"Please, please, don't die!"

Frantically, she searched for a pulse at his throat, ruining his cravat in the process. She nearly fainted with relief when she found the throbbing beat, steady and strong. "Thank God!" She sagged. Without thinking, she carefully rearranged his cravat, smoothing the folds-he was so beautiful and she hadn't killed him.

Wheels crunched heavily on the gravel drive.

Phyllida jerked upright. Her eyes flew wide. The murderer?

Her panicky wits calmed enough for her to distinguish voices as the conveyance rolled on around the house. Not the murderer-the Manor staff. She looked at the unconscious stranger.

For the first time in her life, she found it difficult to think. Her heart was still racing; she felt light-headed. Dragging in a breath, she fought to concentrate. Horatio was dead; she couldn't change that. Indeed, she knew nothing of any relevance. His friend was unconscious and would remain so for some time-she should make sure he was well tended. That was the least she should do.

But here she was in Horatio's drawing room, in breeches, instead of being laid down on her bed at the Grange with a sick headache. And she couldn't explain why, not without revealing her reason for being here-those misplaced personal belongings. Worse, they weren't hers. She didn't actually know why they were so important, why their revelation was to be avoided at all costs, which made it all the more incumbent on her not to reveal their existence. Aside from anything else, she'd been sworn to secrecy.

Damn! She was going to be discovered any minute. Mrs. Hemmings, the Manor housekeeper, would even now be entering the kitchen.

Think!

What if, instead of waiting here and landing herself in a morass of impossible explanations, she left, cut home through the wood, changed, and returned? She could easily think of an errand. She could be back in ten minutes. Then she could make sure Horatio's body had been discovered, and oversee the tending of the stranger.



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