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but can he catch you if you fall?’

      ‘Buddy prevents me falling,’ she pointed out. ‘And we’re fine from here. Buddy? The cottage.’

      She was walking faster and faster now, practically running from one kind of darkness to another, with no landmarks in between. She was frightened of the strange territory, and she was frightened of Nacho. She heard him mount up again and now he was right behind her, his horse almost on top of her.

      ‘We know our way,’ she insisted, fighting off the terrifying sense of being hunted in the dark. She wished he’d speak, so she could tell exactly where he was. She wished she could see his face and know exactly what he was thinking. As long as there wasn’t any pity on it. She couldn’t have borne that. She’d had enough of people treating her as if her brain was faulty along with her sight. ‘Really, we’re fine from here,’ she called out, hating the fact that her voice was shaking.

      ‘Can’t I show you some basic civility?’ he said, giving her some indication that he was keeping his horse a safe distance away. ‘While you’re here in Argentina you’re my guest.’

      While she was there? That sounded ominous, as if she wouldn’t be here very long—which was bad news for Elias. ‘Look, I must apologise,’ she said, drawing to a halt. ‘I realise we haven’t got off to the best of starts. I want you to know that I’m really looking forward to tasting your wines …’ She stood and listened. It had gone very quiet again. ‘Elias spoke so highly of them …’

      She breathed a sigh of relief as she heard Nacho’s horse move and its harness chink.

      ‘I’m sorry if my being here instead of Elias has been a disappointment for you,’ she said.

      Not half as sorry as he was.

      ‘And I realise you must be wondering—’

      ‘Wondering what, Grace?’ he interrupted. Shortening the reins, he brought the stallion under control. ‘Elias has kept me completely in the dark. I feel let down. What am I supposed to think when Elias sends a young girl with little or no experience in his place? If you’re asking me to be blunt, I can’t imagine how you can possibly do the job.’

      She flinched, and he felt wretched, but people’s livelihoods were at stake. And now she was about to fall down a bank.

      ‘Grace, watch out!’ he yelled.

      ‘I’m not going anywhere,’ she said as the dog led her safely back onto the path.

      ‘You nearly did.’

      ‘Buddy wouldn’t let me fall.’

      He admired her confidence and hoped it wasn’t misplaced. This was not the naïve young girl he remembered from Lucia’s wedding. This was a woman with steel in her spine and she intrigued him—which complicated matters.

      ‘How did you find your way to the river in the first place?’ he said, trying to imagine himself blindfolded, with only a dog to lead him.

      ‘Buddy heard the water—smelled it too, I expect. He started barking, and after the long journey I thought we both needed some fresh air.’

      ‘I can’t understand why my sister didn’t mention your illness.’

      ‘Because I asked her not to.’

      ‘Why keep it a secret?’ he said suspiciously.

      ‘Because I’m handling it,’ she said, marching on. ‘Because I don’t want to be treated any differently just because I can’t see. I don’t want to be defined by being blind. I don’t want it to influence what people think about me.’

      ‘I think you’re being overly optimistic, Grace.’

      ‘Well, maybe I am, but I don’t want smothering,’ she snapped. ‘I’m quite capable of looking after myself.’

      ‘Don’t you think it would be more considerate if you warned people in advance, so that they can make the necessary provision for you?’

      ‘What provision?’ she flashed. ‘That’s exactly what I don’t want. Why should I—?’

      ‘Compromise?’ he suggested as he battled to keep the stallion in check.

      The horse was bored with inactivity, and it didn’t like the turn this conversation was taking. Animals could sense tempers rising faster than humans, and Nacho was determined that passions of any kind would not be roused between him and Grace.

      Passion could kill, as he knew only too well, and he never made the same mistake twice.

      CHAPTER THREE

      ‘SURELY compromise is all part of adapting to your new situation?’ Nacho insisted as he continued to follow Grace along the riverbank. He caught a glimpse of her face as she strode along. Her jaw was firm and the set of her face was still angry. He could almost see her thinking, What would you know about it? And the answer to that, for once in his life, was absolutely nothing.

      ‘Why should I compromise?’ she said, confirming those thoughts. ‘That sounds too much like defeat to me.’

      ‘Grace! Watch that branch—’

      ‘I’m okay,’ she fired back, and the big dog adjusted direction seamlessly to lead Grace safely round the fallen branch.

      But she still couldn’t know she was so very close to the edge of a steep bank, or that from there it was just a short fall into the fast-flowing river. Nacho’s head reeled with sudden dread as he thought back to another time and a tragedy he should have been there to prevent.

      ‘I might not be able to see the river,’ Grace said, as if she could read his thoughts as well. ‘But I can hear it. And with Buddy to guide me and keep me safe—’

      ‘There’s absolutely no danger of you falling in?’ he demanded sarcastically as the ugly memories continued to play out in his head. ‘And if such a thing were to happen, your dog would, of course, leap in and save you.’

      ‘Yes, he would,’ she said, ignoring his sarcasm. ‘Buddy has more ability than you can possibly imagine.’

      His imagination was all too active, unfortunately, and while Grace was staying here she was his responsibility. ‘Next time you feel like putting your life at risk, call me first.’

      He ground his jaw when she laughed. It would be better if Grace left immediately.

      ‘I’m sorry if I shock you with my independence,’ she said. ‘Would you have preferred me to remain cowering in the guest cottage until you arrived?’

      ‘If you expect to do any sort of business with me you should think firstly about being more polite, and secondly about being more compliant.’

      ‘More compliant? What do you think I am? And if you speak like that to everyone you meet, no wonder they’re not polite to you. My job, as I understand it, is to independently judge your wine—so I would have thought that for your sake, and for the success of your business, my compliance would be the last thing you should want.’

      She had an answer for everything. His practised gaze roved over Grace’s slender frame. She had changed completely in all ways but one—physically she was every bit as attractive as he remembered.

      ‘Elias has been very good to you,’ he observed, curious about this new Grace.

      ‘Yes,’ she said, relaxing for the first time. ‘He took me on when no one else would even give me a job. And he paid for my training.’

      It was interesting to see her open up, though the training must have been recent, which was hardly what he hoped for in an expert. ‘I’m surprised Elias was less than frank with me. He only had to pick up the phone to explain what he intended to do.’

      ‘And would you have allowed me to come if he had done that?’

      He

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