Authors: Nicole Byrd
A Lady of Scandal
“Great dialogue, a wonderful story line, and, not one, but two very romantic couples! What more could a reader ask for? Don't miss this latest novel by Nicole Byrd.”
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Romance Reviews Today
“A fun historical romance starring likable sisters and the hunk cousins who fall in love with themâ¦readers will enjoy this jocular tale.”
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Midwest Book Review
Seducing Sir Oliver
“Charming and deliciousâ
Seducing Sir Oliver
will seduce anyone who loves witty, adventurous romance!”
âCeleste Bradley, author of
Desperately Seeking a Duke
“Superb.”
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Midwest Book Review
Gilding the Lady
“A riveting read.”
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Romance Reviews Today
“Another awesome book by Nicole Byrd, and I look forward to reading more from such a wonderful author.”
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Romance Junkies
Vision in Blue
“A superb and compelling Regency historical that will keep the reader riveted to the pageâ¦A wonderful, richly detailed reading experience. Complex, humorous, and sensual,
Vision in Blue
will delight historical fans.”
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The Romance Readers Connection
“Ms. Byrd does a fantastic jobâ¦I look forward to the next book in this intriguing, well-written series.”
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The Best Reviews
Beauty in Black
“The social whirl of Britain's Regency era springs to vivid life.”
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Publishers Weekly
“Another delightful tale by the multitalented Nicole Byrdâ¦Heartwarming, humorous at timesâ¦a well-written page-turner.”
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Romance Reviews Today
Widow in Scarlet
“Nicole Byrd scores again with her latest Regency historicalâ¦with touches of suspense, sensuality, and the exotic.”
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The Romance Readers Connection
“A superb Regency tale you won't want to miss.”
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Romance Reviews Today
Lady in Waiting
“Byrd's unpretentious writing style and sense of humor render this a delicious read.”
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Publishers Weekly
“Byrd sifts a measure of intrigue and danger into her latest historical confection, which should prove to be irresistible to readers with a taste for deliciously witty, delightfully clever romances.”
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Booklist
“A prime example of a Regency-set romance done well, with personable characters, intrigue, and a lovely secondary romance adding spice to the mix.”
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The Romance Reader
Dear Impostor
“Madcap fun with a touch of romantic intrigueâ¦A stylish Regency-era rompâ¦satisfying to the last word.”
âCathy Maxwell,
New York Times
bestselling author of
Bedding the Heiress
“A charming taleâ¦Great characters, a plot that keeps the pages turning, and a smile-inducing ending make this a must-read. Delightful, charming, and refreshingly differentâ¦Don't miss
Dear Impostor
.”
âPatricia Potter,
USA Today
bestselling author of
Beloved Warrior
“
Dear Impostor
is the real thingâa story filled with passion, adventure, and the heart-stirring emotion that is the essence of romance.”
âSusan Wiggs,
New York Times
bestselling author of
Dockside
ROBERT'S LADY
DEAR IMPOSTOR
LADY IN WAITING
WIDOW IN SCARLET
BEAUTY IN BLACK
VISION IN BLUE
GILDING THE LADY
SEDUCING SIR OLIVER
A LADY OF SCANDAL
A LADY BETRAYED
ENTICING THE EARL
THE BERKLEY PUBLISHING GROUP
Published by the Penguin Group
Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
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Penguin Books Ltd., Registered Offices: 80 Strand, London WC2R 0RL, England
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental. The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.
ENTICING THE EARL
A Berkley Sensation Book / published by arrangement with the author
Copyright © 2008 by Cheryl Zach.
Hand lettering by Ron Zinn.
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Please do not participate in or encourage piracy of copyrighted materials in violation of the author's rights. Purchase only authorized editions.
For information, address: The Berkley Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014.
ISBN: 978-1-1012-0717-8
BERKLEY
®
SENSATION
Berkley Sensation Books are published by The Berkley Publishing Group, a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc., 375 Hudson Street, New York, New York 10014.
BERKLEY SENSATION and the “B” design are trademarks belonging to Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
Once again, as ever,
For Sid
“T
hey do say he's desperate handsome,” the first hotel
maid said as she scrubbed the door panel. “And a wild man in bed!”
“Tell me some'um I ain't 'eard,” the second maid jeered. “The earl's famous for 'is way wid the ladies. And I 'ear 'e's dumped the 'igh-priced ladybird 'e's been supportin' in such style. She'll 'ave to find some'un else to pay for 'er 'igh perch carriages and diamond-studded boots. Wish I 'ad a chance to take over her post, and she could 'ave this 'ere mop!”
Grinning at this fantasy involving the Quality's love lives, she sloshed her mop about on the staircase landing, splattering drops of dirty water. Thick with muscle, her arms wielded the handle with ease.
“Ha!” The first servant snorted. “You and me and half of London's females, besides. He's probably built her a castleâandâandâGod knows! Who wouldn't want to be mollycoddled with jewels and pretty clothes, and made love to night and day?”
“It'd jolly me just to spend a few 'ours alone wid a man like that!” The other maid groaned in mock ecstasy, and both servants dissolved into fits of giggles.
Who indeed?
Seated on the stairs a flight above them, Lauryn Applegate Harris wrapped her arms about her knees, feet drawn up beneath her, and wondered if she would ever meet such a man. It didn't seem likely.
She had been in London for six weeks, and thisâeaves-dropping on the hotel maids as they workedâwas as close as she had come to any social life. Not that Lauryn had clothes suitable for entering Society, anyhow. She was still wearing the rusty black gowns she had dyed for her unexpected widowhood last year, and now she lacked the money to replace them. Just this morning she had found a hole in her last pair of good stockings. Being poor was enough to make a saint curse.
And she was no saintâjust a young widow who was acutely weary of always making do with too little and forever covering up her own sadness as she tried to help her father-in-law, the squire, cope with his. He had taken the loss of his only son so hard that she'd feared more than once for his sanity. And the only comfort that might have assuaged his misery was beyond her power to offer. If only she had given her late husband an heirâ¦.
Then Squire Harris would have had something to console him and take his mind off the terrible deprivation they both felt. And she would have had some part of her husband to hold on to, and a child to love.
She pushed away the guilt that rode as constant companion with her lingering grief. She had to look forward, not back, as her four sisters reminded her in their letters.
“If you will not come home, if you are determined to stay and aid the squire, please try not to dwell on the past,” her older sister Madeline had written. “You know we love you, Lauryn. I write this for your own good.”
Everyone had advice. Easy for Madeline to say, Lauryn thought, as her sister cuddled her own firstborn, with a husband beside her to offer his strength and support. But Lauryn knew the counsel was sincere. Early on, she had made herself ill with grief, and at some point, she'd realized she could bear no more tears and sleepless nights. None of it would bring Robert back. Now if she could just hear a little laughter again, once in a while enjoy an outing and a pretty dressâwas she terribly selfish to think such thoughts?
She'd had few enough such entertainments to enjoy even before Robert's death. Sighing, she glanced at the sewing basket beside her and the abandoned stocking she'd been trying to darn.
Wedding her childhood sweetheart when both were quite young, Lauryn had expected to live an agreeable life with her husband, bearing many children, with long, happy years to enjoy them together. But the babies had not come, and as the years passed, Robert had seemed to accept their childless marriage.
Their first flush of postwedding passion had drifted into occasional lovemaking and pleasant companionship, and her husband had amused himself instead with hunting and shooting and the details of running their small estate. Perhaps more aware of time's relentless passage, Robert's father, the squire, had appeared more concerned about the lack of an heirâthe next male in the Harris family line was a distant cousin whom the squire detestedâand Lauryn herself had felt the guilty burden of her barren state.
Then Robert had been struck down by a sudden illness. Now, at the age of nine and twenty, Lauryn found herself a widow, doomed to a life of sitting on the sidelines, wearing her widow's weeds and her matron's cap, and watching other young ladies danceâif, indeed, she ever had the chance to attend a ball again, which didn't seem probable.
And nowâ
A new, brightly colored dress, nothing black or gray or even violetâ¦a handsome man with eyes only for herâ¦a man who made her blood quicken once again, a man who made her feel alive, not in the grave with her poor, struck-down-too-soon young husbandâ¦
Oh, was she a terrible person to allow such wistful reflections to dwell in the farthest reaches of her mind?
Despite herself, Lauryn's reflections turned to the scandalous Earl of Sutton. What did he look like, this much talked about lord? What would it be like, to be the lady he sought out? For a moment, her pulse quickened, then the fantasy faded. Turning back to her basket, she picked up the wooden darning egg, which she thrust into the heel of her stocking. She'd better darn that hole, unless she wished for cold feet, as she and licentious earls were most unlikely to meet!
Hours later, when her father-in-law returned at long
last, his face appeared gray with fatigue. He had looked weary before, but this was worse. His eyes had seemed lifeless ever since Robert had died, but nowânow, the light inside them had retreated even farther.
Lauryn opened the door to their rooms. Observing his slumped shoulders, she swallowed hard. “Are you all right, sir?”
“I've lost it all, Lauryn. All. I'm an old fool.”
Her first feeling was one of relief. Perhaps now he would return to Yorkshire and give up this reckless behavior, drinking too much, gambling with men with deeper pockets. The squire had never spent so much time in the city before. Normally, he was content in his own shire, on his own acres, but after losing Robert, it seemed as if he could not stand the sight of his own land, not without the son who should have inherited it.
Without an heirâ¦Guilt moved once more inside her, and she tried to push it back.
“Do you have enough left to pay the hotel's charges? We can return to Yorkshireâ”
“You're not attending, child. There's nothing to go back to.” He rubbed his hand across his face.
“What?” She felt the first stirring of panic.
The squire's voice shook a little, and she could smell the drink thick on his breath. That had likely not helped his skill at cards, but she would not remark on it. It did little good to offer censure after the fact.
“I don't know how I shall pay the hotel, or how we shall eat. The pot had gotten so large, and I was in so deepâit was all I had left to cover my losses. I thought with just one more good hand, I might redeem it allâ”
He named a figure that made her blanch and reach for the support of the back of a chair to keep her legs from folding.
“And then I lost again. Now the land is gone, the estate in Yorkshire, and the worst of it is, I don't think the earl even wants it. He was making jokes about moth-eaten sheep to the rest of the table when I took my leave. I've already written him out a deedâbest to get the thing over with, don't you knowâbut he'll like as not toss it away or throw it into another card game.”
The squire dropped down onto the side of the bed as if his legs would not hold him. He buried his face in his hands.
She patted his shoulder, but her stomach roiled, and she thought she might be ill. The squire's landâthe land that had been in his family for generationsâthe land that should have been Robert's some dayâgone in a game of cards? The squire wouldn't survive this!
“Who is itâto whom did you lose it?” she asked, when she could make her voice work. Could she call on some of her brothers-in-law to come together and as a group loan the squire enough to get his land back? Would his pride endure such a lowering blow? She doubted she could get his permission to even ask.
“The Earl of Sutton,” he told her, his tone grim. “It might as well be the devil himselfâ¦he has the devil's luck at cards, I can tell you.”
Lauryn was glad her father-in-law was lost in his own misery and not watching her face as he lay back on the bed. She had gone quite rigid.
Sutton? The notorious rake the hotel maids loved to gossip about? He was the one who now possessed the squire's deed and other vowels? Good heavens!
Was the earl a cruel man? Had the gossip about him ignored that side of himâwas this an aspect she had not realized as she'd painted him in her daydreams? Or were the eternal card games that the men played just ignorant of all real life outside of the patter of cards and the skill or the luck that determined who came out on top?
And if the squire had been lost in the deepening circle of his despair, would someone else, if not the earl, have been bound to have wonâ¦. Should she blame the earl for being the winner or was it just fate?
Yet why should she let the earl off the hook? She didn't even know the man! It was the squire who was suffering, who would sufferâ¦. Was there anything she could do to help?
That land had been in the Harris family for more than a hundred years. Even though not formally entailed, it was meant to stay in their family. She had not dreamed of anything else, and she knew the squire hadn't, either, so she could not think what momentary madness had led him to offer it up as collateral.
Could Lauryn do anything? Although Madeline had been the “little mother,” Lauryn had always been there to offer help, the gentle middle child who looked out for her younger sisters, who assisted around the house when her mother had died too young, who had made her father smile by being mature beyond her yearsâit was second nature.
And to be truthful, if aiding the squire now brought her into contact with a handsome, dissolute lord who might bring some excitement into her subdued, even bleak existenceâshe felt a small thrill deep inside, and she was aware that the idea didn't exactly displease her.
Feeling guilty at once, she pushed the feeling back. She had to think first of the squire. She went back to check on him and found him dropping off to sleep.
Lauren pulled a blanket up over her father-in-law as he shut his eyes and fell into a troubled slumber, muttering and tossing about now and then. She went into the next small room and paced up and down as she tried to think.
Despite the lateness of the hour, she was suddenly wide awake. She went to the window and opened the pane, leaning out to look and listen. The street was still busy with elegant carriages returning from evening engagements.
Lauryn thought of the affluent, perhaps titled personages inside, with their fancy clothes and rich and privileged lives. That was the existence the Earl of Sutton must lead. What would he want with the squire's small Yorkshire estate, and how could she convince him to release it? If she told him how devastated the squire was and whyâno, no, it would be unfair to strip away all her father-in-law's dignity. Plus, if he should find out, he would never forgive her.
Men were stubborn, as well, about gambling winningsâit could become an affair of honor if she were not careful. Then both men's hands would be tied as to what they could do.
Sighing, Lauryn rubbed her temples, which all at once threatened to ache. One would think she must have something of worth to give the earl in return, in order to get the squire's estate back, but imagining what was near impossible. She looked down at her empty hands. She had nothing of value to give. She had no jewelry, except a few trinkets of sentimental value that Robert had given her. She had had no real dowry; her own family was not wealthy.
For some time her thoughts flew from one impractical scheme to another. And then the obvious answer came to her.
She had only herselfâ¦.
Lauryn blinked. What aboutâno, no, that was unthinkable.
Was it?
Jumping up, she ran across to the small looking glass on the wall. She strained to see her reflection in the faint light now coming from the window as the sun fought to rise over London's horizon, its weak rays pushing valiantly through the haze of coal dust from countless chimneys.
In her girlhood Lauryn had been called pretty by swains in her shire. She made out a familiar pale, heart-shaped face, with large green eyes, delicate features, and long hair of a golden hue with reddish highlights, just now pulled back behind her head. No longer the girl she had been, but not totally repellant, surely. Was it enough to satisfy an earl known for his discerning taste in women? If she went to him and pledged to serve as aâa courtesan, would he engage her?
How did such a woman work?
Her heart dropped. She had no clothes! How could one look alluring in faded black mourning gowns?