Page 43 of A Virgin for the Rakish Duke (Romancing a Rake #3)
CHAPTER TWO
I t transpired that traveling to London without the knowledge of one’s family was more challenging than it seemed. Alice needed a way to sneak out to the nearest village; from there, she would hire a post chaise to take her to London.
But to sneak out, she would need a means of traveling. And for that, the easiest solution was a horse.
While Jenny packed, Alice ventured out into the gardens and bribed the stable boy, bidding him to bring a horse around for her to ride, with one of Harriet’s side saddles equipped.
She assured him she would only be going for a small ride around the estate—and she proved to him that she knew her way around horses enough that he believed her.
Knowing he would likely get in trouble, she tipped him well and bid him to tell no one of his involvement.
Let her aunt and uncle wonder what had happened. It served them right for keeping her trapped.
Just as she was about to sneak out to ride into the village, however, Harriet knocked on her bedchamber door. Alice stuffed her small carpet bag out of sight and plopped down on the bed.
“Yes?” she asked, a trifle impatiently. Harriet was a sweet enough girl, but she had been well and truly spoiled by the over-indulgence of her mother, and Alice had no real patience with her.
“Which gown do you think I should wear for my presentation to the Queen? I was thinking I ought to wear the rose silk, but Mama thinks I look better in the blue chiffon. What do you think? I think silk is more becoming, and flatters my complexion.”
“If you think that, why ask me?”
“Well, because you have already been presented at Court.” Harriet looked at her as though she was stupid. “Before your accident.”
“Yes, I remember when that was.” It was an effort not to snap at Harriet.
She knew the girl meant no harm, but she had never learned tact, and Alice found it wearing.
“But so has your mother. If you would rather wear the rose silk, tell her and have the maids make it up. I’m sure you’ll look lovely no matter what you choose. ”
“Thank you.” Harriet preened, tossing her dark curls over her shoulder.
She was an extremely pretty girl—and able-bodied.
Alice always did her best not to envy her, but she remembered what it was like to have the freedom of choice.
To attend Court and join London society as one of its newest debutantes.
“Could I borrow your kid gloves?” Harriet asked, abandoning the question of the gown. “The white ones? After all, you won’t be needing them.”
Those kid gloves in particular were safely tucked away in Alice’s carpet bag, but she could hardly admit as much. “I’ll ask Jenny to look for them,” she said vaguely.
“Thank you.” Harriet beamed at her. “You know, I am so terribly sorry that you can’t come with us. Mama says it’s not possible and you would be miserable there, but I would rather we could enter fashionable society together. I’m sure you’ll know who everyone is.”
Not any longer.
“Thank you,” Alice smiled instead, twisting her hands together. “You must be eager to pack everything. I’ll let you get back to it.”
To her relief, Harriet took the hint, not even seeming to notice she was being dismissed in her excitement. “Yes, thank you! Send along the gloves when you find them. I shall write to you often and tell you all about my beaus.”
No doubt Harriet would have wonderful luck in London and find a husband in her first Season. Alice had come close, but no one had proposed, and before her second season could much get underway, the Duke of Langford had stolen her future from her.
Alice watched her door close again, then found her carpet bag and brought it out, leaving it on the bed.
She rang once for Jenny, who would come and collect the bag, carrying it to the village.
It was only two miles away—an easy distance, Jenny said, and she could easily make an excuse for leaving there.
All Alice needed to do was escape.
She hobbled down the back stairs, leaning heavily on her stick as she made her way to the library doors that led out onto the lawn. There, round the side of the house, stood the stable boy waiting for her.
“Thank you, Barney,” she beamed warmly, handing him a bag of coins. Her leg already ached, but she knew it would all be worth it. “Now, can you pass me up?”
He cupped his hands willingly, and she gripped the side of the mare he’d prepared for her. Even being this close to a horse again brought back all the memories she’d treasured as a girl—the wind in her hair and the power of a cantering horse underneath her.
She inhaled, fighting back nostalgia and tears. She would not allow this to define or overcome her.
With Barney’s help, she struggled onto the horse and adjusted her skirt to cover her legs. With difficulty, she smiled. “Thank you, Barney. Likely, my uncle will be angry with me, but I will not reveal your part in this, so make sure you don’t, either.”
“No, ma’am.”
Feeling guilty about putting him in a difficult predicament, but knowing she had no choice, she picked up the reins and used her good leg to urge the mare into movement. The mare went willingly enough, too placid for Alice’s taste but perfect for this role.
She would get to the village, even if it killed her. And from there, London.
To stop a dastardly Duke’s wedding.
She grimaced grimly. If he thought he could dismiss her and go on with his life, she would show him the scope of his mistake.
And she hoped he would bear the full consequences of his actions for the first time in his selfish, reckless life!
Frederick Blackwell, the Duke of Langford, adjusted his cravat in the mirror.
The man staring back at him bore no resemblance to his father, and for an extended moment, he wished he could see the old man again just once more.
Then he could offer all the apologies he had not adequately made before his father’s death.
Behind him, Thomas Everston, the Earl of Denshire, lounged in a chair with a glass in his hand. “Sherry? You look as though you need it.”
Frederick shook his head. “Hardly seems good manners to turn up to one’s wedding reeking of alcohol.”
“One glass will hardly make you reek.” Denshire braced his elbows on his knees. “You know, it’s not too late to back out now.”
“As though I could do that. Think of the girl’s family.”
Denshire snorted. “She’d recover soon enough. Dullest girl I’ve ever had the misfortune to meet, but she’s pretty enough, and from good stock. If you hadn’t offered, there would be a dozen men in your place.”
“But,” Frederick pointed out, allowing his valet to shrug him in his velvet coat, “I did offer.”
“And I hardly know why, old boy.”
Frederick concentrated on the mother-of-pEarl buttons he was doing up his front instead of answering.
They both knew he had no real affection for the girl, but that was not why men of his station married. Love was a commodity few could afford—not even Dukes.
After the accident a few years prior, he had turned London upside down.
Gossip had been everywhere. His gaze slid inadvertently to his writing desk, where he still kept some of the scandal sheets written about himself.
He was known as the feckless Earl —as he had been before his father died.
The world had speculated about him, wondered whether he ought to be considered a murderer for the accident he had caused.
People had died, and it transpired to be impossible to simply wipe the stain clean from his soul.
For the rest of his life, he supposed, he would be attempting to pay penance.
Lady Penelope was not precisely penance, but it was yet another attempt to show the ton he had changed, turned over a new leaf, and intended to settle down.
As Denshire so succinctly put, she was from good stock.
It was a reputable marriage. The kind of marriage his father would have liked to see him make.
“You know why,” he said at last. “Besides, I want to do this.”
“You want to repair your reputation,” Denshire began slowly, eyes sharp and piercing. Frederick made the mistake of meeting them in the mirror. “And you think she will erase the past, but—”
“Nothing will erase the past!”
“Then why are you so eager to marry her? There are plenty of other ladies who would gladly have accepted an offer.”
“But none as respectable,” Frederick waved a cavalier hand. “And therein lies her appeal. It is the right thing to do. We both understand the terms of our marriage and the union we will form. Perhaps you do not like her, but—”
“Don’t like her? Dare I say, I’ve had more interesting conversations with Corinthian pillars.”
Frederick scowled.
Admittedly, she had very little propensity for conversation, and did not seem to ever have formed an opinion of her own, but he was not marrying so he could enjoy her opinions.
Frankly, it seemed a cruel thing to judge a woman for, when he knew plenty of opinionated young ladies whose opinions were derided.
“You can’t shake me from this,” he declared firmly. “Besides, if you had intended to change my mind, you would have done better than waiting for the wedding day.” He finally turned to face his friend. “How do I look?”
“As though you are making a mistake,” Denshire said wryly, then shook his head and smiled. “But if you are certain you want to do this, then we should make our way to the church before we are late and the gossipmongers can spread more rumors of your unreliability.”
Frederick winced. Although he had done much to repair his reputation over the past few years, shunning all the vices that had led to his accident and turning over a new leaf, he knew better than anyone how quickly that could change.
His reputation amongst the ton still hovered on a knife’s edge.
It would take very little to push it from one side to the other.
“Come,” he murmured. “If for nothing else but to save my reputation.”