Authors: Brenda Hiatt
Tags: #to-read, #regency romance, #Historical Romance
“I fear that once all the repairs are made, there’ll be little left of what I received for my father’s antiquities,” she said before Harry could reply. “I’ve no doubt that in time, and with Harry’s help, Moorside will become more profitable, but as of yet—”
“Actually, I believe a house in Town sounds like an excellent idea,” Harry broke in. “Only for the winter, of course, after which we must have an eye for Xena’s estate.”
“
Our
estate,” she quietly corrected him, wondering why on earth he should suggest such a thing when it was clearly beyond their means.
But Harry simply sent a quelling look at Peter and changed the subject by asking about plans for the morrow, Christmas Day.
*
*
*
Harry had been bursting to share Peter’s amazing revelation with Xena all evening. Not in front of all the others, however. No, he wanted to experience Xena’s surprise—and rapture—in private.
He’d mentally rehearsed how he wanted to deliver the news, but the very moment they were alone in the luxurious bedchamber that was to be theirs through the New Year, Xena turned to him with the same concerned frown she’d worn earlier.
“What were you thinking, Harry, to say we might take a house in London for the winter? You know full well we can’t afford such a thing, though of course I hope we might someday.”
Smiling broadly, Harry pulled her against him, his speech forgotten. “As it happens, my love, we can. Peter shared some rather remarkable news with me this afternoon when we were shut up all that time. Believe it or not, you see before you a wealthy man.”
Her expression turned to one of blank astonishment. “What? How—? I don’t understand.”
“Neither did I, but Pete carefully explained it all. Even then, I refused to believe him until he produced the account books he’d brought along for that purpose. It then took us all afternoon to work through the details, which is why I was unable to rejoin you until you were dressing for dinner. Have I mentioned how much I like that dress, by the way?”
She narrowed her eyes at him. “You are stalling now. Please tell me the whole at once, sir.”
“Not stalling, merely enjoying the moment.” He dropped a quick kiss on her nose. “Very well, to put it briefly—when I cashed out, I gave some of that money to Peter to manage for me, as he has rather a remarkable knack with investments. I had no idea
how
remarkable, however! Heedless scoundrel that I was at the time, I ran through the remainder in less than a twelvemonth and demanded the rest back from him. He returned what I’d originally entrusted to him, allowing me to believe that was all, when in fact he had already more than doubled my money.”
Xena’s eyes widened. “Do you mean he continued to invest the remainder without your knowledge?”
He nodded. “Over the past three years, he has managed to parlay it into a tidy little fortune. Nowhere near his own, of course, as he had far less to work with, but quite respectable nonetheless. You’ll now have no need to sell off any more of your father’s collection for the sake of your estate.”
“Our estate,” she repeated, but now she was smiling. “Do you realize what this means, Harry? We really will be able to make Moorside profitable and in far less time than I’d imagined. And we will be able to send Theo to any school we wish in a few years…and to Oxford after that.”
Thoroughly enjoying her mounting excitement, he decided to increase it further. “That is not even the best of it, my dear. Peter has agreed to continue investing a good portion for our future and Theo’s, but meanwhile we should have enough to do all you’d like for Moorside…and to travel, as well. I thought we might give Theo the sort of experiences that helped his mother grow into the remarkable woman she is now.”
Xena caught her breath, her eyes positively shining now. “Truly, Harry?”
“Truly. Consider it my Christmas gift to you, my love—the one thing I know you’ve longed for above all these past few years: the opportunity for more adventures.”
“You know me so very well, Harry. I had no idea I’d married such a gallant scoundrel.”
Pleased by her description, and even more pleased by the joy reflected in her face, he lowered his lips to hers. “I certainly intend to do my best.”
* * *
Keep reading for a sneak peek at
Scandalous Virtue
, the delicious prequel to
The Saint of Seven Dials
series!
* * *
C
HAPTER
1
London—Late September, 1814
Rain beat upon expensively paned windows while in the flickering candlelight within, the boisterous clamor hovered in volume between battlefield and bordello. John Jefferson Ashecroft, equally at home in either setting, relished the wild abandon of this latest celebration of his recent, unexpected elevation to the lofty title of Marquis of Foxhaven.
Lord Peter Northrup, fourth son of the Duke of Marland and his oldest friend, clearly did not share his enthusiasm. "Three near-orgies in three nights is a bit much, don't you think, Jack?" he whispered. "Thought you valued your grandfather's memory. This would having him rolling in his grave!"
"Mausoleum, dear boy. Nothing so crude as earth for a Foxhaven resting place! But the old fellow's gone now, so there's no one to care what I do with my good fortune—or no one whose opinion matters." Jack turned from the card table and his advisor.
"Here, Polly, lass! Bring me another pint and another kiss!" he called out to a passing maidservant.
Giggling, the girl complied, and Jack slid a hand up her skirts to sweeten his kiss. "Milor' you are a handful!" Polly informed him, wrinkling her freckled nose and winking.
Jack chuckled. "Nay, you're the handful, and a pretty one at that! What say you and I escape upstairs for half an hour? My guests will never miss me." He swept a glance about the sumptuous drawing room at the dicing, dallying throng there assembled. The marked absence of ladies—of the Quality, at any rate—gave evidence that this particular gathering lacked Society's blessing.
Then he caught Lord Peter's eye. "What? Surely you don't begrudge me a bit of revelry after the past few years of privation?"
Lord Peter snorted. "Privation? I don't recall that a light purse ever kept you from revelry in the past. Now you simply have the means to speed yourself to perdition on greased wheels."
"Ah, you have no idea how I suffered during the war," Jack informed his friend with a melodramatic sigh. "Wine, women and song were hard to come by. The sleep I lost in the search . . . ! Ask Harry over there. He has no fault to find with my present lifestyle."
"No surprise there." Lord Peter turned a judicious eye on Jack's second-oldest friend, who was enthusiastically tossing dice with his one remaining arm. The wars had left his other sleeve empty. "Harry always lived for the moment, even before his injury turned him bitter. Now he just wants company on his journey to hell."
Jack shrugged. "And perhaps I'll oblige him. He saved my life in Spain, after all."
"And you his—twice," Lord Peter reminded him. "I'd say the score's more than even."
"Polly, go ahead and take Ferny another bottle," suggested Jack, nodding toward the gesturing Lord Fernworth across the noisy room. "Perhaps by the time you return, Peter will be done with his moralizing. You're quite the spoilsport tonight, you know," he informed his friend when the wench had gone. "I can't think you accepted my invitation merely to cluck over my shortcomings like some brightly colored mother hen."
Lord Peter smoothed his gold and scarlet waistcoat. "I suppose I am acting the prig tonight. Sorry, Jack. It's just—"
A forceful throat-clearing at his elbow interrupted him. The thin, nondescript butler Jack had hired earlier that week announced, "A Mr. Havershaw, milord." The throat-clearer, just as thin as the butler but much taller, hovered behind, scowling.
He'd really have to see about a new butler, thought Jack resignedly. This Carp, or Crump, or whatever his name was, didn't seem to have a grasp of the proper procedures at all.
"Ah, yes, Mr. Havershaw," said Jack with forced cordiality while looking daggers at his oblivious butler. "I do apologize for not keeping our appointment last Wednesday. The press of business, you see—"
"Yes, I certainly do see, my lord." Mr. Havershaw scoured the room with a sour glance. "I would not have presumed to come to you, but some of these papers are quite pressing. If I could have half an hour of your time in the library?"
Jack stared at the man in disbelief. "Now?" He knew that Havershaw had enjoyed an unusually privileged position as both his grandfather's steward and lifelong friend, but this was absurd.
"If you'd be so kind, my lord. I'll not keep you long from your . . . guests."
Aware that Lord Peter, along with a growing number of the revelers, were regarding him with interest, Jack finally shrugged. "I may as well get it over, I suppose. Peter, see that no one's glass goes empty, will you? My staff leaves a bit to be desired. All right, Havershaw, the library's this way."
Havershaw headed for the hallway. "I know, my lord."
How did the man manage to make those two words sound like an insult? He was the marquis now, by God, however unprepared for the role he might be.
Once in the library, he turned to face his nemesis. "I trust you'll make this quick, Mr. Havershaw. It's most irregular for a host to abandon his guests in this manner."
He'd meant to say something far more cutting, but various childhood memories of Havershaw had crowded back. With them came an ingrained respect he was amazed could still constrain him. Other than his grandfather and, more recently, the Duke of Wellington, Jack had never cared about pleasing anyone but himself.
Lord Geoffrey, his spendthrift, gamester father and Lord Foxhaven's second son, had died when Jack was but eight. Two years later, his mother married Sir Findlay Branch, a wealthy, stuffy baronet whose apparent mission in life was to eradicate Lord Geoffrey's influences from his son.
Jack had responded with rebellion, at first subtle, then open, and finally flagrant. Before he reached eleven he was shipped off to boarding school and forbidden to return until he reformed. As a result, he spent all holidays at Fox Manor, where old Lord Foxhaven had become the only stabilizing influence in his early life. There, Mr. Havershaw had been an imposing, authoritative presence, second only to his grandfather in the boy's eyes.
"As I said, my lord, this should take but half an hour, perhaps less," said that former object of awe. Opening the satchel he carried, he pulled out a thick sheaf of papers. "There will be much more for you to go over when you finally see your way clear to visit Fox Manor, of course, but these documents are the most pressing."
Jack eyed the stack doubtfully. "I thought I'd signed all the necessary papers after Uncle Luther's funeral."
"Those to ensure your succession to the title and estates, yes. But Foxhaven encompasses a great many enterprises, some of which have been too long neglected due to your uncle's ill health."
Uncle Luther's ill health. If Jack had known when his grandfather died last spring that his uncle's health was so poorly, he might have been more prepared for the responsibilities which had descended upon him three weeks since. But no one had seen fit to tell him.
Not that he'd ever inquired.
Jack had sold out of the Army a scant six weeks after his grandfather's death—as soon as the public's enthusiasm for the war heroes began to wane, in fact—and left for Paris, where a warm welcome still awaited. He'd nearly exhausted both his funds and the goodwill of those willing to supplement them by the time he returned to England in late August. Though he wouldn't have wished poor old Luther underground, his timing had been Jack's financial salvation.
"Very well, let's get it over with. I imagine I'll feel even less like dealing with all of this in the morning." He hadn't drunk much yet, by his standards, but since his succession not a morning had come that hadn't found him cripplingly hung over. There was no particular reason to believe tomorrow would be any different.
Havershaw managed a chilly smile. "Excellent, my lord. If you would turn your attention to this? It deals with certain investments in Portugal . . ."
Forty minutes later, Jack was heartily regretting his compliance. Not that the various business matters put before him were particularly incomprehensible, or even quite as boring as he'd expected. But being dumped headfirst into Foxhaven business made him far too cognizant of the responsibilities now facing him—responsibilities he had neither the ability nor inclination to take on. Why, the very thought of Jack Ashecroft, family outcast, attempting to play the respectable nobleman was thoroughly laughable. Not that he was laughing at the moment.
He yawned.
Mr. Havershaw regarded him through narrowed eyes. "I believe that will do for this evening, my lord. There is one last thing, however, that you may wish to have now." He pulled a sealed envelope from the satchel. "A personal letter from your grandfather, to be delivered to you in the event of your uncle's death without issue."
Jack took the envelope gingerly, turning it over in his fingers several times before breaking the seal—the seal that was now his. Odd feeling, that.
The letter was but a single sheet, its brief contents scrawled in his grandfather's strong but careless hand.
My dear Jack,
If you are reading this, you have succeeded to my title and, knowing your attention to family matters, most likely unexpectedly. Rest assured that to me this event was neither unexpected, nor at all undesirable. Luther, while an estimable man, has the strength of neither character nor constitution to effectively carry Foxhaven into the future. You have. In fact, you have it in you to become the finest lord Foxhaven has known in six generations—if you can find it in you to put aside your ongoing pursuit of pleasure to tap into that inner strength I have long observed and, at whiles, attempted to nurture. It is up to you, Jack, to bring Foxhaven into its own by coming into your own. Consider it my dying request.