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Synopsis
USA Today-Bestselling Author: Fleeing a fortune hunter, a woman invents a marriage—until her pretend husband hears about it . . .
Ella Quinn’s bachelors do as they like and take what they want. But when the objects of their desire are bold, beautiful women, the rules of the game always seem to change . . .
Handsome, charming, and heir to a powerful viscount, Christopher “Kit” Featherton is everything a woman could want—except interested in marriage. So when he hears that someone on his estate near the Scottish border is claiming to be his wife, Kit sets off to investigate.
Since her parents’ death, Lady Mary Tolliver has been hounded by her cousin, a fortune-hunting fool after her inheritance. Refusing to settle for anything less than love, Mary escapes to the isolated estate of rakish bachelor Kit Featherton. Knowing he prefers Court to the country, she believes she will be safe. But when Kit unexpectedly returns, her pretend marriage begins to feel seductively real . . .
Ella Quinn’s bachelors do as they like and take what they want. But when the objects of their desire are bold, beautiful women, the rules of the game always seem to change . . .
Handsome, charming, and heir to a powerful viscount, Christopher “Kit” Featherton is everything a woman could want—except interested in marriage. So when he hears that someone on his estate near the Scottish border is claiming to be his wife, Kit sets off to investigate.
Since her parents’ death, Lady Mary Tolliver has been hounded by her cousin, a fortune-hunting fool after her inheritance. Refusing to settle for anything less than love, Mary escapes to the isolated estate of rakish bachelor Kit Featherton. Knowing he prefers Court to the country, she believes she will be safe. But when Kit unexpectedly returns, her pretend marriage begins to feel seductively real . . .
Release date: May 26, 2015
Publisher: Lyrical Press
Print pages: 320
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A Kiss for Lady Mary
Ella Quinn
April 1816
The Honorable Mr. Christopher “Kit” Featherton, heir to Viscount Featherton, waited behind a young gentleman at the entrance to Almack’s. The other man was patting his suit, desperately searching for something. Kit, as he was known to his family and close friends, stepped around the individual, gave his hat, coat, and cane to a footman before addressing Mr. Willis, Almack’s gatekeeper. “Good evening, Willis.”
The older man bowed. “Good evening, sir. Her ladyship and Miss Featherton arrived not long ago.”
“Thank you, Willis.”
As Kit strolled into the assembly room, the young man complained, “I don’t see why you didn’t ask him for his voucher.”
“Mr. Featherton is well known to us and all in the ton,” Willis replied sternly. “You, sir, are not.”
Kit couldn’t help but feel bad for the gentleman, but the patronesses of Almack’s were extremely particular about who gained admission to the rarified assembly rooms. He lifted his quizzing glass, surveying the attendees. Unfortunately, the one person he’d hoped to find was not present, and had not been for two years.
“Mr. Featherton, precise as a pin as usual.” A light hand touched his sleeve. Lady Jersey, one of Almack’s several patronesses, or Silence as she was called because she rarely ceased talking, smiled up at him. “Would you be so kind as to ask one of the young ladies to stand up with you?”
He inclined his head. Her ladyship had no need to ask. Unlike many gentlemen, he would do his duty. “Naturally. Is there anyone in particular?”
“Yes, Miss Caudle. The young lady in green next to the lady with the large red feather in her turban. She is painfully shy. I shall introduce you.”
A few moments later Kit led the girl to join the group of gentlemen and ladies making up a set for a country dance. Bending his head slightly, he said, “Don’t let anyone frighten you. This is really no different from your assemblies at home. You have only to stop worrying and you’ll be fine.”
A smile trembled on the girl’s lips, and she nodded tersely. “Thank you.”
Miss Caudle was light on her feet, managing the complicated steps perfectly. In a few moments, she began to enjoy herself. After the set he was pleased to see other men lining up to beg her to dance with them.
He made his way to his mother and sister Meg.
“That was well done of you, Kit.” Meg grinned, and nodded to indicate Miss Caudle. “She was so afraid of doing something wrong, and I didn’t know how to reassure her.”
“I was glad to help. Do you require a dance partner?”
“No, mine is coming now.” His sister’s eyes twinkled. “Although if you could arrange to have Lord Beaumont ask me, I’d be forever in your debt.”
“I hate to disappoint you, but there is only one reason he is attending.” He motioned with his head to where his friend was standing next to a stunning woman with auburn hair.
“Oh, I know. Unfortunately, Lady Serena is too nice to be jealous of.”
Kit glanced around to see a tall gentleman a few years younger than himself approach. “Swindon.”
“Featherton.” The new Earl of Swindon gave a short nod, before turning to Meg. “My dance, I believe.”
His sister held out her hand and curtseyed. “Indeed it is, my lord.”
After Meg left, he raised a brow to his mother. “Now that would be a good match, if he wasn’t such a cold fish.”
Mama gave her head an imperceptible shake. “She will pick when she’s ready, and not before.” She focused her steady blue gaze on him. “I’m much more concerned about you. It is all very well for you to be the perfect gentleman, but is there no lady who interests you?”
He did not want to have this conversation now. “Perhaps you have a lady in mind?”
Her lips thinned. “You know perfectly well how I feel about matchmaking mamas. I shall not be one.”
Thankfully, Lady Cowper, another patroness, intruded. “Mr. Featherton, I wonder . . .”
“I’ll be happy to, ma’am.”
He spent the rest of the evening doing the pretty, then retired to his rooms on Jermyn Street. Evening shoes off, brandy in hand, Kit stared into the fire. Until this past year, he might have gone to his club and enjoyed a night cap or two with his friends. But now they were mostly married. Late nights drinking brandy couldn’t compete with the soft, warm arms of their wives. The others were either out of Town, or pursuing their lady loves.
Kit heaved a sigh. His mother was right. It was past time he’d thought of marriage. Still there was only one lady it had ever occurred to him to ask, and he hadn’t seen her in a couple of years. Even then, she’d appeared in Town only briefly. Surely if she’d wed, he would have heard. Perhaps he should make a serious effort to track down Barham and asked him where his sister was.
September 1816, near Market Harborough, England
Lady Mary Tolliver heaved a sigh of relief. She’d been at her brother, the Earl of Barham’s, dower house with her grandmother, the Dowager Duchess of Bridgewater, and her widowed aunt, Lady Eunice Phipson, for two weeks now. Thankfully there was still no sign of her cousin, Gawain Tolliver. Perhaps he’d finally given up attempting to compromise her. She’d been taking her regular walks after breakfast for the past week. But this morning she had remembered advice given to her by a friend to vary her schedule as long as Gawain was after her and had decided to go earlier.
She was about a half mile from the house when a familiar male voice asked, “How much longer?”
Mary stopped and scanned the woods. Suddenly, the dark green she’d taken for leaves ruffling in the slight breeze moved revealing a jacket.
Blast it all! It was Gawain, and she’d almost stepped into his trap. She’d known her luck wouldn’t hold. She slipped behind a tree, and listened.
“About another half hour,” a man with a rougher voice answered.
“Have the coach ready,” Gawain ordered. “I want to get away as soon as we grab her.”
She backed up carefully, keeping the dense foliage between herself and her cousin, until she could no longer see Gawain clearly.
“Did you hear something?”
Mary stifled a groan. How far was it to the house, and could she outmaneuver them? She glanced around. It was eight, maybe nine, feet to the old oak tree where, as a child, she’d won many a game of hide and seek. Gathering her skirts, she dashed to it and hid in the hollow part of the trunk. Gawain would have to know exactly where to look to see her. Still, she could not remain in the tree all day. She would have to hope they gave up waiting for her and left, planning to return another day.
“Nah, sir, just a deer or something.”
Several minutes later, Mary shifted and dirt fell around her. This space had been far more commodious when she’d been younger. Something landed on her arm and began to crawl. Stifling a scream, she swatted at it, dislodging more debris. Her heart thudded, making it hard for her to breathe. It was certain her cousin wouldn’t leave until at least the time when she normally passed by. She would just have to run. As they began to converse again, she picked up her skirts and dashed out of the home wood. Once she reached the outer part of the curtilage she raced through the rose garden, staying off the flagstone and gravel paths to the nearest door and darted in.
“My lady,” Cook exclaimed. “You look like the devil hisself is after you.” The old woman narrowed her eyes. “What have you got into? Shake out your skirts before you come in any farther. Is that a dead spider on your arm?”
Mary leaned back against the door, sucking in great gulps of air as she caught her breath. “That might be an apt description.” She briefly considered asking Cook not to tell Grandmamma, but that would only insure her grandmother heard about it sooner. “I’ll be down for breakfast as soon as I wash my hands.”
“No rush, Lady Eunice isn’t down yet either.”
Attempting to avoid her grandmother and aunt, Mary made her way up the servants’ stairs to her chamber.
Her maid, Mathers, was waiting. “I saw you tearing across the garden, my lady. Did your cousin show up?”
“Yes.” Mary’s shoulders drooped as she removed her damaged bonnet. “I’ll not have any more long walks now.”
Somehow she’d have to find a way to avoid him for good, or at least until she could fall in love and wed.
“Thought it was too good to go on for long,” Mathers said, as she took a sprigged muslin morning gown out of the wardrobe. “If you ask me, someone ought to do something about him.”
“Someone” ought to be the eldest of Mary’s brothers, the Earl of Barham. Unfortunately, he was much too good natured, not to mention concerned about scandal.
“When pigs fly,” she mumbled.
“Did you say something, my lady?”
“Nothing of import.” It was a shame there were no convents in England. She could hide in one of them rather than moving from estate to estate. Then again, it would be hard to meet an eligible gentleman, or indeed any gentleman at all, in a convent. On the other hand, it was proving impossible to meet a suitor under her current circumstance. “I wonder what Grandmamma will come up with this time.”
A couple of days later, Mary joined her grandmother and aunt in the dower house’s elegant but cozy morning room. Small paintings and miniatures encompassing generations of Tollivers covered the walls and surfaces. In the Queen Anne style, the furniture was old, but comfortable.
Long windows gave a view over the rose garden and the marble fountain in its center. The curtains had recently been changed from the velvet used during the colder seasons to a cerulean blue watered silk trimmed with gold braid. Even though they were experiencing one of their few warm days this spring, a log spat and popped in the fireplace.
In fact, the only disturbing part of the normally tranquil atmosphere was the conversation.
Doing her best to keep her jaw from dropping in shock, Mary stared at her grandmother. The older woman’s thick silver hair was fashionably dressed, and even at more than seventy years of age, her face held few lines. Her gaze seemed as sharp as ever. Generally she was the picture of health, except for this recent burst of incipient insanity, for that was all it could be.
Mary opened her mouth, then closed it again. Several moments passed in silence as she struggled to make sense of what she thought she’d heard. After rejecting retorts such as, Grandmamma, are you feeling quite well? Or, are you sure you wouldn’t like a nice room in Bedlam? And finally unable to come up with another way to ask her question, she simply voiced the nicest thought in her mind. “Surely I have not understood you properly. You want me to do what?”
“Well, I think it’s a wonderful idea.”
Mary shifted her gaze to her aunt. Perhaps madness had always run in the family and it had been kept a secret so as not to ruin them socially. After all, who would deliberately marry into a family where lunacy was rampant?
“He has a face like a fish.” Aunt Eunice opened her eyes wide and moved her lips in a fair imitation of a fish.
“Hake.” Grandmamma nodded decisively. “It’s the way his eyes protrude.”
Mary closed her eyes, repressing a shudder. “I agree, but surely there must be less drastic measures I can take.”
Grandmamma leaned forward and pounded her silver-headed cane on the floor. “He may look like a fool, my girl, but he’s canny, and, if what Cook told me is true”—Mary should have expected that—“which I have no doubt it is, he almost caught you a few days ago.”
“Yes, well.” Not the cleverest of replies. Surely, she could think of something more to say. “I got away from him,” she ended lamely.
“This time.” Grandmamma’s lips thinned. She rammed the cane into the thick Turkey rug again.
“And every other time previously.” Mary let out a frustrated huff. Unfortunately, her grandmother did have a point. It was becoming more and more difficult to evade her cousin. “Did Barham receive an answer to his last letter to Uncle Hector?”
After a few moments, during which Grandmamma turned so red it appeared as if she would have apoplexy, Aunt Eunice replied, “Yes. But it won’t serve. Barham said Hector continues to insist your father promised you would marry Gawain, and he will not release your funds until either the marriage takes place—”
“In which case that spendthrift, Gawain,” Mary almost growled, the anger in her voice surprising her, “would control everything.”
Thus far she’d been satisfied to allow her brother to handle the whole ridiculous situation. Truth be known, she’d been so battered by her parents’ successive deaths, she hadn’t wanted to deal with it. Yet when Gawain had followed her to London for her first Season in two years and tried to compromise her, she had been jolted out of her complacency.
“Or you turn five and twenty.”
Her aunt’s voice interrupted her silent railing. “I’m sorry. What did you say?”
“When the trust ends,” Eunice replied patiently.
Another two years of trying to evade Gawain. “Has there been any movement in our Chancery suit to replace my uncle as trustee?”
Eunice shook her head.
“Unless you plan to spend the next two years inside the house,” Grandmamma said, emphasizing her speech with another loud thump of her cane, “you will do as your aunt and I advise.”
Mary eyed the silver headed stick. What would her grandmother do if she hid it? Still, what they were suggesting was complete insanity. “But I—”
“He’s found you everywhere we’ve tried to hide you, my dear.” Eunice stared at Mary, a compassionate look on her face. “Drastic times call for drastic measures.”
Mary slowly shook her head. “I don’t think I could pretend to be someone else for that long a time.”
“But you won’t have to pretend.” Her aunt beamed. “That is the brilliance of the plan! You can be yourself . . . with a slight change in your last name for the time being.”
This—they were impossible. Mary threw her hands up in frustration. “And what, pray tell, am I to do if the gentleman who owns the property discovers my deception? Anyone could find out, then I would be completely ruined and no one would want to marry me.”
“Don’t you trust me?” Grandmamma raised one brow in the way she always did when she wanted to badger others to her way of thinking.
Mary seriously considered answering in the negative, not that it would help. Grandmamma was a force of her own. Why else would Barham allow her to remain here when she had a perfectly good dower house of her own at Bridgewater?
“Most of the time,” Mary answered, drawing the sentence out.
Though now wasn’t one of them.
“We’ve been very careful,” her grandmother said as calmly as if she were choosing a dinner menu, “to select a remote area where there are no important families.”
There was something very wrong about all of this. “May I ask who the owner is?”
Her grandmother waved her hand as if dismissing her question. “The less you know for time being, the safer you’ll be if Gawain comes sniffing around.”
“Besides”—Eunice’s already wide smile broadened—“I’ll be with you acting as your companion. It will be such a lark.”
Mary stifled a groan. All the cousins had heard about Eunice’s larks. She’d been the youngest and wildest of Grandmamma’s children, and had apparently not outgrown her previous tendencies. Mary had to find a way out of this harebrained scheme. “Won’t your children wonder where you are?”
“Oh, after a while, I suppose.” Eunice shrugged lightly. “But they’ll think I’m with Mama and probably be happy I’m not around to corrupt their children.” She took a sip of wine. “How Roger—the greatest rake in England and on the Continent, before our marriage of course—and I ever managed to produce such dullards, I shall never know.”
Those were also tales Mary and her brothers had grown up hearing, at least the ones mild enough to tell children. She never had understood how her aunt had been allowed to wed Uncle Roger. “I think that type of thing skips a generation.”
“One can only pray it is not gone forever.” Eunice sighed.
“So then.” Grandmamma tapped her cane for at least the fourth time. Mary’s fingers itched to grab the thing away and throw it in the fireplace. “It’s decided. We’ll leave early tomorrow morning.”
“That soon!” Mary had to stall them. Given just a little more time, she might be able to think of a better scheme. “It seems a little precipitous.”
“Better to get it done before you have a chance to change your mind.” Eunice rose, smoothing out her skirts. “I must see to my packing.”
Mary suppressed her frustration. It was as if she were bashing her head against a stone wall. That actually might be more productive than conversing with her aunt and grandmother.
She considered denying she had agreed to anything. Not that it would matter. The problem was they’d want an alternative, and she couldn’t think of another course of action. Yet she wasn’t stupid; certainly something would come to her before she and her aunt actually reached wherever they were going and the deception began. If anything went wrong her life would be ruined. If only Grandmamma would see reason.
Mr. Gawain Tolliver, not even an honorable to use in correspondence, stood impatiently in the woods and scowled at the moderate-sized dower house. If life had been fair, his sickly uncle would have succumbed before fathering so many children, including the necessary heir and numerous spares. Who knew he’d had it in him to keep going for so long?
There was certainly no counting on the current Earl of Barham dying young. He’d been blessed with the same rude health as his mother. Not that it mattered. Barham had already fathered two sturdy boys. No, the only way for Gawain to get what he wanted and what was rightfully his, was to somehow wed his cousin Mary. She would be the very devil of a wife, but sixty thousand could make up for an awful lot, and by God, he’d not be cheated out of that. The only other option was to hope she fell in love and married without his father’s permission, but he couldn’t see her family allowing that to happen. Once he got her alone, all it would take was a few minutes to tie her up, keep her alone with him for a day or two, long enough that even her bloody brother would insist she marry him, and her money would be his. Not that he wanted an unwilling wife, but needs must, and at least consummation wasn’t required for the marriage to be legal.
Masking his unhappiness with a smile for Sally Athey, the young maid who’d just arrived from Barham’s dower house, he asked, using a gentle tone, “Do you have news for me, sweetheart?”
She fluttered her pale lashes at him. “I might, but if I tell you I could lose my position here.”
Gawain brushed the backs of his knuckles gently over her rounded cheek. “Don’t you remember my promise, sweet? I told you I’ll set you up as soon as I’m married. You’ll never have to worry about working again.”
At least not on her feet.
“Well in that case . . .”
Thank the devil for gullible women. “Come now, I cannot stay here for long. Someone may discover me . . . and you.”
She glanced hastily over her shoulder. “Her ladyship and Lady Mary are going to Bath to-morrow.”
Bath! Who goes to Bath this time of year? “Is Lady Eunice going as well?” If he could get rid of Mary’s meddling aunt, he’d be half-way there. As old as the dowager was, she couldn’t possibly accompany his cousin everywhere.
“I heard her lady’s maid say she was going to visit one of her sons in Suffolk.”
He took Sally’s hand, raising it to his lips. “You’ve done well, my lovely.”
A pretty blush rose in her face. Perhaps he’d keep her as his mistress longer than he’d originally planned. A man needed someone to keep him warm, and it wouldn’t be his hellcat of a cousin.
Sally snatched her hand away. “I must go. The housekeeper will miss me.” She hiked her skirts and dashed hurriedly toward the house.
Gawain stared after her until she was out of sight, then mounted his horse and rode to the small lane not far from the dower house where his groom waited. “Whitely, let’s go back to the tavern. The old lady and my cousin are departing for Bath.”
“When do ye want to leave?”
“In the morning after breakfast. We’re paid up with board until then.” When they arrived at the inn, Gawain handed his reins to a stable boy, went into the common room and ordered an ale.
It wouldn’t be hard to find his cousin in Bath. They were bound to register at the assembly rooms. He’d bide his time until Mary and the dowager arrived. After all, he still had almost a year to secure her as his wife. When he did, he’d never have to worry about money again.
Sally slowed as she reached a side door leading from the small formal garden into the back hall.
Mrs. Collard, the housekeeper, motioned her inside. “Well, Athey, was he there?”
Being called Athey, just as if she were someone important, was only one of the reasons Sally liked working at the dower house. “Yes, ma’am. I pretended to be interested in him, just like the other times, and told him her ladyship was going to Bath, just like you asked me to do.”
“You didn’t give him the tale too easily?”
She shook her head. “No, ma’am. I made him repeat all the promises.” She wiped her hand on her pinafore. “He kissed my hand and got it wet.”
Mrs. Collard harrumphed. “You’re lucky he didn’t try to kiss anything else.” She narrowed her eyes. “He didn’t, did he?”
“No, ma’am. I would never have allowed that. Not to mention his lips look flabby. It’s no wonder Lady Mary don’t wish to marry him.”
“Bad business this is,” Mrs. Collard said in a fierce tone. “Come along now. You must pack. Her ladyship said you could go to Bath with her and begin your training.”
Sally almost couldn’t speak. Bath! She’d never in her life been more than five miles from Market Harborough. Now she was to be taught how to be a lady’s maid too, and all for helping poor Lady Mary escape that nasty Mr. Tolliver, which Sally would have done for nothing. “Yes, ma’am. I’ll be ready!”
After dinner, Mary, her grandmother, and her aunt repaired to the drawing room for tea.
“There you are,” Eunice proclaimed, handing Mary a cup.
It was time to beard the lion, take the bull by its horns, and any number of other things.
“Just how is it you know about this house you wish me to go to?” Mary asked.
Grandmamma sipped her drink, which look suspiciously like brandy. “The current steward of the estate is cousin to the”—she paused for a moment—“Bridgewater steward. I had a discussion with him during my twice yearly visit.”
Mary had the distinct impression that her grandmother wasn’t being truthful. “Go on.”
“It seems the man’s cousin has been in poor health and could use some help.”
“I am to act as the estate manager then?”
“No.” Grandmamma pounded that infernal cane on the floor. “You are to act as its mistress. This is the perfect solution to all of your troubles.”
Her scheme had all the makings of a disaster.
After a restless night planning and rejecting ideas to stop her grandmother, Mary awoke to blackbirds bickering outside her window. Sitting up, she watched as the lady bird threw out the bit of moss her husband tried to place in the nest. It did not appear as if he was having any more luck in his task than she was having in hers. She hoped the poor male bird would win at least one argument. Before too long, the sounds of Mathers in the dressing room reminded Mary she must rise.
A few minutes later, slowly drinking the tea that had been placed on her night table, as if she could delay the inevitable, she continued to cast around for an alternative arrangement to the one proposed by her grandmother and aunt. Yet nothing came to her. If only she had some other place or person to go to where she’d be safe. Unfortunately all her friends were in Town for the Season, and it wasn’t fair to burden them with her presence for a year, not to mention placing them in possible danger as well.
Mathers walked in from the dressing room. “I’ll send for your wash water. I have just been informed that Her Grace wishes to depart within the hour. We will travel with her until she thinks it’s safe for us to go north.”
Flopping back against her pillows, Mary groaned. “Bring me some toast and an egg as well, please. Once she starts a trip, she doesn’t like to stop.”
“I’ll ask Cook to make a basket.” The maid turned to go, then stopped. “For all of us.”
Four days after bidding a tearful adieu to her grandmother and sneaking out of the inn they’d stayed in the previous night, Mary sat next to Aunt Eunice in her well-sprung yet nondescript traveling coach as they entered the bustling market town of Rosebury, Northumberland.
“See how lovely it is,” Eunice enthused as they passed well kept buildings adorned with window boxes of summer flowers.
“Charming.” Two days ago, Mary had given up arguing. The only thing she wanted now was to get out of this coach and go for a walk. She had never traveled so quickly in all her life.
Eunice, having learned the art of rapid travel from her mother, had stopped only to change horses, for which they never seemed to have to wait. Every day they had been in the coach until almost dark and rose with the dawn. Only the mail journeyed faster. “How much farther is Rose Hill?”
“Only a mile or so beyond the town to the east. Oh, look”—Eunice pointed as they traveled over a stone bridge—“there is the River Coquet.”
Perhaps Mary could still get out of this ridiculous charade. Pretend they were stranded due to a lame horse. Beg shelter for the night and leave early in the morning. Even if she could persuade Aunt Eunice to agree, where would she go?
“Now remember, my dear, walk in with your head held high as if you belong there.”
“I don’t suppose Grandmamma could have merely leased a house for a year.”
Eunice turned from the view out the window and peered closely at Mary. “Leasing might have left a trail. The fewer people who know about this the better. Trust Mama and me. This will all work out for the best.”
Much too soon the coach turned off the lane leading from Rosebury onto a rutted gravel drive. They bounced and jolted so hard that it was amazing their teeth didn’t chip. After being almost tossed off the seat, Mary grabbed hold of the carriage strap and held fast for at least ten minutes before they came to a stop before a lovely early Georgian manor. The house was built of sandstone. Columns and a portico graced the entrance. Roses scurried up the walls, almost obscuring some of the windows. The house was definitely in need of a mistress. A stately older man in a black suit stepped out, followed by two footmen who looked suspiciously familiar.
“Was this place fully staffed before?” Mary asked.
For the first time her aunt fidgeted, twisting the fringe on . . .
The Honorable Mr. Christopher “Kit” Featherton, heir to Viscount Featherton, waited behind a young gentleman at the entrance to Almack’s. The other man was patting his suit, desperately searching for something. Kit, as he was known to his family and close friends, stepped around the individual, gave his hat, coat, and cane to a footman before addressing Mr. Willis, Almack’s gatekeeper. “Good evening, Willis.”
The older man bowed. “Good evening, sir. Her ladyship and Miss Featherton arrived not long ago.”
“Thank you, Willis.”
As Kit strolled into the assembly room, the young man complained, “I don’t see why you didn’t ask him for his voucher.”
“Mr. Featherton is well known to us and all in the ton,” Willis replied sternly. “You, sir, are not.”
Kit couldn’t help but feel bad for the gentleman, but the patronesses of Almack’s were extremely particular about who gained admission to the rarified assembly rooms. He lifted his quizzing glass, surveying the attendees. Unfortunately, the one person he’d hoped to find was not present, and had not been for two years.
“Mr. Featherton, precise as a pin as usual.” A light hand touched his sleeve. Lady Jersey, one of Almack’s several patronesses, or Silence as she was called because she rarely ceased talking, smiled up at him. “Would you be so kind as to ask one of the young ladies to stand up with you?”
He inclined his head. Her ladyship had no need to ask. Unlike many gentlemen, he would do his duty. “Naturally. Is there anyone in particular?”
“Yes, Miss Caudle. The young lady in green next to the lady with the large red feather in her turban. She is painfully shy. I shall introduce you.”
A few moments later Kit led the girl to join the group of gentlemen and ladies making up a set for a country dance. Bending his head slightly, he said, “Don’t let anyone frighten you. This is really no different from your assemblies at home. You have only to stop worrying and you’ll be fine.”
A smile trembled on the girl’s lips, and she nodded tersely. “Thank you.”
Miss Caudle was light on her feet, managing the complicated steps perfectly. In a few moments, she began to enjoy herself. After the set he was pleased to see other men lining up to beg her to dance with them.
He made his way to his mother and sister Meg.
“That was well done of you, Kit.” Meg grinned, and nodded to indicate Miss Caudle. “She was so afraid of doing something wrong, and I didn’t know how to reassure her.”
“I was glad to help. Do you require a dance partner?”
“No, mine is coming now.” His sister’s eyes twinkled. “Although if you could arrange to have Lord Beaumont ask me, I’d be forever in your debt.”
“I hate to disappoint you, but there is only one reason he is attending.” He motioned with his head to where his friend was standing next to a stunning woman with auburn hair.
“Oh, I know. Unfortunately, Lady Serena is too nice to be jealous of.”
Kit glanced around to see a tall gentleman a few years younger than himself approach. “Swindon.”
“Featherton.” The new Earl of Swindon gave a short nod, before turning to Meg. “My dance, I believe.”
His sister held out her hand and curtseyed. “Indeed it is, my lord.”
After Meg left, he raised a brow to his mother. “Now that would be a good match, if he wasn’t such a cold fish.”
Mama gave her head an imperceptible shake. “She will pick when she’s ready, and not before.” She focused her steady blue gaze on him. “I’m much more concerned about you. It is all very well for you to be the perfect gentleman, but is there no lady who interests you?”
He did not want to have this conversation now. “Perhaps you have a lady in mind?”
Her lips thinned. “You know perfectly well how I feel about matchmaking mamas. I shall not be one.”
Thankfully, Lady Cowper, another patroness, intruded. “Mr. Featherton, I wonder . . .”
“I’ll be happy to, ma’am.”
He spent the rest of the evening doing the pretty, then retired to his rooms on Jermyn Street. Evening shoes off, brandy in hand, Kit stared into the fire. Until this past year, he might have gone to his club and enjoyed a night cap or two with his friends. But now they were mostly married. Late nights drinking brandy couldn’t compete with the soft, warm arms of their wives. The others were either out of Town, or pursuing their lady loves.
Kit heaved a sigh. His mother was right. It was past time he’d thought of marriage. Still there was only one lady it had ever occurred to him to ask, and he hadn’t seen her in a couple of years. Even then, she’d appeared in Town only briefly. Surely if she’d wed, he would have heard. Perhaps he should make a serious effort to track down Barham and asked him where his sister was.
September 1816, near Market Harborough, England
Lady Mary Tolliver heaved a sigh of relief. She’d been at her brother, the Earl of Barham’s, dower house with her grandmother, the Dowager Duchess of Bridgewater, and her widowed aunt, Lady Eunice Phipson, for two weeks now. Thankfully there was still no sign of her cousin, Gawain Tolliver. Perhaps he’d finally given up attempting to compromise her. She’d been taking her regular walks after breakfast for the past week. But this morning she had remembered advice given to her by a friend to vary her schedule as long as Gawain was after her and had decided to go earlier.
She was about a half mile from the house when a familiar male voice asked, “How much longer?”
Mary stopped and scanned the woods. Suddenly, the dark green she’d taken for leaves ruffling in the slight breeze moved revealing a jacket.
Blast it all! It was Gawain, and she’d almost stepped into his trap. She’d known her luck wouldn’t hold. She slipped behind a tree, and listened.
“About another half hour,” a man with a rougher voice answered.
“Have the coach ready,” Gawain ordered. “I want to get away as soon as we grab her.”
She backed up carefully, keeping the dense foliage between herself and her cousin, until she could no longer see Gawain clearly.
“Did you hear something?”
Mary stifled a groan. How far was it to the house, and could she outmaneuver them? She glanced around. It was eight, maybe nine, feet to the old oak tree where, as a child, she’d won many a game of hide and seek. Gathering her skirts, she dashed to it and hid in the hollow part of the trunk. Gawain would have to know exactly where to look to see her. Still, she could not remain in the tree all day. She would have to hope they gave up waiting for her and left, planning to return another day.
“Nah, sir, just a deer or something.”
Several minutes later, Mary shifted and dirt fell around her. This space had been far more commodious when she’d been younger. Something landed on her arm and began to crawl. Stifling a scream, she swatted at it, dislodging more debris. Her heart thudded, making it hard for her to breathe. It was certain her cousin wouldn’t leave until at least the time when she normally passed by. She would just have to run. As they began to converse again, she picked up her skirts and dashed out of the home wood. Once she reached the outer part of the curtilage she raced through the rose garden, staying off the flagstone and gravel paths to the nearest door and darted in.
“My lady,” Cook exclaimed. “You look like the devil hisself is after you.” The old woman narrowed her eyes. “What have you got into? Shake out your skirts before you come in any farther. Is that a dead spider on your arm?”
Mary leaned back against the door, sucking in great gulps of air as she caught her breath. “That might be an apt description.” She briefly considered asking Cook not to tell Grandmamma, but that would only insure her grandmother heard about it sooner. “I’ll be down for breakfast as soon as I wash my hands.”
“No rush, Lady Eunice isn’t down yet either.”
Attempting to avoid her grandmother and aunt, Mary made her way up the servants’ stairs to her chamber.
Her maid, Mathers, was waiting. “I saw you tearing across the garden, my lady. Did your cousin show up?”
“Yes.” Mary’s shoulders drooped as she removed her damaged bonnet. “I’ll not have any more long walks now.”
Somehow she’d have to find a way to avoid him for good, or at least until she could fall in love and wed.
“Thought it was too good to go on for long,” Mathers said, as she took a sprigged muslin morning gown out of the wardrobe. “If you ask me, someone ought to do something about him.”
“Someone” ought to be the eldest of Mary’s brothers, the Earl of Barham. Unfortunately, he was much too good natured, not to mention concerned about scandal.
“When pigs fly,” she mumbled.
“Did you say something, my lady?”
“Nothing of import.” It was a shame there were no convents in England. She could hide in one of them rather than moving from estate to estate. Then again, it would be hard to meet an eligible gentleman, or indeed any gentleman at all, in a convent. On the other hand, it was proving impossible to meet a suitor under her current circumstance. “I wonder what Grandmamma will come up with this time.”
A couple of days later, Mary joined her grandmother and aunt in the dower house’s elegant but cozy morning room. Small paintings and miniatures encompassing generations of Tollivers covered the walls and surfaces. In the Queen Anne style, the furniture was old, but comfortable.
Long windows gave a view over the rose garden and the marble fountain in its center. The curtains had recently been changed from the velvet used during the colder seasons to a cerulean blue watered silk trimmed with gold braid. Even though they were experiencing one of their few warm days this spring, a log spat and popped in the fireplace.
In fact, the only disturbing part of the normally tranquil atmosphere was the conversation.
Doing her best to keep her jaw from dropping in shock, Mary stared at her grandmother. The older woman’s thick silver hair was fashionably dressed, and even at more than seventy years of age, her face held few lines. Her gaze seemed as sharp as ever. Generally she was the picture of health, except for this recent burst of incipient insanity, for that was all it could be.
Mary opened her mouth, then closed it again. Several moments passed in silence as she struggled to make sense of what she thought she’d heard. After rejecting retorts such as, Grandmamma, are you feeling quite well? Or, are you sure you wouldn’t like a nice room in Bedlam? And finally unable to come up with another way to ask her question, she simply voiced the nicest thought in her mind. “Surely I have not understood you properly. You want me to do what?”
“Well, I think it’s a wonderful idea.”
Mary shifted her gaze to her aunt. Perhaps madness had always run in the family and it had been kept a secret so as not to ruin them socially. After all, who would deliberately marry into a family where lunacy was rampant?
“He has a face like a fish.” Aunt Eunice opened her eyes wide and moved her lips in a fair imitation of a fish.
“Hake.” Grandmamma nodded decisively. “It’s the way his eyes protrude.”
Mary closed her eyes, repressing a shudder. “I agree, but surely there must be less drastic measures I can take.”
Grandmamma leaned forward and pounded her silver-headed cane on the floor. “He may look like a fool, my girl, but he’s canny, and, if what Cook told me is true”—Mary should have expected that—“which I have no doubt it is, he almost caught you a few days ago.”
“Yes, well.” Not the cleverest of replies. Surely, she could think of something more to say. “I got away from him,” she ended lamely.
“This time.” Grandmamma’s lips thinned. She rammed the cane into the thick Turkey rug again.
“And every other time previously.” Mary let out a frustrated huff. Unfortunately, her grandmother did have a point. It was becoming more and more difficult to evade her cousin. “Did Barham receive an answer to his last letter to Uncle Hector?”
After a few moments, during which Grandmamma turned so red it appeared as if she would have apoplexy, Aunt Eunice replied, “Yes. But it won’t serve. Barham said Hector continues to insist your father promised you would marry Gawain, and he will not release your funds until either the marriage takes place—”
“In which case that spendthrift, Gawain,” Mary almost growled, the anger in her voice surprising her, “would control everything.”
Thus far she’d been satisfied to allow her brother to handle the whole ridiculous situation. Truth be known, she’d been so battered by her parents’ successive deaths, she hadn’t wanted to deal with it. Yet when Gawain had followed her to London for her first Season in two years and tried to compromise her, she had been jolted out of her complacency.
“Or you turn five and twenty.”
Her aunt’s voice interrupted her silent railing. “I’m sorry. What did you say?”
“When the trust ends,” Eunice replied patiently.
Another two years of trying to evade Gawain. “Has there been any movement in our Chancery suit to replace my uncle as trustee?”
Eunice shook her head.
“Unless you plan to spend the next two years inside the house,” Grandmamma said, emphasizing her speech with another loud thump of her cane, “you will do as your aunt and I advise.”
Mary eyed the silver headed stick. What would her grandmother do if she hid it? Still, what they were suggesting was complete insanity. “But I—”
“He’s found you everywhere we’ve tried to hide you, my dear.” Eunice stared at Mary, a compassionate look on her face. “Drastic times call for drastic measures.”
Mary slowly shook her head. “I don’t think I could pretend to be someone else for that long a time.”
“But you won’t have to pretend.” Her aunt beamed. “That is the brilliance of the plan! You can be yourself . . . with a slight change in your last name for the time being.”
This—they were impossible. Mary threw her hands up in frustration. “And what, pray tell, am I to do if the gentleman who owns the property discovers my deception? Anyone could find out, then I would be completely ruined and no one would want to marry me.”
“Don’t you trust me?” Grandmamma raised one brow in the way she always did when she wanted to badger others to her way of thinking.
Mary seriously considered answering in the negative, not that it would help. Grandmamma was a force of her own. Why else would Barham allow her to remain here when she had a perfectly good dower house of her own at Bridgewater?
“Most of the time,” Mary answered, drawing the sentence out.
Though now wasn’t one of them.
“We’ve been very careful,” her grandmother said as calmly as if she were choosing a dinner menu, “to select a remote area where there are no important families.”
There was something very wrong about all of this. “May I ask who the owner is?”
Her grandmother waved her hand as if dismissing her question. “The less you know for time being, the safer you’ll be if Gawain comes sniffing around.”
“Besides”—Eunice’s already wide smile broadened—“I’ll be with you acting as your companion. It will be such a lark.”
Mary stifled a groan. All the cousins had heard about Eunice’s larks. She’d been the youngest and wildest of Grandmamma’s children, and had apparently not outgrown her previous tendencies. Mary had to find a way out of this harebrained scheme. “Won’t your children wonder where you are?”
“Oh, after a while, I suppose.” Eunice shrugged lightly. “But they’ll think I’m with Mama and probably be happy I’m not around to corrupt their children.” She took a sip of wine. “How Roger—the greatest rake in England and on the Continent, before our marriage of course—and I ever managed to produce such dullards, I shall never know.”
Those were also tales Mary and her brothers had grown up hearing, at least the ones mild enough to tell children. She never had understood how her aunt had been allowed to wed Uncle Roger. “I think that type of thing skips a generation.”
“One can only pray it is not gone forever.” Eunice sighed.
“So then.” Grandmamma tapped her cane for at least the fourth time. Mary’s fingers itched to grab the thing away and throw it in the fireplace. “It’s decided. We’ll leave early tomorrow morning.”
“That soon!” Mary had to stall them. Given just a little more time, she might be able to think of a better scheme. “It seems a little precipitous.”
“Better to get it done before you have a chance to change your mind.” Eunice rose, smoothing out her skirts. “I must see to my packing.”
Mary suppressed her frustration. It was as if she were bashing her head against a stone wall. That actually might be more productive than conversing with her aunt and grandmother.
She considered denying she had agreed to anything. Not that it would matter. The problem was they’d want an alternative, and she couldn’t think of another course of action. Yet she wasn’t stupid; certainly something would come to her before she and her aunt actually reached wherever they were going and the deception began. If anything went wrong her life would be ruined. If only Grandmamma would see reason.
Mr. Gawain Tolliver, not even an honorable to use in correspondence, stood impatiently in the woods and scowled at the moderate-sized dower house. If life had been fair, his sickly uncle would have succumbed before fathering so many children, including the necessary heir and numerous spares. Who knew he’d had it in him to keep going for so long?
There was certainly no counting on the current Earl of Barham dying young. He’d been blessed with the same rude health as his mother. Not that it mattered. Barham had already fathered two sturdy boys. No, the only way for Gawain to get what he wanted and what was rightfully his, was to somehow wed his cousin Mary. She would be the very devil of a wife, but sixty thousand could make up for an awful lot, and by God, he’d not be cheated out of that. The only other option was to hope she fell in love and married without his father’s permission, but he couldn’t see her family allowing that to happen. Once he got her alone, all it would take was a few minutes to tie her up, keep her alone with him for a day or two, long enough that even her bloody brother would insist she marry him, and her money would be his. Not that he wanted an unwilling wife, but needs must, and at least consummation wasn’t required for the marriage to be legal.
Masking his unhappiness with a smile for Sally Athey, the young maid who’d just arrived from Barham’s dower house, he asked, using a gentle tone, “Do you have news for me, sweetheart?”
She fluttered her pale lashes at him. “I might, but if I tell you I could lose my position here.”
Gawain brushed the backs of his knuckles gently over her rounded cheek. “Don’t you remember my promise, sweet? I told you I’ll set you up as soon as I’m married. You’ll never have to worry about working again.”
At least not on her feet.
“Well in that case . . .”
Thank the devil for gullible women. “Come now, I cannot stay here for long. Someone may discover me . . . and you.”
She glanced hastily over her shoulder. “Her ladyship and Lady Mary are going to Bath to-morrow.”
Bath! Who goes to Bath this time of year? “Is Lady Eunice going as well?” If he could get rid of Mary’s meddling aunt, he’d be half-way there. As old as the dowager was, she couldn’t possibly accompany his cousin everywhere.
“I heard her lady’s maid say she was going to visit one of her sons in Suffolk.”
He took Sally’s hand, raising it to his lips. “You’ve done well, my lovely.”
A pretty blush rose in her face. Perhaps he’d keep her as his mistress longer than he’d originally planned. A man needed someone to keep him warm, and it wouldn’t be his hellcat of a cousin.
Sally snatched her hand away. “I must go. The housekeeper will miss me.” She hiked her skirts and dashed hurriedly toward the house.
Gawain stared after her until she was out of sight, then mounted his horse and rode to the small lane not far from the dower house where his groom waited. “Whitely, let’s go back to the tavern. The old lady and my cousin are departing for Bath.”
“When do ye want to leave?”
“In the morning after breakfast. We’re paid up with board until then.” When they arrived at the inn, Gawain handed his reins to a stable boy, went into the common room and ordered an ale.
It wouldn’t be hard to find his cousin in Bath. They were bound to register at the assembly rooms. He’d bide his time until Mary and the dowager arrived. After all, he still had almost a year to secure her as his wife. When he did, he’d never have to worry about money again.
Sally slowed as she reached a side door leading from the small formal garden into the back hall.
Mrs. Collard, the housekeeper, motioned her inside. “Well, Athey, was he there?”
Being called Athey, just as if she were someone important, was only one of the reasons Sally liked working at the dower house. “Yes, ma’am. I pretended to be interested in him, just like the other times, and told him her ladyship was going to Bath, just like you asked me to do.”
“You didn’t give him the tale too easily?”
She shook her head. “No, ma’am. I made him repeat all the promises.” She wiped her hand on her pinafore. “He kissed my hand and got it wet.”
Mrs. Collard harrumphed. “You’re lucky he didn’t try to kiss anything else.” She narrowed her eyes. “He didn’t, did he?”
“No, ma’am. I would never have allowed that. Not to mention his lips look flabby. It’s no wonder Lady Mary don’t wish to marry him.”
“Bad business this is,” Mrs. Collard said in a fierce tone. “Come along now. You must pack. Her ladyship said you could go to Bath with her and begin your training.”
Sally almost couldn’t speak. Bath! She’d never in her life been more than five miles from Market Harborough. Now she was to be taught how to be a lady’s maid too, and all for helping poor Lady Mary escape that nasty Mr. Tolliver, which Sally would have done for nothing. “Yes, ma’am. I’ll be ready!”
After dinner, Mary, her grandmother, and her aunt repaired to the drawing room for tea.
“There you are,” Eunice proclaimed, handing Mary a cup.
It was time to beard the lion, take the bull by its horns, and any number of other things.
“Just how is it you know about this house you wish me to go to?” Mary asked.
Grandmamma sipped her drink, which look suspiciously like brandy. “The current steward of the estate is cousin to the”—she paused for a moment—“Bridgewater steward. I had a discussion with him during my twice yearly visit.”
Mary had the distinct impression that her grandmother wasn’t being truthful. “Go on.”
“It seems the man’s cousin has been in poor health and could use some help.”
“I am to act as the estate manager then?”
“No.” Grandmamma pounded that infernal cane on the floor. “You are to act as its mistress. This is the perfect solution to all of your troubles.”
Her scheme had all the makings of a disaster.
After a restless night planning and rejecting ideas to stop her grandmother, Mary awoke to blackbirds bickering outside her window. Sitting up, she watched as the lady bird threw out the bit of moss her husband tried to place in the nest. It did not appear as if he was having any more luck in his task than she was having in hers. She hoped the poor male bird would win at least one argument. Before too long, the sounds of Mathers in the dressing room reminded Mary she must rise.
A few minutes later, slowly drinking the tea that had been placed on her night table, as if she could delay the inevitable, she continued to cast around for an alternative arrangement to the one proposed by her grandmother and aunt. Yet nothing came to her. If only she had some other place or person to go to where she’d be safe. Unfortunately all her friends were in Town for the Season, and it wasn’t fair to burden them with her presence for a year, not to mention placing them in possible danger as well.
Mathers walked in from the dressing room. “I’ll send for your wash water. I have just been informed that Her Grace wishes to depart within the hour. We will travel with her until she thinks it’s safe for us to go north.”
Flopping back against her pillows, Mary groaned. “Bring me some toast and an egg as well, please. Once she starts a trip, she doesn’t like to stop.”
“I’ll ask Cook to make a basket.” The maid turned to go, then stopped. “For all of us.”
Four days after bidding a tearful adieu to her grandmother and sneaking out of the inn they’d stayed in the previous night, Mary sat next to Aunt Eunice in her well-sprung yet nondescript traveling coach as they entered the bustling market town of Rosebury, Northumberland.
“See how lovely it is,” Eunice enthused as they passed well kept buildings adorned with window boxes of summer flowers.
“Charming.” Two days ago, Mary had given up arguing. The only thing she wanted now was to get out of this coach and go for a walk. She had never traveled so quickly in all her life.
Eunice, having learned the art of rapid travel from her mother, had stopped only to change horses, for which they never seemed to have to wait. Every day they had been in the coach until almost dark and rose with the dawn. Only the mail journeyed faster. “How much farther is Rose Hill?”
“Only a mile or so beyond the town to the east. Oh, look”—Eunice pointed as they traveled over a stone bridge—“there is the River Coquet.”
Perhaps Mary could still get out of this ridiculous charade. Pretend they were stranded due to a lame horse. Beg shelter for the night and leave early in the morning. Even if she could persuade Aunt Eunice to agree, where would she go?
“Now remember, my dear, walk in with your head held high as if you belong there.”
“I don’t suppose Grandmamma could have merely leased a house for a year.”
Eunice turned from the view out the window and peered closely at Mary. “Leasing might have left a trail. The fewer people who know about this the better. Trust Mama and me. This will all work out for the best.”
Much too soon the coach turned off the lane leading from Rosebury onto a rutted gravel drive. They bounced and jolted so hard that it was amazing their teeth didn’t chip. After being almost tossed off the seat, Mary grabbed hold of the carriage strap and held fast for at least ten minutes before they came to a stop before a lovely early Georgian manor. The house was built of sandstone. Columns and a portico graced the entrance. Roses scurried up the walls, almost obscuring some of the windows. The house was definitely in need of a mistress. A stately older man in a black suit stepped out, followed by two footmen who looked suspiciously familiar.
“Was this place fully staffed before?” Mary asked.
For the first time her aunt fidgeted, twisting the fringe on . . .
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