Winning Miss Wakefield: The Wallflower Wedding Series

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Authors: Vivienne Lorret

Tags: #Fiction, #Historical romance, #Regency

BOOK: Winning Miss Wakefield: The Wallflower Wedding Series
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C
ONTENTS

Dedication

Prologue

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

Epilogue

Acknowledgments

An Excerpt from
Daring Miss Danvers

An Excerpt from
Finding Miss McFarland

About the Author

By Vivienne Lorret

Copyright

About the Publisher

D
EDICATION

For Michael

P
ROLOGUE

Hampshire, England, 1816

T
he manor looked much the same as he remembered it from his youth. Few windows graced the towering limestone façade, and those that did were shuttered and sunken. Barren yew trees flanked either side, resembling the gnarled hands of Death reaching up from hell to reap his grandfather’s soul.

Satisfaction pulled Bane’s lips into a tight grin. At last, he would reclaim what was rightfully his.

Without anyone to stop him, he strode up the weed-choked walk and through the door.

The grizzled old butler shuffled into the foyer. His one good eye narrowed, he huffed a sound of disgust. No doubt, Bane was the only man with gypsy blood in his veins who had dared cross the threshold.

“Don’t worry, Mangus. I’m not here to set the place ablaze,” he said as he whipped off his greatcoat and tossed it onto a bench. “At least, not yet.”

The butler ignored him and altered his slow procession to head in the direction of the drawing room. “His lordship has been laid out in here, if that’s the reason you came.”

“It is indeed.” Bane clapped his hands together and chafed them back and forth. “I must make sure he’s good and dead. Tell me, Mangus, were his final moments terribly painful?”

Not missing a beat, the butler sneered. “You’ll be pleased to know he passed peacefully in his sleep.”

“You old codger,” Bane said with a laugh and chucked him on the shoulder. “If the devil’s own could sleep in peace—even for a single night—then there must be hope for us all.”

Mangus grunted in response before he turned around and left Bane standing alone beneath the wide arch leading to the drawing room.

A table, covered in black silk, stood before him. The former Marquess of Knightswold had been dressed in all his finery. Wall sconces cast the corpse in eerie shadow, undulating in a way that gave the illusion of breath rising and falling in his grandfather’s chest. For the first time since learning the news from the solicitor, a chill slithered down Bane’s spine.

After all, if any man could possess enough evil and hatred to resurrect himself from the dead, Bane was staring at him now. His limbs felt full of porridge as he moved closer. However, it was his own pain and rage that propelled him, seeking confirmation.

Marked by spots of age, his grandfather’s pallor resembled the ashy remains of a cold hearth. Beneath his paper-thin flesh, generations of aristocracy had formed the broad line of his brow, the bold curve of his nose, and the high set of his cheekbones. However, Bane was equally as certain that obstinacy was the reason for the rigid squareness of his jaw. Well,
that
, and the cloth tied around his chin and knotted at the top of his head to keep his mouth from gaping.

Yes, the Marquess of Knightswold was most assuredly dead.

Two gold sovereigns covered his eyes to pay the ferryman. “It still won’t be enough to keep you from the gates of hell,” he growled.

Bane expected to feel a sense of victory, of rightness, in knowing that the man who’d murdered his parents and driven his uncle to suicide had finally paid the ultimate price. But other than the anguish that had transformed into rage over the years, only emptiness filled him. Nothing could undo the damage his grandfather had done—and all because of a ruthless pursuit to keep the Fennecourt bloodlines pure.

Staring down at the monster, he fisted his hands and felt his one-quarter gypsy blood surge, boiling beneath his palms. His mother had been half gypsy and proud of her heritage. His father had loved her so dearly that he’d gladly accepted the terms that—should he marry her—he would be cut off completely and no longer recognized by the man who’d sired him.

However, stripping his eldest son of wealth and land hadn’t been enough. Since Bane’s father was legitimate by birth, the title would have passed to him, no matter what, and from him to Bane. This didn’t sit well with the old marquess. He couldn’t stand the thought of a mongrel inheriting the title and lands.

So around the time of Bane’s thirteenth birthday—a year before his parents were killed—the marquess ordered the church records of marriage between his eldest son and gypsy wife destroyed, in addition to the ledger containing Bane’s baptism.

Those acts effectively made Bane nothing more than a bastard in the eyes of society. Of course, there were those who knew what his grandfather had done, but if anyone had dared to speak out, they soon would have found themselves in dire financial straits, in debtors prison, or even in the grave.

The only one who’d stood up for Bane, even after his parents’ murder had made the stakes much higher, had been his uncle Spencer. Yet soon, he too was attacked by the Fennecourt patriarch.

Financially crippled and facing the loss of everything he held dear—including the estate that had been in his wife’s family for centuries—Spencer could see only one solution to end the tyrannical quest of his father. So on a clear night, three years past, his uncle had stolen into this very house, tied a rope around a beam of the vaulted ceiling in the old marquess’s study, and hanged himself directly above the desk.

Undeterred, Bane’s grandfather had gone about begetting another heir. Ultimately, a man so completely obsessed with pure bloodlines couldn’t risk his title falling into the hands of a gypsy. His efforts, however, were in vain. His young wife and their child had died a mere year ago.

And now there was nothing to stop Bane from taking his revenge.

“Ah, so you
are
here,” a familiar voice purred from the doorway. He turned to see his late uncle’s wife standing there, bedecked in mourning garb. Absently, he wondered if her new husband, the elderly Lord Sterling, realized what expensive taste Eve had. “I’d wondered if you’d heard.”

Bane inclined his head. “Mr. Shirham came to see me late last night with the news.”

“Your grandfather’s solicitor dropping by to see you? How crafty of him.” She sauntered into the room as if she hadn’t a care in the world. Yet her expression was cold and closed. She was always careful not to reveal herself, but he already knew it bothered her to be here in this house even more that it did him.

“I believe it’s more of a matter of frugality,” Bane added with his own degree of detachment. As a young man who’d made his fortune at the tables and track, he knew it never served to reveal too much. While he was fond of Eve—primarily because of how much his uncle had adored her—he never quite trusted her. Then again, he didn’t trust anyone. “Without an employer, a solicitor’s situation can be fairly bleak.” And also, there was no reason to put a man in desperate circumstances if he could be useful.

“You would hire the man who’d conspired with
your grandfather
”—this time she said it with a trace of venom, a notable tell—“to destroy the lives of your parents and my husband?” After a quick intake of breath, she released a hollow laugh and turned her attention to the jewels at her wrist. “How unconventional.”

He didn’t put much stock in her rancor today or delve too deeply. They both had their reasons for despising the dead man in the room. “Oh, how did he put it? . . . Something to the effect
that not all who worked for the old marquess shared his beliefs on purity
.”

“And you believe him?” She looked at him as if he were a fool.

“He came bearing gifts.” Bane lifted one shoulder in a careless shrug. “Apparently, he’d found a family register at the bottom of a desk drawer years ago and held on to it with this”—he gestured to the shell of the old marquess—“eventuality in mind. It bears the name of my father and the date of his marriage, albeit with a thick line of ink striking through them. Then my birth was listed below it, with another fat line through it. Yet the names remain legible beneath.”

For once, Eve had nothing to say. Her eyes gleamed with an uncanny light, as if she were trying hard
not
to reveal the depths of her emotion. However, the oddest thing was, he could almost swear she was furious with
him
and not with his grandfather. Which, he knew, couldn’t be the case since he’d done nothing to her.

In the end, he’d taken on the burden of her debt. Of course, he’d done so mostly out of guilt because he still felt partly responsible for the reason Uncle Spencer had taken his own life. Therefore, this reaction from her puzzled him.

Curious
. His ability to read people was usually flawless. He counted on it.

“I’ll never forgive you for any of it.”
Eve’s quiet whisper drew his attention to where she now stood facing his grandfather’s body.

“He doesn’t deserve your forgiveness,” he said quietly.

She made a sound, something shy of a laugh. After a subtle swipe of her fingers against her cheek, she turned to him, her features carefully in place. “Then it will be only a matter of time before the title is restored to you,” Eve said, her lips pressed into a brittle smile as she toyed with the clasp of her diamond bracelet. “What a fine coup. Revenge at last.”

At last?
No. This was only the beginning.

C
HAPTER
O
NE

London, 1823

M
erribeth Wakefield closed the door and leaned against it as if marauders waited on the other side. A single bead of perspiration trickled down her temple.

“It’s no use,” she said to the only two other occupants of the retiring room. Thankfully, Lady Amherst’s other guests in the ballroom below were now progressing to the outdoor amphitheater and wouldn’t notice their absence. “The plan won’t work.”

Aunt Sophie released a slow breath and sank down onto the window seat in a rustle of lavender crepe. “The first hour of
mingling
went even worse than I imagined.” Lifting away her brass-rimmed spectacles, she pinched the bridge of her nose.

Much worse.
Merribeth expelled a puff of air that stirred the configuration of hot-ironed curls carefully situated over her forehead. The raven tresses threatened to frizz. Yet when she lifted her hand to her brow, she noted that beneath the lace edge of her fingerless gloves, her palms were damp as well. While she’d like to blame the weather, her nerves were the likely culprit, as it was only the first of June. Even so, the breeze from the open window felt divine.

Perhaps, if she locked the door and hid in here for the remainder of the night, no one would notice.

“Stuff and nonsense!” The exclamation came from Aunt Sophie’s friend, who stood in front of a bank of mirrors. Lady Eve Sterling—or simply
Eve
, as she preferred not to be reminded of her late husband—gave her cheeks a pinch before drawing the tip of her finger over tawny eyebrows. Once satisfied with her reflection, she shifted her gaze and stared pointedly at Merribeth in the looking glass. “Tonight is your chance to prove you have nothing to hide. That your reputation is faultless, no matter what those wasps downstairs were whispering behind their fans,” she needlessly pointed out. “Be brave.”

“Brave?” Merribeth’s heart had nearly frozen on the spot from the glacial stares she’d received the moment they’d crossed the threshold. “I felt as if I were standing in my shift and stockings and nothing more.”
A spectacle on display at the
Museum of Wallflower Specimens and Ghastly Occurrences
.

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