paused uncomfortably. “He will convey you to your bedroom.”
“I can manage by myself,” Win said. “I was just dizzy for a moment. Merripen, do put me down.”
“You wouldn’t make it past the first step,” he said, ignoring her protests as he carried her to the stone staircase. And as he walked with her, Win’s pale hand lifted slowly around his neck.
“Beatrix, will you go with them?” Amelia asked briskly, handing her the valise. “Win’s nightgown is in here—you can help her change clothes.”
“Yes, of course.” Beatrix scampered toward the stairs.
Left in the entrance hall with Leo and Poppy, Amelia turned in a slow circle to view all of it. “The solicitor said the estate was in disrepair,” she said. “I think a more accurate word would have been ‘shambles.’ Can it be restored, Leo?”
Not long ago—though it seemed a lifetime—Leo had spent two years studying art and architecture at the Grand Ecole des Beaux-Arts in Paris. He had also worked as a draftsman and painter for the renowned London architect Rowland Temple. Leo had been regarded as an exceptionally promising student, and had even considered setting up a practice. Now all that ambition had been extinguished.
Leo glanced around the hall without interest. “Barring any structural repairs, we would need about twenty-five to thirty thousand pounds, at least.”
The figure caused Amelia to blanch. She lowered her gaze to the pockmarked floor at her feet and rubbed her temples. “Well, one thing is obvious. We need the advantage of wealthy in-laws. Which means you should start looking for available heiresses, Leo.” She flicked a playful glance at her sister. “And you, Poppy—you’ll have to catch a viscount, or at the very least a baron.”
Her brother rolled his eyes. “Why not you? I don’t see why you should be exempt from having to marry for the family’s benefit.”
Poppy gave her sister a sly glance. “At Amelia’s age, women are far beyond thoughts of romance and passion.”
“One never knows,” Leo told Poppy. “She may catch an elderly gentleman who needs a nurse.”
Amelia was tempted to skewer them both with the tart observation that she had already been in love once, and she would not care to repeat the experience. She had been pursued and courted by Leo’s best friend, a charming young architect named Christopher Frost, who, like Leo, had been articled to Rowland Temple. But on the day he had led her to believe a proposal was forthcoming, Frost had ended the relationship with brutal abruptness. He said he had developed feelings for another woman, who conveniently happened to be Rowland Temple’s daughter.
It was only to be expected of an architect, Leo had told her with grim remorse, outraged on behalf of his sister, sorrowful at the loss of a friend. Architects inhabited a world of masters and disciples and the endless pursuit of patrons. Everything, even love, was sacrificed on the altar of ambition. To be otherwise was to miss the few precious opportunities one might have to practice the art of design. Marrying Temple’s daughter would give Christopher Frost a place at the table. Amelia could never have done that for him.
All she had been able to do was love him.
Swallowing back her bitterness, Amelia glanced up at her brother and managed a rueful smile. “Thank you, but at this advanced stage of life, I have no ambitions to marry.”
Leo surprised her by bending to brush a light kiss on her forehead. His voice was soft and kind. “Be that as it may, I think someday you’ll meet a man worth giving up your independence for.” He grinned before adding, “Despite your encroaching old age.”
For a moment Amelia’s mind chased back to the memory of the kiss in the shadows, the mouth slowly consuming hers, the gentle masculine hands, the whisper at her ear. Latcho drom …
As her brother turned to walk away, she asked with mild exasperation, “Where are you going? Leo, you can’t