A
RAKE'S VOW - EXCERPT
CHAPTER ONE
Northamptonshire
October 1819
"You
want to get a move on. Looks like the Hounds of Hell are on
our heels."
"What?"
Jerked from uneasy contemplation, Vane Cynster lifted his
gaze from his leader's ears and glanced around, bringing Duggan,
his groom, into view--along with the bank of lowering thunderheads
sweeping down on them from behind. "Blast!" Vane
looked forward and flicked the reins. The pair of matched
greys harnessed to his curricle stepped out powerfully. He
glanced over his shoulder. "Think we can outrun it?"
Considering
the storm clouds, Duggan shook his head. "We got three
miles on it, maybe five. Not enough to turn back to Kettering,
nor yet to make Northampton."
Vane
swore. It wasn't the thought of a drenching that exercised
his mind. Desperation dug in its spurs; his eyes on the road
as the greys swept on, he searched for some option, some route
of escape.
Only
minutes before, he'd been thinking of Devil, Duke of St. Ives,
his cousin, boyhood companion, and closest friend--and of
the wife fate had handed him. Honoria, now Duchess of St.
Ives. She who had ordered Vane and the other four as-yet-unmarried
members of the Bar Cynster not only to pay for but attend
the dedication service for the roof of the church in Somersham
village, close by the ducal seat. Admittedly, the money she'd
decreed they surrender had been ill-gotten gains, their winnings
from a wager of which neither she nor their mothers had approved.
The age-old adage that the only women Cynster males need be
wary of were Cynster wives still held true for this generation
as it had for those past. The reason why was not something
any male Cynster liked to dwell on.
Which
was why he felt such a driving need to get out of the path
of the storm. Fate, in the guise of a storm, had arranged
for Honoria and Devil to meet, in circumstances that had all
but ensured their subsequent marriage. Vane wasn't about to
take unnecessary chances.
"Bellamy
Hall." He clung to the idea like a drowning man. "Minnie
will give us shelter."
"That's
a thought." Duggan sounded more hopeful. "The turnoff
should be close."
It
was around the next bend; Vane took the turn at speed, then
cursed and slowed his cattle. The narrow lane was not as well
surfaced as the road they'd left. Too fond of his high-stepping
horses to risk injuring them, he concentrated, easing them
along as fast as he dared, grimly conscious of the deepening
gloom of an unnatural, too-early twilight and the rising whine
of the wind.
He'd
left Somersham Place, Devil's principal residence, soon after
luncheon, having spent the morning at church, at the dedication
service for the roof he and his cousins had paid for. Intending
to visit friends near Leamington, he'd left Devil to enjoy
his wife and son and headed west. He'd expected to reach Northampton
and the comfort of the Blue Angel with ease. Instead, thanks
to fate, he would be spending the night with Minnie and her
inmates.
At
least he would be safe.
Through
the hedges to their left, Vane glimpsed distant water, leaden
grey beneath the darkening sky. The River Nene, which meant
Bellamy Hall was close; it stood on a long, sloping rise looking
down on the river.
It
had been years since he'd visited--he couldn't offhand remember
how many, but of his welcome he had not a doubt. Araminta,
Lady Bellamy, eccentric relict of a wealthy man, was his godmother.
Unblessed with children, Minnie had never treated him as a
child; over the years, she'd become a good friend. A sometimes
too-shrewd friend uninhibited in her lectures, but a friend
nonetheless.
Daughter
of a viscount, Minnie had been born to a place in the ton.
After her husband, Sir Humphrey Bellamy's death, she'd retired
from socializing, preferring to remain at Bellamy Hall, presiding
over a varying household of impecunious relatives and worthy
charity cases.
Once,
when he'd asked why she surrounded herself with such hangers-on,
Minnie had replied that, at her age, human nature was her
main source of entertainment. Sir Humphrey had left her wealthy
enough to stand the nonsense, and Bellamy Hall, grotesquely
gargantuan, was large enough to house her odd menage. As a
sop to sanity, she and her companion, Mrs. Timms, indulged
in the occasional bolt to the capital, leaving the rest of
the household in Northamptonshire. Vane always called on Minnie
whenever she was in town.
Gothic
turrets rose out of the trees ahead, then brick gateposts
appeared, the heavy wrought-iron gates left ajar. With a grimly
satisfied smile, Vane turned his horses through; they'd beaten
the storm--fate had not caught him napping. He set the greys
trotting down the straight drive. Huge bushes crowded close,
shivering in the wind; ancient trees shrouded the gravel in
shifting shadows.
Dark
and somber, its multitude of windows, dull in the encroaching
gloom, watching like so many flat eyes, Bellamy Hall filled
the end of the tunnel-like drive. A sprawling Gothic monstrosity,
with countless architectural elements added cheek by jowl,
all recently embellished with Georgian lavishness, it ought
to have looked hideous, yet, in the overgrown park with the
circular courtyard before it, the Hall managed to escape outright
ugliness.
It
was, Vane thought, as he swept about the courtyard and headed
for the stables, a suitably esoteric dwelling for an eccentric
old woman and her odd household. As he rounded the side of
the house, he saw no sign of life.
There
was, however, activity in the stables, grooms hurriedly settling
horses in preparation for the storm. Leaving Duggan and Minnie's
stableman, Grisham, to deal with the greys, Vane strode to
the house, taking the path through the shrubbery. Although
overgrown, it was navigable; the path debouched onto a stretch
of poorly tended lawn which continued around the corner of
one wing. Around that corner, Vane knew, stood the side door,
facing a wide sweep of lawn hosting a small army of huge stones,
remnants of the abbey upon which the Hall was partly built.
The ruins stretched for some distance; the Hall itself had
grown about the guesthall of the abbey, otherwise ransacked
during the Dissolution.
As
he neared the corner, the blocks of weathered sandstone came
into view, scattered crazily over a thick green carpet. In
the middle distance, a single arch, all that remained of the
abbey's nave, rose against the darkening sky. Vane smiled;
all was exactly as he remembered. Nothing about Bellamy Hall
had changed in twenty years.
He
rounded the corner--and discovered he was wrong.
He
halted, then blinked. For a full minute, he stood stock-still,
gaze riveted, his mind entirely focused. Then, gaze still
transfixed, his mind fully occupied by the vision before him,
he strolled forward, his footsteps muffled by the thick lawn.
He halted opposite a large bow window, two paces from the
semicircular flower bed before it.
Directly
behind the lady, clothed in fine, wind-driven sprigged muslin,
bent over, fossicking in the flowers.
"You
could help." Patience Debbington blew aside the curls
tangling with her eyelashes and frowned at Myst, her cat,
sitting neatly in the weeds, an enigmatic expression on her
inscrutable face. "It's got to be here somewhere."
Myst
merely blinked her large blue eyes. With a sigh, Patience
leaned as far forward as she dared and poked among the weeds
and perennials. Bent over at the waist, reaching into the
flower bed, gripping its soft edge with the toes of her soft-soled
shoes, was hardly the most elegant, let alone stable, position.
Not
that she need worry over anyone seeing her--everyone else
was dressing for dinner. Which was precisely what she should
be doing--would have been doing--if she hadn't noticed that
the small silver vase which had adorned her windowsill had
vanished. As she'd left the window open, and Myst often used
that route to come and go, she'd reasoned that Myst must have
toppled the vase in passing and it had rolled out, over the
flat sill, and fallen into the flower bed below.
The
fact that she had never known Myst unintentionally to knock
over anything she'd pushed aside; it was better believing
that Myst had been clumsy than that their mysterious thief
had struck again.
"It's
not here," Patience concluded. "At least, I can't
see it." Still bent over, she looked at Myst. "Can
you?"
Myst
blinked again, and looked past her. Then the sleek grey cat
rose and elegantly padded out of the flower bed.
"Wait!"
Patience half turned, but immediately swung back, struggling
to regain her awkward balance. "There's a storm coming--this
is not the time to go mousing."
So
saying, she managed to straighten--which left her facing the
house, looking directly at the blank bow windows of the downstairs
parlor. With the storm darkening the skies, the windows were
reflective. They reflected the image of a man, standing directly
behind her.
With
a gasp, Patience whirled. Her gaze collided with the man's--his
eyes were hard, crystalline grey, pale in the weak light.
They were focused, intently, on her, their expression one
she couldn't fathom. He stood no more than three feet away,
large, elegant and oddly forbidding. In the instant her brain
registered those facts, Patience felt her heels sink, and
sink--into the soft soil of the flower bed.
The
edge crumbled beneath her feet.
Her
eyes flew wide--her lips formed a helpless "Oh."
Arms flailing, she started to topple back--
The
man reacted so swiftly his movement was a blur--he gripped
her upper arms and hauled her forward.
She
landed against him, breast to chest, hips to hard thighs.
The breath was knocked out of her, leaving her gasping, mentally
as well as physically. Hard hands held her upright, long fingers
iron shackles about her arms. His chest was a wall of rock
against her breasts; the rest of his body, the long thighs
that held them braced, felt as resilient as tensile steel.
She
was helpless. Utterly, completely, and absolutely helpless.
Patience
looked up and met the stranger's hooded gaze. As she watched,
his grey eyes darkened. The expression they contained--intensely
concentrated--sent a most peculiar thrill through her.
She
blinked; her gaze fell--to the man's lips. Long, thin yet
beautifully proportioned, they'd been sculpted with a view
to fascination. They certainly fascinated her; she couldn't
drag her gaze away. The mesmerizing contours shifted, almost
imperceptibly softening; her own lips tingled. She swallowed,
and dragged in a desperately needed breath.
Her
breasts rose, shifting against the stranger's coat, pressing
more definitely against his chest. Sensation streaked through
her, from unexpectedly tight nipples all the way to her toes.
She caught another breath and tensed--but couldn't stop the
quiver that raced through her.
The
stranger's lips thinned; the austere planes of his face hardened.
His fingers tightened about her arms. To Patience's stunned
amazement, he lifted her--easily--and carefully set her down
two feet away.
Then
he stepped back and swept her a negligent bow.
"Vane
Cynster." One brown brow arched; his eyes remained on
hers. "I'm here to see Lady Bellamy."
Patience
blinked. "Ah...yes." She hadn't known men could
move like that--particularly not men like him. He was so tall,
large, lean but well muscled, yet his coordination had been
faultless, the smooth grace investing the languid courtesy
rendering it compelling in some ill-defined way. His words,
uttered in a voice so deep she could have mistaken it for
the rumble of the storm, eventually impinged on her consciousness;
struggling to harness her thoughts, she gestured to the door
at her right. "The first gong's gone."
Vane
met her wide gaze, and managed not to smile wolfishly--no
need to frighten the prey. The view he now had--of delectable
curves filling a gown of ivory sprigged muslin in a manner
he fully approved--was every bit as enticing as the view that
had first held him--the gorgeous curves of her derriere clearly
delineated beneath taut fabric. When she'd shifted, so had
those curves. He couldn't remember when a sight had so transfixed
him, had so tantalized his rake's senses.
She
was of average height, her forehead level with his throat.
Her hair, rich brown, lustrously sheening, was confined in
a sleek knot, bright tendrils escaping to wreathe about her
ears and nape. Delicate brown brows framed large eyes of hazel
brown, their expression difficult to discern in the gloom.
Her nose was straight; her complexion creamy. Her pink lips
simply begged to be kissed. He'd come within a whisker of
kissing them, but tasting an unknown lady before the requisite
introductions was simply not good form.
His
silence had allowed her to steady her wits; he sensed her
growing resistance, sensed the frown gathering in her eyes.
Vane let his lips curve. He knew precisely what he wanted
to do--to her, with her; the only questions remaining were
where and when. "And you are...?"
Her
eyes narrowed fractionally. She drew herself up, clasping
her hands before her. "Patience Debbington."
The
shock hit him, heavy as a cannonball, and left him winded.
Vane stared at her; a chill bloomed in his chest. It quickly
spread, locking muscle after muscle in reactive denial. Then
disbelief welled. He glanced at her left hand. No band of
any sort decorated her third finger.
She
couldn't be unmarried--she was in her mid-twenties; no younger
woman possessed curves as mature as hers. Of that, he was
sure--he'd spent half his life studying feminine curves; in
that sphere he was an expert. Perhaps she was a widow--potentially
even better. She was studying him covertly, her gaze sliding
over him.
Vane
felt the touch of her gaze, felt the hunter within him rise
in response to that artless glance; his wariness returned.
"Miss Debbington?"
Looking
up, she nodded--Vane almost groaned. Last chance--a spinster,
impecunious, and without connections. He could set her up
as his mistress.
She
must have read his mind; before he could formulate the question,
she answered it. "I'm Lady Bellamy's niece."
A
crack of thunder all but drowned out her words; under cover
of the noise, Vane swore beneath his breath, only just resisting
the impulse to direct his ire heavenward.
Fate
looked at him through clear hazel eyes.
Disapproving
hazel eyes.
"If
you'll come this way"--with a wave, she indicated the
nearby door, then haughtily led the way--"I'll have Masters
inform my aunt of your arrival."
Having
assimmilated the style, and thus the standing, of Minnie's
unexpected caller, Patience made no attempt to hide her opinion;
dismissive contempt colored her tone. "Is my aunt expecting
you?"
"No--but
she'll be pleased to see me."
Was
that subtle reproof she detected in his far-too-suave tones?
Swallowing a hoity humph, Patience swept on. She felt his
presence, large and intensely masculine, prowling in her wake.
Her senses skittered; she clamped a firm hold on them and
lifted her chin. "If you'll wait in the parlor--it's
the first door on your right--Masters will fetch you when
my aunt is ready to receive you. As I mentioned, the household
is presently dressing for dinner."
"Indeed."
The
word, uttered softly, reached her as she halted before the
side door; Patience felt a cool tingle slither down her spine.
And felt the touch of his grey gaze on her cheek, on the sensitive
skin of her throat. She stiffened, resisting the urge to wriggle.
She looked down, determined not to turn and meet his eyes.
Jaw firming, she reached for the door handle; he beat her
to it.
Patience
froze. He'd stopped directly behind her, and reached around
her to grasp the handle; she watched his long fingers slowly
close about it. And stop.
She
could feel him behind her, mere inches away, could sense his
strength surrounding her. For one definable instant, she felt
trapped.
Then
the long fingers twisted; with a flick, he set the door swinging
wide.
Heart
racing, Patience sucked in a breath and sailed into the dim
passage. Without slowing her pace, she inclined her head in
regal, over-the-shoulder dismissal. "I'll speak to Masters
directly--I'm sure my aunt won't keep you long." With
that, she swept on, down the passage and into the dark hallway
beyond.
Poised
on the threshold, Vane watched her retreat through narrowed
eyes. He'd sensed the awareness that had flared at his touch,
the quiver of consciousness she hadn't been able to hide.
For gentlemen such as he, that was proof enough of what might
be.
His
gaze fell on the small grey cat which had hugged Patience
Debbington's skirts; it now sat on the runner, considering
him. As he watched, it rose, turned, and, tail high, started
up the corridor--then stopped. Turning its head, it looked
back at him. "Meeow!"
From
its imperious tone, Vane deduced it was female.
Behind
him, lightning flashed. He looked back at the darkened day.
Thunder rolled--a second later, the heavens opened. Rain pelted
down, sheets of heavy drops obliterating the landscape.
Fate's
message couldn't have been clearer: escape was impossible.
His
features grim, Vane closed the door--and followed the cat.
*
* *
"Nothing
could be more fortuitous!" Araminta, Lady Bellamy, beamed
delightedly at Vane. "Of course you must stay. But the
second gong will go any minute, so cut line. How is everyone?"
Propping
his shoulders against the mantelpiece, Vane smiled. Wrapped
in expensive shawls, her rotund figure encased in silk and
lace, a frilled widow's cap atop sprightly white curls, Minnie
watched him through eyes bright with intelligence, set in
a soft, lined face. She sat enthroned in her chair before
the fire in her bedchamber; in its mate sat Timms, a gentlewoman
of indeterminate years, Minnie's devoted companion. "Everyone,"
Vane knew, meant the Cynsters. "The youngsters are thriving--Simon's
starring at Eton. Amelia and Amanda are cutting a swath through
the ton, scattering hearts right and left. The elders are
all well and busy in town, but Devil and Honoria are still
at the Place."
"Too
taken with admiring his heir, I'll wager. Daresay that wife
of his will keep him in line." Minnie grinned, then sobered.
"Still no word of Charles?"
Vane's
face hardened. "No. His disappearance remains a mystery."
Minnie
shook her head. "Poor Arthur."
"Indeed."
Minnie
sighed, then slanted an assessing glance at Vane. "And
what about you and those cousins of yours? Still keeping the
ton's ladies on their toes?"
Her
tone was all innocence; head bowed over her knitting, Timms
snorted. "More like on their backs."
Vane
smiled, suavely charming. "We do our poor best."
Minnie's eyes twinkled. Still smiling, Vane looked down and
smoothed his sleeve. "I'd better go and change, but tell
me--who do you have staying at present?"
"A
whole parcel of odds and ends," Timms offered.
Minnie
chuckled and drew her hands free of her shawl. "Let's
see." She counted on her fingers. "There's Edith
Swithins--she's a distant Bellamy connection. Utterly vague,
but quite harmless. Just don't express any interest in her
tatting unless you've an hour to spare. Then there's Agatha
Chadwick--she was married to that unfortunate character who
insisted he could cross the Irish Sea in a coracle. He couldn't,
of course. So Agatha and her son and daughter are with us."
"Daughter?"
Minnie's
gaze lifted to Vane's face. "Angela. She's sixteen and
already a confirmed wilter. She'll swoon away in your arms
if you give her half a chance."
Vane
grimaced. "Thank you for the warning."
"Henry
Chadwick must be about your age," Minnie mused, "but
not at all in the same mold." Her gaze ran appreciatively
over Vane's elegant figure, long muscular legs displayed to
advantage in tight buckskins and top boots, his superbly tailored
coat of Bath superfine doing justice to his broad shoulders.
"Just setting eyes on you should do him some good."
Vane
merely raised his brows.
"Now,
who else?" Minnie frowned at her fingers. "Edmond
Montrose is our resident poet and dramatist. Needless to say,
he fancies himself the next Byron. Then there's the General
and Edgar, who you must remember."
Vane
nodded. The General, a brusque, ex-military man, had lived
at Bellamy Hall for years; his title was not a formal one,
but a nickname earned by his emphatically regimental air.
Edgar Polinbrooke, too, had been Minnie's pensioner for years--Vane
placed Edgar in his fifties, a mild tippler who fancied himself
a gamester, but who was, in reality, a simple and harmless
soul.
"Don't
forget Whitticombe," Timms put in.
"How
could I forget Whitticombe?" Minnie sighed. "Or
Alice."
Vane
raised a questioning brow.
"Mr.
Whitticombe Colby and his sister, Alice," Minnie supplied.
"They're distant cousins of Humphrey's. Whitticombe trained
as a deacon and has conceived the notion of compiling the
History of Coldchurch Abbey." Coldchurch was the abbey
on whose ruins the Hall stood.
"As
for Alice--well, she's just Alice." Minnie grimaced.
"She must be over forty and, though I hate to say it
of one of my own sex, a colder, more intolerant, judgmental
being it has never been my misfortune to meet."
Vane's
brows rose high. "I suspect it would be wise if I steered
clear of her."
"Do."
Minnie nodded feelingly. "Get too close, and she'll probably
have the vapors." She glanced at Vane. "Then again,
she might just have hysterics anyway, the instant she sets
eyes on you."
Vane
cast her a jaundiced look.
"I
think that's it. Oh, no--I forgot Patience and Gerrard."
Minnie looked up. "My niece and nephew."
Studying
Minnie's radiant face, Vane didn't need to ask if she was
fond of her young relatives. "Patience and Gerrard?"
He kept the question mild.
"My
younger sister's children. They're orphans now. Gerrard's
seventeen--he inherited the Grange, a nice little property
in Derbyshire, from his father, Sir Reginald Debbington."
Minnie frowned at Vane. "You might be too young to remember
him. Reggie died eleven years ago."
Vane
sifted through his memories. "Was he the one who broke
his neck while out with the Cottesmore?"
Minnie
nodded. "That's the one. Constance, m'sister, died two
years ago. Patience has been holding the fort for Gerrard,
pretty much since Reggie died." Minnie smiled. "Patience
is my project for the coming year."
Vane
studied that smile. "Oh?"
"Thinks
she's on the shelf and couldn't care less. Says she'll think
about marrying after Gerrard's settled."
Timms
snorted. "Too single minded for her own good."
Minnie
folded her hands in her lap. "I've decided to take Patience
and Gerrard to London for the Season next year. She thinks
we're going to give Gerrard a little town bronze."
Vane
raised a cynical brow. "While in reality, you plan to
play matchmaker."
"Precisely."
Minnie beamed at him. "Patience has a tidy fortune invested
in the Funds. As for the rest, you must give me your opinion
once you've seen her. Tell me how high you think she can reach."
Vane
inclined his head noncommittally.
A
gong boomed in the distance.
"Damn!"
Minnie clutched her slipping shawls. "They'll be waiting
in the drawing room, wondering what on earth's going on."
She waved Vane away. "Go pretty yourself up. You don't
stop by that often. Now you're here, I want the full benefit
of your company."
"Your
wish is my command." Vane swept her an elegant bow; straightening,
he slanted her an arrogantly rakish smile. "Cynsters
never leave ladies unsatisfied."
Timms
snorted so hard she choked.
Vane
left the room to chortles, chuckles, and gleeful, anticipatory
whispers.
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