Read Wickham Hall: Part Four - White Christmas Online
Authors: Cathy Bramley
âThen we're quits.' He grinned.
âWill you really stay at Wickham Hall?' I murmured.
He nodded. âWill you?'
I grinned. âI'll have to, won't I? Someone has got to organize you.'
âWill you be able to cope?'
âWith you?' I snorted. âI think I'll manage.'
But his eyes were unusually serious. âI mean it, Holly. Being my girlfriend will mean a lot of intrusion in your life. I know how you avoid the limelight. Even opening the art gallery will attract attention. People will want to know about you, talk to you, photograph you even . . .'
I rolled my eyes at him. âBenedict Fortescue, do you know what I think?'
He shook his head, a smile playing at his lips, as I closed the last few inches of distance between us. âTell me.'
âI think you should stop planning for the future and live for the moment.'
âReally?' He traced his thumb across my lips, sending a jolt of electricity down my spine. âIn that case, is this a good moment to tell you that I love you?'
âIt's the perfect moment,' I whispered, weaving my fingers through his hair.
âI love you, Holly Swift.'
And then he kissed me to prove it. And I kissed him back. And there was just him and me, a boy and a girl, and it was as if our bodies were made for each other. Suddenly I didn't care about tomorrow or what was in my diary or when I was going to get round to finding somewhere new to live because I had us, now, this second. If this was what living for the moment meant then I liked it. A lot.
âI've just realized . . .' I laughed as we finally came up for air. âI got my Christmas wish and it was even better than I dreamed of.'
Ben wrapped his arms round my waist and pulled me tightly towards him. âYou must have been a good girl, then.'
âVery good indeed, shall I show you how good?'
And I kissed him again, the man I loved, in my favourite room at Wickham Hall by the twinkling lights of the Christmas tree and the moment was utterly, utterly perfect.
The pale morning light crept through a sliver of space between the curtains and teased me gently awake from a wonderful sleep. This bed was absolute heaven. I smiled and stretched languorously before opening my eyes. I blinked a few times until I could focus; my painting,
Secret Sunrise
, was propped up against the wall on the other side of the room and its colours and energy made my heart sing. I lay still for a moment, gazing up at the golden drapes, listening to the dawn chorus from the trees just outside the window.
I smiled and sank my head further into the pillows; this was the perfect way to start the day. All that was missing was a certain someone . . .
The door opened and Benedict tiptoed in, carrying two mugs of tea and wearing nothing but his boxer shorts and a cheeky smile.
âGood morning, Sleeping Beauty. You look all dreamy and gorgeous.'
A wave of love washed over me as he padded across the carpet. His hair was all messed up and there were still crease marks on his face from the pillows.
âIs this real?' I sighed. âIs this really happening to me?'
âIt is.' He made a space on the Chinese lacquered cabinet beside me and set down a steaming mug. âTea. Just how you like it.'
âHurrah.' I sat up and took my first hot sip.
I loved that he knew how I liked my tea; I loved a thousand other things, too: like the fact that he folded his jeans when he took them off at night and the way he slept with my hand tightly in his . . .
âSo,' he murmured, dropping a kiss on my nose. âHow was it?'
âDid you want marks out of ten?' I giggled, setting my mug back down.
He scooted back to his side of the bed and pulled the duvet up. âNo, but as I appear to have made your third wish come true, I just thought I'd ask if the experience lived up to your expectations.'
My third wish: to wake up at Wickham Hall in a four-poster bed. Tick.
I snuggled up to him, resting my cheek against his chest. âIt
more
than did that; I feel like a princess.'
Ben wrapped his arms round me tightly and kissed the top of my head. âWell, princess or not, you've got twenty minutes to get yourself downstairs and ready for your next adventure.'
âArrghhh!' I jumped out of bed and ran into Ben's en-suite bathroom.
âBy the way,' he called.
I stuck my head back out. âYes?'
âYou didn't snore.' He winked.
Twenty minutes later, Ben and I were on our way downstairs with our suitcases. Lord Fortescue had very kindly suggested that I move my things into Ben's room while the Dower House, a lovely detached cottage on the far side of the estate, was being spruced up for us to move into. It was only for a week and we would be away for some of that.
Ben dropped the bags onto the top step and gave me a sheepish look. âI'll be two minutes, I promise. I just want to check something with the architect before we go.'
âTwo minutes,' I warned, chuckling to myself as he ran off in the direction of the old garages. Ben's plans for the new art gallery had been approved speedily, partly because he was able to use the old sets of drawings. The buildings had been cleared and the scaffolding had gone up and Ben spent every spare minute consulting with builders and architects about his beloved project.
âHolly, dear, I'm glad I've caught you.'
I turned to see Lady Fortescue, wrapped in a long robe and still in her slippers, her arms crossed against the crisp spring air.
âGood morning, Beatrice.' I beamed. âSuch an exciting day!'
She nodded warmly. âAnd I couldn't be happier for you.'
At that moment, Lord Fortescue's Range Rover pulled up in front of the hall with Ben in the passenger seat. He jumped out, opened the boot and loaded the cases inside.
âReady?' He raised an eyebrow and reached for my hand.
âWait,' said Lady Fortescue hurriedly. âI wanted to give you this, Holly.'
She uncurled her fingers to reveal her pearl bracelet with the diamond clasp.
My eyes widened. âFor me?' I breathed. âI don't know what to say.'
I held out my wrist while she put it on me and Ben snaked an arm round my waist. âThat's a lovely gesture, Mum,' he said.
âYou remind me so much of myself when I first came to Wickham Hall.' Lady Fortescue sighed. âWide-eyed at the beauty of the place, full of ideas and energy. I was about your age when Hugo gave me this and now I think I'm ready to hand it over. To you.'
We looked at each other, both of us with tears in our eyes.
I wrapped my arms around her shoulders and hugged her tight. âThank you, Beatrice; I love it, just as much as I love Wickham Hall.'
âBye, Mum,' called Ben, ushering me into the back seat of the car.
He murmured into my ear as he slid in beside me, âThat's it; you'll never escape us Fortescues now.'
I kissed him swiftly and smiled. âAnd I never want to.'
âMorning, Hugo,' I said, leaning forward into the front of the car where Lord Fortescue was drumming his fingers on the wheel.
âAll set?' he boomed. âGot everything?'
I checked my bag for the umpteenth time; our passports and flight tickets to Bergamo lay on top of everything else.
Ben smiled that sunshiny smile that lit up my heart. âAre you ready to meet your father?'
I nodded and squeezed his hand. âLet's go.'
You've come to the end of
Wickham Hall
.
But now you can tuck in to another delicious modern love story from Cathy Bramley:
Verity Bloom hasn't been interested in cooking anything more complicated than the perfect fish finger sandwich, ever since she lost her best friend and baking companion two years ago.
But an opportunity to help a friend is about to land her right back in the heart of the kitchen! The Plumberry School of Comfort Food is due to open in a few weeks' time and has rather gone off the boil. It needs the kind of great ideas that only Verity could cook up . . .
But as Verity tries to balance stirring up publicity, keeping their top chef sweet and soothing her aching heart, will her move to Plumberry prove to be a sheer delight . . . or a recipe for disaster?
Read on for a sneak peek at the opening chapters!
My stomach rumbled as I pulled the pan out from under
the grill. I'd been slaving over my laptop at the kitchen table
since first thing and now it was four o'clock. All I'd had to
keep me going were two chocolate Pop Tarts.
Even by my standards, that was a bit meagre.
There was more to making the ultimate fish finger sandwich
than met the eye, I mused, prodding the fish to make
sure it was cooked. To be proper comfort food, it had to
meet very stringent criteria. The bread had to be soft and
white. I'd bought a new loaf from the corner shop this
morning specially. The fish fingers must be good ones; life
is simply too short for anything less. I keep a box of Birds
Eye's best in the freezer at all times, alongside my stash of
cottage pie, lasagne and tikka masala ready-meals.
I spaced the four golden strips of breadcrumbed cod
evenly across the bottom slice, taking care to leave a gap
in the centre for easy slicing. Next the ketchup â Heinz,
of course. I gave the bottle a firm shake and added a neat
stripe to each of the fish fingers.
Rosie, my part-time housemate, steamed into the
kitchen wearing a sports bra and shorts and turned the tap
on full blast before fetching a glass.
âJust in time to witness my
pièce de résistance
,' I announced,
sliding the plate away from the spray of water.
âPlease tell me that's not your Sunday lunch?' She waggled
her eyebrows sternly. âWait till I tell Nonna.'
Her Italian grandmother believed lunch on the Lord's
Day should consist of at least four courses, take the entire
morning to prepare and the entire afternoon to clear up.
I sliced through the sandwich and sat down at the table.
âYep. Protein, carbs, vegetables . . . a perfectly balanced
meal,' I said. OK,
vegetables
was stretching it a bit, but the
bottle did claim to be full of sun-ripened tomatoes . . . âAnd
more importantly, it only took me twelve minutes. Sorry,
Nonna.'
âYou should treat your body as if it belongs to someone
you love,' she tutted. She twisted the cap off a tub of seaweed
extract and shook two tablets out into her hand.
I watched her knock them straight back with a gulp of
water. âWho do you love â Nemo?'
Rosie choked mid-swallow and spluttered with laughter.
âTouché, Princess Prick and Ping, touché.'
I pretended to give her a dirty look.
She referred to me as that because of my over-reliance
on the microwave, although she didn't spend much time
in the kitchen either. Nor anywhere else. Rosie was too
busy to spend long doing anything. I don't think I've ever
seen her relax. Not completely. Even when she watched TV
she had her phone in her hand, her iPad balanced on her
knee and her laptop on the coffee table in front of her, each
device tracking different social media campaigns for her
clients. She was totally dedicated to her job and she'd been
promoted twice since I'd known her, which was only two
and a half years.
She moved in when I needed a lodger to help pay the mortgage after splitting up with my fiancé. Not that she
didn't have a property of her own; she'd had several over
the years. In her spare time she bought and renovated
run-down houses, selling them on for a profit which she
squirrelled away. Her plan was to buy a big house for herself
and be mortgage-free by the age of forty. I had no doubt
that she'd do it.
âI'm detoxing,' she explained, rattling the bottle of
vitamins under my nose. âBecause I love myself.'
âAnd I,' I said with my mouth full of sandwich, âlove fish
fingers.'
I agreed with her actually; food was about love. To cook
for someone was to show them how much you cared. My
problem was that I'd lost that loving feeling. Or more
accurately, that loving
someone
.
âHow's the project going?' She sat down and read the
document open on my laptop. âNeed any help?'
Spending all day working might not be everyone's ideal
Sunday but it had provided the perfect distraction from the
sadness of today's date, which I wasn't ready to tackle yet.
Besides, tomorrow's meeting was unusually important.
âI think I'm there,' I said proudly, removing the elastic
band from my wavy brown hair. I ruffled my fingers
through it, wishing for the umpteenth time it was as dark
and glossy as hers. âI've got an amazing idea for improving
customer loyalty: the
One, Two, Three Plan
. Instead of incentivizing
purely new customers, this is about giving
existing customers reasons to stay with us for a minimum
of three years. I've come up with loads of benefits.'