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The Earl Takes a Fancy
The Earl Takes a Fancy Read online
Dedication
To Katie Patterson, Executive Director of the Richardson Adult Literacy Center, and all the staff and volunteers who work to help adults striving to learn English as a second language.
To Donna Finlay, Karen Gibbs, Alexandra Haughton, Wanda Lankford, Chris Simmie, and Kandy Tobin, who are the amazing committee members for the Buns & Roses Romance Tea for Literacy, which benefits RALC, and to those who served on the committee in the past.
To the many authors who have generously hosted a table at the annual tea.
And to the wonderful readers who attend and share their joy of reading while making a difference in the lives of so many.
Each year when I attend the event, I feel as though I’ve come home.
Contents
Cover
Title Page
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Epilogue
Author’s Notes
Acknowledgments
An Excerpt from BEAUTY TEMPTS THE BEAST Prologue
About the Author
By Lorraine Heath
Copyright
About the Publisher
Prologue
London
1854
The pain came swift and hard.
Ettie Trewlove gasped, pressed a hand to her swollen belly, and dropped the ladle filled with soup. It hit the scarred oak table, splattering her eldest as he held his bowl out toward her. It wasn’t the first contraction to hit her. They’d been coming all day, but this one was definitely the sharpest, and she felt the wetness rolling down her legs. “Mick, go fetch Mrs. Winters. Quickly now.”
The lad who’d been delivered to her in the dead of night fourteen years earlier didn’t hesitate to dash out the door to search for the midwife. Her other darlings—three boys and a girl—stared at her with large eyes as round as saucers. She gave them a reassuring smile. “You’re going to have to fill your own bowls. Have your dinner in the garden. Stay there until I come for you.”
Slowly she made her way to her small bedchamber. As she began unbuttoning her bodice, she became aware of the quiet footsteps. Glancing over her shoulder, she beamed encouragingly at her daughter. “Off with you now, Gillie. Do as you were told.”
“I’m stayin’.” Her lips pressed in a mulish expression, she marched over to the wardrobe. It had been nearly thirteen years since, wrapped only in a blanket, she’d been left in a wicker basket on Ettie’s stoop. But then all of her children had been brought to her door, one way or another. Gillie took out a nightdress and held it toward her.
Ettie sighed with resignation because her daughter was the most stubborn of the lot. “Until Mrs. Winters gets here.”
By the time Mick returned, breathless and flushed, she was in her nightdress, tucked into bed, having suffered through two more contractions without screaming, but it was becoming increasingly difficult to hold her tongue.
“She’s off deliverin’ another babe,” Mick announced with such solemnity he might as well have pronounced the midwife dead.
“Well, then.” Ettie tossed back the covers. “I’d best boil some water.”
“We’ll do it.” The stoic set of Gillie’s mouth didn’t hide the fear in her eyes.
“I can handle it, love.”
“Just tell us wot to do, Mum.”
And so she did. And four hours later, within her arms, she cradled the most beautiful babe upon whom she’d ever set eyes. Skimming her fingers lightly over the dark hair, with sorrow, she reminisced briefly about the two babes she’d given her husband, and the sweet joy they’d brought with their arrival. But then Michael had died, and shortly thereafter, so had her little ones. She’d begun taking in by-blows as a way to earn a few coins. Now she had one of her own.
“Wot ye goin’ to name ’er?” Gillie asked.
“Fancy. Because one day she will not live in the squalor her mum did. But she will marry a fancy man, live in a fancy house, and enjoy a fancy life.” She smiled warmly at the five children surrounding her. “You’ll all have fancy lives.”
Chapter 1
London
1873
A man’s life was bookended by two events: the day he was born and the day he went toes up. Interspersed throughout were other critical moments, but for the Earl of Rosemont, only three were of any consequence: the day he wed, the night his wife died, and the morning she rose from the grave to wreak havoc on his life.
Sitting at the desk in his library, opening the newspaper his butler had dutifully ironed, he once more read the letter that had ruined his appetite at breakfast three days earlier.
To the noble ladies of London:
It is with unheralded sorrow tempered by a great deal of hope that I pen this letter. The very fact that you, gentle ladies, are reading it today signals that it has been one year exactly since my passing. We all know gentlemen seldom observe the full mourning period of two years while women always have the more dedicated hearts and adhere more fervently to Society’s strictures.
I, for one, am glad we allow such leniency toward men as I want my darling Rosemont to be saddened and without the comfort of a woman for as short a time as possible. To that end, dear ladies, I call upon you to hasten the close of his period of sorrow and bring forth his smile.
For you see, it was his smile that first drew me toward him.
It was ever so slow in coming, but when it did arrive, it fairly took my breath and softened the countenance of a man whose pride sometimes has the better of him. He is not an easy man to love and yet love him I did for I saw a side to him that few witnessed.
He has brushed my hair, rubbed my feet, and not only read me poetry with animated passion but written it as well. Ah, dear ladies, his voice is a soothing baritone, his features most comely, and his shoulder incredibly comforting when I required a haven to absorb my tears. His eye never wandered . . . well, except toward sweet shops. He does so enjoy his lemon balls.
In spite of my flaws, he remained the most loyal and steadfast of husbands. Win his heart and find yourself falling into a lifetime of happiness.
With my most sincerest regards,
The Departed Countess of Rosemont
Each time he read it, the coldhearted lie she’d meticulously penned mocked him. She hadn’t loved him. Not in the least. Not with one iota of her being.
The daughter of an industrialist knighted by the Queen, Elise had been in want of a titled husband and, at only nineteen, she’d known well how to work her wiles on him. He had little doubt his smile had drawn her—that much was true—but she’d also been lured by the title he’d inherited only the year before. He’d been all of twenty-three, infatuated with her beauty and teasing eyes that promised wicked adventures and a tantalizing escape from all cares. When she’d suggested a tryst among the plants in the conservatory during a ball held at his married sister’s country estate, he’d been only too keen to accommodate her. Being caught by Elise’s father with her skirts up and his trousers down had resulted in a rather hasty trip to
the altar. But the triumph mirrored in her eyes when they were interrupted alerted him that he’d been cast into the role of gullible fool.
It had been a hard lesson learned, a high price paid, and he’d made a solemn vow to never again be duped by anyone of the female persuasion.
A marriage based on a lack of trust was no marriage at all. During the first two years, they’d not confided in each other at all, preferred to spend their time apart, he in the country, she in the city. He’d been in no rush to get her with child. The joy of having her had died in the conservatory, and he’d been hard-pressed to work up any enthusiasm when it came to the bedding of her. The third and final year, he’d seldom left her side as the cancer had its way with her. Elise had made a point of listing all the things she’d never do. She’d not welcomed death, nor should she have. She’d been all of twenty-two, with hair that would never gray and skin that would never wrinkle with age.
Still, her letter confounded him. Why had she gone to the bother of writing it and arranging to have it published? To ease her guilt at having duped him? Knowing her deceptive ways, he couldn’t take her missive at face value, so what was she striving to accomplish? Based on what he’d experienced since the message first appeared, perhaps she merely wanted to make his life as unpleasant as possible. As though the coldness of their marriage had not been punishment enough for falling into her trap.
At the approach of hushed footsteps, he glanced up to see his butler enter carrying a silver salver. The slender man, graying at the temples, came to a stop and bowed slightly. “My lord, Lady Fontaine and her daughter have come to call.”
In frustration that Elise had placed him in this unenviable position, he slammed his eyes closed. His first visitors of the day. He could expect at least a dozen more before the sun finally bid its farewell. If he wasn’t home to them now, they’d only return later. After carefully folding the broadsheet, he shoved back his chair and stood. “Have tea brought to the parlor.”
And so it went. Day after day after day.
A parade of eligible young ladies through his front door. They had talked, talked, talked. Recited poetry. Sung on occasion. Played his pianoforte with gusto. He was invited for walks in the park as though he were a hound in need of having his legs stretched. They issued him invitations to dinners, recitals, the theater, and gatherings in their gardens. They sought promises of a waltz at upcoming balls once the Season was fully underway. They alternated between cooing over his abhorrent loss and assuring him that happiness waited around the corner if only he would march briskly toward it—and they were more than willing to become his countess and accompany him on the journey toward discovering what glories life still held in spite of the unfairness fate had already visited upon him.
It was the lemon balls that finally became the last straw. Within two weeks of the letter’s appearance, he’d received so many of the damned things he could have opened his own sweet shop. If he ever smelled lemon and sugar again, he might go stark raving mad.
Hence, after having his belongings packed up and his London residence shuttered, he went in search of peace.
Chapter 2
Standing behind the polished oak counter in her bookshop, Fancy Trewlove read once more the letter she’d clipped from the Times a month earlier. The Countess of Rosemont’s words regarding her love for her husband had deeply touched Fancy’s romantically inclined heart, a heart she had feared would cause her—when she was introduced into Society at a ball the following week—to be foolish enough to fall for a lord who viewed her as someone to be only bedded but not wedded.
All of nineteen, she was more than aware of the realities of the world and understood fully that the circumstances of her birth would not serve her well when it came to securing her place among the aristocracy. Still, her family was determined to see her married to a noble. The man had to be titled. Not the second son or the third, but the first. A duke was preferable, a marquess adequate, an earl acceptable, a viscount . . . an outcome to be avoided if at all possible.
From the moment she’d made her entry into the world they had decided her destiny and moved her unerringly toward it, but the life they had mapped out for her seemed to lack one crucial element: love.
She yearned for love more than she wanted to breathe. Oh, her family loved her, she had no doubt about that, but she longed for the sort of devotion about which sonnets were written and poets waxed, a grand love like the one her mum had known. When Fancy was a wee lass, yet still old enough to be curious about the absence of a man about, she’d worked up the courage to ask about her father. With tears in her eyes, her mum had explained how she’d fallen for a handsome regimental officer. They’d not been married when they’d given into passion on the eve of his departure to a foreign land, but he’d promised to wed her upon his return. However, fate had intervened, and he’d died heroically, yet tragically, on a bloodied battlefield on the Crimean Peninsula.
“But, still, he gave me the most wonderful gift of all—you.” Even now, the recollection of her mum’s words caused her eyes to dampen. From that moment on, Fancy had understood she was special. Unlike her siblings who had all been left at her mum’s door, she had been wanted.
And so it was that she had a tender regard for stories brimming with romance, and Lady Rosemont’s letter certainly fell into that category, serving as a talisman, offering hope that she, too, might discover a passion not to be denied.
At that very moment, with long, slender fingers, her future husband might be opening the gilded invitation that would set him on the path toward meeting her. Unlike her brothers’, his hands would be soft and without calluses or scars, his movements would reflect elegance. He would have mastered the waltz to perfection, and when he took her within his arms to sweep her over the parqueted flooring, although he would hold her at a proper distance and with decorum, his gaze would capture hers and communicate his intense regard toward her, would reveal how firmly she’d already won him over. His eyes would reflect warmth and hint at his desire—
Jingle. Jingle.
As the bell above her shop door heralded the arrival of a customer, she gave a guilty start. Based on the heat scalding her cheeks, she was blushing profusely at being caught dreaming the afternoon away. It didn’t help matters that the man crossing the threshold had smoothly removed his black beaver hat to reveal a handsome countenance, a face that no doubt set many ladies to swooning. Quickly, she folded the letter and slipped it into the pocket of her skirt, where she had handy access to it when she needed a reminder that love could be found among the aristocracy and that the path her family had set her on was one worth traveling.
The gent surveyed the various areas of her shop—the shelves lining the back wall, the parallel bookcases with the elaborate scrollwork standing perpendicular to it, the small tables with novels stacked on top of them, books gathered in corners. Books, books, books, everywhere he looked. She could never have enough of them, which was obvious to anyone entering her shop, whether for the first time or the hundredth.
In her youth, a lad had once told her she had a fetish when it came to books. Because of how much she read, she knew the word and that he was implying something untoward, and so she’d bloodied his nose. What she had for books was a healthy appreciation for all they offered, an admiration for those who penned them, and a gratitude to those who published them. She wasn’t ashamed of it; rather she reveled in it.
She couldn’t decide if her customer, who seemed absorbed by all surrounding him, was enthralled by her collection or appalled that so much space was taken up with literary works. Knowing she’d never before seen him within these walls—his mere mien indicated he was not one easily forgotten—she straightened her narrow shoulders to welcome the gorgeous stranger into her midst. “May I be of service, sir?”
He swerved his head toward her, and she became ensnared in the most striking green eyes she’d ever beheld. His black hair, a tad longer than was fashionable, every strand in place, made the green st
and out all the more. Her wits seemed to have deserted her, and she knew staring into those emerald depths for the remainder of her life would be an insufficient amount of time to fully appreciate the various facets of them, of him. He seemed at once imposing, yet approachable—and she dearly wanted to approach him but remained where she was, unwilling to risk any action that might cost her a sale, or at the very least, placing a book into a hand.
“The sign on your door indicated you were closed.” His enunciation, hinting at an education, good breeding, and possibly an affluent background, was posher than that spoken by most of the people who lived in the area. But it was his deep smooth voice that sent a warm shiver through her.
Interesting that in spite of the sign, he’d given the door a try. A man who obviously didn’t quite trust what was before him—or perhaps one who merely needed proof that what he was told was true.
Glancing at the tall standing clock resting against the wall to her left, near her office, she saw that indeed it was ten minutes past the hour of six when she usually locked her doors. She’d been so engrossed in the letter she’d failed to even notice the chimes signaling the time. “My posted hours are more a suggestion, not a law. Nor am I one for turning away someone in need of a book. If you would like to browse . . . or I’m happy to help you find something to your taste.”
He edged farther inside but only by a couple of steps. “I don’t wish to impose if you were on the verge of latching up for the night.”
“It’s no imposition I assure you. Partnering people with books is one of my greatest joys. I can even recommend a few of my favorites if you like.”
“As long as you’re so graciously willing to accommodate me, I’m in the mood for some dastardly deeds. Have you the latest penny blood?”
She blinked, parted her lips—
And heard the smallest of scoffs beneath his breath. “You’re no doubt too young to recall that phrase. I believe it’s more popularly known these days as a penny dreadful.”