
He'd returned from war a duke. Now Rafael Daughtry was
battling a force more terrifying than Napoleon's army—his
family. Thankfully, his childhood friend Charlotte Seavers
had agreed—reluctantly—to a bargain. While Rafe would
provide her with the home she'd lost, Charlotte would
provide him with a chaperone for his unruly twin
sisters. But who would chaperone Rafe? For the feisty
young girl he remembered had blossomed into a sensual
woman—a woman whose haunting beauty and deeply kept secrets
drew him like no other. Charlotte had good reason to
mistrust men—yet could Rafe's sizzling seduction convince
her to give in to temptation?
Excerpt Charlotte Seavers was on the hunt. And she was in a mood to
take no prisoners. Only scant minutes earlier Charlotte
had been comfortably ensconced in the drawing room of her
parents' small manor house, happy in her ignorance, enjoying
the sight of a mid-November frost glittering on the newly
bare tree branches outside her window while she stayed warm
and toasty inside. But then the housekeeper had
brought her one of the letters just arrived with the morning
post. After taking another sip of sweet tea, Charlotte
had opened the missive from her good friend, read it in
growing apprehension and disbelief until, with her newfound
knowledge, her blissful ignorance turned to righteous
anger. "Unrepentant liars and tricksters! Wretched
connivers!" she exclaimed, her teeth chattering in the cold,
for she'd left the house without taking time to search out a
warmer cloak than the rather shabby one she used while
gardening that hung on the hook just outside the kitchens.
"They'll be lucky if I don't choose to murder
them!" She stomped along the well-worn path that led
through the trees from the manor house, to end halfway up
the drive to Ashurst Hall. "And worse fool me because I
believed them!" What Miss Charlotte Seavers was
referring to was her discovery, after months of the
aforementioned ignorant bliss, that Nicole and Lydia
Daughtry—in retrospect, mostly Nicky, with Lydia only
following along because she felt she had no choice—had been
pulling the wool over her eyes. Over everyone's
eyes. All this time, since the spring, when they'd
first had word from Rafael Daughtry that he was well and
aware of the deaths of his uncle and cousins, Nicole and
Lydia had been cleverly putting one over on Rafe, on their
aunt Emmaline, on Charlotte. Oh yes, and Mrs. Beasley.
But then again, pulling the wool over Mrs. Beasley's eyes
was no great accomplishment, and the twins had the benefit
of years of practice when it came to hoodwinking their
governess. In her haste to confront the Daughtry
sisters and verbally rip several strips off their hides,
Charlotte stomped on some wet, slippery leaves littering the
path, and went down with a startled "Damn and
blast!" She just as quickly scrambled back to her
feet, hurriedly looking about to be certain no one had heard
her unladylike exclamation, and then brushed at the back of
her cloak, pulling off damp leaves and bits of
moss. She took several deep breaths, hoping to calm
herself, steady herself. After all, she was supposed to be a
well-bred, civilized female, and here she was, racing
through the trees like some wild boar. But then she
thought again of how Nicky and Lydia had spent the summer
and fall posting letters back and forth, impersonating their
brother to their aunt, and impersonating their aunt to their
brother. Correspondence Charlotte had seen, had been allowed
to read—all while the twins were doubtless laughing behind
their hands at her gullibility. Worse, if Emmaline
hadn't just now written to her privately, her words and her
questions contradicting things she had already said in the
letters Charlotte had been shown by the twins, she would
still be none the wiser. From the moment she'd begun
reading the letter, Charlotte's suspicions had been raised,
as the handwriting was so very different from Emmaline's
letters supposedly posted to Ashurst Hall. But those
suspicions had turned to a cold certainty when she read the
words, "Charlotte, I vow I sometimes think Rafe is Nicky in
long pants. The girl never could get her mind around
spelling any word longer than c-a-t." And here
Charlotte had thought Rafe, for all his on-again, off-again
schooling alongside his cousins, was next door to a yahoo
when it came to grammar and spelling. "They'll pay for
this," she promised out loud, wiping her hand across her
cheek to push an errant chestnut-brown curl back beneath her
hood and depositing a smudge of dirt on her otherwise
flawless skin. Poor Emmaline, happy in her newly
wedded bliss as she continued her long honeymoon in the Lake
District, comforted with the knowledge that Rafe had sailed
for home immediately upon receiving the news of his change
of fortune. And poor Rafe, going about his duties on
Elba, assured that Lady Emmaline had everything at Ashurst
Hall firmly in hand until his mission was completed,
including the care of his young sisters. "And me,
duped by two miscreant monsters not yet out of the
schoolroom—except that they most certainly did escape the
schoolroom with their little trick," Charlotte muttered,
lifting up the hem of her gown even as she stepped up her
pace along the path. "Commiserating with the girls about how
much they missed their brother…joking with them about how
Emmaline seemed to have thrown all sensibility to the four
winds thanks to her newfound love. Running tame through the
house all these months, leaving the nursery and their
governess behind, because their brother wrote that he would
be delighted—no! de-litted—to allow them more
freedom. Their brother wrote? Ha! I'll have their
heads on a platter, I swear I will!" Her mind
on contemplated acts of mayhem, she broke free of the trees,
stepping onto the gravel drive that twisted and turned on
its way through the well-landscaped park. The horse
and rider appeared out of nowhere, heading for her at a
vigorous canter. Charlotte slid to a halt on the
stones even as she threw up her hands and gave a quick,
faintly terrified cry. The horse, either in response
to her unexpected appearance, or in reaction to his rider's
immediate sharp tug on the reins, gave a rather frightened
cry of its own. It then reared onto its hind legs, pawing at
the air as if attempting to climb an invisible
ladder. The hapless rider was immediately deposited on
his back on the hard-packed gravel. No fainthearted
miss, Charlotte had already collected herself. She bravely
grabbed at the horse's now-dangling reins to keep it from
bolting off down the lane, which, she readily saw, it
appeared to have no intention of doing. She then walked
toward the man she had unhorsed, hoping he'd get to his feet
without assistance, which he would most probably do if he
hadn't cracked his skull, or worse. "Are you all
right, sir?" she asked rather cautiously, keeping her
distance even as she leaned over the man, whose many-caped
brown traveling cloak was twisted up and around his head.
"I'm most terribly sorry. I am entirely at fault for
your misfortune, I know, but I believe it would be extremely
considerate and gentlemanly of you to pretend that you
hadn't noticed." The man mumbled something Charlotte
couldn't quite make out, which was understandable, what with
him still all but strangled by his extremely fashionable
cloak. She was, however, fairly certain that his response to
her hadn't been quite as forgiving as she might have
hoped. "Excuse me? Perhaps if you were to loose the
fastenings of your cloak you'd be able to free yourself from
its grasp?" She rolled her eyes, knowing that she was most
probably only making things worse. "Shall I… shall I fetch
help?" "God's teeth, no," the man said, struggling to
sit up while fighting his way out of the cloak. "I feel
bloody well embarrassed enough, thank you. I've no need of
an audience." At last his head emerged from the tangle of
cloth, his healthy crop of nearly black hair falling over
his eyes. "Where's my bloody hat?" "I've got it,"
Charlotte said, holding it out to him. "It's barely dented,
and I'm confident that it will clean up quite nicely once
the mud is dry and can be brushed off." He still
hadn't looked at her, instead busying himself attempting to
rearrange his many-caped collars so that they lay flat over
his shoulders once more. She counted four capes, graduated
in size—very impressive. More would have classified him as a
dandy, and less wouldn't be half so fashionable. Upside-down
and over a man's head, however, all that fine London fashion
was probably little more than a nuisance. "Next,
madam, I suppose you'll say I should be delighted with that
piece of information. How fortunate I am. My cloak is only
torn—ah, in two places—and my new hat is barely dented.
Lucky, lucky me. Perhaps you believe I should be
thanking you." "There's no need for rudeness, sir,"
Charlotte told him, knowing that there was probably every
need. She'd unhorsed the man, for goodness' sakes, ruining
his fine clothes, which were apparently very dear to him.
She probably also shouldn't point out that if he hadn't
sawed so on the reins, his mount, which seemed a placid
sort, may not have reared at all. No, she probably shouldn't
mention that, either. "I didn't mean to unhorse you, you
know. It was an accident." "An accident, of course. I
believe the fool who touched off the Great London Fire
attempted the same sorry excuse. You ran into the roadway,
madam. Next you'll probably say it was all my fault for
having been on the drive in the first place." "Don't
be ridiculous," Charlotte said tartly, beginning to lose
patience with the man. "You had every right to be here."
Then she frowned. "And why are you here?" The hat was
all but ripped from her hand as the man finally got to his
feet. But when he slammed the thing back on his head he
uttered a quick curse and quickly removed it once more; it
dropped, unnoticed, onto the drive. She went up on her
tiptoes. Goodness, he was a large man. Quite imposing. "What
is it? What's wrong? Is it your head? I don't see anything."
But, then, how could she? He was very tall. Charlotte was
rather impressed; she'd known few men who stood a full head
and shoulders above her not inconsiderable height. He
actually made her feel small. "Damn," he said,
touching the back of his head and then bringing his hand
forward once more, looking at the blood on his fingers. "Six
years of war all but unscathed, and I take a head wound not
a mile from home. Inflicted by a woman, no
less." Home. He'd said that. She'd heard him.
He'd said home. Charlotte's eyes went so wide she was
amazed they didn't pop straight out of her head. While
he fished in...
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