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Not the Duke's Darling

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by Elizabeth Hoyt




  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2018 by Nancy M. Finney

  Preview of When a Rogue Meets His Match copyright © 2018 by Nancy M. Finney

  Patience for Christmas copyright © 2016 by Grace Burrowes. Patience for Christmas was originally published as part of a compilation entitled The Virtues of Christmas in 2016 by Grace Burrowes Publishing.

  Cover design and illustration by Elizabeth Turner Stokes

  Cover copyright © 2018 by Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  Hachette Book Group supports the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like permission to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact permissions@hbgusa.com. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Forever

  Hachette Book Group

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  First Edition: December 2018

  Forever is an imprint of Grand Central Publishing. The Forever name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

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  ISBN: 978-1-5387-6352-0 (mass market), 978-1-5387-6353-7 (ebook)

  E3-20180928-DA-NF

  Contents

  Cover

  Not the Duke's Darling Copyright

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  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

  Epilogue

  Discover More Elizabeth Hoyt

  About the Author

  Other titles by Elizabeth Hoyt

  PRAISE FOR ELIZABETH HOYT’S MAIDEN LANE SERIES

  Patience for Christmas by Grace Burrowes Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  About the Author

  Looking for more historical romance?

  For every woman who works day in and day out, who takes care of family and friends and community, who sometimes despairs late at night but then gets up in the morning and does it all again anyway.

  You are strong and brave and beautiful and this book is for you.

  Acknowledgments

  Thank you as always to my fantabulous editor, Amy Pierpont, to my wonderful beta reader, Susannah Taylor, and to my writer helper dogs who faithfully sit by me as I write: Rue, Darla, and Ellie, aka Miss Puppy Pie.

  And very special thanks to my Facebook friend Paola, who named Tess the dog!

  Chapter One

  Now this is how it all began.

  Long, long ago there lived a powerful prince who had but one child, a daughter.

  She was beautiful, haughty, and spoiled, and her name was Rowan.…

  —From The Grey Court Changeling

  May 1760

  London, England

  Had someone asked Freya Stewart de Moray at the age of twelve what she expected to be doing fifteen years later, she would’ve listed three things.

  One, writing a pamphlet on the greater intelligence of females compared to males—especially males who were brothers.

  Two, indulging in as much raspberry trifle as she pleased.

  And three, breeding spaniels so that she might have an endless supply of puppies to play with.

  She’d been very fond of puppies at twelve.

  But that was before the Greycourt tragedy, which had torn her family apart and nearly killed her eldest brother, Ran.

  Everything had changed after the tragedy.

  Which was possibly why Freya’s twelve-year-old self could never have predicted what she was actually doing at seven and twenty: working as an agent of the ancient secret society of Wise Women.

  Freya hurried along the London street toward Wapping Old Stairs. At the last cross street she’d realized that they were being followed. She glanced at her charges. Betsy was a nursemaid only just turned twenty. The girl was red faced and panting, her mouse-brown hair coming down around her damp cheeks, her eyes wide with terror. In the nursemaid’s arms was Alexander Bertrand, the seventh Earl of Brightwater.

  Age one and a half.

  Fortunately His Minute Lordship was asleep in Betsy’s arms, round cheeks pink and tiny rosebud mouth pursed.

  Behind them were two disreputable men who looked very much as if they were stalking Freya and her charges.

  Freya racked her brain, trying to think of a plan of escape. The day was sunny. Seagulls screamed above the Wapping streets. She and Betsy walked parallel to the Thames, only blocks away, and the fetid smell of the river was strong in the air.

  She estimated that it was less than a quarter mile to Wapping Old Stairs. The street was busy at this time of day. Carts rattled by, filled with foreign goods brought through the Port of London. Smartly dressed merchants and ship captains bumped shoulders with staggering sailors already in their cups. Working-class women made sure to avoid the sailors, while women who worked the streets made sure to accost them.

  Freya chanced another look behind.

  They were still there.

  The two men might simply be traveling in their direction. Or they might have been sent by Gerald Bertrand, Alexander’s paternal uncle, with orders to bring back the baby earl. If they took him, she wouldn’t have a second chance to rescue the toddler.

  Or, of course, they might be Dunkelders.

  Freya’s pulse picked up at that last thought. The Wise Women had long been hunted by Dunkelders—nasty, superstitious fanatics who knew about the Wise Women and believed they were witches who should be burned.

  If the followers were either Dunkelders or Bertrand’s men, she had to do something soon, or they’d never make it to the stairs.

  “What is it?” Betsy asked breathlessly. “Why do you keep looking back?”

  “We’re being followed,” Freya told her as a huge black carriage came around the corner, moving toward them at a snail’s pace due to the crowded street.

  Betsy moaned and hitched His Lordship higher in her arms.

  The carriage door bore an ornate gold crest Freya didn’t recognize. Not that it really mattered. They needed safety and a place to hide from the men. Whoever the aristocrat in the carriage was, Freya was certain she could stall him for a minute or two.

  That was all they needed.

  She seized Betsy’s arm. “Run!”

  Freya darted behind the carriage, pulling Betsy along with her. There was a sho
ut from the men following them, and the carriage shuddered to a stop.

  On the far side of the carriage she dragged Betsy to the door, wrenched it open, and shoved both nursemaid and baby inside. Freya leaped in, slamming the carriage door behind her.

  She landed on hands and knees and looked up.

  Betsy was sitting on the floor of the carriage, cowering away from a large yellow dog, who appeared to be regarding the maid with surprise. Miraculously, Alexander, the tiniest earl in all the land, hadn’t woken.

  The gentleman beside the dog stirred. “I beg your pardon?”

  At least that was what he said. What he quite obviously meant was, “What the bloody hell?”

  Freya tore her gaze from the dog and looked up into cerulean eyes framed by thick black eyelashes. Lounging on the squabs, his legs stretched clear to the opposite seat, was Christopher Renshaw, the Duke of Harlowe.

  The man who had helped destroy her brother Ran.

  Freya’s breath seized, her eyes dropped, and she saw something else.

  The bastard was wearing Ran’s signet ring.

  Her gaze snapped back to his, and she waited for him to shout her name. For her true identity to be revealed after five long years of hiding in London.

  Instead his expression changed not at all as he said, “Who are you?”

  He didn’t recognize her.

  He and Julian Greycourt had been Ran’s best friends. He had seen her every week of her life until the Greycourt tragedy. She’d once vowed to marry the swine. Of course she’d been twelve and that was before he’d nearly gotten Ran killed, but even so.

  He didn’t recognize her.

  What a complete and utter ass.

  Freya straightened her bonnet and glared up at the duke. “You are not Lady Philippa.”

  The duke’s eyebrows snapped down. “I—”

  “What,” Freya said with rather enjoyable ire, “are you doing in Lady Philippa’s carriage?”

  Said carriage lurched and began moving as Alexander woke with a whimper.

  Outside a man cursed.

  Freya made sure to keep her head below the level of the open window.

  Someone pounded on the carriage door.

  Harlowe looked from Freya to Betsy and the baby and then back to Freya again.

  Holding her gaze, he stood.

  Freya stilled.

  Betsy and the baby sobbed.

  Harlowe leaned over Freya and glanced out the window before shutting it and drawing the curtain. He resumed his seat, a muscle twitching in his jaw as his right hand dropped to the dog’s head. “I don’t know what trouble you might be in or why those brutes are after you.”

  Freya opened her mouth, desperately thinking of a story.

  The duke held up his hand. “Nor do I care. I’ll take you to Westminster. After that you’re on your own.”

  Harlowe was offering to help them, two strangers? That didn’t make sense from the man who had so coldheartedly abandoned Ran.

  But she had no time to ponder his vagary.

  “Thank you,” Freya said, the words like acid etching hatred on her tongue. “But that won’t be necessary.” She looked at Betsy. “I’m going to jump out when next the coach slows. I want you to wait to the count of twenty and then follow.”

  “What of the child?” the duke interrupted imperiously. “Surely you don’t wish to endanger the both of them by ordering her to jump from a moving carriage?”

  “Then stop the coach for her,” Freya replied sweetly.

  For a second they locked gazes. His face was wrathful. Obviously he wasn’t used to being given orders by anyone—a woman least of all.

  Too bad.

  Freya leaned close to Betsy and murmured in her ear, “Remember to head for Wapping Old Stairs and to look for the woman wearing a black cloak with a gray hood.”

  “But what of you?” Betsy whispered frantically.

  Freya straightened and gave the girl an encouraging smile. “I’ll find you, never fear.”

  “Oh, miss—”

  Freya shook her head firmly, bussed the baby earl on his adorably fat cheek, and winked at the duke. “A pleasure, Your Grace.”

  Then she leaped from the carriage.

  She stumbled when her boots hit the cobblestones, and for a ghastly second she thought she might go under the carriage wheels.

  But she recovered.

  Just as she heard a shout from behind her.

  Freya hitched up her skirts in both hands and ran. She ducked down a road, heading to the river.

  Behind her came the clatter of pursuit.

  She turned into a narrow alley and skidded to a stop. At the other end was the second man.

  Freya spun.

  The first man was behind her, closing fast.

  She darted into an arched opening to her right, coming out almost at once into a small courtyard enclosed on all sides by the surrounding buildings. The stink of the public privy was near overwhelming. She could see, straight ahead, the back of a tavern.

  A man opened the door to the tavern and threw slops to the side.

  Freya ran up the steps, pushed past him, and rushed into a steaming kitchen. Two maidservants looked up in astonishment as she ran through. The man at the back door belatedly swore behind her.

  She found herself in a dark passage. There was a common room ahead and stairs to her right. She could try to hide in one of the rooms above, but that was a dead end. If they chased her up there, she’d be cornered.

  Freya ran through the common room, where, except for a single lewd suggestion, no one paid her any mind. She came out of the front of the tavern onto the wharves. She could see the Thames beyond, the water sparkling in the sun prettily. Of course that was deceiving: the privy she’d just run past would empty directly into the river.

  Freya turned to the left, heading east with the river on her right hand. She walked rapidly, for she’d gotten a stitch in her side from running. Her pursuers hadn’t emerged from the tavern. Perhaps she’d lost them.

  Perhaps they’d caught Betsy and the baby.

  Dear God, no.

  A figure emerged from the alley just ahead. Freya started before she recognized Betsy. Relief nearly made her stumble.

  The nursemaid was wild eyed. “Oh, thank the Lord I found you, miss. If Mr. Bertrand’s men catch me I don’t know what he’d do.”

  “Then we shan’t let that happen,” Freya replied stoutly. She glanced at the earl and found him grinning at her around a fat finger stuck in his mouth. She pressed her lips together. “No, I won’t let either of you fall back into his hands.”

  Behind them came a shout.

  They’d been found.

  “Hurry,” Freya urged, breaking into a jog. She could see the alley that led to Wapping Old Stairs just ahead.

  Betsy was praying under her breath.

  They weren’t going to make it. The stairs were too far, the men behind them too close.

  “Give me the baby,” Freya said.

  “Ma’am?” Betsy looked terrified, but she did as Freya ordered.

  Freya wrapped her arms around Alexander’s little body. He started to cry, his open mouth wet against her neck. “Run for the stairs!”

  Unencumbered by Lord Brightwater, Betsy flew.

  The earl was wailing in Freya’s ears as she ran, his body shaking, his little face bright red with distress. If they caught her, she’d be unable to fight them off with the baby in her arms. She’d lose Alexander. His uncle would hide him away behind walls and guards and the laws made by men and she’d never get him back.

  Up ahead a figure emerged from the mouth of the alley leading to the stairs. She was short and slight and wearing a black cloak with a gray hood.

  She raised her arms, a pistol in each fist.

  Freya dove for the ground, landing hard on her shoulder so the baby wouldn’t be hurt.

  The blasts were simultaneous and so loud Lord Brightwater stopped crying, his mouth open, his eyes wide as he gasped.
<
br />   He blinked up at her, tears in his big brown eyes.

  Freya kissed him and then checked behind them.

  One man was on the ground, swearing. The other had turned tail and run.

  When Freya looked back, the Crow was striding to her. “You’re late.” She held out her hand to help Freya up.

  “Thank you,” Freya muttered, taking the hand.

  Together they hurried to the stairs.

  Betsy was there, sobbing in the arms of an elegantly dressed woman with a beauty patch on her upper lip.

  “Alexander!” The woman turned to them.

  The Earl of Brightwater started struggling in Freya’s arms. “Mama.”

  Freya handed the baby to his mother.

  “Oh, my precious darling.” The widowed Countess of Brightwater hugged her only child close, pressing her cheek to his. She looked up at Freya, her eyes shining. “Thank you. You cannot know how much this means to me. I thought I’d never see Alexander again.”

  The countess’s fears had nearly come true: her brother-in-law, Mr. Bertrand, had barred her from her son so that he could control both the countess and the estate left to his tiny nephew.

  Freya nodded, but before she could draw breath to reply, the Crow said, “Best we leave immediately, my lady. We don’t know if there’s other men behind.”

  Lady Brightwater nodded and turned to descend the stairs with Betsy. Freya could see a wherry waiting below.

  “She and her servants have passage on a ship to the Colonies,” the Crow murmured. “They’ll be out of her brother-in-law’s influence there.”

  “Good,” Freya replied softly. “A child should never be raised without a loving mother if it can be helped.”

  The Crow cocked her head at Freya, but said only, “Be in the mews at midnight tonight. I have word.”

  She turned and swiftly ran down the stairs.

  Freya inhaled. Her part of the matter was finished. She watched as the little party got in the wherry and the wherryman pushed off from the steps. Betsy raised a hand in farewell.

  Freya waved back. She’d probably never see Betsy, the adorable earl, or his mother again, but at least she’d know they were safe.

  And that was everything.

 

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