Publisher: Tule Publishing

Series: The Duke's Men, Book 2

ISBN: 978-1-964703-28-2

Coming October 21, 2024

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Other Books In The Series

The Lady and the Thief

The Raven's Lady

At a ball in London in 1834, after fire destroys the Houses of Parliament, obscenely rich Adrian Cole, the newly-knighted, fire-fighting hero of the hour, falls in love with a beauty of high rank. To his friends, Adrian is Raven, one of the Duke of Wenlocke's former lost boys, and heir to his industrialist grandfather. With his usual energy and force of character, Raven leases a grand country house and puts his past behind him to pursue the beauty.

After a disastrous London Season and a crippling accident, Lady Cassandra Lavenham hides herself away from society's cruel taunts until a wealthy stranger comes to lease her grandmother's neglected estate, Verwood Hall. As Raven and Cassie deal with one another as tenant and landlady, an unacknowledged bond forms between them. Until Raven's grand plan to impress his lady love with a midsummer's ball brings Cassie into the light and reveals the true longings of his heart.



Excerpt

"Stop." She sneezed, and he handed her his handkerchief. "You are getting ahead of yourself," she said. "Even if this house can be made livable, to get your lease you have to find your way into Grandmama's good graces first."

"You don't think offering her a trainer will help?"`

"It might, but perhaps there's something else about you that would ..."

"Overcome the taint of trade in iron and glass? I assure you I have been welcome this winter in all the loftiest houses in Mayfair."

"Have you?" Her dark brows went up. "Somehow I don't think unbridled conceit will be a winning strategy with Grandmama."

Raven choked. "Unbridled conceit?"

"Apparently, you have acquired boundless confidence along with your fortune. Is that how you earned your knighthood?"

"I earned..."

She sneezed again, and Raven took hold of her elbow and led her through the house and out a door in the kitchen into a small courtyard. She leaned against a low stone wall overlooking a field, and sneezed a few more times. He waited.

"Speaking of conceit..." he began. "I wager there's plenty of conceit in a household that can't afford coal or servants or new gowns for a lady, but that pretends to be above leasing a portion of the property to a respectable man of means."

Her eyes flashed up at him. She was taller than Amabel, and fearless and frank in her bearing with no illusion of feminine frailty, and, he suspected, she was about to let him have it. Then another sneeze took her.

"Oh bother," she said, recovering. "It's no use getting angry. The truth is that leasing Verwood is the practical solution to our family's dilemma. It is just that the littleness of a drawing room only twenty feet across is a strong a reminder of our circumstances."

"Will her grace care so very much about the house if the stables prosper?"

"No," she admitted with a laugh. "You're right. She will hardly spend any time here. But first we have to reconcile grandmama to you as a tenant."

Raven liked that we. It meant she was going to be practical. But he didn't understand the problem exactly. "My money's not suitable for the ladies of Verwood?"

"Your money's fine. It's you. You aren't what we ..." She waved a hand over his person. Even without a valet Raven had dressed himself to exacting London standards, so he couldn't think what caused her to object to him.

"What?"

"Expected." She blew out a sigh. "The tenant we imagined was ... old, quiet, settled... married, content to drive a gig about the lanes or shoot a few pheasants in season. You'll be noticed."

"You didn't tell Trimley that you required any of these qualities in a tenant."

"That's because the Sir misled me. I thought Sir Adrian Cole must be a merry old nabob returned from India, or a mill owner bringing his wife and daughters from some blighted northern town to live in the healthful south. How did you acquire a 'sir' at your age?"

"My age?" He no longer thought of himself as a youth. Dick Crockett was a youth. "I was knighted for making fire engines."

"Fire engines?" The perplexed look on her face made him laugh. "When I joined my grandfather's business, he asked me what I wanted to make. His fortune came from cannons for the army and the navy, but demand had slowed. I started with glass. Glass makes money, but it doesn't excite my grandfather. Then I suggested we make better fire engines, engines that can pump more water, at a faster rate. He liked that idea."

"And a better fire engine led to a knighthood?"

"Five engines. Ours were deployed against the fire in the Houses of Parliament last October."

"You were there, fighting the fire?"

"Yes." His reputation as a man who fought the palace blaze meant he'd been pointed out in ballrooms all winter. Whispers had followed him. Women had looked at him with a sort of awe, and some women, with a kind of hunger.

Lady Cassandra gave him a shrewd assessing glance. Plainly, his firefighting did not stir any particular admiration in her.

He laughed and pushed away from the wall. "Not impressed? What about showing gratitude for sending disagreeable Hugh on his way?"

"I am grateful. Whatever your motive for that act, it was a kindness to Dick Crockett."

"Motive? You suspect me of having a motive for helping a fellow who was getting the wrong end of an unfair fight?"

"You threw money at a problem and made it go away. That's hardly heroic."

"Does my money have to be heroic to rescue Verwood from insolvency?"

She took a deep breath. "As I said before, it's not the money, it's you we need to present as an unobjectionable tenant."

He shook his head. "You would prefer a tenant in his dotage who fought at Trafalgar or Waterloo?" 

She grinned at him and shrugged her shoulders. "Even a minor victory like Navarino would do. Mostly, it would help if you could manage to be forty or fifty and a bit more ... staid."

"That," he said, "is beyond my power. I am staying at the Crown and can return directly if you think of any way of gaining her grace's approval."

"Oh, the Crown. Which horse did they give you?"

"Apollo."

Her brows went up again. "Then you have made an impression. Apollo is the Crown's best horse, and Grandmama likes him. You must come for tea."

"Tea? Why isn't your solicitor handling the lease for you?"

"Because women can manage their own affairs," she snapped.

"Tea it is, then, if you agree to support me as an acceptable tenant for Verwood, for my service to the nation." Raven stuck out his hand to seal the bargain. He would have Trimley seek out Verwood's solicitor and find out the reason for leaving him out of the lease plans.

She cast him a brief puzzled glance, then her hand met his. The sensation of it brought him up short, her small delicate hand in his larger one. He had been thinking of her as this forthright, strong-willed person, managing business affairs women usually left to men. The soft hand threw him off for a moment.

She withdrew her hand, and he recovered. It was Amabel he should be thinking of, not this odd, prickly independent woman.