âItâs not charity Iâm offering you. Itâs a deal.â
âA deal,â Courtney repeated, dismay clutching at her heart.
Not loveâ¦
A dealâ¦
âI will clear your debts if you do something for me in return.â
âFor heavenâs sake, what?â It had to be something huge in return for three million dollars.
Jack looked worried for a second. âThis might be a bit of a shock, coming so quickly after weâve met. But Iâm quite sure on my part. In fact, Iâve never been more sure of anything.â
âJack, for pityâs sake, what?â
âI want you to have my child.â
COURTNEY knew, the moment she saw William Sinclairâs face, that her motherâs accountant had really bad news. Heâd hedged over the phone when sheâd asked him if Crosswinds was in financial trouble, saying he just needed to have a little chat with her, face to face.
Courtney hadnât been fooled by that. Her motherâs cost-cutting measures these past couple of years had been obvious to everyone. Staff was down to a minimum. The fences had not been painted. Other repairs had been left undone. The place had begun to look shabby. Which wasnât exactly good for business.
If Crosswinds was to compete against the lavish and very modern thoroughbred studs now gracing the Upper Hunter Valley, then it needed to look its very best.
When sheâd pointed this out to her mother earlier in the year, Hilary hadnât agreed. âWhat we need, daughter, is a new stallion. Not fancy stables.â
Which was also true. Four years earlier, when the stud had been doing very well, her mother had imported a classy Irish stayer named Four-Leaf Clover.
Unfortunately, the horse had contracted a virus and had died shortly after standing his first season at stud. His only crop of foals hadnât been much to look at as yearlings, bringing such poor bidding at auction that Hilary had stubbornly kept most of them rather than let them go for less than theyâd cost to breed.
With Four-Leaf Clover gone, and their remaining two sires both getting older, Crosswinds had a real hole in its breeding program. But there hadnât been the money to buy a replacement till this year.
âIâll still have to look for a bargain,â her mother had told her. âI havenât got much spare cash.â
Her mum had been cock-a-hoop when sheâd arrived home with Goldplated in May, especially with the price sheâd negotiated. Though no price was a real bargain, Courtney realised ruefully as she walked into the accountantâs office, if the money to buy the darned horse had been borrowed.
William Sinclair rose as she entered, being the old-fashioned gentleman that he was. âGood morning, Courtney,â he greeted. âDo sit down.â And he waved her to the single chair facing his large, but large, ancient desk.
Courtney took off her Akubra hat and sat down, making herself as comfortable as she could in the stiff-backed seat. A fruitless exercise. Tension had already knotted the muscles between her shoulder blades.
The accountant dropped his eyes to the papers in front of him, then started shuffling them around.
Courtneyâs agitation rose. She wasnât in the mood for any further procrastination.
âJust give it to me straight, Bill,â she began bluntly, and his eyes lifted, his expression faintly disapproving. Heâd never liked her calling him Bill. But that was rather irrelevant at the moment. âNo bulldust now. No waffle. Iâm my motherâs daughter. I can take it.â
William shook his head at the young woman sitting before him. Yes, she was indeed her motherâs daughter, he thought wearily.
Not in looks. Lord, no. Hilary Cross had been as plain as a pikestaff. Her daughter had clearly taken after her father, that unknown, unspoken-of male who had miraculously impregnated the forty-five-year-old spinster owner of Crosswinds over a quarter of a century ago, then disappeared off the face of the earth.
Gossip claimed heâd been a gypsy, and Courtneyâs looks seemed to confirm that, with her long black curly hair, dark brown eyes and rich olive skin. A striking-looking girl, in Williamâs opinion.
Her personality and ways, however, were pure Hilary. Just look at the way she was sitting, for heavenâs sake, with her right ankle hooked up over her left knee. That was how men sat, not young ladies. And then there was the matter of her dress, âdressâ being the pertinent word. Because she never wore one! William had never seen her in anything but blue jeans and a checked shirt. Yet she had a very good figure.