The Scoundrel Takes a Bride: A Regency Rogues Novel (41 page)

BOOK: The Scoundrel Takes a Bride: A Regency Rogues Novel
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“Do take care with her dress, my love,” Elena instructed Dash from her place next
to Sophia.

Dash stood outside the Afton carriage in the Petworth Manor drive. His valiant attempt
to arrange Sophia’s wedding dress had not proven particularly fruitful. “Would it
truly be a tragedy of monumental proportions if the gown somehow managed to be caught
in the carriage door?”

“Yes!” Elena cried.

Dash grinned with impudent pride. “You, my dear, are far too gullible.”

He held the skirts in one hand and pulled the door with the other, slamming it shut
only a moment after removing his arm. “You see? We men can be useful.”

“ ‘Can’ being the operative word,” Elena whispered to Sophia.

Dash climbed up to the box and joined the driver. “To the lake, Joseph Wends, and
with care if you please.”

“Aye, Lord Carrington,” the elderly man replied with a laugh. “ ’Tis no other way
I know.”

Sophia smiled at the old driver’s lilting voice, glad that he could be part of her
day.

“Sophia?”

“Yes,” she replied, still thinking fondly on Mr. Wends’s presence as she turned to
look at Elena.

“Is there anything …” Elena paused and demurely
cleared her throat. “That is to say, do you have questions regarding …”

The woman’s fair skin began to glow with embarrassment.

“Oh!” Sophia cried as understanding dawned. “Regarding marital relations?”

Elena sighed with appreciation. “Precisely. To be frank, I had no idea whether Mrs.
Kirk—”

Sophia could not help herself this time. She took Elena’s hand in hers and giggled.
“There are books for such things, and from what I understand, a certain inborn understanding
will present itself at the necessary time. But I thank you for the kindness.”

“Books, you say?” Elena asked sheepishly.

Sophia arched a brow. “Oh yes.”

Both women fell victim to a fit of laughter then, the sound of their shared amusement
reaching the men.

“Better a laughing bride than a crying one,” Mr. Wends opined loudly.

Sophia covered her mouth with the palm of her hand and waited for the tickle of mirth
to cease.

Elena sighed with contentment, one last bubble of laughter escaping her lips before
she settled back upon the seat cushion.

Sophia peered out the window at the giant chestnut trees that lined the drive. “I
do have a question for you, come to think of it.”

“Of course,” Elena replied. “After I fumbled the last topic so badly, I owe you at
least one good answer.”

“Tell me,” Sophia began, “has Dash succeeded in building a new life with you—one free
from those things that had consumed him entirely before you met?”

“It is a bit of a daft question, isn’t it?”

Sophia blinked and abruptly turned her head, unsure if she’d heard the woman correctly.
“Did you just question my intelligence?”

“No, not in general,” Elena answered. “And it is an assumption that Dash made as well,
so you are in good company. Honestly, though, the very idea that one could simply
throw over essentially what they’ve lived for as if tossing out an old dress and embracing
an entirely new life without any bumps along the way? I am sadly mixing my metaphors,
but you do understand what I mean, don’t you?”

“Eventually, the bumps and the old dresses smooth out?” Sophia pressed.

Elena sighed good-naturedly. “You are quite like Dash, aren’t you?”

Elena’s words were both disappointing and elating at the same time. For as long as
she could remember, Sophia had assumed her life would flourish and thrive once she’d
found the person responsible for her mother’s death. It was quite a lot to ask of
her future and, she realized now, impossible to fulfill. “Then there will always be
difficulty, no matter what I choose?”

“Precisely!” Elena exclaimed, clapping her hands together. “No matter how dedicated
we are to building the perfect life, there will always be bumps and old dresses. After
our first fight, Dash was terrified that he’d somehow failed to do everything that
he should, despite the fact that he’d all but left the Corinthians and moved to Verwood
with me.”

“So I should lower my expectations?” Sophia said, her lips tilting up into a smile.

The woman considered Sophia’s words and nodded. “In a manner of speaking, yes. Life
was always going to be difficult at times, even if your mother had not been taken
from you. Because it is the bumps and old dresses that force us to grow and come into
our own. It is how you found Nicholas, and I discovered Dash.”

“How did you become so wise?” Sophia asked, returning her gaze to the window.

“My share of bumps and old dresses, Sophia.”

A second carriage sounded just beyond the trees. “That will be Carrington and Sophia,”
Nicholas said to his brother, straightening his cravat.

“Carrington?” Langdon asked. “Where is her father?”

“Lord Afton sent word that he was too ill to attend,” Nicholas explained, not bothering
to hide his disappointment.

“Do not think too harshly of him. Not every man is as strong as you and I, Nicholas,”
Langdon told him, with a smile. Then, turning a little, he pointed to the aisle and
said, “Now it is time for me to find a seat and for you to join the vicar, I believe.”

Langdon left first, walking to take the empty seat next to Carmichael.

Nicholas followed after his brother.

The vicar looked past Nicholas and his eyes grew wide with pleasure. “Come along,
Mr. Bourne. Your bride has arrived.”

Nicholas turned around and walked the last few steps backward, the sight of Sophia
on Dash’s arm making the world melt away.

“Here, Mr. Bourne,” the vicar urged, his plump hand pulling Nicholas into position.

The music of a single violin filled the air, though Nicholas could not be sure if
it was real or his imagination. All that was real to him was Sophia.

Sophia. The one he had loved for so long. The one who had belonged to another. The
one he had never dared to dream would be his.

She was the woman walking down the aisle toward him. Her dress, a frothy concoction
of silk and antique lace, shimmered in the sunlight as she took each step forward.
Her hair was pinned up, partially exposing
the dainty pearl earrings that had once belonged to her mother. And her face … Her
lips were curved upward in a small smile that Nicholas knew was only for him. And
her eyes possessed the very love and devotion that he felt pulsing within his heart
and soul.

She was no more than two steps from Nicholas. Still, he could bear the wait no longer.
He moved forward and reached out to take her hand.

Dash grinned at Nicholas, shaking his head as he released Sophia and stepped back
to take a seat next to Elena.

Nicholas lifted their linked hands and kissed Sophia’s palm before looping her arm
through his and turning back to the vicar.

“We are ready,” Nicholas told the stout man, looking at Sophia. “Are we not?”

Sophia stifled a small laugh at his nerves, resting her head momentarily on his upper
arm. “For the future?”

“Not precisely,” Nicholas drawled, his heart disgustingly full. “For
our
future.”

“Together?”

“Forever,” Nicholas insisted, tightening his hold.

Sophia raised her head and captured him with a fierce look of possession. “I would
not have it any other way.”

For Junessa Viloria, my brilliant editor.
You are one in a million, with kindness, grace,
talent, and intelligence to spare.
I don’t know how you do it all.
But you do it so, so well.

~XO, S

A
CKNOWLEDGMENTS

The following is a list of people so awesome, so powerful, so ridiculously talented
and insightful that, should they ever all be in the same room at one time, the world
would explode, sending confetti, unicorns, and rainbows flying everywhere: Jennifer
Schober, Franzeca Drouin, Lois Faye Dyer, Randall, and the Girls.

B
Y
S
TEFANIE
S
LOANE

The Devil in Disguise
The Angel in My Arms
The Sinner Who Seduced Me
The Saint Who Stole My Heart
The Scoundrel Takes a Bride

Read on for an exciting excerpt from

T
HE
D
EVIL IN
D
ISGUISE

Stefanie Sloane’s Rita Award-nominated
Regency Rogues novel
Published by Ballantine Books
Available wherever books are sold

L
ONDON
April 1811

Lady Lucinda Grey had not precisely decided what she would do if the overly eager
Matthew Redding, Lord Cuthbert, compared her eyes to the Aegean Sea. Or the most brilliant
of sapphires. It had all been said before and—Lucinda admitted with a stab of regret—in
much more creative ways than poor Lord Cuthbert could ever dare dream.

“I shall faint, I believe,” she said succinctly, straightening the Alençon lace fichu
neatly tucked into her jonquil gown.

Lord Cuthbert stopped ogling Lucinda’s bosom abruptly, a look of confusion clouding
his round face. “I beg your pardon?”

Lucinda realized her earnest suitor clearly felt he’d reached the point in his seduction
where she should have been dizzy with anticipation and too caught up in the moment
to speak.

“Lord Cuthbert, I do apologize,” she offered, taking advantage of the moment to discreetly
reclaim her hand from his damp gloved grasp. She slid to the end of the settee, putting
two feet of gold damask cushion between them. “Pray continue.”

Lucinda felt compelled to see this thing through, despite
the temptation to feign what would surely be a spectacular fainting spell. Lord Cuthbert’s
fumbling attempt at romance was, she realized, not unlike happening upon a carriage
accident; be it concern or distasteful fascination, one simply could not look away.

Nor faint away, she acknowledged with a frustrated sigh.

Over the last few weeks, Lucinda had acquired far more experience with this sort of
thing than she could have ever imagined or wished to endure. The endless parade of
suitors who had found themselves on her doorstep this season had been uninspiring,
to say the least.

This was all her dear friend Amelia’s fault, of course, Lucinda reflected as Lord
Cuthbert droned on. If Amelia hadn’t married the Earl of Northrop last year and if
the couple had not displayed a love so wide and vast that those observing wondered
if they might very well be lost forever … well, Lucinda would not be in this predicament.

A fellow ape leader for the last several seasons, Amelia had, until the altogether
unexpected appearance of the earl, been a staunch supporter of a woman’s right to
peace. And quiet. And sanity. In other terms, a woman’s right
not
to marry.

“If only Lord Northrop had not worn Amelia down,” Lucinda muttered under her breath,
causing not even the slightest pause from the windbag before her.

Lord Cuthbert was completely absorbed in his rehearsed speech, which left her free
to return to her contemplation of the events that had led to his presence in her parlor.

Discreetly counting the winged cherubs that inhabited the plaster ceiling in force,
Lucinda begrudgingly admitted that Lord Northrup had not precisely worn Amelia down.
Not exactly. That was to say, not at all. On the day the two met it was as if the
heavens echoed with
the cries of angels—and Cupid himself nearly collapsed from the joy of uniting such
a pair.

Uncharitable and unkind
, Lucinda mentally chided herself. She adored Amelia as though she were her own sister.
To be unhappy over her newfound marital bliss would be inexcusable. And in all honesty,
Lucinda
was
pleased for her friend. It was just that they had both been so convinced that love
was a ruse, invented to keep the poets out of trouble. And now one had only to look
upon Amelia and her new husband to know that they’d been utterly wrong.

But the real difficulty was that—London being London—Amelia’s blissful state meant
that the entirety of polite society assumed Lucinda would follow suit and be felled
by love as well.

Frankly, Lucinda found the whole thing somewhat alarming.

And Amelia was no help. Utterly smitten and convinced Lucinda should share her happiness,
she had done nothing to defend her friend and dispel the ton’s false assumption. On
the contrary, she’d worked feverishly to provide every opportunity for Lucinda to
achieve an equally sublime level of bliss. And after countless prospects, all of which
had been met with what could be politely called mild disappointment on Lucinda’s part,
Amelia had grown desperate.

Which was how Lucinda had arrived at this moment with Lord Cuthbert, forced by good
manners to endure his declaration of undying affection.

Cuthbert’s patting of his mud brown hair into place pulled Lucinda from her thoughts.
Clearing his throat with theatrical emphasis, he continued his attempts at poetic
flattery. “Lady Lucinda, your eyes are, to be sure, the bluest of blues that I’ve
ever encountered. Truly, without a doubt.”

She stared at him. She did not know what to say.

He blinked. “Quite blue. Really, truly very blue.”

And in that moment, Lucinda realized that there was only so much a lady of reasonable
intelligence could be expected to endure.

“My lord,” she began, rising from the settee and smoothing the fine lawn skirt of
her morning gown, “I fear our time together is at an end.”

Cuthbert practically jumped from his seat. He stepped clumsily toward Lucinda, stopping
mere inches from her. “Lady Lucinda, are you well?”

It was just the cue she needed. She’d faced much worse from importunate suitors over
the last three weeks and hadn’t a doubt her dramatic flair would serve her well in
this instance. “I seem to … that is to say …” She hesitated, swaying ever so slightly
while raising her hand to her temple. “I must retire. Immediately, if not sooner.”

Cuthbert seemed to take this latest development as an opportunity, moving to stand
unbearably close. He placed his hand at the small of her back. “My dear lady, you
must tell me what you need and I will fetch it at once.”

He was determinedly solicitous; Lucinda had to commend him for that. She was going
to have to skip to the coup de grâce.

“Lord Cuthbert,” she said, pausing to give what she hoped was a convulsive swallow.
“I feel obligated to inform you that I fear I shall cast up my accounts at any moment.
And I would so hate to ruin your extremely unique puce waistcoat.”

Cuthbert nearly shoved Lucinda to the settee in his eagerness to escape the baptism.
He bounded across the room to reach a small armchair where Lucinda’s maid, Mary, was
seated. “Attend to your mistress,” he barked. “At once.”

“My lady,” Mary said quickly, shaking herself from what clearly had been a pleasant
daydream and standing.
Lucinda bit back a smile and focused her gaze on Cuthbert. “Thank you, my lord, you’re
most kind.”

Clearly his fondness for the puce brocade far outweighed his affection for Lucinda.
He backed quickly toward the doorway. “Of course, of course. I’ll call again at a
more convenient time.”

Lucinda’s butler, Stanford, appeared with such alacrity it was apparent he’d been
waiting just outside in the hall.

“My lord,” the stony-faced butler intoned, his emotionless gaze focused on the gilded
mirror just beyond Cuthbert’s large head.

Lord Cuthbert bowed before falling into step behind Stanford.

Mary closed the door quietly.

“He was the worst by far. What on earth could Amelia have been thinking?” Lucinda
said, exasperation clear in her voice as she stood.

“That you’ve refused every eligible man in London under the age of seventy?” Mary
answered, her years of service to Lucinda evident in her impertinent answer.

Lucinda laughed, Mary’s blunt observance easing the annoyance of the last half hour.

“I do believe Lord Mayborn is actually three-and-seventy,” Lucinda said. “And I highly
doubt I’ve made the acquaintance of ‘every eligible man’ in the entire city. Surely
there are at least one or two more for Amelia to proffer up in her quest for my everlasting
happiness.”

“I’ve heard Lord Thorp’s son is available,” Mary answered, peering into the now silent
hall before holding the door wide for Lucinda.

Amused, Lucinda arched an eyebrow at her maid’s too innocent expression. “I prefer
my men properly attired, which does not include apron strings. And while I do like
a good challenge,” she added dryly as she crossed the threshold, “I fear the twenty-year
gap in our ages
would prove to be an obstacle even I could not overcome.”

“Hmph,” Mary said with unshakable calm as she followed her mistress out of the room.
“You’ve no romance in you, Lady Lucinda. Not at all.”

“Well, when it comes to infants, I’d have to agree with you,” Lucinda answered over
her shoulder as she walked toward the staircase.

Mary hmphed again. “Don’t play coy with me, miss.”

Lucinda stifled a grin at Mary’s curt tone. “Oh, Mary. It’s just not true and you
know it.”

“Really, now?” the servant answered, the sarcasm somewhat lost in her rough Liverpool
accent.

Lucinda mounted the carpeted stairs.
“Really,”
she confirmed. And it was the truth. She believed in romance as it pertained to the
likes of Antony and Cleopatra, Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn, Arthur and Guinevere, Amelia
and John—though the tragic ending of all but her dear friend’s relationship were unsettling,
to say the least.

I really must remember to mention this to Amelia
, she mentally took note, reaching out to skim the smooth marble balustrade.

The point was, romance was all well and good for others. It simply was not for Lucinda.
She did not need a man to make her life complete. Nor did she particularly want one;
the emotional upheaval and mercurial behavior that seemed to accompany love was something
that she neither understood nor desired.

“I’ll have to take your word for it, I suppose,” Mary answered unconvincingly, then
gestured for her lady to continue up the stairs, swatting at her derriere when she
did so and eliciting a hoot of laughter from Lucinda.

William Randall, the Duke of Clairemont, bent to nip his mistress’s breast and licked
upward to the vulnerable
spot where her pulse pounded at the base of her throat. The woman beneath him twisted,
panting, her lush curves slick with sweat where their bodies pressed and slid, bare
skin against bare skin.

“Harder, Will.” The throaty gasp was half plea, half demand. “Now.”

He could see it in her eyes—the heady mixture of heat, passion, and urgent need that
told him that a woman was about to come. Never one to deny a lady, he thrust deeply,
ruthlessly holding back his own rising need for release.

“Your Grace. If you please …”

“No need to be so polite, Beatrice,” Will muttered before he realized she hadn’t spoken.
He bit off a curse and went still, looking over his shoulder.

The ducal bedchamber was cast in gloom, the heavy silken curtains drawn against the
afternoon sunshine. Nevertheless, Will instantly recognized his valet’s stiffly erect
figure, standing just inside the closed door. “What is it, Smithers?”

Lady Beatrice Winn’s fingers tightened on Will’s forearms, her body stiffening beneath
his, and he glanced down at her. Her eyes widened with alarm, chasing away the raging
passion of only seconds earlier. Will soothed her concern with a brief, hard kiss.
“If you’ll excuse me for one moment,” he began, lifting off of her, “I’ll deliver
the sound thrashing that most certainly is in order and return to continue our”—he
paused, dropping his bare feet to the floor and standing—“discussion of charitable
endeavors.”

Beatrice discreetly pulled the sheet up to her shoulders, her mouth sulky with frustration.
“Think nothing of it, Your Grace. My charity can wait—though do keep in mind that
the longer one is kept waiting, the more needy one becomes.”

He fully understood Beatrice’s warning. She’d proven
to be well nigh insatiable in past encounters. “Not to worry. Try to remember where
we left off, won’t you?”

Satisfied that she was as comfortable as a mistress might be when interrupted by her
lover’s servant, Will reached for his dressing gown and shrugged into it with quick
jerks. He roughly knotted the silk tie and turned to his valet. “Smithers, you have
my full attention for precisely two minutes. Shall we?”

Will stalked from the room, waiting until Smithers joined him in the hall and pulled
the door closed behind them. “Bloody hell, man, do you have any idea how near I was—”

Smithers quickly gestured toward the stairs. “Lord Carmichael awaits you in your study,
Your Grace.”

For precisely three seconds, Will held himself silent. And then: “Again you prove
yourself unimpeachable, Smithers.”

Will quickened his pace and descended the steps two at a time. “Though you could work
on your timing, man. One, two minutes, perhaps, could have been spent in quiet contemplation
outside my door, if you understand me?”

“Of course, Your Grace, though Lord Carmichael led me to believe his business with
you is of some importance,” Smithers replied from several lengths behind. “Might I
bring you a coat, or perhaps breeches?”

Will couldn’t help but grin at Smithers’s undying devotion to propriety, even after
many years in his employ. “Not necessary, Smithers. But see to Beatrice. Some tea,
perhaps?”

“Of course, Your Grace,” Smithers said instantly.

Barefooted, Will strode down the hall on the second floor and turned left into his
study, slamming the heavy wooden door behind him. Much to his frustration, the sound
failed to elicit even the slightest arching of an eyebrow from the man sitting behind
his desk.

“You really should have taken Smithers up on the breeches, Clairemont,” Henry Prescott,
Viscount Carmichael, said dryly, his eyes never straying from Will’s.

Damnation, the man can’t be surprised
. Will sat down and carefully arranged his dressing gown. “Come now, Carmichael. Clothing
can be an impediment in certain situations. If I had known to expect you, then perhaps
other arrangements could have been made.”

BOOK: The Scoundrel Takes a Bride: A Regency Rogues Novel
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