Page 35 of Once Upon a Rose

pulled her closer under the raincoat.

  "That was Henry." She looked up as the

  lightning zig-zagged through the sky. "He demands

  another platter of doughnuts."

  Kit laughed, his eyes crinkling as the rain

  dampened his hair.

  "We should leave now, love. Neville

  Williamson and his wife are holding tea for us;

  we should at least arrive on time. And we

  promised your mother we'd ring her this evening." Kit

  took a deep breath and glanced over her head at

  the maze, barely visible in the misty distance. "I

  think we've seen all there is to see."

  "I suppose." Then she reached for his hand.

  "Have you made a decision yet?"

  "Yes, I believe I have."

  "Well? Tell me, Kit, are you going

  to sell? That's a heck of a lot of money they

  offered. I mean, how many fledgling airlines are

  the center of an international bidding war?"

  "Not many, I imagine." He raised an

  eyebrow, unable to keep the smile from his face.

  "But then how many airlines are composed completely

  of vintage propeller planes?"

  "It's the service everyone goes nuts over,

  Kit. It was brilliant of you to think of it: the

  old decor, the outfits worn by the flight

  attendants, jazz and old radio shows on the

  headphones, the antique magazines offered

  in-flight, those great old movies."

  "Shush." He placed his hand over her mouth.

  "Don't tell me what happens at the end of

  Casablanca. Every time I almost reach the end,

  some pesky phone call interrupts."

  "Pesky? Like British Airways doubling

  their offer? So you haven't told me, Kit: Are

  you going to sell?"

  He paused and rotated his shoulder, feeling the

  ache of the old wound in the English dampness.

  "I've been thinking, Deanie. I have no real

  desire to sell. There's nothing quite like flying your

  own plane, and I don't believe I could give

  that up. Certainly not now, maybe never. But here

  in England, where the taxes are brutal and

  available land is so limited, it would be

  almost impossible for the airline to grow." His thumb

  traced over her hand as he spoke. "How about if

  I move the operation to the United States?"

  "Really?" The excitement made her voice

  shrill.

  "Someplace with lots of land nearby, so

  Monarch Air could expand. Perhaps someplace in the

  South. It might take awhile, with rough going at

  first, but we've been through worse. I have my eye

  on a bit of land outside of Nashville and--"

  The rest of his words were cut off by her lips on

  his, as the black raincoat slipped off their

  shoulders and landed in the dirt, forgotten and muddied.

  At first he laughed at her response, but the

  laughter died in his throat, replaced by fierce

  desire, overwhelming passion for the woman in his

  arms.

  His fingers combed through her hair, droplets of

  water drizzling from the ends as their embrace

  became tighter, their kiss deeper. She noticed

  the scratchy feel of his whiskers and the soft

  fullness of his lower lip, and it didn't matter

  where they were or when they were. It only mattered that

  they were together.

  "A-hem," came an embarrassed voice.

  In her haze Deanie did not respond, and

  Kit, only half aware of the intrusion, chose

  to ignore it.

  "A-hem, a-hem."

  Completing one last kiss, Kit raised his

  eyebrows, glancing at the red-faced gardener standing

  under a large black umbrella.

  "Excuse me, sir," he said discreetly.

  "A-hem, and ma'am. The grounds are closing.

  You'd best be off, and get out of them wet

  clothes."

  Deanie giggled, her hands dropping to Kit's

  chest, her eyes still steady upon his face.

  The gardener cringed. "That's not what I meant."

  Kit held up a hand. "Please, don't

  worry. We'll be off."

  The gardener seemed reluctant to leave them

  alone. Kit gave Deanie's shoulder a light

  squeeze and scooped up his soggy raincoat.

  "You should come back later in the spring," said the

  gardener, struggling for something to say. "It's

  lovely then, it is. Magical, almost."

  The ghost of a smile traced Deanie's lips.

  "We know," she whispered, ducking under Kit's

  arm. "It's pure magic."

  Together they walked back to the parking lot, the

  gardener holding the umbrella over their heads,

  chattering about the flora and fauna of Hampton

  Court.

  But Kit and Deanie said nothing. For as

  magical, as glorious as the garden was in the

  spring, they alone knew the most magical thing of

  all is love.

  Author's Note

  The Hampton Court maze was not actually

  created until the reign of William and Mary,

  more than a hundred years after Kit and Deanie

  and, incidentally, Henry VIII. Anne

  Boleyn's family home, Hever Castle,

  did have a maze, however. Perhaps Henry wooed his

  vivacious ill-fated second wife there.

  Only they know for sure.

  Anne of Cleves never did return to her

  homeland. She was granted the palace of

  Richmond upon the annulment of her marriage, as

  well as the extraordinary sum of four thousand

  pounds a year. Henry threw in the title of his

  "Honorary Sister," as well as the manor of

  Betchingly and his reviled late wife's Hever

  Castle. Her brother the duke of Cleves

  breathed a sigh of relief and admitted that he was

  "glad his sister had fared no worse."

  Anne became something of a fashion

  trendsetter, and her unique position as a

  self-sufficient woman at court gave her a

  delightful sense of freedom. Although she never

  remarried, she remained good friends with Henry and his

  eldest daughter, Mary.

  And after the annulment, Henry allowed Anne

  to become a mother figure to his little red-haired

  daughter, Princess Elizabeth.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 


 

  Judith O'Brien, Once Upon a Rose

  (Series: # )

 

 


 

 
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