Memories Of The Past. Carole MortimerЧитать онлайн книгу.
certainly wouldn’t want to live permanently anywhere near Caleb Jones!
‘Restful, isn’t it?’
Helen turned sharply at the sound of that softly spoken voice.
Her father had gone off into town on some errand or other, and she had taken the opportunity to stroll along the beach near the estate; it had once been a place she had spent many soothing and calming hours.
And it had, in recent years, always been somewhere she had come to alone…
Caleb Jones standing several feet away, his bare feet planted firmly in the golden sand, bronzed legs revealed by the white shorts, a pale blue short-sleeved shirt completely unbuttoned down the front showing a chest that was just as tanned, was not a welcome intrusion into her solitude.
Far from it!
‘I always thought so,’ she replied pointedly.
In fact she had been immensely enjoying the gentle lap of the waves on the sand, her feet bare as she enjoyed the latter’s coolness near the water’s edge.
The local people from the village rarely used this beach, a much more popular one, with a few amenities like a small café, situated just around the bay. It shouldn’t have surprised her in the least that Caleb Jones had discovered and invaded this quiet stretch of water; he seemed to have intruded on several other important parts of her life too!
His mouth quirked into a half-smile, and Helen was sure he knew exactly what she was thinking. His next words confirmed it. ‘I always come here when I feel like being alone,’ he drawled.
‘No Sam today?’ she challenged.
Caleb shrugged. ‘He’s taking a nap. His idea of the start of day is daybreak, so by this time he’s ready for a sleep. So am I, come to that,’ he added self-derisively.
‘Don’t you have him trained not to wake you yet?’ Helen couldn’t help her curiosity about the child she had met so precipitately.
He grimaced. ‘That’s a little difficult; his nursery is right next to my bedroom. And playing in his cot only lasts for a few minutes once he’s woken up. After the last episode I’m loath to leave him anywhere on his own too long; lord knows what he would get up to!’
Helen frowned. ‘Doesn’t his nanny——?’
‘I don’t have a nanny for Sam,’ he cut in quietly, bending down to pick up a pebble and skim it across the clear water in front of them.
His action gave Helen a few seconds to take in his surprising statement. If he didn’t have a nanny for the little boy then that must mean… Good grief, wasn’t that taking his guardianship of Sam just a little too far? After all, there couldn’t be many men in his financial position who would even think of doing such a thing, let alone carry it out.
‘That seems a little—ambitious,’ she dismissed coolly.
No wonder he rarely spent time in London any more if he had taken on the full-time care of a very young child!
He raised dark brows mockingly. ‘Because I’m a man?’
Her cheeks warmed at his taunting tone. ‘Not necessarily,’ she answered defensively. ‘Bringing up a child is difficult for anyone, but for a man alone, a man with a full-time career to think of, I would have thought it was virtually impossible.’
‘It’s—hard, at times,’ Caleb admitted. ‘Hence the need for the PA.’
Helen stiffened, at once wary. ‘Wouldn’t it have just been easier to engage a nanny for the baby?’
‘Easier, perhaps,’ he conceded consideringly. ‘But not half as much fun!’
He sounded as if he was really enjoying caring for the baby, and she had no reason to think otherwise; after all, he did seem to have changed his whole lifestyle to suit his new responsibilities. But even so, she still found it an odd thing for him to have done, especially when the child supposedly wasn’t even his own.
‘I wish you luck with your other venture,’ she told him dismissively, hoping he would go away and she could be left alone to her thoughts—and the privacy of the beach!
He gave her a sideways glance, standing next to her now. ‘Not thinking of applying yourself?’
She gave him a knowing look. ‘There wouldn’t be much point, would there?’
‘No?’
He didn’t give anything away, she would give him that! ‘No,’ she drawled derisively.
‘Your father would like it.’
Her mouth twisted. ‘But you and I know it’s a foregone conclusion that it will never happen.’
‘We do?’
‘Of course,’ she snapped, impatient with his evasive tactics. ‘If you gave me the job it would mean my father wouldn’t sell Cherry Trees to you.’
‘Yes?’
‘Well, we both know you don’t want that to happen.’ Her eyes flashed.
‘Do we?’
‘Don’t start playing games with me, Mr Jones,’ she bit out disgustedly. ‘We both know that, for reasons of your own, you have decided to have Cherry Trees back as part of the estate, and my moving back here to live would certainly defeat that objective.’
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