Authors: Suzanne Enoch
Reforming a Rake |
With This Ring [1] |
Suzanne Enoch |
A governess must never be alone with a man.
Her reputation mustn't have even a hint of scandal.
She must never reveal personal emotions.
No matter how strong the provocation by her employer.
A governess never questions her employer's commands.
Even when he's tempting her to forsake respectability for desire?
She must never, ever, fall in love with someone above her station.
Especially a rake—no matter how devastating his kisses may be . . .
Alexandra Gallant is a governess extraordinaire—and if it weren't for that unfortunate incident at her last position, she wouldn't now be forced into the employ of Lucien Balfour, the most notorious rake in London. Though the sinfully attractive earl hired her to teach his young cousin, his seductive whispers and toe-curling kisses suggest he has something far less respectable in mind . . . And that will never happen. For although Lucien seems determined to teach her about pleasure, she has a few lessons to teach him about love!
A native and current resident of Southern California, Suzanne Enoch loves movies almost as much as she loves books. She once appeared on an
E!
special,
Star Wars Is Back
, as an expert on the romance in the
Star Wars
movies. Other highlights include winning her third grade spelling bee, receiving an
E.T.
poster and T-shirt in an alien-inspired poetry contest, and submitting a script for
The A-Team
(which was not why the series was cancelled). When she is not busily working on her next novel, Suzanne likes to contemplate interesting phenomena, like how the three guppies in her aquarium became 161 guppies in five months.
With This Ring
For Kay Kerby
Carol Zukoski
Helen Kinsey
Jim Drummond
You taught, you inspired, and you shared
your enjoyment of learning, literature, and life.
All my love and gratitude to you—
my teachers.
Lucien Balfour, the Sixth Earl of Kilcairn Abbey, leaned against…
She blinked blue-green eyes as deep as the sea. “Hired?”
So he intended to marry soon. Alexandra glanced at his…
Alexandra lay on her bed and pulled a knotted rag…
“Remember, Rose,” Alexandra chided, “there are five courses yet to…
Lucien considered riding his horse to the Howard soiree and…
Evidently Lord Kilcairn thought Rose had passed her first test.
Alexandra wondered whether Lord Kilcairn had heard the gossip. If…
To Alexandra’s surprise, Mrs. Delacroix joined her and Rose at…
Virgil Retting yawned over a strong cup of tea and…
Alexandra watched Rose turn, dip, turn again, and take her…
Being the subject of further gossip might prevent Alexandra from…
With only four hours of sleep, Alexandra didn’t even try…
“He said what?” Victoria set her tea down so abruptly…
“Oh, nonsense.” Alexandra gestured for Rose to precede her into…
Alexandra put on her blue bonnet, fastened Shakespeare’s leash, and…
“Oh, and a clock. I would like to know what…
The next step was simple. Lucien intercepted the Delacroix ladies…
Redemption. How odd that such a word had come out…
“I was not wrong!” Alexandra stamped about the small office.
Lucien arrived at Miss Grenville’s Academy a few minutes early.
L
ucien Balfour, the Sixth Earl of Kilcairn Abbey, leaned against one of the marble pillars at the front entry of Balfour House and watched the storm clouds gather overhead. “‘By the pricking of my thumbs,’” he murmured, puffing on his cigar, “‘something wicked this way comes.’”
Though an ominously darkening sky hung over the west side of London, that particular storm was not the one that concerned Lucien Balfour. A larger tempest was galloping toward him: he was about to welcome Satan’s handmaiden and her mother into his house.
Behind him, the front door opened on well-oiled hinges. Lucien glanced skyward as a long boom of thunder rolled across the rooftops of Mayfair. “What is it, Wimbole?”
“You asked me to inform you at the hour of three, my lord,” the butler answered in his usual monotone. “The clock has just struck.”
Lucien took another drag of his cheroot, letting the smoke curl from his mouth and be snatched away by the
stiffening breeze. “Make certain the study windows are closed against the rain, and provide Mr. Mullins with a glass of whiskey. I imagine he’ll be needing it shortly.”
“Very good, my lord.” The door clicked shut again.
Rain began plopping onto the shallow granite steps before him just as a coach clattered onto Grosvenor Street and turned toward the mansion. Lucien took one last, long draw on his cigar, snuffed it out against the pillar, and cast it aside with an oath. The demons had splendid timing.
The front door opened again and Wimbole, flanked by a half dozen liveried footmen, appeared at his elbow just as the great black monstrosity of a coach rocked to a halt at the foot of the steps. A second vehicle, less ostentatious than the first, stopped behind.
As Wimbole and his troops marched forward, Mr. Mullins took the butler’s vacated position on the portico. “My lord, I must again commend you on your attention to familial duty.”
Lucien glanced at the solicitor. “Two people signed a piece of paper before their deaths, and I am left with the results. Don’t commend me for getting trapped into something I’ve simply been unable to avoid.”
“Even so, my lord…” The smaller man trailed off as the coach’s first occupant emerged into the light drizzle. “My goodness,” he choked.
“Goodness has nothing to do with it,” Lucien murmured.
Fiona Delacroix stepped out onto the drive and with a flick of her gloved fingers beckoned to Wimbole for her walking cane. She didn’t seem to notice the rain, but given the size of the hat perched on her bright red—orange—hair, she likely would have no idea of the downpour until the weight of the water capsized her.
“Lucien!” She gathered her voluminous pink skirts and marched forward as he descended the steps to meet her. “How like you to wait until the last possible moment to send for us. I’d begun to think you meant for us to rot in mournful solitude all summer!”
Mountains of luggage began sailing off the roofs of both coaches and into the arms of the waiting footmen. Lucien spared the heap one look, noting that he’d have to give over another room simply for female wardrobe, before he took her gloved hand and bowed over it. “Aunt Fiona. I trust the journey from Dorsetshire was a pleasant one?”
“It was not! You know how traveling upsets my nerves. If not for my dear, dear Rose, I don’t know how I should have managed.” She swung her rotund, schooner-topped form around to face the carriage again. “Rose! Come out of there! You remember your cousin Lucien, don’t you, my sweet?”
“I’m not coming out, Mother,” echoed from the bowels of the cavernous vehicle.
Aunt Fiona’s smile became more radiant. “Of course you are, my dear. Your cousin is waiting.”
“But it’s raining.”
The smile faltered. “Only a little.”
“It will ruin my dress.”
Lucien’s determined good humor began to crumble a little. His uncle’s damned will did not in any way obligate him to catch pneumonia.
“Rose…” his aunt trilled again.
“Oh, very well.”
The incarnation of hell on earth—as he’d thought of her since their last meeting, when she’d been seven and throwing a screaming, stamping tantrum at being denied a pony ride—emerged from the coach. She stepped
down amid a cloud of pink lace and ruffles that perfectly complemented her mother’s frothy gown.
Rose Delacroix curtsied, the blond curls that framed her face bobbing in pert unison. “My lord,” she breathed, rising and batting her long lashes at him.
“Cousin Rose,” Lucien responded, suppressing a shudder at the horrifying thought that some of his gender would find her angelic appearance attractive. With her great puffy sleeves and feathered frills she looked more like some ungainly bird than an angel. “You both look colorful this afternoon. Shall we go inside, out of the rain?”
“It’s silk and taffeta,” Aunt Fiona crooned, fluffing up one of her daughter’s drooping wings. “They cost twelve pounds each, and came directly from Paris.”
“And flamingos come directly from Africa.”
The comment was a mild one, for him, but as he turned to usher Rose toward the steps, her blue eyes filled with tears. Lucien stifled an annoyed sigh. Sometimes one’s memories remained perfectly accurate, despite the passage of time.
“He doesn’t like my gown, Mama,” she wailed, her lower lip trembling. “And Miss Brookhollow said it was the very thing!”
Lucien had meant to behave himself, at least for today. So much for his good intentions. “Who is Miss Brookhollow?”
“Rose’s governess. She came highly recommended.”
“By whom—circus performers?”
“Mama!”
“Good God,” Lucien muttered, wincing. “Wimbole, get their things inside.” He returned his attention to his aunt. “Does all your attire match so…vividly?”
“Lucien, I will not tolerate your insulting us five
minutes after we’ve arrived! Dear Oscar would never tolerate such cruelty!”
“Dear Uncle Oscar is dead, Aunt Fiona. And as you well know, he and my father conspired to see that you would end up here in that eventuality.”
“‘Conspired?’” Aunt Fiona repeated, in an ascending voice that could shatter crystal. “This is your familial obligation! Your duty!”
“Which is precisely why you are here.” He climbed the steps unaccompanied since they seemed content to stand about bellowing in the rain. “And only until she”—and he jabbed a finger in his soggy cousin’s direction—“is married. Then you can be someone else’s familial obligation and duty.”
“Lucien!”
He glanced at his sobbing cousin again. “Would this same Miss Brookhollow be the one who has taught you everything necessary to ensure your success in society?”
“Yes! Of course!”
“Splendid. Mr. Mullins!”
The solicitor emerged from behind one of the marble pillars. “Yes, my lord?”
“I assume our dear Miss Brookhollow is cowering in the second coach. Give her twenty pounds and the directions to the nearest spectacle shop, and send her on her way. I want a posting in the
London Times
. Advertise for a finishing companion for my lovely cousin. Immediately. Someone knowledgeable in music, French, Latin, fashion, and—”
“How dare you, Kilcairn!” Aunt Fiona snarled.
“—and etiquette. Have them apply in person to this address. No names. I bloody well don’t want the world at large to know that my cousin has the appearance of a poodle and the style of a milkmaid. No one in his right
mind would want to be leg-shackled to either animal.”
Mr. Mullins bowed. “At once, my lord.”
Lucien left the screeching females behind and strode into the house. That had certainly deteriorated nicely. The headache with which he’d awakened resumed with a vengeance. He should have had Wimbole pour him a whiskey, as well.
At the top of the stairs he paused, leaning his wet backside against the mahogany railing. A series of paintings covered the opposite wall, part of the vast portrait gallery in the Great Hall at Kilcairn Abbey. Two of them, hung several yards from one another, bore black ribbons across their top right corners. One was a passing likeness of Oscar Delacroix, his mother’s half brother. He’d barely known the man and had liked him even less, and after a brief moment Lucien turned his attention to the nearer portrait.
His cousin James Balfour had died a little over a year ago, so Lucien should have had Wimbole remove the ribbon by now. The mourning band served as a reminder, though, of exactly what sort of predicament James had left him in.
“Damnation,” he murmured without heat. His nearest male relation, James would have—and should have—inherited Kilcairn Abbey. His young, headstrong cousin’s thirst for adventure, though, had collided fatally with Napoleon Bonaparte’s quest for power. As the inheritance now stood, once the weepy pink confection downstairs was married, her offspring would have the Balfour titles, lands, and wealth. But after setting eyes on her again, Lucien was of no mind to allow that to happen.
And so the inconsiderate mortality of all his male relations had effectively trapped him into taking the one
road down which he’d sworn never to venture. The Earl of Kilcairn Abbey needed a legitimate heir—and so, by logical if unfortunate extension, he needed a wife. But before he could begin that task, he needed to conclude his obligation to Rose Delacroix and her mother with all possible haste.
Alexandra Beatrice Gallant stepped down from the London hack she’d hired and straightened her pelisse. The blue morning dress was the most conservative one she owned, and the high neck scratched at her. Uncomfortable or not, though, she’d been on enough interviews over the past five years to know that a conservative appearance and manner did wonders for one’s employment prospects. And at the moment she needed all the help that she could get.
Shakespeare, her white Skye terrier and most faithful companion, jumped down beside her. Without a backward glance, the hack driver turned his coach back out into the light midday traffic. Alexandra looked up and down Grosvenor Street. “So this is Mayfair,” she mused, eyeing the staid facades of the massive homes.
Though she’d taken positions with landed gentry and minor nobility in the past, nothing compared with this. Gilded Mayfair, the favorite haunt of England’s wealthiest and highest born, bore little resemblance to the rest of noisy, crowded, dirty London. From the hack’s window she’d spied numerous pleasant walking paths for her and Shakespeare to explore in Hyde Park. Finding employment in Mayfair could have definite benefits, provided the young lady and her mother weren’t completely reclusive.
She pulled the folded newspaper advertisement from her pocket and read the address once more, then tugged
on the terrier’s leash and strolled up the street. “Come along, Shakes.”
This would be her second interview of the day, and the ninth of the week, with one more prospect in Cheap-side remaining. If no one wanted to hire her in London by the end of the week, she’d have to use her scanty savings to go up north. Perhaps they had never heard of her in Yorkshire. Lately, though, she’d had the sinking feeling that every household, or at least those needing a governess or a companion, knew every blasted detail of her life—and the best she had come to expect was a polite refusal to offer her employment.
“Ah, here we are, twenty-five.” Alexandra paused to survey the mammoth town house that stood at the far end of a short, curving drive. What seemed like half a hundred windows peered toward the street and overlooked the small, simple garden on the east side. The house was bordered by a carriage run to the west, and not much distinguished it from the other splendid houses with which it shared the way. So far, so good.
Taking a deep breath, she walked up the carriage drive around to the back of the house and climbed the three steps to the rear entry. Before she could even rap on the door, it swung open.
“Good afternoon.” A tall, thin man dressed in impeccable gold and black livery dating from the height of George III’s reign stood just inside the kitchen entry and gazed at her. The dusting of silver at his temples served as an exclamation point to his dignity. “I presume you are here in answer to the advertisement?”
“Yes, I—”
“This way, miss.”
Without even a glance at Shakespeare, the butler turned on his heel. Alexandra followed him through the
huge kitchen, down two long intersecting hallways, and into a large, spacious study tucked beneath a winding staircase of carved mahogany. She took in the scattered, tasteful paintings by artists as celebrated as Lawrence and Gainsborough, the ornate Far Eastern carvings in ivory and flawless ebony wood, and the gold-inlaid cornice running along the top of the walls. Tasteful, elegant, interesting, and very well appointed, the house seemed curiously unfeminine for the residence of a young lady and her mother.
“Wait here, miss.”
Alexandra nodded, absorbed in her observations. Shakespeare found an interesting scent beside the massive mahogany desk, while she approached the fireplace to warm her hands. A carved elephant stood guard on the mantel, and tentatively she touched its smooth, ebony leg.
Footsteps padded down the stairs that curved above her head. With a start she abandoned the hearth and seated herself in the chair placed opposite the desk. A moment later, the door opened. Alexandra affixed her best look of professional yet sincere interest on her face, ready to begin her well-rehearsed speech about her experience and mostly impeccable references, and looked up. And then forgot everything she’d been about to say.
He stood in the doorway, gazing at her. At first all she took in were his eyes—a fine light gray beneath dark, sardonic brows. Gradually the rest of him sank into her senses. Tall, with dark hair curling at his collar and an athlete’s lean build, he had a French aristocrat’s high cheekbones and arrogant, shamelessly sensual mouth. He remained where he was, unmoving, for several long seconds.
“You’re here for the governess position?” he asked in a deep, cultured drawl.
“I…” Alexandra nodded, shivering a little as the sound of his voice resonated down her spine in electrifying spirals. “I am.”
“You’re hired.”