Harlequin Historical July 2021--Box Set 1 of 2 Read online




  Harlequin Historical July 2021 Box Set 1 of 2

  The Marquess Next Door

  The Railway Countess

  A Marriage Made in Secret

  Virginia Heath

  Julia Justiss

  Jenni Fletcher

  Table of Contents

  The Marquess Next Door

  By Virginia Heath

  The Railway Countess

  By Julia Justiss

  A Marriage Made in Secret

  By Jenni Fletcher

  The Talk of the Beau Monde

  Three unconventional sisters for three infamous lords

  As the daughters of a famous portrait artist, sisters Faith, Hope and Charity Brookes are regular features at the best balls and soirees—and in the gossip columns!

  Daring to follow their dreams of being an artist, writer and singer means scandal is never far away, especially when they each fall for titled—and infamous—gentlemen who set the ton’s tongues wagging!

  Read Faith’s story in

  The Viscount’s Unconventional Lady

  Read Hope’s story in

  The Marquess Next Door

  Both available now

  And look for Charity’s story

  Coming soon!

  Author Note

  I never knew my father’s mother.

  She died before I was born at the relatively young age of sixty-five—but if the photographs were to be believed, she looked a very old lady by then. She has always fascinated me. Her four sons always spoke of her fondly but were careful in their choice of anecdotes. Her daughters-in-law would sometimes let slip in whispered conversations that she could be a difficult woman, reclusive and unpredictable. I still have no clue which version of her was the real one and suspect it was an amalgamation of both.

  What I do know is that she had my father in her late forties and was ashamed to have become pregnant at that age. That when he was only a few weeks old, her home in East London was destroyed during the Blitz and she was rehoused miles away from her family. That she attempted suicide and was committed to the insane asylum. And that the stigma of her mental illness was so great nobody ever spoke of it...

  The Marquess Next Door

  Virginia Heath

  When Virginia Heath was a little girl, it took her ages to fall asleep, so she made up stories in her head to help pass the time while she was staring at the ceiling. As she got older, the stories became more complicated—sometimes taking weeks to get to their happy ending. One day she decided to embrace her insomnia and start writing them down. Virginia lives in Essex, UK, with her wonderful husband and two teenagers. It still takes her forever to fall asleep...

  Books by Virginia Heath

  Harlequin Historical

  His Mistletoe Wager

  Redeeming the Reclusive Earl

  The Scoundrel’s Bartered Bride

  Christmas Cinderellas

  “Invitation to the Duke’s Ball”

  The Talk of the Beau Monde

  The Viscount’s Unconventional Lady

  The Marquess Next Door

  Secrets of a Victorian Household

  Lilian and the Irresistible Duke

  The King’s Elite

  The Mysterious Lord Millcroft

  The Uncompromising Lord Flint

  The Disgraceful Lord Gray

  The Determined Lord Hadleigh

  Visit the Author Profile page

  at Harlequin.com for more titles.

  This book is dedicated to every inmate of the Middlesex County Lunatic Asylum and most especially to my grandmother Elizabeth, who was once a patient there.

  Contents

  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 ONE

  The most delicious rumour to find my ear this week, Gentle Reader, concerns Miss H. from Bloomsbury, a certain lieutenant who is newly returned from the Peninsula and a violet ice cream at Gunter’s Tea Room. I have no idea what the handsome soldier said to the young lady in question to vex her so, suffice it to say that whatever he proposed resulted in him wearing the fiery young lady’s colourful frozen dessert like a jaunty hat...

  Whispers from Behind the Fan

  May 1814

  ‘Just the one dance?’ The overfamiliar and persistent fool stared pointedly at the fan-shaped card dangling from Hope’s wrist, which was resplendent with purposely blank spaces. Spaces he could plainly see, thanks to the stupid card’s design. ‘Surely, at this late hour, you can now spare me one? A cotillion perhaps...’ His eyes dipped unsubtly to her cleavage again, because in the eighteen months Lord Harlington had doggedly pursued her he always struggled to focus on her face. ‘Or better still, the last waltz? It hasn’t escaped my notice that you haven’t yet danced once.’

  ‘What part of never in a month of Sundays do you struggle to understand, Lord Harlington?’ She did not bother hiding her irritation, even though she’d worked out long ago that her dismissive and curt treatment of some men only seemed to spur them on. Not that refusing politely worked either. This one was as persistent as gangrene in a festering wound and twice as obnoxious. Being arrogant, exceedingly pompous and convinced he was God’s gift to women, the hapless Harlington wrongly assumed she was playing hard to get. ‘Because trust me, I would rather stick pins under my fingernails or salt my eyeballs than waste a single second waltzing with you.’

  True to form and much to her irritation, her answer seemed to fire his blood further and he got that funny lascivious look in his eyes which men like him always got when she was unspeakably rude to them. Or simply when they ogled her figure. ‘Would you like me to beg?’

  And that was probably yet another of his perverted fantasies. Because there was something about her which always sparked this sort of nonsense from men. Whether that was down to her vivid red hair or the pale skin, the bigger than average, cumbersome bosoms she abhorred or the fact her waist was disproportionately smaller than her overly generous hips, she wasn’t sure. Although, more likely, she had long been of the opinion it was a particular combination of all those obvious womanly things which life had cursed her with and which rendered her, not so much a human being in their blinkered, lustful eyes, with thoughts and feelings and opinions—but an object. A plaything. A vessel. And one they were convinced could be owned.

  Which wasn’t just degrading, demeaning and downright uncalled for—it was exhausting.

  ‘No, Lord Harlington, I would like you to go away. In a perfect world, preferably for ever.’

  ‘You are such a tease, Mistress Vixen.’ He smiled in what she assumed he thought was a sultry and seductive manner, but which was anything but, especially thanks to the dreadful nickname he had given her and always insisted upon using whenever he caught her alone. It was improper and
lecherous, and she loathed it. ‘I know you do not mean that.’

  ‘If you suddenly dropped dead at my feet here in the Earl and Countess of Writtle’s ballroom, I would spontaneously rejoice at my good fortune. I might even dance a jig around your corpse, my lord, because you are an irritating, nauseating, infuriating pest who gives pestilence a bad name. One who continues to labour under the gross misapprehension that when I say no to your unattractive offer of being your mistress, repeatedly and vociferously, I actually wish for you to woo me harder and that my outright and open disgust of you which is always written as plain as day on my face, is a form of flirtation. Or worse, merely a bargaining chip. Which, of course, it isn’t.’

  For good measure, she pointed her closed fan at him, wishing she weren’t in a packed ballroom so she could smash it over his thick head. ‘After a year and a half, even the stupidest of cretins would have worked out my extreme aversion to you by now. But alas, unfortunately, you are so cretinous, so thick-skinned, thick-headed and pig-ignorant, I sincerely doubt the combined efforts of a royal proclamation, an Act of Parliament and a town crier simultaneously bellowing out my complete and unwavering revulsion for you has any chance of hammering that undeniable message home.’

  ‘If you dance with me now, I promise I shall leave you alone for the rest of the evening...’ Briefly, his eyes met hers before they latched determinedly back on her breasts. ‘Just grant me one dance...please. I ache for you.’

  It was like talking to a wall. She rolled her eyes heavenward, praying for the strength not to kick Lord Harlington hard in the gentleman’s area so that he had a proper ache to contend with. The nuisance had been following her around for the last half an hour. Instead she scanned the ballroom to see if there was any sign of anyone from her family who might save her.

  Much to her chagrin, they were all too engrossed to notice she was stuck in an alcove all alone with the most nauseating of her current sorry collection of lacklustre or downright despicable suitors. Her theatrical mother, the famous soprano Roberta Brookes, was waxing lyrical in the centre of a gaggle of devoted opera fans next to the refreshment stand, while her equally famous father, the portraitist Augustus Brookes, was holding court in another crowd in the opposite corner. Both of her sisters were busy too, which was why she was left in this predicament alone. While Charity, the youngest Brookes, happily danced and flirted with everyone because she adored attention, Hope usually spent most social occasions stood with her slightly older sister Faith diligently refusing all dances because dancing with her never failed to give her dancing partners lustful ideas. Faith had always shared the same cynical view of the unworthy predators who swarmed around young ladies at social functions, or at least she had since she had foolishly allowed one past her defences. Since then they had always protected one another and thoroughly enjoying it while they did, but things had changed of late. The dynamic had shifted, since her most reliable, formerly cynical and similar sibling had fallen hopelessly in love.

  Faith was currently with Lord Eastwood, her handsome husband-to-be, hardly a surprise when this had tonight been announced as their engagement ball. And, in typical Charity fashion, the youngest of the three Brookes daughters was again the talk of the ballroom because she had, unbelievably, snared the Duke of Wellington as her current partner. No mean feat as the last time Hope had seen her, Charity had been twirling around the dance floor with none other than Lord Bryon.

  Which left the floundering Hope with three choices.

  Either try to lose Lord Harlington again in the crowd, which was proving difficult as he apparently had the instincts of a homing pigeon as far as she was concerned, remain stuck talking to the idiot for the duration and likely kill him before the end of the night and then face imprisonment for murdering a peer of the realm, or, most horrific and unpalatable of all, she could dance with him.

  None solved the problem.

  That would teach her for carrying the stupid dance card in the first place, even though she never had any intentions of using it. Her lofty plan of sneaking off to a quiet room, for the last hour, to finish writing the next chapter of her latest novel was in tatters thanks to him.

  And thanks to all the words which were filling up her head and positively bursting at the seams to be let out, she’d likely have to write them all in the small hours now when they finally got home. If they ever got home before dawn—which was looking increasingly unlikely when absolutely none of the guests was leaving despite it already being a good hour past midnight.

  When murdering him seemed the only viable option, another idea struck. It was sly and sneaky but undoubtedly no less than this noxious, stalking, leering libertine deserved—but it just might work.

  ‘You can have the next country dance, Lord Harlington—but only if you leave me in peace beforehand.’ Which gave her precisely one cotillion and one short quadrille to find somewhere in this unfamiliar house to hide. Ideally somewhere with a desk, a lamp and a plentiful supply of ink and paper because her mother had banned her from bringing any.

  The annoying lord beamed, clearly beside himself with joy that he had finally worn her down with his superior and scintillating wooing. ‘Oh, thank you, Miss Hope! You have made my night.’ While he was oblivious that he made her flesh crawl.

  ‘But only if you leave me in peace remember!’ All she needed were a few undisturbed minutes to escape. ‘If I see you watching me, or even as much as facing in my general direction in the next ten minutes, I shall declare my reluctant offer of a dance null and void. Do I make myself clear, Lord Harlington?’

  ‘As crystal, my dearest vixen.’ He had the gall to smile smugly at his perceived triumph. ‘I knew my dogged determination would eventually pay off.’ Then he tried to kiss her gloved hand and she placed it behind her back and glared at him appalled down her nose.

  ‘I can assure you, hell would have to freeze over for me to allow that!’ The thought of his lips anywhere near her skin made her want to gag. ‘Keep your filthy hands and your slobbering lips to yourself, sir!’

  ‘Shall I meet you back here in this alcove?’

  ‘Yes...here would be perfect.’ Because it was now the exact place where a herd of wild elephants wouldn’t drag her once she had secured her freedom. As an additional incentive, she shooed him off with both hands as if he were vermin, making sure she scowled in complete disgust as she did so. ‘Now go away. Leave me in peace, halfwit!’

  Thwarted from touching her, he blew her a foul lingering kiss instead. ‘Consider me gone...my lovely Mistress Vixen.’

  Feeling oddly violated as well as annoyed, Hope couldn’t contain the grimace as she watched him disappear into the crowd, her flesh still crawling. Perhaps one day a man would come along who surprised her? One who talked to her and not her chest. One who adored her brain and her wit and had noble intentions for once rather than entirely carnal. Every man seemed to want to skip Charity down the altar, and with the besotted Piers about to whisk Faith to the Writtle family chapel in Richmond, it seemed doubly annoying that the only place any man ever suggested taking her was to their bed.

  She sighed, fed up to the back teeth with it all, but conscious there was no time to waste, she shook herself to banish all thought of Hideous Harlington, adjusted the filmy fichu she had added to her already modest gown, then swiftly searched for a suitable exit in case he realised his folly and came back. She needed a way out which wasn’t obvious to escape before anyone saw her. Aside from Lord Harlington, she had already spotted another two lecherous gentlemen in the ballroom who also struggled to take no for an answer, and she didn’t want to swap one plague of boils for another.

  The main door was undoubtedly the quickest route, but that would take her past both the dance floor and the refreshment table, so that wouldn’t do, but behind her were a line of French doors leading out to the darkened terrace.

  Without a second thought, she slipped through one and dashed dow
n the steps into the garden, fully intending to hunt for a different entrance back inside, well away from the odious Lord Harlington or any other prying and preying eyes. But the moon was full, the night air surprisingly warm and the sky so clear she could see every twinkling star.

  Hope had always adored the night. She had never been an early bird and had always struggled to sleep until many hours after the rest of the household were snoring, even as a little girl. As a child she had passed the time daydreaming, creating little stories in her head to keep herself entertained and soon discovered that storytelling was her calling and her vivid imagination was always at its best when the sun, like her family, was sleeping.

  Charmed and instantly at home, she ventured further into the pretty but unfamiliar garden, enjoying the dark silhouette of the fancy topiary lining the winding path. Like all such gardens in the centre of the crowded capital, this one wasn’t particularly large, but it was long and narrow and its owners had created little rooms ringed with flower beds or shrubbery to give the illusion of space and the suggestion of privacy. They had achieved this so well, from only a few yards from the house, she could barely see the twinkling lights of the ballroom. She could, however, hear the alluring sounds of tinkling water, so headed straight for it.

  The little white fountain trickled over a pale Grecian-style urn sat on top of a narrow pedestal, sat in a circular pond. Ringing it was a perfectly symmetrical miniature, knee high maze made up of neatly clipped box hedging, heather, and lavender.

  Because she enjoyed a challenge, she followed the puzzle properly until she reached the centre, then sat on the wide brim of the pond’s inviting wall—a wall clearly designed to be sat upon. It was the perfect spot to read, even by candlelight, if she had had the wherewithal to fetch a book and candle in her hurry to escape. So instead she simply sat as she supposed she was meant to and soaked it all in, consigning the opulent scenery to memory in case she ever needed it in one of her future stories.