Carole Mortimer - Shadowed Stranger

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Carole Mortimer is one of Mills & Boon’s best loved Modern Romance authors. With nearly 200 books published and a career spanning 35 years, Mills & Boon are thrilled to present her complete works available to download for the very first time! Rediscover old favourites – and find new ones! – in this fabulous collection…More than infatuation…?Sweet, naïve Robyn Castle knows that eminent doctor Rick Howarth is the wrong man for her! He’s older, more sophisticated, experienced…and so sinfully delicious that he should be illegal! But despite their differences, Rick seems just as infatuated with Robyn as she is with him…But when Robyn learns that Rick is married, there’s no way she can be the other woman! Could Rick really have hidden such an important truth from her? And what does it mean for their future?

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Shadowed Stranger - изображение 1

Shadowed Stranger

Carole Mortimer

Shadowed Stranger - изображение 2

www.millsandboon.co.uk

MILLS & BOON

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Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page Shadowed Stranger Carole Mortimer www.millsandboon.co.uk

CHAPTER ONE

CHAPTER TWO

CHAPTER THREE

CHAPTER FOUR

CHAPTER FIVE

CHAPTER SIX

CHAPTER SEVEN

CHAPTER EIGHT

CHAPTER NINE

CHAPTER TEN

Copyright

CHAPTER ONE

TREES overshadowed the narrow lane she was riding down, and several large holes in the road made her bicycle wobble precariously. Birds were singing in those trees, the sound of children laughing happily as they played in the brilliant sunshine.

Children laughing …? There shouldn’t be any children laughing here. The only house in this area, at the end of this small country lane, was Orchard House, and it had been unoccupied for quite some time now. She knew that some of the village children played there, but if Billy were one of them …

Yes, there he was, right in the middle of a crowd of other youngsters, the game of five-a-side football obviously well under way, jumpers being placed on the ground as goalposts.

Robyn came to a halt, straddling her bicycle. Her brother was enjoying the game; for some reason she couldn’t see, football was an obsession with him and his impish face was alive with glee as he scored a goal through the makeshift goalposts.

‘Billy?’ she called to him. ‘Billy!’ more firmly as he seemed not to hear her.

He looked up impatiently. The two of them were very much alike, both blond and fair-skinned, although Billy’s manner was the more aggressive. ‘What is it?’ he asked impatiently.

‘You know you shouldn’t be in here.’ She felt rather silly now, the other boys were looking at her as if she had no right to be here. And maybe she didn’t, but neither did they! Billy had already been in trouble with her father once about trespassing into the grounds at Orchard House, and if he were caught again he would be in real trouble.

‘Stop interfering!’ her brother snapped, obviously embarrassed at her bossy attitude in front of his friends.

‘This is private property,’ she told them all firmly. ‘The last time Constable Fuller caught you he gave you all a warning, the next time it might be rather more serious.’ Especially for Billy. Her parents had been so shocked and upset when the local policeman had called at the house to tell them of Billy’s trespassing.

‘Robyn—–’

‘I’m sorry, Billy,’ she said, and meant it. ‘But I think you should play football somewhere else.’

‘There isn’t anywhere else,’ he snapped.

‘Well, you can’t stay here—any of you,’ she added meaningly.

The other boys started to wander off, shooting her resentful glances as they went. She felt awful for spoiling their fun, but if she had heard them there was a fair chance Constable Fuller would too if he should go by, and she knew for a fact that most of these boys would be in as much trouble as Billy if they were caught here again.

‘I bet you’re great at a party,’ Billy muttered once there was just the two of them left.

Robyn sighed. ‘I did it for your own good.’

‘That’s what Dad always says before he keeps me in or stops my pocket-money.’ He kicked moodily at some of the stones on the driveway.

‘I’m sorry, Billy,’ she told him ruefully. ‘I didn’t mean to break up your game. Am I forgiven?’

He seemed to think about it for a while, but she knew he would soon get over his mood—he always did. ‘Okay,’ he finally accepted. ‘But help me look for my football first. It had just been kicked into that long grass among those trees when you interrupted us.’

‘All right,’ she agreed cheerfully, leaving her bicycle on the side of the gravel driveway of the house as they went to find the ball.

The grass was almost up to their knees, the ball nowhere in sight. But there were lots of wild daffodils growing in the grass, and Robyn couldn’t resist picking some of them.

‘That’s called stealing!’ Billy appeared at her side with his football.

‘I know, but—–’ Just at that moment a car turned into the driveway, the wheels going over Robyn’s bicycle with a telling crunch of metal. The car came to an immediate halt.

Robyn’s instant reaction was to duck behind a wide tree trunk, pulling the suddenly immobile Billy with her. ‘What’s a car doing driving in here?’ she whispered. ‘This house isn’t occupied.’

‘How should I know?’ her brother said impatiently. ‘But I bet your bike’s a mess.’

‘I know,’ she groaned, envisaging the twisted metal.

‘Maybe—–’

‘Ssh!’ she quietened him. ‘Someone is getting out of the car.’

She watched as the man came around the back of the car, bending down to inspect what was left of her bicycle. He straightened, looking about him with narrowed grey eyes. He was a handsome man, although rather unkempt-looking, his hair long and out of style, although it gleamed with a clean black sheen, his eyes grey and piercing, his nose long and straight, his mouth set in a rigid line. He was very leanly built, although firmly muscled, his denims old and faded, the shirt he wore clean but unironed. He would be in his late thirties, Robyn guessed, his expression harsh, deep lines grooved into his face beside his nose and mouth.

She had been so mesmerised with the aggressively male attractiveness of him that she had forgotten to hide, something she realised too late as he spotted her and strode angrily towards them.

‘Now you’ve done it,’ Billy glared at her.

‘Shut up!’ she snapped.

‘Come out of there!’ the man’s angry voice ordered. ‘Come on, I know you’re in there,’ he added at their delay.

‘Now we’re for it,’ Billy muttered, dragging Robyn behind him as he stepped out into view.

Robyn looked up at the stranger, all six foot one of him, feeling like a midget herself at only five feet two inches. On closer inspection the man looked gaunt, very pale beneath his tan, the harshness to his features more noticeable.

‘Well?’ he barked as they remained silent. ‘What have you to say for yourselves?’

‘Sorry?’ Billy said hopefully.

He received an impatient look for his trouble. ‘I gather that distorted hunk of metal on the driveway belongs to one of you?’

‘My sister,’ Billy muttered, obviously realising this man was a force to be reckoned with.

Robyn’s violet eyes flashed. ‘It was a bicycle before you drove over it,’ she snapped her indignation.

Glacial grey eyes were turned on her. ‘I’m well aware of what it was. What I want to know is what it was doing on my driveway.’

She gasped. ‘ Your driveway?’

‘That’s right.’ He pushed the untidy dark hair back from his forehead as if it annoyed him.

‘You live here?’ Billy’s eyes were as wide as saucers.

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