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The Wedding Runaway
The Wedding Runaway Read online
His Touch
It was a simple matter, really, to move his hand to cup her head and bring her forward. With her height, there was an easy fit, and no long delay to the meeting of their mouths.
Lydia kissed with innocence that shifted to eagerness and her essence swirled on his tongue. Her willing participation was like ambrosia to a starving man. Need throbbed through him as Victor pulled her closer and deepened his kiss. He urged with a persuasive touch to loosen her hold on the slit nightshirt. She complied, wrapping her arms around him.
He wanted to touch every inch of her skin, to trace the lines of her every curve, to taste her flesh. The material slipped from her shoulder and offered him a tantalizing glimpse of heaven.
THE WEDDING RUNAWAY
by
Katy Madison
Amazon edition © 2012
Original Copyright © 2005 by Karen L. King
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the author, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.
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This book is a work of fiction. Any resemblance to any person living or dead is purely coincidental.
This book was originally published in paperback by Kensington Publishing Corp.
as The Wedding Runaway by Karen L. King
Chapter One
November, 1818, Southern England
Lydia Margaret Hamilton ran up the stairs two at a time and burst into the private sitting room at the Cock and Bull Inn. "I bought two tickets for the mail coach and no one even looked at me."
Her mouth pursed in disapproval, Jenny tossed a handful of Lydia's newly shorn blond curls into the small blaze behind the grate. Initially, the maid had refused to cut Lydia's hair. So Lydia had hacked off a big chunk with her sewing scissors. Once she had a big hole in her hair, Jenny had to even it up.
"Oh, that smells awful." Draping one leg over the chair arm, Lydia sprawled in her seat the way her brothers would. In spite of herself, her enthusiasm gushed, "I am to ride on the outside on the coachman's box."
Jenny put her hands on her slim hips and said as sternly as a girl of her diminutive stature could manage, "Miss Hamilton, you cannot ride on the outside."
"Quit being missish, Jenny. You are my maid, not my minder, and I refuse to let you ruin my last moments of freedom."
"Hardly freedom to be dressed in trousers and riding on a carriage box with the coachman, Miss."
On the contrary, for the first time in her life, Lydia was making all her own decisions. She had never experienced greater liberty and she lived in the freest country in the world. "I had to take an outside seat for one of us. There was only one inside seat left, or we'd have to wait for the next mail coach. It's not as if the weather is inclement, and I won't miss a bit of the countryside." Lydia smiled brightly. Snow probably covered Boston.
Lydia bounced out of the chair, too excited by her adventure to sit still, even if pantaloons allowed her to sprawl with unfettered abandonment. "You'll have to stop calling me Miss, or we'll get stares. Besides, riding on top is what a young man would do."
Jenny folded her arms. "But you're not a young man, and pretending to be one will get us both in a peck of trouble."
"I pass, don't I? No one looked twice at me." Lydia spun around.
She'd registered in the mail coach logbook as Mr. Leonard M. Hall, from Boston, Massachusetts, America. She didn't want her brothers, father, or abandoned fiancé to easily chase after her if they followed her across the ocean.
"From Plymouth Rock to Plymouth, England," she joked to the clerk. He had given her one of those absent smiles as if he were trying to appear amused by the young American, but really hadn't paid her any mind.
Jenny stared at Lydia's front, specifically at the juncture at the top of her thighs. "You don't quite look a man."
The two pads strapped around her waist straightened her midsection, hiding her curved-in sides. She didn't have much to bind down on top, but she planned to wear her coat and waistcoat at all times. The towering concoction of her cravat hid her lack of an Adam's apple. While pretending to be a young man, her ungainly height became a blessing. Yet, Jenny frowned.
"What is it?"
Jenny blushed. "Well, a man is...has other parts."
Lydia twisted her lips to the side and looked down. Jenny at sixteen had more experience with male parts than Lydia had at twenty-one, even though she had five older brothers and had a fairly good idea of the differences in their anatomy.
"Should we roll up a sock? I suppose I could sew up and stuff ah...er...a male appendage, but you'll have to help me design it." Lydia opened her trunk to retrieve her sewing supplies. "We've got a few hours, until the mail coach leaves this evening."
"I'm not going." Jenny gasped and fell on her backside. "You never said anything about pretending to be a young man when you said we were going to London."
Lydia sighed. She supposed she should have anticipated this outburst from Jenny. Rummaging in the open trunk exposed Lydia's youngest older brother, Trevor's, outgrown shirts, jackets and waistcoats along with James's, Lydia's oldest and largest brother, breeches and pantaloons. The final clue that this trip, despite Lydia's insinuations, was not sanctioned by Lydia's father or fiancé.
"Jenny, I am determined to spend time in London and you can go with me or you can find your own way back to Boston." Lydia hated to be mean, but she needed Jenny's help. "Might I remind you that you would not even have employment if I hadn't interceded on your behalf after you were caught in the bushes with the neighbor's groom."
Jenny blushed. "Well, I won't likely have employment when I get back after helping you with this nonsense, will I?"
"When we go back, I will tell Papa I left you no choice in the matter and you did your best to protect me from my worst impulses. Fair enough?" Lydia grimaced. "Or if I end up marrying Mr. Sullivan, I will have fits until he finds you a position in my new household."
"Should have married him and be done with it. I don't know what you hope to gain delaying the marriage."
There was a way to take the wind out of her sails. Until recently, Lydia had anticipated her impending nuptials with, if not enthusiasm, at least a little joy. "I overheard him talking about me. He called me mannish. Would you want to marry a man who called you mannish?"
Jenny, who was petite and perfectly rounded in all the right places, would never have to worry about being called mannish. Her brown eyes filled with sympathy nonetheless.
That statement had been bad enough. While Lydia didn't think herself particularly vain, her fiancé's opinion of her had stung. But it didn't end there. Her betrothed had confided in his friend that he meant to take over her father's shipping company and oust her brothers from control...and marrying Lydia was the means and the price of taking over the lucrative enterprise.
Shaken, Lydia had tried to tell her father, but he'd been firm that she would marry Oscar Sullivan and that was that. He thought she was just trying to worm out of another proposal.
If her father's business was her main attraction for Mr. Sullivan, then she could act so outrageously that she was disowned. If he thought she was mannish, then she would become a man. Coupled with her desire to have a European tour like all her
brothers, the solution to run away to England and masquerade as a young man struck her as the only way to go.
Besides, the only way she could get into the gambling hells and increase her modest amount of money to see them through was as a young man.
~*~
Northern England
The smell of smoke and ash hung heavy in the air. Even after a week, pockets of Victor John Bartlett's home still smoldered. A wisp of gray curled in the air above what had been the West wing of his estate. The only part that remained standing was the menacing thirteenth-century keep that loomed sentinel over the river and the road and proclaimed the Earls of Wedmont owned this land and would repel all interlopers.
The destruction had come from the inside.
Eleven of the previous twelve Earls of Wedmont were probably rolling in their graves, and blaming Victor for bringing in one not of their kind, one who finally finished the destruction. His own father, no doubt, moldered silently in his crypt. After his wild, wicked, wastrel life, nothing was likely to disturb his eternal rest. He had started the ruin of the long and noble earldom, and he had never particularly cared what happened to his son, much less the family estate.
Victor kicked a pile of coals in the keep's storage room entrance, dispersing their nearly spent heat. He climbed over the blackened remains of a roof beam and crossed into the hollow shell of blackened stone. The once mighty rafters were now jagged black spikes of charred timber on the ash-coated stone floor. Five years ago he'd been praying for this to happen. The fates, as ever, got the timing wrong.
The heat radiating from the scorched stones irritated the burn on his forehead. Picking up a piece of twisted metal that must have been the blade of a medieval battle lance that once hung on the wall, Victor climbed back out to the lawn. The neatly kept expanse contrasted oddly with the ruins behind him.
Servants had piled salvaged pewter plates and cups in the middle of the drive. Not that there was much. The valuable plate and antiques had been sold off long ago, before he'd married to restore wealth to the estate.
A well-appointed traveling coach swayed up the drive. No markings or crest adorned the mahogany paneled doors. His father-in-law.
Dread poured through Victor's veins. Dread, guilt, and regret. The fire followed the argument he'd had with his wife. The last argument he'd ever have with his wife. Victor's hand closed around the deformed lance head. The edge cut into his palm and reminded him how badly he'd failed her.
Now he had to face his father-in-law and tell him his daughter was dead, and Victor hadn't been able to save her. He'd carried her kicking and screaming from the blazing rooms, once. She'd dashed back in, and he hadn't succeeded in pulling her out a second time.
His portly father-in-law descended from the carriage. "What a disaster." He shook his head, took a surveying look, and pronounced, "We'll rebuild, grander than before."
"I should rather not." Still affected by the smoke he'd swallowed, Victor's voice rasped. "It is done. I have no good memories of this place," and no heirs for which to preserve it.
Victor would be the last Earl of Wedmont, unless a distant cousin was found after his demise. His father had littered plenty of by-blows across England, but he couldn't be bothered to sire more legitimate children. Victor would never marry again. He'd failed grandly enough the first time.
He dropped the warped metal, wiped his sooty palms against his thighs, and crossed to his wife's father. As he neared him, he saw the swollen red eyes of a man who'd been crying. Did he know? Suspect?
As Victor drew up close, the older man threw his arms around him and clapped him on the back.
"I know, I know. I stopped by the church and spoke with the vicar. I know you tried to get her out."
Victor had tried. Tried to make his marriage work, tried to love his wife, tried to stave off the madness that made her crazed. One out of three wasn't a raving success.
"You were a good husband to my gel. I di'n't think you would be, what with your gambling and you needing my money and all to save your bacon. You toffs ain't expected to keep to your wife, but you did."
His father-in-law clapped him on the back and held him in his arms, while sniffling and singing qualified praises. Victor wanted to sink through the ground. Using his wife's money to pay for whores or a mistress had been beyond even his limited moral code. And he'd supported himself with his gambling too many years to find much pleasure in it these days.
Although he found himself longing for his bachelor days, with a bottle of Madeira at his elbow and a flush of cards in his hand. He wanted simpler times and simpler pleasures and to return to his old haunts.
Victor bit his tongue so hard it bled. His main vice these days was spitting out whatever caustic thought entered his head. Would that he had bit his tongue off a week ago rather than say what he'd said to Mary Frances.
"I know you brought in the best doctors to work with her," the older man said.
"Should have had them work with me." If he had any inkling that she would burn the place down, he never would have provoked her. But then his mouth had always been his downfall.
"There now. I know you're blue-deviled, now." Mr. Chandler released him but continued to paw his shoulder affectionately. "Time heals all wounds."
Victor shook his head. "Not all wounds. What..." he let his voice trail off. Whatever had brought on Mary Frances's madness, whatever past injury turned her into a clawing, biting shrew at the most inopportune moments didn't need to be discussed now...or ever. It wouldn't bring her back. It wouldn't help him to help her. She was beyond help now, beyond wounding now. His destruction of her was complete.
"I hoped you and Mary Frances might have given me grandchildren—"
Victor snorted. His wounds were still fresh.
"—but you're a young man still and you can marry again and get children."
"I have a daughter." That he could not claim.
"You need sons. Sons to take over my businesses, a son to carry on your title."
Victor winced. His wife wasn't in her grave yet. Of course, if she'd lived he would never have had any children by her. A wave of guilt swept over him. His father-in-law apparently still thought of him as his heir. "You are not so old." Victor told his father-in-law. "You should remarry and sire your own sons."
Harold Chandler shook his head. "No, no. Mary Frances never told you, did she?"
"What?" Was there something Victor should have known? A clue that would have explained his wife's insanity? A bit of information that would help him make sense of it all?
"My wife Mary is still alive. Gave me five children, she did, but Mary Frances is the only one, what lived to be full grown. Good woman, my wife."
Where was she now? In almost four years of marriage to Mary Frances, Victor had never heard mention of her mother. He'd assumed she'd passed away, but was she chained to a wall in an asylum somewhere? Bedlam? Was that where Mary Frances got her madness? Victor stared at his father-in-law.
"She's in Newgate Prison."
"For arson?" Victor inquired. Perhaps starting fires ran in the family.
~*~
Lydia's head thrummed and her stomach churned as she tried to reach through the throng of male bodies and get her markers down in a hedge bet. She had her main bet down, but Hazard was one of the few games where smart betting and hedging guaranteed winning.
A few of the men crowding the gaming hell could have done with a little better hygiene. She edged away from a short man wearing a stained shirt. By the time she got repositioned, it was too late to get down her hedge bet.
Too much wine clouded her head. Laying her bets was hard enough, let alone remembering the odds and how to play the dice throws.
The thrower crabbed out and the dice were thrust in her hand as her large bet disappeared off the table. Fiddlesticks!
Her heart in her throat, she pitched the dice on the table. Throwing the dice made her the center of very rowdy attention. She had been in disguise for nearly four months n
ow and the crowds in London had grown until this hell on a Friday evening was stuffed beyond capacity. But then London thronged with houses, shops, museums, churches and manufactories. People, carriages, horses and carts crowded the streets, while a gray haze of coal smoke hung over it all.
In this exclusively male environment, the men jostled and shouldered and smacked each other like a pack of puppies. She expected that at any second one of them would reach over and nip her on the ear.
Lydia had done a credible job posing as a young man. She had the walk, her voice was naturally low, and she and Jenny had giggled all the way through the construction of a stuffed male member, now sown to her drawers. But that she couldn't quite manage to force her way through a crowd hampered her ability to bet effectively. She desperately needed her funds increased. Living in London as a carefree young man taxed her finite amount of money. Unlike her brothers, she couldn't apply to her father for more blunt to see her through.
The hard drinking required of all young men on the town left her brain muzzy. She never wanted to stand out from the crowd, so she drank along with her cohorts.
Finally, she passed the dice. Lydia concentrated on the throw. A main of six. She reached to place her markers on the table and was jostled out of the way. "Excuse me," she muttered.
The other side of the table looked just as crowded. She swallowed and ducked under an arm. An elegant hand with long tapered fingers placed the bets she had tried to make as she watched with dismay. An elbow clipped her in the chin, and she reared back. The croupier called the bets and the dice were thrown.
Twelve. Double sixes. She knew exactly what to bet for a sure win. She ducked and squiggled her way to the table and her hand collided with the hand placing the same bets. She followed the line of the hand, up a black sleeve, to a stare at a man taller than she.
He gave her a mocking smile, if you could call it that. More just the slightest lift of his lips in a face she would call handsome, but for the slight air of wickedness in the lift of his winged eyebrows. His too-long walnut hair waved and curled in a studied disorder.