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Authors: Julia London

Tags: #Historical romance, #Fiction

BOOK: The Seduction of Lady X
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Contents
 

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

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

Chapter Thirty-One

Chapter Thirty-Two

Chapter Thirty-Three

Chapter Thirty-Four

Chapter Thirty-Five

PROLOGUE

 

England, 1809

 

T
wenty-eight souls served the Carey family at Everdon Court, and every one of them, from the young girl who peeled potatoes in the kitchen to Mr. Brock, the head butler, knew to cut a wide berth around Lord Carey if they wanted to keep their position. His lordship had a cold and calculating temper, and with a tot or two of whiskey in him, he could be provoked by the most innocuous thing. With a few tots in him, he could easily be moved to dismiss a groundsman who had served for twenty steadfast years but had failed to trim the shrubbery to the marquis’s exacting standards on the day he commanded it done. Or to send a young stable boy to pack his things and leave at once when Lady Carey laughed at something he said as she mounted her horse.

The servants avoided the marquis when they could, and when they did not have the luxury of doing so, they kept their eyes down and their lips sealed. Lady Carey, however, could not avoid her husband. How she managed to abide her marriage to such a cold man was a source of endless fascination for two old friends in the family’s employ: Miss Foster, the cook, and Mrs. Perry, the housekeeper. Miss Foster believed that Lord Carey’s prowess in the marital bed was the one thing that must have kept the marchioness loyal to him in the six years they’d been married. “A lady might put up with quite a lot if she’s properly handled between the linens, aye?” she’d cheerfully hypothesized.

Mrs. Perry, who had been married quite a while longer than six years, argued, “You are mad if you believe a romp is all that is required. I’d wager what brings her to heel is more likely the threat of being handled in a manner she
doesn’t
find the least bit pleasing.”

“Nonsense,” Miss Foster said. “We’d hear of it from Nancy if that were true,” she said, referring to Lady Carey’s personal maid. “And besides, she’d not be willing to leave any of this behind her, would she, now?”

Miss Foster was referring, of course, to the monstrosity that was Everdon Court. It had been a keep at one time, but through the centuries the Careys—the surname as well as the title deriving from the borderlands once known as Careyridge—had added wings to the central tower and taken down battlements. Now the house boasted eighteen bedrooms, two courtyards, and a banquet hall appended to the ballroom that could seat one hundred guests. It was filled with the finest French furnishings obtained during the dismantling of the French aristocracy over the last twenty years.

“Aye, but what good is all this when she’s married to a man like him?” Mrs. Perry had countered. There was little that would entice her to stay if Mr. Perry were to treat her as unkindly as the marquis treated the marchioness. “These are only things. Lady Carey deserves a man’s esteem.”

“Perhaps it is a child she wants,” Miss Foster suggested. “An heir to all of this would serve her well.”

Mrs. Perry gave Miss Foster a withering look. “If there was to be a child born to that union, it would have been born long before now.” Every one of the twenty-eight staff knew of the trouble on that front. They waited every month with anxious anticipation—was she, or wasn’t she?

“What, you think her ladyship is barren, then?” Miss Foster asked.

“No,” Mrs. Perry said pertly. “I rather think it is him, what with all the whiskey.”

“Perhaps you are right,” Miss Foster said. “And then again, perhaps he’s unable.” The two ladies looked at each other and snickered.

What they could not know was that the marriage of the Marquis and Marchioness of Carey existed perfunctorily between the linens, and beyond that, scarcely at all. On most occasions, Lord Carey was neither a demanding nor an exciting lover; he performed his marital duties as was necessary to gain the heir and saved his personal preferences for a young woman in town who had been happy to receive him for some four years now.

Four years ago, Lady Carey had thought herself pregnant. As any woman would have done, she’d shared the joyous news with her husband, who was overcome with relief and gratitude. Alas, when two months passed, Lady Carey realized that she was no longer, or had never been, pregnant and the marquis’s disappointment was so great that he’d never fully recovered from it.

Lady Olivia Carey, who had enjoyed a highly public and fashionable wedding among England’s
haut ton,
had long since abandoned any hope of having a marriage of mutual respect and admiration. There was nothing she loathed more than her husband’s twice weekly visits to her room—except for his tendency to drink to excess—and she was ever thankful that it was over within a matter of minutes.

Sometimes, while Olivia lay there as Edward attempted to impregnate her, she wondered what it must be like to have an exciting lover. Or a caring one. She would settle for a lover who did not rut about like an animal answering some primordial need to procreate.

Sometimes she lay there and counted the tiles on the ceiling, guessing what number she might reach before he finished.

And still other times, when he reeked of whiskey and clumsily groped her, Olivia passed the time by imagining the ways she could murder her husband and avoid being found out. Shooting him was too risky, as Olivia wasn’t entirely certain how to fire a gun. She imagined fumbling with the thing and losing the element of surprise.

Pushing him from the top of Everdon Court seemed a better alternative, but she might draw attention if she invited him to a meeting on the roof. And then, of course, she would need him to stand at the edge, preferably where she could take a bit of a run at him to have enough force to topple him over.

Poison seemed the most sensible, but Miss Foster would never allow Olivia near his lordship’s food. The woman was entirely too conscientious and prided herself on the meals she served. It would take some convincing that Olivia was suddenly interested in preparing a dish for her husband to consume. And really, how much poison was necessary to kill a man? What if she did not use enough? Or so much that the taste of the food was ruined?

Lately, the murderous thoughts had lost their luster for Olivia. For one thing, Edward had not been able to perform “his duty,” as he called it, for more than a month due to his fondness for drink. It certainly didn’t stop him from trying, but he gave up quickly and Olivia rolled over and stared at the gold silk ties that held the heavy canopy curtains back from her bed. Inevitably, she would feel a well of envy bubbling up for her younger sister Alexa.

She did
not
envy Alexa’s disastrous situation. What she envied was the fact that Alexa had fallen so deeply in love with a man that she walked about with a look of yearning in her eyes. Alexa refused to reveal to Olivia who had earned this devotion from her; the only thing Olivia knew was that he was a gentleman Alexa had met in Spain while on tour with Lady Tuttle. Alexa could scarcely speak of anything else but the fine brown shade of his eyes, or the timbre of his laugh, or the intelligence of his speech.

Oh, but Olivia envied the quiet, desperate pining that Alexa seemed to wrap about her like a heavy winter shawl. Olivia wanted to know what that was like, how it felt. She wanted to
feel
.

For the first fortnight of her return from Spain, Alexa had not revealed that she was carrying the man’s child. Olivia had guessed it by the way Alexa would unthinkingly place her hand on her abdomen when she spoke of love. And while Olivia admired Alexa’s fierce determination to protect her lover from condemnation and scandal, she wanted to strangle the foolish young woman for bringing her insurmountable problem to Everdon Court.

When Olivia confronted her, Alexa had tried to deny it—so typical! She’d been indulged as child and allowed to barter and skate her way out of trouble, and had never learned the art of owning up to her mistakes. She preferred to deny and shift blame where she could . . . and Olivia always picked up the pieces.

Especially since their mother had died.

Alexa was eight years younger than Olivia and her only sibling, the daughter of her mother and her mother’s second husband. She was fair-haired, like Olivia and like their mother had been, but her eyes were brown, not blue like Olivia’s, and she was smaller in stature than Olivia.

Their mother had always doted on Alexa. Everyone had. Alexa had been a darling child with curly hair and a dimply smile that matched her bubbling
joie de vivre
.

“The devil kissed that girl when she was born,” her mother used to say, and it was true that, as a girl, Alexa could be counted on to create mischief. As a young woman, she was free-spirited and disdainful of the societal rules that governed their lives. She’d never really thought of the consequences of her actions, whereas Olivia had always been circumspect. And quiet. And responsible.

Even so, Alexa was generally not as reckless as this.

When Alexa at last did admit to the truth, she collapsed to her hands and knees while great choking sobs wracked her body. “What shall I do, Livi?” she begged. “I don’t know what to do!”

It was heartbreaking for Olivia to see her sister so distraught, particularly as Alexa really didn’t know what to do. Olivia could guess that the consequences of her actions had scarcely been a thought in the girl’s head until now.

Unfortunately, there was nothing they could do but tell Edward, and that, Olivia knew, would not go well. Edward could not abide Alexa’s spirit. “She always seeks to tie her garters in public, then turn up sweet,” he’d complained once when Alexa had attended a ball in London and danced with the same young gentleman four times. When Olivia had explained to her sister that this was simply not done unless there was an understanding with the young man, Alexa had been sweetly contrite. “I beg your pardon,” she’d said. “I did not know.”

Edward had not been placated. “She has no appreciation for the Carey name, and I am second cousin to the king!” he’d railed at Olivia, as if dancing was somehow on a par with treason.

“What shall we do, Livi?” Alexa had asked her sister, artfully twisting her pregnancy into a dilemma for them both.

“We have no choice but to explain it to Edward,” Olivia had said wearily.

Alexa had gasped loudly and thrown herself at Olivia’s knees, begging for any other fate than that.

“Oh, Alexa,” Olivia said sadly, bending over her sister. “What did you expect? Will it not be obvious to us all in a matter of weeks?”

“Yes, but I thought you’d help me without telling
him.

“I must tell him! How could I ever keep it from him?” There was so much Alexa did not understand—particularly how powerless a woman was in this male-dominated world. Once a woman took her wedding vows, she was doomed to whatever fate her husband would mete out. She could not escape.

“Must we tell him now?” Alexa asked tearfully. “There is the supper party for the Duke of Rutland, and you know how the marquis can be.”

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