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‘Money talks louder than blood in the Pagonis tribe,’ he warned her. ‘Even better, my uncles and cousins all work for me now.’

Bunny knew sarcasm when she heard it now and she recognised his bitterness too. She had serious questions to ask about his childhood but decided to leave them until later. ‘So when do I get the full tour of the house?’ she asked instead.

‘As soon as you’re dressed and we’ve had lunch.’ His dazzling smile engulfed her and she was aware that his extra warmth stemmed from her having restrained her uncomfortable curiosity.

She hastened into the shower to freshen up while wondering with a pleasant sense of anticipation about what lay within those closets. She had never had the money to buy fancy clothes but she loved to dress up. It would be mortifying though to embarrass Sebastian by looking shabby and she was relieved that he had taken care of the problem.

Forty minutes later, she wore light wool trousers, a rather slinky blue top and a cashmere cardigan teamed with soft leather boots. Knightsmead Court had all the drawbacks of a historic listed property. Away from the fireplaces and the background heating provided by a system installed in the twenties, it could be chilly. Pausing only to admire the magnificent four-poster bed, which was enormous and unbelievably comfortable and hung with gorgeous brocade drapes, she smiled at Sebastian.

‘How did you know I love four-poster beds?’

‘An extensive amount of online snooping. Your footprint is very heavy on four-poster beds. This one is brand new and made to order. I’m too big for an antique bed and I expect a decent mattress,’ he told her.

Bunny blinked and went pink at the thought of him going to that much trouble to establish her likes and dislikes. Did it bother her that he admitted to snooping? Not particularly because she had nothing to hide from him. It said much more about him, she reckoned, that he had put her preferences above his own. Pleased, she allowed him to lead her on a tour. There was so much for her to admire. The airy long gallery where the ladies had once taken their exercise in adverse weather, the carved chimneypieces and wainscoted walls, the great hall with its minstrels’ gallery and walls hung with shields, medieval weapons and faded flags.

‘The perfect backdrop for a party…or a wedding reception,’ Sebastian remarked. ‘That is assuming we don’t go for a guest list of thousands.’

‘We’re not talking weddings yet,’ she reminded him. ‘But I would only have friends and family. I should imagine your list would have hundreds of possibilities, business and social.’

‘My wedding wouldn’t be a business event,’ he murmured, opening a door at the end of the hall to usher her into a more reasonably sized dining room where there were a polished table, fine bone china and candelabra, and yet another fire glowed in a giant grate.

‘Who’s keeping all these fires going?’ she exclaimed in wonderment.

‘We have a large staff here.’

‘Is there an estate with the house?’

‘No, there’s a home farm and woods and sufficient land to preserve privacy but the majority of the original estate was sold off long before my grandfather met his first wife.’

‘Tragic her dying in childbirth and the baby dying as well,’ she sighed.

‘It’s not going to happen with you. You will have every medical exam available and, by the way,’ Sebastian continued, ‘I organised an appointment for you on Monday to see an obstetrician for the usual checks. I’ll go with you before I leave for Germany.’

‘I was going to get around to it eventually, but then I don’t really need to think for myself any more with you so happy to doallmy thinking for me,’ she said drily.

‘Touché,’ he responded without heat. ‘I always think ahead. Occasionally it irritates people.’

Their lunch arrived, brought in by an elderly man with a stately manner.

‘This is Parker, Bunny. Our butler, who has always worked here and knows everything there is to know about this house,’ Sebastian advanced.

‘Madam…sir.’ Parker executed a slight bow. ‘I am happy to still be here.’

‘I’m glad you kept him on,’ Bunny whispered when he had left them alone again. ‘But he must be at least—’

‘Seventy-eight, but he doesn’t want to retire. He’s Maybelle’s father,’ Sebastian supplied as she shed her cardigan in the heat flowing from the fire. ‘And, in what he terms the twilight of his life, presiding over a large staff with an enhanced salary and a large household budget suits him very well.’

Bunny laughed and then her heart-shaped face turned serious. ‘It’s time you told me about what happened to you after your parents passed away…’

Sebastian flinched. ‘The Pagonis family were devastated by the scandal and the shame of what my father did. As the survivor, I was a huge embarrassment and a disappointment. They put out a story that my father had mental health issues, which was untrue. They refused to admit his addiction. They made me see a psychiatrist every week for years and sent me to boarding school in England where I could be forgotten about.’ Sebastian toasted her with his wine glass and lounged back in his seat, his lean, darkly handsome features taut. ‘Vacation times? They sent me off to wilderness survival camps and places for troubled adolescents because nobody wanted me around.’

‘But why was it like that?’ she demanded with a frown.

‘If I’d died that night, the family wealth would have gone to my four uncles, who had all fiercely resented my father. My grandfather tied everything up in a trust which leaveseverythingto the firstborn son and Loukia didn’t challenge her husband’s trust arrangements while she was alive. The family thought they would come into her property empire but it had originally been my grandfather’s, so it also came to me. I’m already rich beyond avarice. Her will was the last straw, which is why they’re dragging me through the courts…and destined to lose. The trust as it currently stands is virtually unbreakable.’

‘So what do you plan to do?’

‘In the interests of fairness, offer them a decent settlement, continue to employ them and revise that trust for my child’s sake and ensure that a daughter will not be discounted. I’m determined to prevent the bitterness revisiting the next generation if we have more than one child,’ he proffered calmly.