Saved by Scandal

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Authors: Barbara Metzger

Tags: #Regency Romance

BOOK: Saved by Scandal
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Table of Contents

Copyright

Saved by Scandal

Dedication

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Chapter Eleven

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-One

Chapter Twenty-Two

Chapter Twenty-Three

Chapter Twenty-Four

Chapter Twenty-Five

Chapter Twenty-Six

Chapter Twenty-Seven

Chapter Twenty-Eight

Chapter Twenty-Nine

Chapter Thirty

Saved by Scandal

By Barbara Metzger

 

Copyright 2012 by Barbara Metzger

Cover image courtesy of
BIBLIOTHÈQUE DES ARTS DÉCORATIFS

Cover Copyright 2012 by Ginny Glass
and Untreed Reads Publishing

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, 2000.

 

This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be resold, reproduced or transmitted by any means in any form or given away to other people without specific permission from the author and/or publisher. 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. Any resemblance to the living or dead is entirely coincidental.

 

Also by Barbara Metzger and Untreed Reads Publishing

A Loyal Companion

A Suspicious Affair

A Worthy Wife

An Angel for the Earl

An Enchanted Affair

Cupboard Kisses

Father Christmas

Lady Whilton’s Wedding

Miss Treadwell’s Talent

Rake’s Ransom

The Duel

The House of Cards Trilogy:

Ace of Hearts

Jack of Clubs

Queen of Diamonds

Wedded Bliss

 

http://www.untreedreads.com

Saved by Scandal

By Barbara Metzger

To the second Siegal sibling, Jillian Rose. Hooray!

Chapter One

Whoever said that it was better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all had not consulted Galen Woodrow, Lord Woodbridge. How, the viscount wondered, could he be better off with his heart wrenched out of his chest, carved into tiny pieces, then ground under the dainty feet of Lady Floria Cleary, in full view of the entire
ton
?
Twice. The conscienceless witch had jilted him. Again.

The first time two years ago hadn’t been so bad. He’d been a mere four-and-twenty, and relieved to have his bachelorhood extended a few years while Florrie matured. Bridal nerves, her father had said. Wanting to enjoy a few more Seasons as an Incomparable, Galen had supposed, without being tied to a husband who criticized her flirting, lowered necklines, and cropped curls. At eighteen, Florrie hadn’t been ready for marriage or motherhood, and Galen had gladly accepted the note she’d sent a week before the ceremony. The viscount had also patiently accepted the gibes and the gossip of the Polite World—for two weeks. Then, since he was free of the immediate entanglement if not the engagement, Galen joined the forces against Napoleon. He served on the Peninsula until a minor injury sent him home, at which his father insisted the marriage go forth, with heirs forthcoming, to ensure the succession. One hint of Cousin Harold as Duke of Woburton had been enough to have His Grace calling the banns. Galen might be a viscount in his own right, inheriting from a deceased uncle, but he still had to answer the duke’s call.

But this time, this very morning, Lady Floria hadn’t developed cold feet. She simply had a cold heart. She had purposely wounded him worse than any French artillery shell. Worse than a saber gash. Worse than being blown off his horse, trampled, and left for dead, which Galen was wishing he was. This time Florrie had left him at the altar, and not just any altar, but the vast, echoing altar of St. George’s. At least three hundred pairs of laughing eyes had been fixed on him, with Lud knew how many lesser folk watching from outside. The uninvited spectators, at least, caught a glimpse of his bride, which was more than Galen did. She’d arrived in her father’s coach, all strewn with ribbons and roses, and stepped out to cheers and well-wishes. She’d waved, they told him after, right before climbing into Sir Henry Lytell’s barouche. Then she’d tossed her wedding bouquet to a dressmaker’s apprentice come to gape at her betters.

Better, hah! The little seamstress would not have run off with a rake of the first order, a fortune hunter, a gambler, a wife-stealing worm.

Florrie’s father had come rushing into the church, white-faced and trembling. “You have to go after her!” he shouted on his way down the white-carpeted aisle, loudly enough for everyone to hear, if they hadn’t already been informed of the bride’s taking white-gowned wing by those nearer the doors.

“Go after her?” Galen had shouted back. “Why, so I can strangle her? Let Lytell do it when he is tired of her fits and starts. I would not marry your daughter, my lord, if she were the last woman on earth.”

Lord Cleary had gone after the jade himself, but not before Galen’s father had made him swear to return the settlements, but not reclaim the dowry, unless he wished a breach-of-promise lawsuit. Trust His Grace to worry about pounds and pence when his son’s pride was being put to the stake.

Galen’s sister Harriet, meanwhile, was setting up a screech that now she had no one to present her next Season. One of the other bridesmaids thought that if she swooned into
Galen’s arms, he might choose her to take Lady Floria’s place. Galen let her fall. The duke stormed out of the church, dragging Harriet with him, declaring London no place for a well-mannered chit. He was returning to the country, His Grace declared, to his orchids and his books. Harriet was turning purple. The bridesmaid was moaning, the bishop was clucking his tongue, and everyone else was laughing. Everyone except Galen, of course. Dredging forth what dignity he had left, the viscount had raised one arm and addressed the congregation, those who had not rushed out to spread the word to the newspapers, the clubs, the four corners of the kingdom.

“My friends,” he had lied. He despised every one of the snickering, snorting dastards. “I am certain Lord Cleary would want me to repeat his invitation to the wedding breakfast. The food would only go to waste otherwise, and the drink. So go, and help me celebrate my lucky escape.”

He had no intention of facing the grinning crowds, of course, but in the bustle of emptying the church, Galen was able to flee out the side door and flag down a passing hackney carriage. He ducked beneath the coach windows till they were well away.

The staff at Woburton House in Grosvenor Square had all been sent to Lord Cleary’s to help with the reception, which suited the viscount just fine. Laughter was bad, pity was worse. He barricaded himself in the library, locking the door behind. Now he was alone with three good friends: brandy, Burgundy, and blue ruin. Galen fully intended to enjoy their company to the last drop. Better a bottle than a bitch for a bride.

The realization that he felt more anger than grief was a good sign, Galen decided after the second glass. Perhaps his heart was not broken after all. It wasn’t as if he had any grand
amour
for Florrie; he was just accustomed to thinking of her as his, his to protect from importunate puppies, his to tease out of the sullens, his to buy trinkets for, and his to escort to innumerable dull parties. More like a burden than a
bride, he reflected. The occasional kisses they’d shared were more pleasant than passionate, but he’d accepted that too, since a man did not want his wife being so warm-blooded she’d worry him. Florrie was a lady, not a ladybird, he’d thought. And she was beautiful, with her auburn curls and green eyes and luscious figure. He’d been proud to have her on his arm, once she outgrew the spots and stubby legs of girlhood, and proud that other men seemed to admire her. He didn’t have to pretend to play the love-sick suitor, not with so many mooncalves worshiping at her feet. Or so he’d thought.

They’d known each other since the cradle, and had been engaged nearly that long. Their fathers had decided on the match: a duke’s son, an earl’s daughter, fortune to fortune. What could be more suitable? Galen had been raised knowing his duty, knowing Florrie was his fate. He’d assumed she was as resigned. Obviously, he’d been wrong, again. Well, good riddance to the heartless harlot. She would have made a wretched mother to his children anyway, with her need to enjoy the newest gossip, the newest fashions, the newest flirtations. Why, staying home by the fireside of an evening was torture for Florrie—and for anyone unfortunate enough to be sharing such quiet entertainment. Galen tried to recall if he’d ever seen her read anything besides a ladies’ magazine. He gazed around the book-filled room, thinking of all the hours he’d spent here, lost in the wonder of words.

He raised his glass—his fourth or fifth—to the portrait of the elegant lady hanging over the mantel. Her Grace had been gone for ten years, and Galen missed her still. His mother had been a governess before becoming a duchess, so she was wise in the ways of young females and would have seen Florrie for a strumpet long since, and saved him from making such a fool of himself. Damn, but now he was weeping for his mama like a homesick, runny-nosed schoolboy. His mother could not help him now. No one could. He was going to be grist for the gossip mills.

So his heart was intact. So what? He’d never trust it to another woman. Cousin Harold would have to provide the heirs, if the nodcock could figure out how. And Galen would…what? He would not dare show his face outside this door. He couldn’t go to White’s or his other usual haunts, and he couldn’t go abroad, not with the war on. The family had property in Jamaica, but Galen got seasick. He could rejoin his army unit, but that would likely send his father into apoplexy. Besides, word of Florrie’s ignominious abandonment would reach Spain with the next despatches. He’d rather put a bullet through his head and get it over with, than fall victim to his fellow officers’ merciless teasing. No, he would not give Florrie the satisfaction of knowing he was so distraught he’d done himself in. Besides, Galen Woodrow was not a coward. A few more glasses and he might even be brave enough to face his own valet.

No one died of a broken heart, and no one died of embarrassment, the viscount told himself. In a few days, some other scandal would arise, and his wedding-day debacle would be relegated to a footnote to the Season. “Oh, yes,” he could hear the dowagers’ tongues clacking, “that was the year Lady Floria left young Woodbridge at the church door, right before Lady Witherspoon married her butler and Lord Hammermill gambled away his wife’s dowry.” Besides, with the Season soon ending, the
haute monde
would be leaving Town for their country properties or the seashore. They’d have better things to think about than Galen’s ghastly affairs.

Affairs—that was it! Amazing what brilliant ideas lurked in the bottom of a bottle. He’d cause a scandal, that’s what—a major, epically proportioned scandal, one to make Florrie’s defection seem like a schoolgirl’s mischief. No one would pity him, and no one would wonder what he was so lacking that his bride chose a rake over a respectable marriage.

His idea would work, Galen just knew it would, if he could get Mademoiselle Margot Montclaire to cooperate.

Miss Montclaire was the current comet of the theater world, the entr’acte singer at Drury Lane. She was the daughter of Simone Montclaire, a famous French chanteuse of the previous generation who’d run off to Italy with her lover. Galen didn’t care who fathered the chit or who trained her to sing like a husky nightingale. He simply wanted Miss Montclaire, to help stir the scandal broth, of course.

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