Reckless in Innocence ~ A #Free Historical Romance story ~ Part Twenty-six

 

Reckless in Innocence

for my Historical Romance readers © Jane Lark Publishing rights belong to Jane Lark, this should not be recreated in any form without prior consent from Jane Lark Reckless in Innocence

Reckless in Innocence

~ Read the earlier parts 

one , two, threefourfivesixseveneightnineteneleventwelvethirteenfourteenfifteensixteenseventeen, eighteen, nineteen, twenty, twenty-one, twenty-two, twenty-three, twenty-four, twenty-five

~

Marcus

Marcus was seething as he thrust aside the door to his own office, where his brother occupied the desk. “Angela told me that Elizabeth has gone!”

He had gone for a ride this morning to burn off his frustration, and then he’d broken his fast among his guests and neither his brother nor his sister-in-law had said one word of this. They had not told him because they knew he would go after her, they had deliberately given her chance to get away. The first that he’d known was when she did not show up for breakfast at all. It was half past eleven when he had finally gone looking for her, and it was only then that Angela had told him the truth.

“She said that you drove her into Tunbridge Wells at first light. What is this, brother? Why have you aided her in fleeing from me at such a ridiculous hour? Anyone would think me a monster, the way this escape has been so carefully planned!”

Jason stood. “I wondered how long it would take you to notice. Are you certain that you are not the ogre in this tale, Marcus? She is not one of your women from the stage, or a lover like Lady Hillsborough, to whom you were just one more. She is a young woman who has expectations of a marriage and a family to accompany it. She does not need a scoundrel like you destroying her prospects.”

Jason came about the desk, his anger reddening his cheeks. “Congratulations, Marcus. For the first time in your life you have thoroughly disgusted me. I am ashamed of my own brother. If this gets about town then I do not think that even Angela, who has been the most patient of women as far you are concerned, will deem to entertain you. When you said that you would bring Miss Derwent here, I had thought…” Jason snatched a deep breath, clearly struggling to control his temper, then began again. “I believed you intended to offer her marriage, not that you had planned seduction. Miss Derwent was distressed yesterday, distraught last night and silent this morning. You have ruined that young women, have you not? I thought better of you, Marcus.”

They stood eye to eye just for a moment.

Marcus did not flinch from Jason’s judgement, seeing himself through his brother’s eyes, hearing Jason’s words repeated in his mind. He saw the person he had always expected to be, the person his mother had always claimed that he would be, a worthless man, and he was not surprised at all. It was what he deserved. He had spent years developing this façade.

Marcus turned his back and walked away, heading for the stables.

 

Elizabeth

Elizabeth perched on the edge of the sofa in the parlour, still clothed in her travelling dress, blue spencer and bonnet. Her trunk stood in the hall where the hackney cab driver had deposited it and she clutched her reticule in her lap, her head bowed to her father’s tirade.

“You have let me down, Elizabeth. Beyond measure, girl, you have let me down! The deal was done! The marriage sealed! You were the only woman invited at His Grace’s request. You have had an entire weekend in which to extract a proposal from the man and you have not done it!”

“Father,” she did not look at him, “Lord Tay never had, nor ever will have, any intention of offering me marriage. Marriage was not what was on his mind.”

“Then it is your role to make it his intent. You should have put it into his mind!”

Elizabeth stood up to walk away, but her father caught her arm, his grip firm and painful. Her face turned to him, but her gaze rested on his mouth, it did not lift to his eyes. “What am I to do, Father? Place him in a situation where he is forced to make me an offer?”

“If that is the only way Elizabeth… if that is the only way, then that is what must be done.”

“But Father, he would hate me. Would you wish me to marry a man who hated me?”

“That is insignificant. You would be wed, and your mother and I would have some blunt. I cannot keep a girl about my neck forever. If you will not take the Duke then you must accept Lord Percy.”

Elizabeth pulled her arm from his grip and backed away one step. She could see his fingers shaking. He had not had a drink yet. “Lord Percy has not offered that. When will you understand what I always knew, Father? No one will have me. I have no dowry and you and Mother are an embarrassment to any family in the ton. No one will take me!”

Elizabeth turned and fled. Lord Derwent followed her, and as she hurried up the stairs, he gripped the newel post of the banister and shouted after her, “Not good enough, Elizabeth! Not good enough! You will find a husband and you will do so by the end of the week or you shall find yourself without a home. You will do what has to be done, or we shall all be without a roof over our heads.”

While she’d been away her parents had been indiscreet. Her mother had borrowed funds while gambling and the money had been loaned to her because she had declared that her daughter was to marry the Duke of Tay. While  her father had launched into another business venture, citing her potential engagement as a deposit on the deal. They had no funds, and they had speculated on her match. A match which would never happen. The fault was theirs, but the blame would be hers.

“You shall not make a fool of me!” Her father’s voice rang out behind her. “I shall have to contact my business partner and ask for more time! It is you who needs it! It is you who must make a match!”

 

Marcus

Marcus stood before the Derwents’ door. His fist had risen and fallen at least four times over the last few minutes. He was wet through from an earlier shower, and he stunk of horseflesh after riding his horse hard to get here. It was no way to present himself at someone’s door, but then Elizabeth Derwent’s family were not of the normal mould, undoubtedly they would not care a jot about his appearance. They would be over the moon that he was here at all.

His hand rose again. This time he did not allow himself to hesitate; he had made up his mind and the deed must be done.

The three hour ride from Kent had given him time to think things through, and Jason’s anger had driven him a hard ride. He could not forget Elizabeth’s warm and willing body against his and could not deny to himself that he wanted more. Had he truly dragged himself so low that he would offer a debutante anything but marriage? Was his fear of taking a wife so great that he would destroy the life of the one woman he’d discovered he could love?

Somewhere on the edge of the city he’d decided not. He’d decided that he would not live without her – could not live without her. That was untrue; he had made the decision the night before last, before he’d undone his trousers.

He curved his fingers into a fist to stop them shaking. Fool! He was still kidding himself. Jason had been right in his judgement. He had made his decision before they had gone to Larchfield, he had just not been ready to admit it.

His knuckles struck the door.

Abigail opened the door for him to enter and then held out her hand to take his hat and gloves. He removed his hat but held it, rather than let her take it as he swallowed, steeling himself to request an interview with Lord Derwent.

The voice of the man in question rose from a side room leading off from the hall. The door stood a little ajar. “I am no longer able to give you the additional money.”

Marcus looked over. He could see Lord Derwent slightly as he paced about the room, passing before the door, but not the person he spoke to, yet Marcus could hear their conversation clearly.

“It is too late to withdraw. You signed the agreement, you cannot back out.”

“Please understand, Mr Jones. I am in a difficult situation.”

“And I, sir. If you are about to tell me that you seek the return of your funds, the money is not there, it is invested.”

“But I had hopes, man. I told you that I had hopes, and they have not come to pass. I must have the money back and withdraw from our agreement.”

“If you were foolish enough to gamble money upon your daughter’s face, Derwent, that is not my concern. You have agreed to fund my venture, you cannot withdraw. You have signed an agreement. You owe me another fifty pounds within the month and I shall expect it.”

Marcus caught the expression on Lord Derwent’s face. He had never believed the drunkard capable of calculation, but there was definitely an idea forming. He stopped pacing and stood in Marcus’s clear view, confronting the man who Marcus could not see.

“She will do it. I will see that she does. I had planned for the girl to be able to claim she carried his offspring, that would seal it. She will compromise him and force his hand. You will have the rest. She will marry him. I will ensure it.”

“I have already invested on the understanding we have made, Derwent. I don’t care how you get the money, just get it?”

“She has Tay tamed already. It is just that he must be pushed to make the match.”

Marcus’s innards turned to stone. He’d heard enough – he’d heard exactly what he needed to hear. He put his hat back on his head and looked at the maid. “Tell no one that I called.” His voice rang with a cold pitch that carried the disdain and bitter betrayal which ran in his blood.

The maid bobbed a curtsy, silent, her skin flushed.

“I have your word?”

In answer she bobbed again, her head bowing further.

Marcus turned and opened the door himself then strode out, his head high and his shoulders back. He considered himself lucky. He had been saved on this occasion.

He would never make a fool of himself over a woman again.

~

If you cannot wait until next week for more of Jane Lark’s writing there’s plenty to read right now 😀 And if you have read them all already, then there’s another treat out now, you can begin devouring, The Dangerous Love of a Rogue Dangerous Love of a rogue from Zoe To read the Marlow Intrigues series, you can start anywhere, but the actual order is listed below ~ and click like to follow my Facebook Page not to miss anything…  The Marlow Intrigues CompleteCollecvtion_Facebook_Advertv5   The Lost Love of Soldier ~ The Prequel #1 ~ A Christmas Elopement began it all ~ The paperback would be a  lovely stocking filler 😉  The Illicit Love of a Courtesan #2  Capturing The Love of an Earl ~ A Free Novella #2.5  The Passionate Love of a Rake #3  The Desperate Love of a Lord ~ A second Free Novella #3.5  The Scandalous Love of a Lord #4 The Dangerous Love of a Rogue #5 The Secret Love of a Gentleman #6 Jane’s books can be ordered from most booksellers in paperback and, yes, there are more to come  🙂  IMG_4415

Go to the index

For

  • the story of the real courtesan who inspired                          The Illicit Love of a Courtesan,
  • another free short story, about characters from book #2,      A Lord’s Scandalous Love,
  • the prequel excerpts for book #3                                           The Scandalous Love of a Duke

Jane Lark is a writer of authentic, passionate and emotional Historical and New Adult Romance stories, and the author of a No.1 bestselling Historical Romance novel in America, ‘The Illicit Love of a Courtesan’.Click here to find out more about Jane’s books, and see Jane’s website www.janelark.co.uk to learn more about Jane. Or click  ‘like’ on Jane’s Facebook  page to see photo’s and learn historical facts from the Georgian, Regency and Victorian eras, which Jane publishes there. You can also follow Jane on twitter at @janelark

Reckless in Innocence ~ A #Free Historical Romance story ~ Part Seventeen

Reckless in Innocence

for my Historical Romance readers

© Jane Lark

Publishing rights belong to Jane Lark, this should not be recreated in any form without prior consent from Jane Lark

Reckless in Innocence

Reckless in Innocence

~

Read the earlier parts 

one , two, three, four, five, six, seven, eight,nineten,eleven,twelvethirteen, fourteen, fifteen, sixteen

~

Elizabeth

“Good morning, Miss Derwent,” Angela greeted Elizabeth when she entered the room. Elizabeth was the last to arrive to break her fast, everyone else was seated.

She smiled uncertainly and looked about the group. “Good morning.” Her gaze settled on Marcus who sat beside his sister-in-law.

He did not smile, but he watched Elizabeth as she took the empty seat opposite Angela. She looked down, but sensed his gaze follow her movement.

She leaned to her side a little when a footman offered to fill her cup with coffee, and she stared at the spout of the pot as it was poured. Months ago she had looked for Marcus across rooms full of people and the moment their gazes had met it had seemed as if no one else was there.

“Marcus said you do not like to hunt?” Angela spoke.

Elizabeth looked up.

When they’d arrived yesterday Elizabeth had felt out of place, she was the only stranger, yet all the women had gone out of their way to include her when they’d taken tea and after dinner in the drawing room. The gentlemen had done their utmost to keep her talking through dinner too.

“No, it is not to my liking. I like to watch the animals. I do not wish to see them harmed.” If the women sought to include her then it would be rude not to respond, she had done her best to try to let herself be included, and yet she was shy in this company because she was so unlike these people.

What did his sister-in-law and brother think of her invitation here? She had wondered that a dozen times. Had they guessed that something must have passed between Marcus and her? Her skin heated. But why on earth would a notorious rake trail a debutant and then invite her to his home? There could be only one conclusion.

“Miss.”

Elizabeth stood under the direction of the butler and walked to the buffet to look at the array of food. It was a week’s menu for her family, scrambled and boiled eggs, bacon, ham, kedgeree and kippers. A footman helped her select her choices but she did not fill her plate, she dare not eat much, her dresses had been growing tight.

“You will not be joining us today, then?” Marcus asked her directly when she returned to her seat.

She looked up, shock flooding her. “You are hunting?”

He nodded.

“Not the stag!” She was appalled by the suggestion. They had watched that beautiful creature last night and tonight he intended to put it on their dinner plates.

He leaned forward, his voice lowering to an intimate tone, despite the fact that he was speaking across the table. “I promise, if we see the stag I shall not let anyone shoot.”

He was teasing her. The rogue. Why had he brought her here?

She looked down at her plate, simply to look away from him, he was too overpowering when he was in his charming mood.

“We are shooting pheasant.” Marcus clarified. She looked up and narrowed her eyes at him, to tell him it had been mean to let her think he’d kill the stag. “Have you ever used a gun?”

“Never, and I do not wish to.”

“Then what will you do? Do you ride?”

Elizabeth blushed. “I learnt as a child but I have not ridden for several years. My father sold his stock.”

“Then you shall ride and I will join you. You will become accustomed to the saddle again soon enough.”

“But I have no habit.”

“You may borrow mine, we are a similar size,” Angela interrupted. “I shall neither be hunting nor riding. I have the menus to consider for our stay.”

“Beautifully offered, Angela dear.” Marcus turned a smile from his sister-in-law to Elizabeth.

She looked at Angela. “Thank you.” But I wish you had not offered, I do not trust him.

“Then it is settled. Be ready to ride at eleven.” Marcus grinned at her.

~

An hour later Elizabeth gripped a groom’s hand to climb the mounting block, wearing Lady Campbell’s riding habit.

“Bonnie is a steady mare, Miss, she’ll not lead you a dance.”

Another groom held the mare’s head as Elizabeth gripped the pommel and sat down, then she turned and hooked her knee across the side-saddle. It had been about five years since she had sat on a horse. She took the reins, her heart pounding.

Angela’s heavy velvet riding habit was scarlet, it was not a colour Elizabeth usually wore, and it was tight about her waist and the bust. She gripped the reins in one hand for a moment to adjust the thin veil adorning the small hat which had accompanied the habit. The mare side-stepped and Elizabeth grabbed at the rein, which had the mare lifting its head and whinnying in disgust.

Elizabeth balanced her grip on the reins, and steadied the mare. It shook out its mane.

The mare was chestnut, and tall, taller than any horse Elizabeth had ridden before, but the groom had told her there were no smaller animals in the stalls. It was Bonnie or nothing. All Marcus’s horses were bred for the hunt, built for speed and the agility to jump fences and walls.

“Thank you, Johnson.” Marcus turned his black stallion and spoke to the groom who’d helped Elizabeth. “You have kept the stable well. You have some well bred animals here.”

“We have kept it so, Your Grace, not knowing when the family may visit. The workhorses are bred from our own stock as well as the horses for the hunt. Titan, the stallion you are riding, has fathered two sturdy foals this year. We turn a reasonable profit from the breeding, as I am sure you are aware.”

“Certainly, Johnson. I will catch up with you a little later if I may? I would like to see how you run the place. It would be interesting to look at your breeding plan and see the animals.”

“Indeed, Your Grace. I’d be glad to show you.” The man put his thumb and forefinger to the fringe of his curly hair and tugged it, leaning forward a little.

Marcus turned his horse and then he leaned across and tapped a hand against the backside of hers, gently setting it into a walk without her bidding. “Come, Elizabeth. As you are rusty we shall take it steady while you find your seat. Keep your mare to a walk until we are off the drive.”

She rocked her bottom forward urging the animal on. She had not remembered how high up riding on horseback felt or how vulnerable it felt when she tried to keep her balance through the grip of one knee.

She held the reins awkwardly and she was certain if she tried to steer it the mare would not turn, but fortunately it wished to follow Marcus’s stallion and so it did.

She looked at his easy posture with envy, he must ride daily, his weight seemed light and balanced on his stirrups, she would swear he could control his horse without reins.

“Bonnie is several hands taller than the pony I rode as a child.” She spoke only to try to dispel her nerves..

Marcus gripped the back of his saddle and half turned to look back at her.

She continued to speak, as fear twisted through her stomach. “She is beautiful. I have never ridden an animal as fine as this before. We had one pony when I was young, and when my brother grew out of riding her he used father’s hunter, but I never progressed. Father would not allow me to ride Major. He said two masters for one horse were enough. But we have not had horses for several years.”

He smiled, then turned around again, looking ahead. “Your seat is good regardless. Just just grip the reins a little further up and tighten your hold or the animal will not know you’re in control.”

Elizabeth laughed. “Then that is the two of us.”

His head turned as he laughed too. It was a sound of pleasure she had not heard from his lips in weeks.

“Should we not have brought a groom with us, Marcus?” She knew well enough that they should not be alone.

He looked back and smiled again, then laughed “Is it not a little late for you to demur?”

“I was thinking of appearances.”

“Of my guests? They are all out, or busy, they’ll not know we left the groom behind.”

Yet, if they did, bearing in mind his reputation, hers would be ruined. But she had ruined it weeks ago, it was just that no one knew. “Do you come to your estate often?” She changed the subject to free her mind from the memory.

“No, never.” He did not turn this time.

“I thought… It is beautiful, why would you not come?” Her voice lifted high. “Do you not like it here?”

“I am by nature a town man, Elizabeth. I have no interest in the pursuits of the country.”

“Is that why you are not hunting?”

“I am not hunting because it would be unfair to ask you to join me here and then leave you alone.”

“You said that you brought me here only to keep me away from others. In that case I see no reason why you are under any obligation to entertain me.”

“I am not the harsh man you believe me to be, Elizabeth.”

She laughed. It erupted in a mocking sound. “Really? I had come to the conclusion you are as cold as stone.”

He surprised her when he merely laughed, and his laughter was not harsh. “Well Jason may agree, he has often said I lack a heart.”

Clearly he was not in a mood to argue with her.

He turned his horse onto the drive leading away from the house and rose into a trot. Her mare followed and she bounced in the saddle, until her knee obtained a better grip and then she lifted, and fell in the rhythm he set.

“You are in a bright mood today.” She stated.

He looked back and merely smiled again.

Perhaps it would be pleasurable to spend some time with him if he was in a good mood. Again the memory of the hours when they had sought each other out in ballrooms, ignoring everyone else slipped through her mind. She still loved that man.

Yet thinking of that only reminded her of her foolishness and that made her wish to stab at his ego for revenge, with words, but it was no fun if he would not  bite back.

To be continued…

~

If you cannot wait until next week for more of Jane Lark’s writing there’s plenty to read right now 😀 And if you have read them all already, then there’s another treat on its way, on the 29th January you can begin devouring, The Dangerous Love of a Rogue

Dangerous Love of a rogue from Zoe

To read the Marlow Intrigues series, you can start anywhere, but the actual order is listed below ~ and click like to follow my Facebook Page not to miss anything…

 

CompleteCollecvtion_Facebook_Advertv5

 

The Lost Love of Soldier ~ The Prequel #1 ~ A Christmas Elopement began it all ~ The paperback would be a  lovely stocking filler 😉 

The Illicit Love of a Courtesan #2 

Capturing The Love of an Earl ~ A Free Novella #2.5 

The Passionate Love of a Rake #3 

The Desperate Love of a Lord ~ A second Free Novella #3.5 

The Scandalous Love of a Lord #4

The Dangerous Love of a Rogue #5

Jane’s books can be ordered from most booksellers in paperback and, yes, there are more to come  🙂 

IMG_4415

Go to the index

For

  • the story of the real courtesan who inspired                          The Illicit Love of a Courtesan,
  • another free short story, about characters from book #2,      A Lord’s Scandalous Love,
  • the prequel excerpts for book #3                                           The Scandalous Love of a Duke

Jane Lark is a writer of authentic, passionate and emotional Historical and New Adult Romance stories, and the author of a No.1 bestselling Historical Romance novel in America, ‘The Illicit Love of a Courtesan’.Click here to find out more about Jane’s books, and see Jane’s website www.janelark.co.uk to learn more about Jane. Or click  ‘like’ on Jane’s Facebook  page to see photo’s and learn historical facts from the Georgian, Regency and Victorian eras, which Jane publishes there. You can also follow Jane on twitter at @janelark