Teddy blinked in alarm.
“First you’re letting Lord Granville slip away, and now this?” Daphne asked. “Clio, have you gone raving mad?”
“Perhaps.” She shrugged. “Daphne, you are my sister, and I love you. I know you mean well. But you can be astoundingly hurtful at times.”
Clio had Phoebe’s well-being to consider. She just couldn’t be accommodating anymore. Teddy and Daphne were one of those things best taken in small amounts. Like ground cloves. Or smallpox.
“I know that once you leave, I shall miss you,” Clio told her sister. “I’m looking forward to missing you.”
“You can’t do this!” Daphne rattled the gate. “You can’t just boot us out.”
“Actually, I can. I might still be a spinster. I might never be a lady, or even a wife. You might always be my social superior. But I am mistress of my own castle. On this property, I make the rules. And today, I’m feeling a bit medieval.”
Clio waved good-bye to her shocked sister and brother-in-law through the iron grate. “Do have a safe journey. I hope you don’t encounter much traffic on the bridge.”
That done, she turned to Phoebe. “I don’t suppose you’re interested in helping me start a brewery?”
“I’m not sure what help I’d be.” Phoebe fished a bit of string from her pocket. “But I won eighteen hundred pounds in the card room last night. I want to invest.”
“The stewards tell me these fields could be put to better use.” Rafe drew his mount to a halt on the southern border of Oakhaven. “How do you feel about barley?”
“I don’t know that I possess strong feelings about barley.”
“I don’t know that you possess strong feelings at all.”
Piers gathered his reins and set his jaw. “Actually, I do have a few. None of them especially charitable at the moment.”
Rafe walked his gelding in a tense circle. They hadn’t been back on Oakhaven land for ten minutes, and already they were back to their old, familiar boyhood conflicts. If Clio hadn’t asked him to do this . . .
“Maybe we should have it out, the two of us,” Rafe suggested. “Take off our coats, roll up our sleeves. Get it over with.”
“I’m not going to fight you. It wouldn’t be fair.”
“I suppose you’re right.” Rafe puffed his chest. “I was heavyweight champion of England for four years.”
“I know how to kill a man with a letter opener and make it look like an accident,” his brother said coolly. “I meant it wouldn’t be fair to you.”
Rafe rolled his eyes. “You’re so damned predictable. For as long as I could remember, I lived in your shadow. Always failing. Always envious. Fighting was the one thing I could do better than the perfect, upstanding Piers. But no. You had to go and one-up me on that score, too.”
“Of course I did. You weren’t the only one with envy.”
“Why the devil would you envy me?”
“For a hundred reasons. You did as you pleased. Said what you liked. You had more fun. With considerably more girls. You had that roguish air they all like, and your hair does that thing.”
“My hair does a thing?” Rafe made a face. “What thing?”
His brother declined to explain. “I took assignments I wouldn’t have chosen otherwise. Dangerous work. Because even though you were a continent away and the truth of what I was doing must be kept secret from everyone, I couldn’t help but feel I was still in competition with my little brother. As it turns out, we were in competition. In one way, at least. And there, it seems I lost.”
So, it would seem he had gathered the truth about Clio. Rafe had won that round, hadn’t he?
About damn time.