. We can share leftovers for lunch.’ He smiled. ‘It’s a fine day, so we could take Bran for a walk first to work up an appetite.’
‘All right, you’ve persuaded me.’ Kate had intended to say yes right from the start, but Jack didn’t have to know that. ‘May I have a shower, please?’
‘Of course. I’ll make more coffee when you come down.’
Kate hurried to the pretty spare room, gathered up the sheets and removed the covers from the duvet and pillows and folded everything into a neat pile. After her shower she put on Jack’s sweatshirt in preference to her thin camisole, pulled on her boots, used a lipstick, dragged a comb through her hair and hurried down to the kitchen with the bundle of laundry.
Bran came to meet her in such joyous welcome she scratched his ears and dropped a kiss on his head.
‘How about me?’ asked Jack.
Kate grinned. ‘You want me to scratch your ears?’
‘I meant the kiss.’
‘OK. Bend down, then.’
Jack bent his head and Kate stood on tiptoe to kiss his cheek.
‘Is that the best you can do?’ he demanded.
‘Bran didn’t complain.’
Jack snatched the bundle from her, dumped it on the floor and pulled her into his arms to kiss her squarely on her protesting mouth, while the dog frisked round them, obviously thinking it was some kind of game. ‘I like that kind of kiss,’ Jack informed her as he let her go.
‘I’ll make a note of it,’ Kate said breathlessly, and tore a sheet from the roll of kitchen paper. ‘Here, lose the lipstick. That shade just isn’t you.’
Jack grinned and scrubbed at his mouth. ‘Come and sit down. I’ve made coffee.’
‘I’ll deal with this lot first. Where’s your washing machine?’
‘Leave it. Molly will do it.’
‘Certainly not, I will,’ Kate said firmly. ‘And if you show me where you keep your spare bed linen I’ll make the bed, too.’
‘You never used to be so bossy,’ he complained, and took the laundry into the boot room, which was fitted with every conceivable aid for washing, drying and ironing, along with a refrigerator and vast freezer, and floor to ceiling cupboards for food storage.
Kate smiled as she saw the small folding stepladder near the tall cupboards. ‘That’s for Molly, I assume. This is very impressive, Jack, but why a boot room?’
‘This end of the house contained the actual living quarters for the mill owner, with a scullery here where the boots were cleaned by the boy employed for the job.’
Once the washing machine was in action Jack insisted Kate had some coffee before she put clean linen on the spare bed.
He perched on the corner of the table, one foot swinging. ‘In fact, I’ve got a better idea. I’ve started the fire in the living room and even tidied up a bit, so you can lie on the sofa there and read the Sunday papers with Bran while I do the bed.’
She smiled warmly. ‘An offer I can’t refuse! Thank you, Jack.’
In the morning sunshine, with flames leaping in the fireplace and two brand-new paperback novels placed beside the Sunday papers on the rosewood table, the living room looked very inviting. Bran deserted Kate instantly to lie on the rug in front of the fire, and she added more logs, bent to stroke the dog, and then curled up in a corner of the sofa. She read a few headlines in the papers but, unable to resist any longer, picked up one of the books, a thriller she’d intended to buy the moment it was out in the bookshops.
The story was riveting from the first page. But almost at once the warmth of the fire combined with her disturbed night to add weight to her eyelids and soon she put the book down and lay back against the new cushions. She stirred to the touch of familiar lips on