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Authors: Anne Gracie

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BOOK: The Spring Bride
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She shivered deliciously and turned in his arms, smiling at him with sleepy, loving eyes. She kissed him. “Good morning, my darling.” She stretched. “I feel wonnnderful. So that's what you meant by
‘
all the pleasures prove
'?”

“No.” He gave her a slow smile. “That was just the beginning. It gets better.” And he drew her back to the big, wide, rumpled bed.

Epilogue

“Tis too much!” she added, “by far too much. I do not deserve it. Oh! why is not everybody as happy?”

—JANE AUSTEN,
PRIDE AND PREJUDICE

T
he May Day fete at Wainfleet was a huge success. People had come from miles around—villagers, tenants and all kinds of people not connected with Wainfleet. All of Jane's family was there, including her newfound grandmother, a group of Zach's friends from school, even some members of the literary society.

To Winnie's delight, she'd been crowned Queen of the May and had led the dancing. There was maypole dancing, and folk dancing, and competitions of all sorts, from baking competitions to shooting and tug-o'-war, and wrestling. Zach had provided a feast with a whole ox and several sheep roasted on a spit, barrels of ale and cider, platters of roasted vegetables and mounds of bread, followed by cakes and sweet pies of every sort.

A bonfire was built that lasted through the night, and as evening fell, a gypsy band had appeared and there was music and dancing and fortunes told and trinkets bought and sold. Zach had introduced his wife to his gypsy friends; they would always be welcome at Wainfleet, he told them.

The following night, there was just Zach and Jane and their immediate family seated around the big oaken table in the dining hall at Wainfleet, and Lady Beatrice was educating the
newer members of the family in the history of the Chance sisters—according to her.

“The Chantry gels, you see, being orphaned, were taken in by my dear half sister Grizelda—”

“Imaginary half sister,” Max murmured
sotto voce
to Zach. “All this is quite imaginary.”

Zach grinned. He liked the old lady, and it was good to know he wasn't the only focus of her mischievous tongue.

“Grizelda, of course, was married to a
marchese
, Alfonzo di Chancelotto—”

“Angelo,” Max corrected her dryly.

“Of course, dear boy, I always get those Italian names confused.”

“Venetian.”

“Precisely.” She gave him a beady glare and continued, “So when Abby and Jane's widowed mother passed away in the sanitorium in Italy—”

“Not Venice?” Max asked innocently.

“No, dear, in the mountains of Switzerland—the Italian-speaking part,” she added before Max could interject again. “So dear Grizelda and her husband decided to take in the girls and raise them as their own dear daughters.”

“Along with dear Damaris, I presume,” Freddy said.

“And Daisy,” Damaris added, giggling.

“Oh, she was only discovered later, sadly.” Lady Beatrice had to account for Daisy's Cockney accent somehow.

“I never went to Italy,” Daisy said firmly. She didn't approve of these flights of the old lady's fancy. “And I never been to Venice either.”

“But we'll take you there one day, Daisy darling,” Abby told her. “You should see it, so beautiful with the houses rising out of the water.”

“I been in houses like that,” Daisy said, unimpressed. “It's called rising damp.”

Abby laughed. “No, they're beautiful, and not at all damp, you'll see.”

“And there are pigs,” Freddy added. “The famous experimental Chinese swimming pigs of Venice—oof!” as Damaris elbowed him in the stomach. He gave her an injured look. “What? My father l
oves
those pigs.”

“Nonsense,” his loving wife told him. “He's never even seen them, and he won't because they don't exist.”

“Ah, but he
dreams
of them,” Freddy said soulfully, and they all laughed.

The newly proclaimed Earl of Wainfleet slipped his arm around the waist of his countess, and said, “Well, delightful as this gathering is, my wife and I need to . . .”

“Inspect the grounds,” Jane said.

“At night?” Lady Beatrice said.

Zach smiled. “There's a full moon out there and it needs attending to.”

“Ahh.” The old lady nodded.

At the mention of a full moon, Abby and Max, Freddy and Damaris and Cecily and Michael all decided they needed to inspect the grounds too, different parts of the grounds, attending to the moon.

Lady Beatrice and Lady Dalrymple looked at those who remained, Daisy and Flynn. “Well,” Lady Beatrice said, “are you two going or staying?”

“Staying,” Daisy said. “The country gives me the creeps at night. Anyone for cards?”

Patrick Flynn gave her a dry look and rose to his feet. “I might as well walk the dog, then. Come on Caesar or RosePetal or whatever your name is, we can bay at the moon together.”

*   *   *

J
ane and Zach strolled slowly through the gardens, stopping to kiss every few steps. The scent of roses, freesias, lilac and a hundred spring blossoms filled the air. Overhead a full, fat golden moon hung in the sky, blessing all beneath it. They were home, both of them.

“Happy?” Zach murmured.

Jane gave a blissful sigh. “More than I ever believed possible.”

“Me too.” He tightened his hold on the woman nestled against his heart, the woman who'd made dreams he'd never dared to dream come true. Bathed in moonlight, they
kissed.

Read on for a special excerpt from the first Chance Sisters Romance

The Autumn Bride

Available now from
Berkley Sensation!

 

“Give a girl an education and introduce her properly into the world, and ten to one but she has the means of settling well, without further expense to anybody.”

—JANE AUSTEN,
MANSFIELD PARK

London, August 1816

S
he was running late. Abigail Chantry quickened her pace. Her half day off, and though it was damp and squally and cold outside, she'd taken herself off as usual to continue her explorations of London.

Truth to tell, if her employers had lived in the bleakest, most remote part of the Yorkshire moors, Abby would still have removed herself from their vicinity on her fortnightly half day off. Mrs. Mason believed a governess should be useful as well as educational, and saw no reason why, on Miss Chantry's half day, she should not do a little mending for her employer or, better still, take the children with her on her outings.

What need did a governess, especially one who was orphaned, after all, have for free time?

Miss Chantry did not agree. So, rain, hail or snow, she absented herself from the Mason house the moment after the clock in the hall chimed noon, returning a few minutes before six to resume her duties.

Having spent most of her life in the country, Abby was loving her forays into this enormous city, discovering all kinds of
wonderful places. Last week she'd found a bookshop where the owner let her read to her heart's content without pressuring her to buy—only the secondhand books, of course, not the new ones whose pages had not yet been cut. She'd returned there today, and had become so lost in a story—
The Monk
, deliciously bloodcurdling—that now she was running late.

If she returned even one minute after six, Mr. Mason would dock her wages by a full day. It had happened before, and no amount of argument would budge him.

She turned the corner into the Masons' street and glanced up at the nearby clock tower. Oh, Lord, three minutes to go. Abby picked up speed.

“Abby Chantry?” A young woman, a maidservant by her garments, limped toward her with an uneven gait. She'd been waiting opposite the Masons' house.

Abby eyed her warily. “Yes?” Apart from her employers, Abby knew no one in London. And nobody here called her Abby.

“I got a message from your sister.” She spoke with a rough London accent.

Her mouth was swollen and a large bruise darkened her cheek.

“My
sister
?” It wasn't possible. Jane was hundreds of miles away. She'd just left the Pillbury Home for the Daughters of Distressed Gentlewomen, near Cheltenham, to take up a position as companion to a vicar's mother in Hereford.

“She told me where to find you. I'm Daisy.” The girl took Abby's arm and tugged. “You gotta come with me. Jane's in trouble—bad trouble—and you gotta come now.”

Abby hesitated. The girl's bruised and battered face didn't inspire confidence. The newspapers were full of the terrible crimes that took place in London: murders, white slavery, pickpockets and burglars. She'd even read about people hit over the head in a dark alley, stripped and left for dead, just for their clothing.

But Abby wore a dull gray homemade dress that practically shouted “governess.” She couldn't imagine anyone wanting to steal it. And she was thin, plain and clever, rather than pretty, which ruled out white slavers. She had no money or valuables and only knew the Mason family, so could hardly inspire murder.

And this girl knew her name,
and
Jane's. And Abby's address. Abby glanced at the clock. A minute to six. But what did the loss of a day's wages matter when her little sister was in London and in trouble? Jane was not yet eighteen.

“All right, I'll come.” She gave in to Daisy's tugging and they hurried down the street. “Where is my sister?”

“In a bad place,” Daisy said cryptically, stumping rapidly along with an ungainly gait. Crippled, or the result of the beating she'd received? Abby wondered. Whichever, it didn't seem to slow her down.

“What kind of bad place?”

Daisy didn't respond. She led Abby through a maze of streets, cutting down back alleys and leading her into an area Abby had never felt tempted to explore.

“What kind of bad place?” Abby repeated.

Daisy glanced at her sideways. “A broffel, miss!”

“A broff—” Abby broke off, horrified. “You mean a
brothel
?”

“That's what I said, miss, a broffel.”

Abby stopped dead. “Then it can't be my sister; Jane would never enter a brothel.” But even as she said it, she knew the truth.
Her baby sister was in a brothel
.

“Yeah, well, she didn't have no choice in the matter. She come 'ere straight from some orphanage in the country. Drugged, she was. She give me your address and arst me to get a message to you. And we ain't got much time, so hurry.”

Numb with shock, and sick at the thought, Abby allowed herself to be led down side streets and alleyways. Jane was supposed to be in a vicarage in Hereford. How could she possibly have ended up in a London brothel?
Drugged, she was.
How?

They turned into a narrow street lined with shabby houses, and slowed.

“That's it.” Daisy gestured to a tall house, a good deal smarter than the others, with a freshly painted black door and windows curtained in crimson fabric. The ground-story windows were unbarred, but the higher ones were all barred. To keep people in, rather than out.
She didn't have no choice
.

As she stared up, she saw a movement at one of the highest windows. A glimpse of golden hair, two palms pressed against the glass framing a young woman the image of Abby's mother.

Abby hadn't seen her sister for six years, but there was no doubt in her heart.
Jane!

Someone pulled Jane back out of sight and closed the curtains.

Her sister was a prisoner in that house. Abby hurried across the street and started up the front stairs. Daisy grabbed her by the skirt and pulled her backward.

“No, miss!” Her voice held so much urgency it stopped Abby dead. “If you go in there arstin' questions now, it'll only make things worse. You might never see your sister again!”

“Then I'll fetch a constable or a magistrate to sort out this matter.”

“Do that and for certain sure you'll never see your sister again. He—Mort—him who owns this place and all the girls in it now”—she jerked her chin toward the upstairs—“he pays blokes to warn him. Before any constable can get here your sister will be long gone.”

Abby felt sick. “But what can I do? I must get her out of there.”

“I told you, miss—we got a plan.” The sound of carriage wheels rattling down the street made Daisy look around. She paled. “Oh, my Gawd, that's Mort comin'! Go quick! If he catches me talkin' to anyone outside he'll give me another frashing! I'll meet you in the alley behind the house. Sixth house along. Big spiked gate. Go!” She gave Abby a shove and fled down the side steps to the basement area.

Abby, still in shock—Jane, in a brothel!—hurried away down the street, forcing herself not to look back, even when she heard the carriage draw to a halt outside the house with the black door.

She turned the corner and found the alley Daisy had described running behind the houses. It was narrow, gloomy and strewn with filth of all kinds, the cobbles slimy, the damp stench vile. Abby covered her nose and grimly picked her way along the lane. From time to time something squelched underfoot but she didn't look down. Whatever she'd stepped in, she didn't want to know. All that mattered was getting Jane out of that place.

She counted along the houses and came to the sixth, set behind a tall brick wall, the top of which was studded with shards of broken glass. A solid wooden gate was set into it, topped by a line of iron spikes.

The sinister row of spikes gleamed dully in the faint light. Ice slid slowly through her veins. With her dying breath Mama had made Abby promise to keep Jane safe, to keep them both safe. It hadn't been easy—Jane's beauty had always attracted attention, even when she was a little girl—but Abby had kept that promise.

Until now. Jane was imprisoned
in a
brothel
. Abby raised a hand to her mouth and found it was shaking.

Her whole body was trembling.

How long had Jane been there? Abby tried to work it out, to recall what Jane had said in her last letter, but she couldn't. Over and over, the question pounded through her mind: How had Jane come to be in a brothel?

Abby shoved the fruitless question aside. She had to think, to plan what to do to get Jane free. What if Daisy didn't come? Abby would have no option but to fetch a constable.

Do that and for certain sure you'll never see your sister again.
Abby shivered. She was entirely dependent on the goodwill—and ability—of a girl she'd never seen till a few minutes ago.

If constables and magistrates couldn't help, how could one small, crippled maidservant make a difference? And where was she?

The minutes crawled by.

Abby was almost ready to give up when she heard something on the other side of the gate. Her heart gave a leap of relief, then it occurred to her it could be anyone. She pressed back into the shadows and waited.

The gate cracked open an inch. “You still here, miss?” came a whisper.

“I'm here.”

The girl poked her head out. “I got no time to explain, miss, but come back here in an hour with a warm cloak and some shoes.”

“Shoes, but—”

“I was going to try and get your sister out now, but I can't while Mort's here. But he's goin' out again shortly.”

She turned to leave, but Abby grabbed her arm. “Why? Why would you do this for us? For Jane and me?” It was obviously dangerous. Why would this girl—a stranger—take such a risk?
Was she expecting payment? Abby would gladly give all she had to save her sister, but she didn't have much.

The girl shook her head. “'Cause it's wrong, what Mort's doing. It never used to be like this, stealing girls, keeping them locked up—” She broke off. “Look, I ain't got time to explain, miss, not so's you'd understand. You'll just have to trust me. Just be back here in an hour with a warm cloak and some shoes.”

“Why?” Some kind of payment for services rendered?

“'Cause she hain't got nothin' to wear outside, of course.” She jerked her chin at the filth in the alley. “You want her to walk through that in her bare feet? Now I gotta go.” And with that the girl was gone, the gate shut behind her. Abby heard a bolt slide into place.

Numbly, Abby found her way back to the Masons' house.

An hour.

A lot could happen in an hour.

*   *   *

“W
hat time do you call this?”

Abby, her foot on the first stair, turned back. Mr. Mason stood in the hall entry, fob watch in hand, glowering. “You're late!”

“I know, and I'm sorry, Mr. Mason, but I only just learned that—”

“I shall have to deduct the full day from your wages, of course.” He puffed his chest up like a particularly pleased toad.

“It was a family emergency—”

He snorted. “You have no family.”

“I do, I have a sister, and she has come to London unexpectedly and—”

“No excuses, you know the rules.”

“It's not an excuse. It's true, and I'm hoping . . . I was wondering . . .” She swallowed, belatedly realizing she should not have argued with him.

“What were you wondering, Miss Chantry?” Mrs. Mason swept down the staircase, dressed in a sumptuous puce silk dress, a feathered headdress and a cloak edged with fur. “Have you forgotten, Mr. Mason, we are to attend the opera this evening? I do not wish to be late.”

“It's fashionable to be late,” her husband responded.

“I realize that, my dear.” Mrs. Mason's voice grated with sugarcoated irritation. “But we are going to be more than fashionably late—you don't even have your coat on.”

The butler arrived in the hallway, heard the remark and went to fetch Mr. Mason's coat.

Mrs. Mason pulled on one long kid evening glove and glanced at Abby. “Well, what is it, Miss Chantry?”

Abby took a deep breath. The Masons were very strict about visitors of any kind. Abby was allowed none. “My younger sister is in London, ma'am, and I was wondering if she could stay with me, just for the night—”

The woman's well-plucked eyebrows rose. “Here? Don't be ridiculous. Of course not. Now come along, Mr. Mason—”

“But I haven't seen her for years. She's just left the orphanage and she's not quite eighteen. I can't let her stay in London on her own.”

“That's not our concern.” Mrs. Mason frowned into the looking glass and adjusted her headdress. “A stranger, sleeping in the same house as my precious babies?” She snorted.

“She's not a stranger; she's
my sister
.”

BOOK: The Spring Bride
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