Lord Devere's Ward (2 page)

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Authors: Sue Swift

Tags: #Historical Romance" Copyright 2012 Sue Swift ISBN: 978-1-937976-11-8, #"Regency Romance

BOOK: Lord Devere's Ward
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“Yes,” he said, “I believe I can direct you to the Earl of Devere.”

She heard a door open behind her.

“Ah, Bartram!” the young man said. “Do tell me, who is this delightful young person, and how comes she into my bedchamber?”

A dry voice spoke from behind her. “My lord, may I present to you Lady Katherine Scoville.”

“Kate! Bonny Kate, Kate, the prettiest Kate in Christendom. Kate of Kate-hall, my super-dainty Kate.” The chap’s brows lifted as he babbled on.

“Hearing thy mildness praised in every town, thy virtues spoke of, and thy beauty sounded…” Heat rose into her cheeks as she recognized lines from
The Taming of the Shrew
. Leaning back into his chair, the man cast his gaze up and down her person as he continued.

“Kate, like the hazel-twig is straight and slender…Oh! Let me see thee walk!” He blatantly examined her legs, exposed by the short doublet and the revealing hose.

“Walk out, most like!” she snapped. “I seek the Earl of Devere. Please direct me to him at once.”

“You have found him. I am Quincy Tyndale, the current Earl of Devere.”

“I beg your pardon?” She stared. “Is not the Earl of Devere an older gentleman?”

“I fear not, or at least, not yet. I gather, sweet Kate, that no one has told you that my father died this past year. I inherited his title and his responsibilities, including your guardianship.”

“Ah, er, please accept my most sincere condolences.” She struggled to maintain her composure as enlightenment dawned. Good heavens.

Grandfather had made even more of a muddle of things than she’d previously imagined. The memory of a red-headed devil-boy leaped into her mind as she recalled Quinn Tyndale’s visit to her home in Somerset with his father ten long years before. At age thirteen, Quinn had lorded it over her, taunting and teasing until she thought he’d drive her quite out of her mind.

But now her childhood enemy held her fate in the palm of his hand! What would happen if he held their past against her?

Quinn’s next words dashed the slight hope that he’d forgotten. “I must say, it’s a pleasure to see you, dear Kate. Kate, the pest who put frogs in my short-sheeted bed and added pepper to my soup! Dear, sweet Kate!” He looked her over yet again and laughed.

Aware of the uncertainties of the situation, she refrained from reminding the wretch that he’d peeked during blind man’s bluff and used her favorite doll for archery practice…as his target. Pressing her lips together, she maintained a calm demeanor, though her thoughts tumbled like a brook in spring.

“Bartram, take our super-dainty Kate to the drawing room and get her some tea. I’ll attend her shortly. Malcolm!” The Earl shouted unexpectedly, and she flinched. A small dark man entered, so quickly that she suspected he’d been listening at the door. “Dress me at once! Can’t you see we have a guest?”

Quinn winked at Kate as Bartram hustled her out.

* * *

Quinn couldn’t restrain his mirth as he tied his cravat. As Malcolm assisted him into his midnight-blue jacket, the valet asked about the source of Quinn’s fine humor.

“Did you see that creature who was just in my rooms? Wasn’t she a prime ’un?”

“She, my lord?” asked the valet, in his Scottish burr.

“Aye, then,” mocked Quinn, in a teasing imitation of Malcolm’s accent. “My ward. I wonder what she is doing here.”

“Mayhap something’s amiss in Wiltshire.”

“And what do you know of that, my fine sir?” Quinn narrowed his eyes at his servant, who shrugged.

“Gossip of your lordship’s new status as guardian to the heiress of Badham Abbey shot through the servants like scandal at a ton party.”

“Do tell.” Quinn was ever impressed by the ability of servants to know their employers’ every move. “So what can the lady want?”

“Who knows the wants of women, especially one as young as she?” Malcolm tugged at Quinn’s sleeves.

“Hmph. She comes to ask a favor. I’d lay a monkey on it.”

“And will you give it to her, my lord?”

“I’d give her much more than a favor, if she weren’t my ward.” Quinn gave a final tweak to his lapel before proceeding out the door. “Pity she’s practically family. Can’t play blanket hornpipe with m’own ward.”

He’d been surprised by the arousal he felt at his first glance at the cub who’d invaded his rooms; he’d never before been attracted to any catamite, however pretty. And this creature was a delight for the senses, with chestnut hair, blue eyes, and pouting lips that begged for a man’s kiss.

But the moment she’d opened her mouth, revealing herself as a female, he’d wanted to turn her over his knee, strip off that doublet and those outrageous hose, and spank her sweet blind cheeks.

This Kate wanted taming. A pity that her Petruchio would have to be someone other than her legal guardian.

* * *

Kate sat uneasily on the sofa in Quinn’s yellow drawing room, sipping her tea. Her flesh itched in the grubby finery in which she’d slept the previous night, wrapped in her cloak in the taproom of a shabby inn at Staines. Although the costume had served her well, she’d become thoroughly uncomfortable with her garb, and wanted nothing more than a bath and clean clothes.

Moreover, she was rather nervous. When she sought her guardian’s help, she’d assumed that her grandfather’s crony wouldn’t remember her childhood trespasses. Quinn, however, hadn’t forgotten any detail. Kate herself hadn’t recalled that she’d short-sheeted his bed whilst leaving the frogs.

She prayed he’d confine his retribution to teasing, for he had ultimate power over her.

Quinn flung open the doors of the drawing room not thirty minutes after she’d entered. Her mouth dropped open in shock. The untidy young chap in the nightshirt had disappeared. Confronting her was a veritable Pink of the Ton, of commanding mien and immaculate dress, whose midnight-blue jacket appeared to have been tailored to fit his broad shoulders. Buff pantaloons did nothing to hide muscular, masculine thighs. Shaving had revealed a strong jaw, and neatly brushed hair emphasized his expressive eyes. Quinn, Lord Devere, epitomized upper-class hauteur.

She lifted her chin. Despite her clammy hands and shaky soul, she was a Scoville and wouldn’t be intimidated.

Eyeing her with the expression a bloodhound might wear while tracking prey, Quinn dragged at the bell pull and bellowed, “Richard!” She jerked at the unexpected noise. She gathered that her guardian was a jovial sort. Well, she could use some good cheer after the travails of the past few weeks. She tried to relax into the stiff-backed brocade sofa.

He regarded her once more and she squirmed self-consciously in her doublet and hose. “So why on earth are you attired in such a deucedly eccentric manner, my dear?” he asked, advancing into the room, which seemed to shrink as he dominated the chamber.

“I had to escape.” She kept her voice low and terse. If her guardian did not treat the threat to her person with the utmost seriousness, she’d be packed off and sent back to Wiltshire, trapped in the same hopeless circumstance.

“Strange,” he remarked, as another gentleman entered. “We received a letter from your uncle, Badham, stating you were well content and wished to marry your cousin Hoskins.”

“Osborn.”

“So you do wish to marry this Osburt?” Quinn tapped an elegantly shod toe on the carpeted floor.

“Osborn.”

“If you wish to marry your cousin, with whom you have been living in apparent happiness, how come you to my bedroom?”

“I wasn’t aware that was your bedroom.”

“As ungentlemanly as it might be to argue with you, my super-dainty Kate, I was in my nightshirt, in my bedroom.”

She gave up winning that particular point. “I don’t want to marry him. I had to escape because they locked me up! I wrote to you through the solicitor weeks ago—didn’t you get my letter?”

“No. And, I take it, you didn’t receive mine?” She shook her head.

“Hmph. In any event, I declined to provide my, er, blessing for the union due to my man of affairs, Richard Carrothers.” Quinn inclined his head toward his secretary, a spare, graying man who remained quiet as stone near the door. “Richard has traveled twice to Wiltshire to see you, and both times was denied admittance to Badham Abbey.”

“I didn’t know that.” Surprised, she realized that her uncle had defied her guardian’s authority by diverting their letters and excluding Carrothers.

“Be that as it may, that does not explain how you come to be in my rooms at dawn.”

“Dawn, my lord? It’s past eleven o’clock.” Mercy.

Is he daft?

“Well, close to it.” Quinn waved an airy hand as he sat in a chair opposite her, folded his arms over his chest, and waited.

“I told you, I had to escape. He locked me in the attic, you see, until I agreed…until you agreed…to marry Osborn.”

“There is very little chance I would agree to marry Osgood, and even less chance I would consent to your marriage at this time to anyone at all.” Quinn poured himself a cup of tea.

“Anyone at all, my lord?”

“Do you express a desire to marry?” He held his cup poised and eyed her over its rim.

“Not at this time, my lord,” she answered stiffly.

“But I do not see that you should make such a dictatorial declaration when we are not acquainted.”

“We are sufficiently acquainted for me to have made that determination.” He sipped, then put his china cup onto its saucer with a click. “And, fascinating as this discussion of your marital prospects might be, it does not speak to the immediate questions which occupy me. Ah. Let me think.”

She waited as he raised his eyes to the ceiling.

“I now recollect. I recall a young girl much addicted to fencing, the climbing of trees, and similar pursuits. Please do not tell me you were so improper as to clamber out of the attic dressed in that manner.” Quinn’s long face assumed an expression of distaste.

She wriggled herself further into her cloak. “It was necessary.”

“And you found your way from Wiltshire to London. The public stage?”

She nodded.

He winced. “Indomitable Kate! Well, your determination will be rewarded, I am sure. However, mere strength of character will not solve any of our more pressing issues. We must find a place for you to live, with some female to provide you company and countenance.”

“Would not the presence of your, er, wife be sufficient?”

“Wife? I have no wife, bonny Kate, to lend propriety to this awkward situation.”

She gulped. “I need only a maid to attend to me here.”

He raised his brows. “Nay, dearest Kate. I would not have your reputation destroyed.”

“I doubt that would be the case.”

Standing, her guardian spoke without a trace of humor as he paced to and fro. “You’re not in the country anymore. As yet, no one knows of your escapades, but unless you wish to forever enjoy your fortune in solitary splendor in the wilds of Somerset, you cannot stay here with just a maid. Besides, I also have a reputation to maintain. I would not have it bruited about that I took advantage of my child.”

“I’m not your child.” She jumped to her feet, arms akimbo.

“You are my ward, so you might as well be my child,” he told her curtly. “Richard, how about Grillon’s for the chit?” Quinn moved to the window.

Carrothers followed. “Doesn’t solve the problem of her companionship, my lord.”

“We might hire someone.” The two males spoke as though Kate were not in the room.

“Can’t trust a hireling.”

“Open up the house on Bruton Street?”

She interrupted, for she hated being ignored. “I own a house in London.”

The two men paused, looked at her, then resumed their conversation.

“Ring for Harper, find her some clothes,” Carrothers murmured.

“P’raps she’s the same size as one of the maids.” Quinn looked her up and down for what must have been the tenth time.

She tried again, keeping her tone polite, firm and calm although she felt her back teeth grating. “I’m not sure where my house is. I haven’t been to London since before my parents died.”

“Can’t take her to my mum. Kate would run her ragged. I’ve got it!” Quinn, excited, thrust a finger up into the air in triumph. “We’ll send her to Nan!” Kate lost her temper and grabbed her guardian’s sleeve. “I am not a parcel to be sent off!” Quinn swatted her hand. “See here, you’re crumpling my coat.”

“And who is Nan?”

“Anna, Lady Penrose, is my older sister. Has a passel of brats, one of them’s about your age, maybe a little older. How old is my niece Louisa, Richard?”

“The Honorable Louisa Penrose is eighteen years of age and is expected to be brought out this Season.”

“There you are. You’ll be eighteen soon, hmm?

This year it’s Louisa’s turn, next year will be yours. In the meanwhile, you’ll go to Kent until the Season.

Hide you in plain sight, as it were.”

“Hide me in plain sight?” Mystified, she frowned.

“Safety in numbers, and all of that. If the wicked uncle comes to call, he shan’t find you,” Quinn said.

“Nan has several daughters and a couple of boys. You can put frogs in their beds, too,” he added maliciously.

Her mind was elsewhere. “Do you really think he’ll try to kidnap me?”

Carrothers cleared his throat. “After we received the letter from Badham, I made some inquiries. Your uncle desperately needs your fortune. Without it, he will have to mortgage or sell Badham Abbey.”

“Oh.” She took a moment to absorb this news.

“You are a considerable heiress, you know.” Quinn’s tone was unexpectedly gentle. “Must be protected.”

She hated the thought of being a burden. “I don’t want anyone to protect me.”

“Then why are you here?”

She bit her lip. “I’m afraid I can’t see any alternatives.”

“Well, then, you are lucky.” Quinn smiled crookedly at her. “Until you’re safely leg-shackled, you have me, whether you want me or not. Harper!” His voice rose into a plaintive wail. He yanked on the bell pull. His impatience told her that nothing happened quickly enough for the Earl when he wanted results.

An older woman, attired in plain gray with a white apron, entered the drawing room. “My lord?” She adjusted her mobcap over silvery curls.

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