“Well, that was because I wasn’t closing my eye.”
That silenced all of them.
And then finally: “I beg your pardon?” From Anne, who really did want to know what closing his eye had to do with anything.
“I always close my eye when I count,” he told her. With a completely straight face.
“You always— Wait a moment,” Anne said suspiciously. “You close one of your eyes when you count?”
“Well, I could hardly close both.”
“Why not?” Frances asked.
“I wouldn’t be able to see,” he said, as if the answer were plain as day.
“You don’t need to be able to see to count,” Frances replied.
“I do.”
He was lying. Anne could not believe the girls weren’t howling in protest. But they weren’t. In fact, Elizabeth looked utterly fascinated. “Which eye?” she asked.
He cleared his throat, and Anne was fairly certain she saw him wink each of his eyes, as if to remember which was the injured party. “The right one,” he finally decided.
“Of course,” Harriet said.
Anne looked at her. “What?”
“Well, he’s right-handed, isn’t he?” Harriet looked to her cousin. “Aren’t you?”
“I am,” he confirmed.
Anne looked from Lord Winstead to Harriet and back again. “And this is relevant because . . . ?”
Lord Winstead gave her a tiny shrug, saved from having to answer by Harriet, who said, “It just is.”
“I’m sure I could take on the challenge next week,” Lord Winstead said, “once my eye has healed. I don’t know why it did not occur to me that I would lose my sense of balance with only the swollen eye to look through.”
Anne’s eyes—both of them—narrowed. “I thought one’s balance was affected by one’s hearing.”
Frances gasped. “Don’t tell me he’s going deaf?”
“He’s not going deaf,” Anne retorted. “Although I might, if you yell like that again. Now, get going, the three of you, and carry on with your work. I’m going to sit down.”
“As am I,” Lord Winstead said jauntily. “But I shall be with you three in spirit.”
The girls went back to their counting, and Anne strode over to the bench. Lord Winstead was right behind her, and as they sat she said, “I can’t believe they believed that nonsense about your eye.”
“Oh, they didn’t believe it,” he said nonchalantly. “I told them earlier I’d give them a pound each if they endeavored to give us a few moments alone.”
“What?” Anne screeched.
He doubled over laughing. “Of course I didn’t. Good heavens, do you think me a complete dunce? No, don’t answer that.”
She shook her head, annoyed with herself for having been such an easy mark. Still, she couldn’t be angry; his laughter was far too good-natured.
“I’m surprised no one has come over to greet you,” she said. The park was not any more crowded than usual for this time of day, but they were hardly the only people out for a stroll. Anne knew that Lord Winstead had been an extremely popular gentleman when he’d lived in London; it was hard to believe that no one had noticed his presence in Hyde Park.
“I don’t think it was common knowledge that I planned to return,” he said. “People see what they expect to see, and no one in the park expects to see me.” He gave her a rueful half grin and glanced up and to the left, as if motioning to his swollen eye. “Especially not in this condition.”
“And not with me,” she added.
“Who are you, I wonder?”
She turned, sharply.
“That’s quite a reaction for so basic a question,” he murmured.
“I am Anne Wynter,” she said evenly. “Governess to your cousins.”
“Anne,” he said softly, and she realized he was savoring her name like a prize. He tilted his head to the side. “Is it Wynter with an i or a y?”
“Y. Why?” And then she couldn’t help but chuckle at what she’d just said.
“No reason,” he replied. “Just my natural curiosity.” He was silent for a bit longer, then said, “It doesn’t suit you.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“Your name. Wynter. It does not suit you. Even with the y.”
“We are rarely given the choice of our names,” she pointed out.
“True, but still, I have often found it interesting how well some of us are suited to them.”