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The Resurrection of Lady Ramsleigh

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by Bowlin, Chasity




  The Resurrection of Lady Ramsleigh

  The Lost Lords

  Book Four

  Chasity Bowlin

  Copyright © 2018 by Chasity Bowlin

  Kindle Edition

  Published by Dragonblade Publishing, an imprint of Kathryn Le Veque Novels, Inc

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews.

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  The Wishing Well

  Isolated Hearts

  Sentinel

  The Lost Lords Series by Chasity Bowlin

  The Lost Lord of Castle Black

  The Vanishing of Lord Vale

  The Missing Marquess of Althorn

  The Resurrection of Lady Ramsleigh

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  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  Books from Dragonblade Publishing

  About the Book

  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

  Author Bio

  A shipwreck near Castle Black sees Dr. Nicholas Warner risking his life to save a woman from the churning sea. As he pulls her to the safety of the shore, the villagers are stunned by her presence. She is no stranger to them. They identify her as Viola Grantham, Lady Ramsleigh, wife of the recently deceased Lord Percival Ramsleigh… a woman who supposedly died nearly two years earlier. The mystery and scandal surrounding her only draws him in further, adding fuel to the fire of the immediate connection he feels to her.

  Viola, thanks to her cold, unfeeling father, her abusive husband and his profligate nephew, has no trust for men and very little use for them. But there is something about Dr. Warner that she cannot so easily dismiss. Drawn to him seemingly against her will and better judgement, she confides in him about the son she bore in secret, the heir to her late husband and that she had only returned to secure his future and his place in society.

  As they spend more time together, their feelings for one another deepen. But their happiness and growing affection for one another are threatened by Viola’s past. The late Lord Ramsleigh’s nephew, Randall, will not willingly give up the title, even if his aunt has returned from the dead and is presenting a child as the true heir to the title. In fact, there is nothing he will not do and no depths to which he will not sink, to ensure that never happens. He means to hold on to the title and the prestige that accompanies it by any means necessary… even if it means doing far more than just pretending that she is dead.

  Will Viola be able to let go of the pain from her past and embrace the love of a truly good man? And even if she can, will Randall’s plots and schemes cost her far more than just her chance at happiness?

  Chapter One

  The interior of the cottage was clean and neat, everything tidy and in its place. That had far more to do with the village woman who cleaned for him than with any proclivities toward tidiness himself. It wasn’t that he was slovenly really, but a shirt or waistcoat tossed over the back of the chair and a news sheet spread across the table was hardly the end of the world. Still, it was nice to come home to a pot of stew simmering on the hearth and a bed that had been freshly made, even if it was unlikely he could make it to that bed in his current exhausted state.

  Nicholas Warner settled deeper into the wing chair that faced the fireplace and rested his stockinged feet on the small, tufted ottoman that had magically appeared in his abode. It seemed that every day some new item of crockery, furniture or, heaven help him, a barnyard animal, manifested there. It was the way of being a country doctor. People rarely paid with actual coin but instead paid with the things he might have bought for himself had they done so. Of course, there was one particularly foul-tempered goat that he’d not have purchased for love or money. That beast had been deposited on his doorstep out of nothing more than spite. He wound up spending coin he didn’t have himself to pay for one of the neighboring farmer’s children to care for those animals.

  It was almost as an afterthought that he retrieved the letter from the pocket of his discarded coat. It had been delivered to him earlier in the day but he
had not yet had time to look at it. The seal on the back, pressed into ominously dark red wax, was ornate, heavy and painfully familiar.

  Breaking the wax, he scanned the contents.

  Doctor Nicholas Warner,

  It is with my deepest regret that I must inform you of the death of our father, Edward Garrett, Lord Ambrose. The late Lord Ambrose suffered from a malady likely attributed to the many years of excess which he enjoyed.

  Syphilis. Pox. A diseased liver likely from drinking so heavily for decades. Whatever it was, Nicholas tried to conjure some emotional response that was appropriate to hearing that his father had died, but he failed miserably. He hardly knew the man after all. Lord Ambrose had paid for his education and had purchased his commission in the Royal Navy, but all of that had been accomplished without the two of them ever occupying the same room together. The man had been nothing to him but a generous stranger. Rather than focus on that disturbing and shockingly morose thought, Nicholas returned his attention to the letter.

  Despite his haphazard parenting, our late father has bequeathed a generous settlement to you in his last will and testament. When it is convenient for you to do so, please come to London. You will be welcome at the family’s townhome, though family may be a slight exaggeration as I alone remain to carry on the family name. Again, as one orphan to another, I bid you welcome.

  Sincerely,

  Your heretofore unknown brother,

  Cornelius Garrett, Lord Ambrose

  Nicholas read the missive again. It was the only time in the entirety of his life that any member of his father’s family had reached out to him. He didn’t know his mother’s family. Whatever actress, dancer, demirep or unfortunate housemaid had given birth to him, he’d been deposited with a family on one of Lord Ambrose’s estates and then, when old enough, plucked from that home and put into a school. There had been no interaction, no indication that anyone with whom he shared a blood connection would ever seek him out. Any childhood fantasies or foolish wishes to the contrary, he’d come to accept that he was merely an obligation to be discharged. But he supposed he should have some gratitude for that. He had the means to support himself and was viewed as a gentleman by most, when many of his ilk had been forgotten entirely, left to their own devices and whatever fate a cruel world held in store for them.

  The note, while somewhat brief and abrupt, had been strangely welcoming nonetheless. But he was undecided on whether or not he should go. It seemed that establishing connections with them this late in his life might be nothing more than opening wounds unnecessarily. He had survived quite well for his thirty odd years without any interaction with them. It was an avenue fraught with potentially negative consequences. Regardless, he was too tired to decide.

  Perhaps it was the heat of the fire, or the comfort of his favorite chair after a long day of tending to sick children and then a difficult birth, but he dozed there. His eyes drifted shut. He sank deeper into the chair and dreamed of a dark-haired woman. Her face was hidden. He saw nothing of her but the cascade of her dark hair and the lush curves of her body as he trailed behind her. In spite of the lack of contact between them, the dream was still intensely carnal. His ephemeral light o’ love wore nothing but a diaphanous gown that draped elegantly over her figure and served more to highlight than to conceal the exaggerated curve of her hips, the narrow indentation of her waist, the heart-shaped bottom that stirred his blood and roused his body.

  In his dream, she paused and waited, letting him draw close enough to see the fine, silken texture of the dark waves that cascaded over her shoulders and the velvety texture of her skin. As he reached for her, his hand brushing the satiny skin of her shoulder, a sharp tapping sound jolted him from the pleasantness of his dream. Sitting bolt upright in his chair, Nicholas shook his head and tried to make sense of where he was and what he’d heard. It was rare that he slept deeply enough to dream. Even more rare that a dream was so tantalizingly real to him. Still trying to ground himself to the here and now, and to identify the source of noise that awakened him, Nicholas tried to focus his sleep-fogged mind. Before he could do either, the door burst open to reveal none other than Graham, Lord Blakemore himself.

  “You’re needed,” he snapped.

  “Lady Agatha or Lady Beatrice?” he asked, instantly awake and alert, the dream forgotten in the face of a potential crisis. He referred respectively to Graham’s mother who had overcome a long illness as well as an addiction to laudanum and Graham’s new bride who was expecting their first child. Both women were his patients. But he had also come to view both of them as friends if not family.

  “Neither. It’s a shipwreck on the rocks below… I doubt there will be any survivors. You’ll be more a pair of strong hands than a doctor on this occasion,” Graham answered. The grimness of his expression told the truth of the situation far more than his sparse words.

  Nicholas was already dragging his boots on. Shipwrecks were bad enough. But in the bitter cold of an early spring on the North Sea, the likelihood of survival was even slimmer. He didn’t bother to don his coat as he’d only have to remove it once he arrived at the shore. They’d all be wading out into the waters to retrieve the bodies of those lost to the capricious whims of nature. Fewer layers to trap the damp cold against their skin and less weight while trudging through the water would be to their benefit.

  Outside the small cottage, Graham was already mounting his own horse with another one waiting beside him for Nicholas.

  “Do we know the kind of ship? Smugglers?” Nicholas asked as he hoisted himself onto the back of the borrowed mount. The man had uncanny foresight as it would have taken much longer if he’d been forced to saddle his own.

  “If they are, they’re not local. But I don’t think so. There was nothing furtive about their movements,” Graham answered. “I saw them earlier in the day heading south, flags and sails flying high, bright in the sun. The storm came up quickly and blew them back here.”

  Nicholas didn’t ask how he knew it was the same ship. There were few enough that passed within viewing distance of their little spit of a coastline to imagine it could be anything else. He also didn’t speak because he needed all his wits about him to navigate the steep path down to the beach. He might have trusted the horse more if he’d been born to the saddle. But like Lord Blakemore, he’d spent more time aboard ships than on horseback. He was an adequate horseman, but lacked the love for it many Englishmen possessed.

  Sweat had beaded on his skin, despite the cold, by the time they reached the rocky beach. It could only be laid partially at the door of exertion. There was a strange rush of energy that came with facing such situations and it brought a visceral response—heart racing, sweating, muscles tensed and ready. It was a terrible thing to feel such excitement in the face of tragedy. But while it might have marked him heartless to some, it was that which allowed him to be good at his chosen profession. He’d learned to appreciate it during his days in the navy and later serving on less than respectable ships in the Caribbean as they prepped for battle or harsh weather. This was no different.

  Villagers had already arrived, many of them fishermen in their small boats. It wasn’t simply to help those poor souls that might be suffering or have already perished. Shipwrecks were an opportunity for riches and rewards that rarely came to those folks. Mercenary it might have been, but he didn’t lay blame. In the course of his work, he’d seen the poverty of their homes. If they could scavenge something to use or sell, in his mind, they were welcome to it.

  An older man was dipping torches into a barrel of oil and setting them alight, giving one to each man in queue. When he saw Nicholas, he waved the others aside and extended a torch in his direction. “They’ve found a few survivors, Dr. Warner. They’re down the beach a ways though. Most of the poor souls will be needin’ an undertaker more than a physician!”

  Nicholas said nothing, simply accepted the torch and headed off in the direction indicated. Many of those that survived the wreck were quickly s
uccumbing to the cold or to injuries sustained as the ship broke apart beneath them. On the beach, chaos reigned supreme. Survivors and casualties alike were pulled from the water and laid out upon the sand. He worked through the night, ignoring the cold, ignoring the ache in his bones and the pounding in his head as he helped those he could and closed the unseeing eyes of those for whom he was too late. In many ways, he had transcended the limits of his own body, no longer feeling the exhaustion or the cold. His focus was such that he could ignore his own discomfort in those moments.

  Others had ceased looking for survivors at all and were simply bent on scavenging what could be saved from the debris of the ship and its doomed cargo. As dawn broke, a skirmish erupted between two men over a small cask of brandy. As they struggled, grappling with one another for possession of the item, they tripped, collapsing onto the broken body of one of those unfortunate souls whose life had been claimed by the rushing waters of the sea.

  Furious, Nicholas rose. “You worthless, grasping bastards! Fighting over a cask of second rate brandy atop the corpses of the men who died trying to bring it to shore! Have you no shame?”

  “This ain’t no second rate brandy!” one of the men protested, still grumbling and attempting to elbow his competition in the ribs to wrest control of the contraband.

  Nicholas was no longer paying attention to them. His eyes had been drawn to something beyond the beach, bouncing in the rough waves. A flash of red and then it was gone. He strained to see it again as the tide ebbed and flowed. Another wave crested and there it was again. A woman in a red gown. “Get a rope,” he growled.

  “It ain’t worth hanging us over!” the other man said in defiance.

  “Look out there, you fool! Do you not see her?” Nicholas demanded.

  Dutifully, if the two miscreants could ever be described as such, they stared at the crashing waves for a second until the flash of red appeared again. “Likely just a bolt of cloth, Doctor. Ain’t no use in drowning yerself, too!”

  “Get a rope for me to tie about my waist while I make my way to her,” he barked. “Even if it’s too late to save her, I’ll not leave her out there to be preyed upon by the fish.”

 

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