Intriguing Lady

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Authors: Leonora Blythe

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BOOK: Intriguing Lady
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Table of Contents

Copyright

Dedication

Intriguing Lady

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

Intriguing Lady

By Leonora Blythe

Copyright 2014 by Leonora Blythe

Cover Copyright 2014 by Untreed Reads Publishing

Cover Design by Ginny Glass

The author is hereby established as the sole holder of the copyright. Either the publisher (Untreed Reads) or author may enforce copyrights to the fullest extent.

Previously published in print, 1982.

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the publisher or author, except in the case of a reviewer, who may quote brief passages embodied in critical articles or in a review. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to your ebook retailer and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

This is a work of fiction. The characters, dialogue and events in this book are wholly fictional, and any resemblance to companies and actual persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

Also by Leonora Blythe and Untreed Reads Publishing

Carolina

Felicia

Helene

Lady Tara

Miranda

Sally

http://www.untreedreads.com

For

Nancy with the sparkling eyes

and

Louise, who was so generous with

her time

Intriguing Lady

Leonora Blythe

Chapter 1

The old-fashioned
traveling carriage which was carrying Miss Roberta Rushforth and her companion, Mrs. Ashley, on the final stage of their journey across France toward England moved at a fast pace. The speed was dictated by Roberta, who, after six months’ absence from her native land, was anxious to return.

Williams, the coachman, a wiry old gent, clucked his disapproval of the pace every time he urged the horses on; yet, having known his mistress from the hour she entered the world some seven and twenty years ago, he suspected she would take over the reins if he ignored her orders.

“It comes to summat that we’ve got to risk breaking our necks to get back in time to see the bloomin’ flowers,” he muttered in the northern brogue that he stubbornly retained even though he had lived most of his adult life in London. “I’ve never ’eard of such nonsense in me life.”

His indignation was caused not only by the speed but by the fact that the party presented an undignified appearance as the horses dashed pell-mell along the bumpy, ill-kept roads. Moreover, since leaving Switzerland, he had not been treated with the respect he had come to regard as his right, and even taking into consideration the outmoded traveling conveyance, it was hard for him to conceive that no one in France had ever heard of the Rushforth family or was willing to pay homage to that old, illustrious name. From the moment they had left Switzerland, he had had a constant fight to get decent accommodations for his mistress, and on at least three occasions, he himself had been forced to sleep over the stables.

“Not tonight, though,” he told himself grimly, “for no matter what ’er ladyship says, we’re going no farther than Le Cateau. Henri will be only too willing to see that we’re treated in the proper manner.” Henri Lamonte was his late wife’s cousin and had inherited Le Cheval Blanc, the only hostelry Le Cateau sported.

The two occupants sat gazing at the passing scenery from their respective windows, oblivious to the coachman’s misery. Mrs. Ashley’s hands were busy with her tatting, while Roberta’s elegantly gloved ones were impatiently drumming on the faded upholstery.

The dramatic scenery of Switzerland had long since been replaced by the dull, rolling countryside of France, and this didn’t suit Roberta’s mood at all. Their journey thus far had been uneventful, unless one were to count as exciting one of the horses going lame just outside Metz.

Now, with nothing more to do than sit in the carriage, with only Mrs. Ashley for company, Roberta was bored.

She was finally roused from her brown study when she realized that Williams was slowing the coach. “I wonder if there has been an accident,” she remarked, her melodious voice breaking the silence that had prevailed all morning. But the pause was only fleeting, and they soon resumed the earlier fast pace. “Poor Williams,” she continued, covering behind a determined smile her disappointment that there was to be no diversion. “He must be rueing the day he ever sought service with the Rushforths. I think these past two weeks have been a sore trial to his dignity.”

“As they have been to mine, Roberta,” Mrs. Ashley rejoined as she tried, unsuccessfully, to resettle her large frame more comfortably. “But then, you were ever the one to set your own pace. And once you’ve got an idea fixed in your mind, there’s no stopping you. I just hope we reach London in one piece.”

Mrs. Ashley spoke with the ease of an old retainer, which she was. For when Roberta had been orphaned at the age of five, Lord Bromley, Roberta’s uncle and guardian, had hired Mrs. Ashley with explicit instructions to provide Roberta with love and affection, which hadn’t proved the least bit difficult. The child had been an engaging little soul, even though she tended toward wildness at times.

As Roberta had grown older, this wildness had turned into a savage independence. This, in Mrs. Ashley’s considered opinion, had ultimately cooled the ardor of her many suitors when she had made her debut seven years ago. Even so, it still was a puzzlement to Mrs. Ashley that, with her looks, breeding and fortune, Roberta hadn’t been snapped up by some worthy gentleman willing to overlook this flaw in her character. There had been one, but he had been altogether unsuitable, and Mrs. Ashley could only hope that Roberta had forgotten him.

Now Mrs. Ashley wondered what the future held for her charge and worried lest, on their return, Roberta would be dubbed an old maid by the people who knew her best. She turned her gaze inward and studied her charge intently, looking for any overt signs of the miracle that had so recently occurred. There were none, despite the tedium of the journey. She still looked pale, which accentuated her brown-flecked hazel eyes. But the thinness of her figure was carefully disguised by an elegant and obviously expensive emerald gown, and her flaming red hair, cut in an unfashionably short bob, was hidden beneath a wide-brimmed bonnet.

“I do wish Dr. Steinway hadn’t insisted on cutting your hair so short,” Mrs. Ashley said, shaking her head in regret. “It will take forever to grow back to its original length.”

Roberta laughed at Mrs. Ashley’s melancholy expression and reached over to squeeze her hand. “I thought to keep it like this,” she teased, “for I find it prodigiously easy to take care of.”

“Roberta!” Mrs. Ashley exclaimed in shocked tones. “Don’t even jest about such a thing. I cannot think that you will enjoy being seen abroad, sporting such an unfashionable frizz. Why, people will think you an eccentric.” She shuddered at the thought. “No, no, my dear. Now that you are cured, there is no need at all to worry that growing it long will sap your strength. No need at all.”

Roberta appeared to consider this for a while and then relented as she saw the look of worry in Mrs. Ashley’s eyes.

“Well,” she said, “if it makes you feel easier, I will agree to do as you wish. Anyway, it’s fashionable for a female of my advanced years to hide her burnished glory beneath a cap.”

Mrs. Ashley smiled her acceptance of this compromise but ignored the last piece of bamming.

“I hope you are not concerned that your condition will recur, Roberta,” she remarked. “Dr. Steinway was most emphatic that your lungs are completely clear.”

“That is the least of my worries.” Roberta laughed. “Having just spent the last six months undergoing what I can only consider to be the most grueling of treatments, I have no intention of ever being sick again in my life. Oh, Ashley!” she continued, her boredom forgotten for the moment, “it’s a wonderfully exhilarating thought to know that I have been cured. Do you remember when we thought I’d never breathe properly again? And the time I was convinced I’d never see another English spring? You spent the best part of a week persuading me otherwise. What nonsense I must have spoken, yet never once did you withdraw your support.”

She broke off as the carriage came to a halt. Looking out the window, she noticed they were standing in the middle of a cobblestoned courtyard. “What is it, Williams?” she asked as she opened the window.

Williams clambered down from his perch and made his way slowly around the carriage. He opened the door and lowered the steps with a flourish. “Nothing’s amiss,” he muttered. “I just thought as ’ow you might like to spend a night in a comfortable bed, for a change, and partake of the excellent food for which this inn is renowned.”

“We’re not stopping!” Roberta exclaimed. She could now see the inn. It was a pretty, white-stoned, gabled building covered in a flowering creeper. She felt instinctively it would be a pleasant place to spend the night. Yet she continued perversely, “Why, there must still be two hours of daylight left.”

“If you will pardon me for saying so, Miss Roberta, I’ve ’ad about as much as I can take for one day. This dampness ’as gotten into my joints summat awful, and I can ’ardly move my right ’and.”

“Oh, Williams, you poor man!” Impetuously, Roberta jumped to the ground and took the aging servant by the arm. “I insist that we stay here until you feel better, even if it means a delay of a week.”

Her concern was genuine, until the landlord appeared from a side door. As he hurried over, he greeted Williams as a long-lost friend. Roberta drew back and in severe tones ordered Williams to her side. “Is this some ploy you’ve thought up to spend some time dallying with an old acquaintance?” she demanded. “Where are we?”

Williams shuffled from one foot to the other and resolutely refused to look up at Roberta’s severe countenance. “We’re but two days from Calais, Miss Roberta,” he wheedled, “and I thought to myself as ’ow you wouldn’t mind putting up at ’Enri’s inn.”

Henri began to shake his head. “
Mon
dieu,
but it is
impossible.
I have rooms, yes, but not one available that is suitable for a lady.
It…
it is
impossible. Impossible.

Roberta eyed the rotund little Frenchman for a moment. He threw his hands in the air in a gesture of finality. There was something in his manner that aroused her curiosity. She gave him a haughty stare and then turned to Williams. “You may tell him, Williams, that I am too tired to travel farther today, and that I will take whatever rooms he has.”


C’est tres difficile
,”
Henri muttered without waiting for the message to be relayed. “The English lord has bespoke my best rooms
and…and…
non, mademoiselle,
I think it not a good thing for you to inconvenience yourself by staying here.”

“I don’t know what’s gotten into ’im, Miss Roberta,” Williams declared angrily. “And we’re supposed to be related. Now, look ’ere, Henri,” he continued, “you ’eard what Miss Rushforth said. We’ll take whatever rooms you ’ave, and be done with it. It’s just not dignified for you to behave in such a fashion, and ’ere’s me thinking as ’ow you’d be pleased to see me after all these years.”

Henri hastened to apologize, but Williams, his pride wounded, refused to listen. Instead, he turned back to the carriage and inquired of Mrs. Ashley whether she was ready to descend.

Meanwhile, Roberta, sorry that she had caused a rift between the two men, hastened to put Henri at ease. “Williams will come about, for he seldom takes offense and never holds a grudge,” she said in reassuring tones. “So please do not dwell on what he just said. Perhaps your wife could show me to my rooms?”

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