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Synopsis
Two sought-after sisters, a slew of suitors—and a vow to hold out for true love. How many proposals will it take to get to “I do”—especially when the stakes are high . . . There have been six suitors so far, all vying for the attention—and generous dowry—of the beautiful, elusive Eleanor Sutherland. What does this woman really want? Who has what it takes to melt the heart of the so-called Lady Ice? These are the questions Camden West keeps asking himself. But rather than wait for answers, Cam takes matters into his own hands . . . for he has a secret weapon. Cam knows that Ellie’s sister, Charlotte, harbors a scandalous secret—one that could bring ruin to the Sutherland name. If Ellie marries him, Cam promises to keep mum. But is she willing to sacrifice her own happiness for her sister’s reputation? To Ellie’s surprise, it becomes clear that Cam doesn’t need her money, nor is he interested in her status. Soon, what begins as a sham engagement transforms into something deeper, and more passionate, than Ellie could have imagined. Is it possible that all Cam truly wanted was her? And is that reason enough to say yes —or is handsome Cam hiding something else? Even for a lady in love, only the truth will do . . .
Release date: September 5, 2017
Publisher: Lyrical Press
Print pages: 272
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Lady Eleanor's Seventh Suitor
Anna Bradley
Lady Eleanor Sutherland clutched her fan and studied the young lord before her, a polite smile frozen on her face, her heart sinking into her slippers.
Lord Tidmarsh had placed a wager on her in the betting book at White’s.
Ellie didn’t want to believe it of him, but she’d seen this performance—the shifty eyes and twitchy fingers, the sheen of nervous sweat on his upper lip, the hint of a smirk on his lower one—too many times to deny the truth. Yes, his lordship was definitely in the throes of a violent, and feigned, passion.
She knew a sham suitor when she saw one. Lord Tidmarsh was her third this season.
Several weeks ago she’d rejected her fifth marriage offer—one offer too many, she now realized, for the gentlemen of the ton to overlook. Since then it had become quite the fashionable game for them to attempt to pry some sign of affection from her. They teased for dances, begged for smiles. A few of the bolder ones had even written sonnets to her sparkling dark eyes.
My heart flies, my soul cries, and so forth.
It was enough to make one shudder for the fate of the rhyming couplet. Alas, whoever had said a single sonnet could drive love entirely away had the right of it. It wasn’t a romantic sentiment, perhaps, but true for all that.
The same could be said of wagers.
Ellie had her own page in the betting book at White’s. A smile from her would earn her swain a sovereign, a walk on the terrace was worth five guineas, and as for the higher denominations . . . well, perhaps the less said about that the better, though she did wonder what value they’d placed on her virtue.
As for her love . . .
It must be worthless indeed, for not one of the gentlemen seemed at all interested in securing it.
“Won’t you favor me with a smile, my lady?” Lord Tidmarsh dragged a gloved hand across his damp forehead. “You know I exist only for your smiles.”
Poor Lord Tidmarsh might be able to produce a bit of perspiration, but she couldn’t see any other signs of impending manhood. Not a single whisker shaded his smooth upper lip. She’d have settled for the merest hint of fuzz, even—anything to indicate a hair had tried to hatch there.
“Will you consent to one more dance this evening? Please, Lady Eleanor.”
She sighed. It had come to this, then. She’d be compelled to rebuff a mere lad this time. The ton already called her Lady Frost behind her back, and once she sent young Lord Tidmarsh on his way, she was sure to be saddled with a far worse nickname.
Icy Ellie, perhaps, or the Artic Queen?
But the sooner she put an end to this scene, the better. “I beg you’ll excuse me, my lord. I’ve already danced twice with you this evening. If we dance together again, the ton will gossip, and—”
“Would that be so terrible?” He arranged his lips into a perfect schoolboy pout.
She pasted a smile onto her face. “Now, Lord Tidmarsh, you know very well a third dance will encourage Lady Foster’s guests to assume we have an understanding. We wouldn’t want that, would we?”
“But we could have an understanding, even now. It’s the very thing I want.” He pressed her fingers against his bony chest, his face twisted with a passable imitation of passionate despair.
Eleanor tried to withdraw her hand, but he hung on with such determination her arm began to slip out of her glove. Well, how absurd. She would have her hand back, even if it meant he ended with her limp glove clutched to his chest.
“I’ll run mad if you refuse me, Lady Eleanor. Indeed I will!”
Eleanor’s cheeks heated with embarrassment. Must all of her pretend suitors fall into wild hysterics? Next he’d fall to his knees, beat his chest, and tear his hair out from the roots.
Another tragic hero, right here in the middle of the Foster’s ballroom.
She supposed it was more amusing if he fell into fits. Whichever lord had sent him to torment her would want to see the thing done with a dramatic flourish. No doubt Lord Ponsonby, Mr. Fitzwilliam, or another of her rejected suitors was watching the entire performance from a shadowy corner of the ballroom.
Eleanor straightened her spine. Well, there was no help for it. Lady Frost would have to make an appearance. A pang of guilt pierced her chest for Lord Tidmarsh’s tender young heart, but if he had any true affection for her, it was a flimsy thing, at best.
She fixed him with a steady gaze, and after a moment his blue eyes darted guiltily away. Ah. Just as she’d thought. A dare, or a wager. “I must insist you release me.”
He clutched at her fingers. “But Lady Eleanor, I swear—”
“At once, my lord.”
He studied her for a moment, no doubt hunting for some tenderness in her eyes, some hint of breathlessness, some softening of her lips.
Eleanor gazed back at him, her face expressionless.
He dropped her hand and stepped back. “Very well. I wish you a pleasant evening, madam.”
It was far more likely he wished her to the devil, just like the rest of them, but it wouldn’t do to say so. “How kind you are, my lord.”
He folded his lanky frame into a stiff bow, turned on his heel, and disappeared into the crowd. Eleanor watched him go, her chin raised as she fought the urge to let her shoulders slump in defeat.
Just as she’d suspected. Flimsy.
Camden West stood off to the side of the ballroom, half-obscured behind a white marble pillar. Lady Foster had a fondness for pillars, it seemed—pillars, and wide gilt mirrors. Every turn brought him face to face with his own reflection: severe black evening dress, stark white cravat, tight mouth. Damn unsettling, but like the rest of the ton, Lady Foster must want to see an endless echo of herself in every shiny surface.
But the pillars suited Cam. He preferred to remain unobserved tonight, which was difficult to do when one was the tallest gentleman in the room. Of course, his height did offer certain advantages. If he were a few inches shorter, he’d have spent all evening craning his neck to see around the crowds of gentlemen swarming Lady Eleanor Sutherland, like bees buzzing around their queen. As it was, he had a perfect view of the little drama unfolding about twelves paces to his left. The adolescent lord who’d cornered her didn’t look to be an especially sharp specimen, but he was sharp enough to have found a way to separate Lady Eleanor from the rest of the swarm.
That young lordling—what the devil was his name again? Cam had been introduced to him. He had a vague memory of watery blue eyes, but he couldn’t remember the boy’s name. No matter. The lad’s time would be better spent attempting to grow some chest hair rather than buzzing around a bee of Lady Eleanor’s majesty.
Her sting was legendary.
Cam couldn’t hear a word they said, but he didn’t need to, for this was a pantomime worthy of the Parisian stage.
The besotted swain grasped the lady’s hand and pressed it dramatically to his breast.
The lady remained unmoved.
The swain pleaded, cajoled, looked tragic, and finally, in desperation, hurled his throbbing heart at the feet of his cruel mistress. The lady, her face composed, dark eyes unblinking, brought one dainty foot down and crushed that tender organ under her heel, then kicked it back in his general direction with a careless flick of her satin-covered toe.
Cam suppressed an urge to laugh. Or applaud. He’d gladly pay a crown to see that performance again.
What did that make, then? Three seasons, five offers, five refusals, and now this poor devil, who hadn’t even made it as far as Lady Eleanor’s brother. Impressive, how she’d dispensed with him before he had a chance to come to the point. Lord Carlisle was said to be fond of his sisters, and he must be. Fond enough to permit Lady Eleanor to reject suitor after suitor.
Reason enough to bypass the earl altogether.
How fortunate for Cam that Lady Eleanor thought herself too good for every gentleman in London, and how lucky none of these fine lords had the remotest inkling how to handle a woman like her.
Cam didn’t have that problem. Handled she would be, and soon.
Poor lord whatever-the-devil-his-name-was slunk off into the crowded ballroom. He looked like a puppy who’d taken an unexpected and vicious kick to the ribs. Lady Eleanor looked as if she found the whole thing tedious, as if she made it a habit to kick a puppy every day.
Lady Frost. Cam smiled. Oh, yes. She was every inch the proper aristocratic lady.
She’d do. She’d do quite nicely.
Lady Eleanor flapped her fan in front of her face, no doubt to cool the flush of irritation from her cheeks. Cam’s lips twisted in a cynical smile. It must exhaust the poor lady to be the object of such constant adoration. Did she encourage them, and then refuse them? He thought it likely. What were the chances five suitors could have been so mistaken about her affections?
He waited, watching her from behind his pillar. She wouldn’t take much time to fume. No more than a few minutes, and then she’d remember.
Her hand dropped to her side and she looked around, and a slight frown creased that smooth, white brow. She grasped a fold of her silk gown, rose to her tiptoes, and moved her gaze over the crowd, searching.
Ah. There. Cam knew it the moment she spotted her sister in the sea of whirling couples. He followed her gaze to the other side of the ballroom, though he knew what he’d find before he saw them.
Lady Charlotte Sutherland, the younger of the two Sutherland sisters, rumored to be a bit on the wild side. Indeed, from what Cam had heard, Lady Charlotte had driven the ton right out of countenance this season. If she placed another toe over the line of propriety, she’d suffer dire social consequences.
Charlotte Sutherland was dancing with Cam’s cousin, Julian West. Handsome, charming, irresistible Julian. Damn shame he was such a rake. With every turn of the dance Julian drew closer to the open French doors leading onto the terrace and the dark garden beyond, his quarry caught in his arms.
Such a scenario was a bit worrying for the young lady. Someone could get hurt. Or ruined.
Lady Eleanor must have thought so too, for she hurried past Cam in a cloud of wine-colored skirts and a faint scent of black currants, her gaze fixed on the opposite side of the ballroom.
Cam slid out from behind his pillar and started after her.
What a pity she wouldn’t reach her sister in time.
“You are presumptuousness itself, sir.”
Julian gazed down into a pair mischievous dark eyes and couldn’t resist the smile that curved his lips. Lady Charlotte might speak in a scolding tone, but her eyes gave her away, for nothing but invitation shone in those wicked depths.
Good Lord. Her eyes were sin itself. How had she managed to escape ruination for this long, with eyes like that?
Julian pressed his palm against her waist and maneuvered her a few steps closer to the terrace doors. “Presumptuous? I don’t know what you mean. You look flushed, Lady Charlotte. Too much dancing, perhaps? A breath of fresh air will restore you.”
A tiny smiled played about her lips. “Oh, indeed. How solicitous of you, Mr. West. I do beg your pardon, for I was sure you thought only of your own needs when you began to move me toward the doors.”
Julian’s smile widened. Clever. No doubt that was how she’d avoided seduction so far—that cleverness. Not one gentleman in ten would expect it of her, for they’d be too taken with her eyes and mouth to notice her tongue, except for the most carnal of purposes.
He didn’t flatter himself he was the one in ten who would notice, but then this wasn’t one of his usual seductions. Under normal circumstances he’d have his mouth over hers by now, but Lady Charlotte wasn’t a courtesan, and she wasn’t his mistress. She was an innocent, and Julian drew the line at debauching dewy-eyed maidens. He’d give her a chaste kiss or two, and keep her out of the ballroom long enough for her absence to be noticed, but this was hardly a scandalous seduction.
He eased her through the doors and out onto the terrace. “I promise you, my lady, I have no needs beyond assuring myself of your comfort.”
She slid her arm away from his, strolled to the edge of the terrace, and leaned back against the low stone wall separating it from the garden beyond. “No proper young lady could be comfortable near a dark garden with a man of your reputation, sir. I hope you don’t mean to imply I’m not a proper young lady?”
Julian’s lips curved into a grin. How delightful to find a wit to match that wicked red mouth of hers. He followed her across the terrace, stopping only when he was so close the deep violet silk of her skirts brushed against his black breeches.
He bent his head toward her so the other couples on the terrace couldn’t overhear them. “I meant to imply no such thing, and yet I do wonder whether a proper young lady should be as accomplished a flirt as you appear to be.”
She didn’t draw away from him, but instead gave him a teasing half-smile. “Perhaps not, and yet my skills at flirtation are wasted on you, for you need no encouragement whatever from me. I might flirt with you or not, and you’ll still attempt to lure me into the garden either way, won’t you?”
Julian stared at her. Jesus, but she was tempting—so much so he began to imagine they stood on the edge of the Garden of Eden. He’d expected a dim-witted debutante, not Eve herself. Cam should have warned him.
“I begin to think it’s you who lure me, Lady Charlotte.”
He’d expected to be the serpent in this scenario, but it seemed more than one ardent gentleman had tried to lure the delectable Lady Charlotte into a dark garden. He wasn’t the first serpent she’d encountered, or the most cunning. She knew what he was about. She was merely toying with him now, and delighting in doing so.
A gentle breeze wafted over them, lifting the loose locks of hair away from her neck. The cool draught blew under Julian’s coat, but it did nothing to cool the heat of his skin.
She gave a low, throaty laugh. “I, lure you? Yes, I suppose it would be more convenient for you to believe so. No need for an attack of conscience, in that case.”
“Ah, my lady.” Julian caught a lock of her dark hair between his fingers. “What makes you think I have a conscience?”
That surprised a genuine laugh out of her. “No conscience, Mr. West? My, such refreshing honesty. I confess I’ve never heard the like of it before, not from any gentleman, but especially not from one intent on a solitary stroll in a dark garden with an innocent young lady. I believe you do have a conscience, after all.”
Julian felt the first frisson of regret shoot down his spine, but he ignored it. She was lovely and intriguing, but it was too late to change his mind. Cam would be halfway across the ballroom by now.
“I have no fear of my conscience, Lady Charlotte, for I’ve done nothing I need reproach myself for.”
His tone, his casual smile, the self-deprecating lift of one shoulder—all perfect. He waited, his breath held.
Her thick, dark eyelashes brushed against her cheekbones as she let her eyes fall shut. When she opened them again, she looked straight at him. “No. You’ve no need to reproach yourself. Yet.”
Charlotte waited for her words to sink in, for understanding to cross his smooth, handsome face, for his lips to part in anticipation. Then she brushed past him, stepped off the edge of the terrace, and strolled into the dark garden beyond.
She didn’t look back to see if he followed her. He would. They always did.
Such pretty lips he had—full, with just the slightest hint of a pout, almost like a woman’s, though there wasn’t anything else the least bit feminine about him. It wasn’t his lips that decided her, though. She did want to taste them, but his honesty was more seductive even than his handsome face. So sudden and unexpected. More than one gentleman had tried to tempt her into an indiscretion, but she couldn’t recall any who’d admitted to it before. How refreshing, not to be treated as if she were a complete fool.
Of course, the pretty lips didn’t hurt.
A few kisses, nothing more, then she’d send him on his way and return to the ballroom before the next dance began. Eleanor wouldn’t have to know. She wouldn’t be gone long enough to be missed.
Charlotte skirted around the edge of a tree at the far end of the garden. The light from the terrace didn’t reach this far, and the low-lying branches would shield them from any curious eyes that might chance to glance their way.
She felt more than heard him come up behind her. “Just as I thought. It’s you who have lured me.”
She gave him her profile, but didn’t turn around. “Lure is such a wicked word. Are you here against your will, Mr. West?”
He gave a soft, amused laugh. “Oh, no. Quite the contrary, as I think you know.”
His lips were right at her ear—she felt his breath stir the tendrils of hair at her temple, felt the heat of his body against her back. He’d take her shoulders in his hands now, turn her to face him, and kiss her.
Charlotte waited, trembling, but he didn’t touch her. She could hear him behind her, his breath working in and out of his chest, ragged. He was close, so close, his lips nearly touching her neck, and yet he hesitated for so long every inch of her body drew taut, waiting for his touch. Longing for it. She imagined she felt it every moment, and yet it didn’t come. He simply stood behind her, a starving man with a feast spread before him, unsure where to begin, but savoring the moment before the first taste touches his lips.
Charlotte moaned aloud when it came at last, so light, his fingers in the loose waves of hair at her nape, brushing them aside to clear a path for his lips, open and soft against the tender skin of her neck.
Dear God. Her eyes slid closed.
“Never tasted anything so sweet.” His whisper was hoarse, stunned.
He fumbled with the buttons at the back of her gown, his fingers shaking as he slipped them loose, one by one, then spread the silk open to bare her shoulders. He teased his hot, wet mouth over her flesh, and Charlotte caught her lower lip between her teeth to keep from whimpering.
Just a few more innocent kisses. That was all, and then she’d return to the ballroom, find Eleanor . . .
He spread the fabric wider to nip at her shoulder blades, then knelt to touch his tongue to the arch of her back before trailing the damp heat of his mouth up her spine until he stood upright behind her again. “Lean back against me. Yes. Like that.” He wrapped his other arm around her waist and splayed a hand low across her belly.
She hadn’t known it could feel this way, hadn’t realized—
“It’s all right, sweetheart.” His mouth brushed her ear. “Wrap your arms around me.”
No. No, she couldn’t let herself touch him . . .
But her arms rose, and her fingers slid into the soft waves of hair at the back of his neck. He pressed his mouth to the inside of her arm, and a soft puff of warm breath touched her damp skin. A ragged groan rose from his chest at her touch, and she felt it everywhere, deep in the darkest recesses of her body.
His mouth found her neck, and she felt his lips curl upward against her skin.
He’s smiling.
Charlotte let her head fall back against his shoulder, and knew she was lost.
Blast it. Dash it. Confound it, and d—
Eleanor caught herself before any truly wicked curses could escape. There was no need to be unladylike, even if it was only in her head.
No need yet.
Charlotte couldn’t have gotten far. Eleanor had seen her just there not even a minute ago, on the other side of the ballroom. She made her way toward the terrace doors, doing her best not to look hurried or anxious, but before long her feet fell into the same frantic rhythm as her heart. A few ladies called out greetings as she flew past, a few gentleman bowed, but Eleanor merely nodded at them.
She came to a breathless halt on the other side of the ballroom.
Blast it. Dash it. Confound it. She may as well have saved herself the effort. Charlotte had disappeared, and it didn’t take a fortune-teller to see the only place she could have gone was into the dark garden beyond the terrace.
Eleanor scanned the ballroom, but Charlotte’s dance partner, Julian West had also disappeared, no doubt into the garden, panting after Charlotte.
Very well, then. The situation now called for curses, and why should the ladies be denied the truly wicked ones?
Damn it, devil take it, and bloody hell.
This was all Lord Tidmarsh’s fault. If he hadn’t tried to tease her into a third dance, she’d have had her eye back on Charlotte before her sister finished dancing with the Marquess of Hadley.
Lord Tidmarsh, Julian West—why did it seem whenever trouble was afoot, some gentleman or other was always at the root of it?
Either some gentleman, or Charlotte, devil take her. What in the name of heaven had come over her this season? She disappeared into dark gardens with dubious gentlemen as often as Eleanor rejected offers of marriage.
If Charlotte must have a stroll through the garden, why couldn’t she have taken Hadley? But no, nothing would do for Charlotte but a stroll with Julian West, a rake of the first order, and worse, a handsome and charming one. Charlotte thought herself sophisticated, but she hadn’t any idea the sort of tricks such a man might pull from his sleeve.
Or his breeches, for that matter.
Eleanor might be a little fuzzy on the details regarding a gentleman’s breeches, but she knew enough to know a young lady didn’t disappear into a garden with a man like Julian West if she didn’t care to see him pull out something he oughtn’t.
She and Charlotte had become quite the notorious pair this season, and the ton hadn’t failed to take notice of it. Eleanor’s dismissal of Lord Tidmarsh wouldn’t help her cause, but Charlotte in particular couldn’t afford any more questionable behavior.
Julian West was questionable, even if he kept his breeches fastened.
Damnation. There was no help for it. She’d have to go after Charlotte. Again.
Eleanor stepped out onto the terrace and took a quick measure of the situation. A few couples wandered about, but she didn’t overhear any eager whispers, and none of the ladies had fallen into a shocked swoon. Charlotte had wandered off into the garden with Mr. West, but no one seemed to have taken notice of it yet. If Ellie could just find them, she could drag Charlotte back inside before anyone did notice.
All might still be well.
She hurried across the terrace, but froze before she could step into the garden. She spun around, one foot hovering over the damp grass, the hair on her neck prickling with awareness, certain she’d find curious eyes following her every move.
Nonsense. No one had even noticed her. What was it they said about suspicion haunting a guilty mind? But, dash it, why should she be haunted? She’d done nothing wrong. Charlotte was the guilty one—Charlotte, and that blasted Julian West.
She entered the garden and melted into the gloomy shadows. Between Lord Tidmarsh’s unwelcome declarations and Charlotte’s disappearance, Eleanor had had quite enough of this ball, and she wouldn’t attend another without reinforcements. She couldn’t be expected to fend off suitors and guard Charlotte’s virtue at the same time, especially when Charlotte herself was so determined to discard it.
Goodness, it was dark. Far too dark for any proper young lady. Eleanor picked her way along, pieces of wet grass clinging to her hems. She peered over a low shrub and darted around a tree or two, expecting any moment to see a guilty couple spring apart, but the garden appeared to be deserted. Not even a giggle or a breathless sigh interrupted the silence.
Where in the world was Charlotte? How would she ever find her sister in this gloom without an obliging sigh or giggle to guide her?
Unless . . . Eleanor paused for a moment, listening. Was that a soft shuffle behind her? It sounded like the tread of booted feet on damp grass, but the moment she stopped, the sound ceased. She turned to look behind her, but all she could see were dense pools of darkness.
Oh, for God’s sake. She’d be better off returning to the ballroom. Perhaps Charlotte had come to her senses and returned by now, as well? Yes, yes, of course she had. Charlotte had grown rather reckless over the past few weeks, but even she knew better than to vanish in the middle of a ball with all the ton gawking at her behind their fans.
Eleanor took one determined step back in the direction of the ballroom, but stopped again before she could take a second one. When had Charlotte ever let knowing better stop her from doing precisely as she wished?
Damn it, devil take it, and bloody—slam!
She stumbled backward, stunned. What in the world did the Foster’s mean by planting a tree in the middle of a garden path? For pity’s sake, she might have knocked herself unconscious—
“I beg your pardon.” Two enormous hands came down on her shoulders to steady her. “Are you injured?”
Eleanor gaped at the row of buttons in front of her. A tree with an embroidered silk waistcoat? No, no. That couldn’t be right. Perhaps she was injured, after all. Had she concussed herself?
She shook her head to clear the dizziness. A silk waistcoat . . . trees didn’t wear silk waistcoats, but gentlemen did. Gentlemen like Julian West. But if he was here, where was Charlotte? Had she come to her senses and returned to the ballroom, or had Julian West hidden her in the garden somewhere?
“What have you done with my sister, you scoundrel?”
There was a surprised silence, then a low laugh. “Have you misplaced her, Lady Eleanor? That’s unfortunate, but perhaps we’ll find her in the shrubbery.”
Eleanor squinted into the darkness, her belly fluttering with sudden nerves. She recognized that voice, and it wasn’t Julian West’s.
It was his cousin, Camden West.
Damnation. Of all the gentlemen a lady might stumble upon in a dark garden, Camden West would be her last choice.
They’d been introduced at a ball at the start of the season, shortly after he returned to London from a prolonged stay in India. Once they’d met, his gaze seemed to follow her everywhere, fixed on her with an intensity that made her whole body quiver with . . .
Anticipation?
At first, perhaps. Until. . .
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