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A Country Masquerade
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Back Cover Text
Lady Barbara Whitfeld’s dreams are shattered when she overhears a harsh condemnation from the one lord she’s set her heart on. If he thinks her frivolous then she’ll show Lord Aubrey St. Vincent just how frivolous she can be. Despite popularity with the ton, and the gossip an absence will provoke, Lady Barbara is banished to her uncle’s farm in the hopes she’ll learn maturity.
Lord Aubrey believes in true love, but finds none among the season’s debutantes who provokes even the slightest interest. No one, that is, until Lady Barbara gives him a cut direct in Hyde Park. After fruitless searching, he learns she quit London before he could discover how he offended her. Lord Aubrey heads to the country to escape the season only to find himself drawn to a young farm girl, none other than Lady Barbara in country guise.
Can Aubrey overcome his qualms about her unsuitability before Barbara’s plans to teach him a lesson destroy any chance they might have?
Review Quotes for Beneath the Mask
Uncommon Lords and Ladies, Book One
By V—
…This tale has many twists and turns that ramp up the tension in believable ways. A regency romance to remember.
By J—
…Even if you’re not sure if this is your kind of book, if you read the description and feel called to read more, do so. You won’t regret it.
By D—
Awesome Regency Romance!…was pleasantly surprised to be sucked into the story and taken for a wild romping good time!
A Country Masquerade
Uncommon Lords and Ladies, Book Two
Margaret McGaffey Fisk
Cover created by Patrick Lynn Smith
TTO Publishing logo design by Blue Harvest Creative
www.blueharvestcreative.com
A Country Masquerade
Copyright 2014 by Margaret McGaffey Fisk
Smashwords Edition
eBook edition created 2014
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are either the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
This eBook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This eBook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this eBook, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you did not purchase the copy you’re reading, please purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the author’s hard work.
All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, or stored in a database or retrieval system, without prior written permission of the publisher.
Published by
TTO Publishing
ISBN-10: 1-63139-007-4
ISBN-13: 978-1-63139-007-4
Print edition ISBNs
ISBN-10: 1-63139-008-2
ISBN-13: 978-1-63139-008-1
Table of Contents
Back Cover Text
Review Quotes
Title Page
Copyright
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 Twenty-five
Chapter Twenty-six
Chapter Twenty-seven
Chapter Twenty-eight
Chapter Twenty-nine
Chapter Thirty
Chapter Thirty-one
Chapter Thirty-two
Chapter Thirty-three
Chapter Thirty-four
Chapter Thirty-five
Chapter Thirty-six
Chapter Thirty-seven
Chapter Thirty-eight
Chapter Thirty-nine
Chapter Forty
A Note to Readers
Excerpt from Beneath the Mask
Excerpt from Safe Haven
About the Author
Visit the Author
Other Works
Acknowledgements
CHAPTER ONE
Lady Barbara Whitfeld stood still as Sarah helped her out of the simple, but elegant, white gown she’d worn to the poetry reading.
She hardly noticed Sarah’s efforts, her mind still caught up in the rich tones and lovely words Aubrey St. Vincent had offered in his reading. He’d put the rest of the gentlemen to shame.
“Your mother should not be having you out so late every night,” Sarah scolded. “You’ll have to sleep well past noon to keep from getting dark circles beneath your eyes, and what then will the young gentlemen say.”
Barbara laughed as cloth pooled about her feet. “Sarah, you sound like a woman twice your age. You know full well you’d have been happy at my side. You’re just jealous.” She stepped free and sat at the dressing table.
Her best friend and maid softened enough to smile. “Jealous of what? Listening to conceited men talking about lines on paper? I think you’re mistaken.”
“Ah, but what lines. To hear them read aloud makes such a difference. Resonate tones, elocution…it makes the poems come alive, I tell you.”
Sarah released the last of the pins holding back Barbara’s riot of dark brown curls and ran her fingers through to loosen them further. “He was there, then, was he?”
Barbara raised both hands to cover her cheeks, but from Sarah’s knowing glance reflected in the mirror, she knew she’d failed to hide her response. She shrugged as though it were of no consequence, then a grin burst out across her lips. “Aubrey St. Vincent. A better specimen of the male breed I’ve yet to see. Handsome, reasoned, and kind. The perfect gentleman.”
“You’d have me believe him a paragon of virtues. The only man to meet such a standard is one still in the cradle, and even then they’re all about demanding attention.” Sarah laid a heavy stroke through Barbara’s hair, and it caught on a tangle.
“Not so rough,” Barbara cried. “And he is all that and more.” She raised a hand to count off on her fingers. “He escorts his youngest sister to all manner of gatherings when other young men are off seeking their own pleasures. He doesn’t retire to the card room the moment they arrive at an event. He’s willing to participate when asked like tonight, though he had no plans to read. One of the readers fell ill and could not attend. Then there’s how he considers education in philosophy something even women should be able to strive for.”
“Enough, enough,” Sarah wailed, both hands pressed to her ears though the twinkle in her eyes belied her protests. “You’ve made quite a study of the man, but I’ve heard it all before. You marked him as your interest at the very start of the season. So tell me, did you speak with him this time?”
All confidence drained from Barbara as she stared at her twisting fingers, no longer raised to count his worth. She’d encountered Aubrey on her first outing when, sitting against the wall unnoticed, she’d overheard him discussing how unsettled the Continent was. His conversation attracted her attention when the other young men spoke only of fashion and horses.
Since then, his
presence acted like a beacon, calling out to her. She did what she could to be within earshot, and if she succeeded, almost every time she learned something new or had a thought to ponder. Still, she’d never spoken a single word to the man.
Sarah tucked a curl back behind Barbara’s ear. “Your mother would be happy to arrange an introduction, I’m sure. He’s a man of good standing, from a good family, and with a title of his own free and clear since he has only sisters. An earl, he’ll be.”
Barbara pulled away and rose, though what she intended once upright, she had no idea. “I’ve seen the way mothers bring their daughters up to meet him. He’s surrounded by them too often for me to miss. I can’t come to him as just another young lady in white and expect him to notice.”
“Don’t you think that way,” Sarah said, rushing to catch her arm. “You meet with him proper, Barbara, or you’ll do nothing but make yourself out to be a fool, especially when the man in question shows no sign of returning your regard. But then, how could he share your interest when you’ve avoided the chance for an introduction. You want to stand out from the rest. That’s how to do it. Get your introduction and show Lord Aubrey you can put more than two sentences together without dissolving into cloying giggles.”
They shared a significant look, remembering the afternoon party Lady Whitfeld had arranged shortly after Barbara’s presentation. Sarah had assisted the staff and so suffered the same babble and attempts to preen Barbara had. A bunch of ninnies with nothing of consequence between their ears, and her mother wanted her to find bosom friends among them.
Barbara had Sarah for her companion. None of them had offered an adequate substitute.
Her mirth faded as she addressed the flaw in her approach. “But what if I do? What if, when faced with none other than the most perfect Aubrey St. Vincent, my tongue curls up in my mouth and my mind vanishes into the clouds. Sarah, how can I be sure of the impression I’ll give. You’ve heard my mother often enough. She says first impressions are the most important as they form the foundation of everything going forward. I cannot chance this going astray.”
Sarah shook her head, but when she met Barbara’s gaze, her own held sympathy. “Better to take that risk than never to chance at all. Trust yourself enough. You’ve certainly studied his habits, read whatever you heard him mention, and even plagued your father about the questions you didn’t understand. You’ve prepared for this moment better than most gentleman study for their examinations. Besides, how could he not be taken in by your combination of beauty and thought? If he isn’t, then he’s not the paragon you seem to think him either.”
Barbara laughed at Sarah’s stout support, but knew she’d be hard pressed to put her friend’s advice into effect when faced with the gentleman in question.
“Just promise me you’ll try nothing foolish. Tradition has set these ways for presentation to society, and it’s because they prove worthwhile. Hatching some crazy plan will only bring you trouble.”
Barbara turned away more to hide her smile than because she disagreed. “You’re sounding old enough to be my mother again, Sarah. Not so long ago, you were happy to join me in whatever adventures I could concoct.”
She climbed into bed, pulling the covers up under her chin so she could peek out at her friend.
Sarah paused in collecting the discarded clothing. “Fair enough,” she said, her gaze on a distance place, “But that was when you were at your father’s country estate, or your uncle’s farm, not here in London. You’re not to run wild. It will do you a disservice and break your mother’s heart. If sounding old is how I must be to keep you from trouble, then I’ll turn the hag rather than see you receive a reputation you cannot recover from.”
Barbara sank lower, no longer playing as she accepted the somber warning. London did have its own standards, and gossip ran rampant. She’d taken many months to adjust when brought up from the country a few years ago, and even now found its strictures confining.
“Besides,” Sarah added with a rich chuckle, “If you fail to catch in your season, you’ll be left to live out your days under your mother’s thumb, which means I will too. That’s a sorry end neither of us would prefer.”
Though her mother little deserved such a slight, and well Sarah knew it, Barbara appreciated the effort to lighten her mood. She waved her friend off with a smile. “Then I’d best catch some sleep or those black circles will come whether you will them or not.”
Arms full with soiled clothing, Sarah paused in the doorway. “I’ll bring you a cup of chamomile tea. That will send you into a deep, soothing rest.”
Her friend didn’t wait for Barbara to answer, and from the yawn that split Barbara’s face, she suspected sleep would overtake her long before Sarah returned. At least the tea would not go to waste, and Sarah needed the rest as much as any what with having to manage Barbara’s complicated wardrobe now that she’d been presented.
Thoughts full of balls, readings, and theater, Barbara sank into oblivion. At least in her dreams, she could amaze Aubrey with her wit and wisdom.
CHAPTER TWO
Aubrey took a sip of punch from the cup in his hand and let the drink soothe his throat. A pity it couldn’t quiet the cacophony around him.
“You’ve done me quite the favor,” Jasper said with a lopsided grin as he waved toward his mother’s ballroom floor and the bevy of young ladies vying for attention. “I thought myself beyond all this now that I’m a happily married man.”
“And to think you once believed your mother and wife could split the confines of London with you and none would suffer for it.”
His friend gave a deep laugh that yet held a level of content Aubrey would never have expected to hear from him.
“How is the Lady Pendleton faring at your country estate, anyhow? I’ve seen so little of you since your wedding, I half thought to run out there myself and make sure she hadn’t confined you to the cellars.”
“Counting the minutes until I return to her side, or so I hope she is based on my own preoccupation. A better match I could not have found had I searched the length and breadth of England for a score of years.” He clapped Aubrey on the shoulder. “We used to mutter about the trap of marriage, but those were the words of ignorance, I promise you.”
Aubrey brushed Jasper’s hand from his shoulder. “Speak for yourself, old man. I was never one to mourn it.”
“True enough. And how goes your search for the perfect mate? Should you tire of the effort, you’re welcome to take a rest at my home. Daphne and I would be glad to see you.”
“Growing weary of each other’s company so soon? Why, there’s not a year gone by since you bound your lives together.” He glanced out at the gathering as he spoke, a longing fierce as a stab in the gut overtaking him. Since his friend confessed the truth of their love, with Daphne’s permission, he saw Jasper’s transformation into the happy groom in a different light, and one he envied. He’d been seeking the woman created just for him for more than a year now, but his best friend tripped over Daphne without any effort while Aubrey was left searching.
From the expression on Jasper’s face, his friend had made some comment requiring an answer but Aubrey had not the faintest idea what it might be.
“Just look at them,” he muttered, revealing the cause of his distraction. “There’s not a level head or a serious thought among them. I have no idea why your mother would seek them out when she has no daughter to cast among them. She always was one for parties, though.”
“And matchmaking. Don’t forget how she likes to keep her hand in even now. She was considering who might serve for you just this morning. My mother knows the bloodline, habits, and secrets of every single soul who graces that floor out there, and many more as well. You’d do worse than let her give you a hand. She says Whitfeld’s daughter has shown some potential.”
That drew Aubrey’s attention from the dancers and his own morose thoughts. “Your mother wouldn’t know a good match if it lit a fire beneath her skirts. You f
orget in your wedded bliss that had your mother had her way, you’d have been tied to a wife who thought of piety more than convention and spent her time among the poor. Had fate not intervened, you’d be crying for me to give you a good excuse to avoid services every day of the week when Sunday proved too little worship for her liking.” He nodded toward where the Dowager Lady Pendleton held court. “Your mother lines up lists in her head that hold only titles and wealth as well you know.”
Jasper lifted both hands, almost spilling his drink in the process. “Enough, enough. I surrender the point. She might not understand the workings of a young man’s heart, but at least she knows more than you can have gathered standing here in the shadows. She talks to the girls, and to their mothers. Can you say the same?”
“You never had to ride the horse to know its value,” Aubrey said with more force than he’d intended. “I’ve been chaperoning Isabella for weeks now as my mother recovers from being ill, though I’m starting to think she malingers just to avoid the clash of so many trying to speak inanities in rooms with more echoes than a mountain range. If not for the music, I’d swear I’d woken to find myself trapped in a flock of geese. If there’s an intelligent mind out there, it’s growing duller by the moment, beaten into submission by talk of weather and fashion.”
Jasper sent Aubrey a raised eyebrow at that, and Aubrey softened enough to laugh, his outfit a match to any on the dance floor.
“True enough,” he said in answer to the unspoken criticism. “But just because I keep to the fashion doesn’t mean I need to discuss it every waking moment.”
Aubrey heaved a great sigh. “It’s been a sorry London without you in it, my friend. I’d had hopes at first you’d leave your wife and return to keep me company, but you thoroughly dashed them when you told me the truth. I’m left adrift with no one to spar against unless you count greybeards. Any younger who are mature enough to consider more than how many folds it takes to form the latest cravat are busy with wives and children.”