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Virtue and Valor: Highland Heather Romancing a Scot Series

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by Collette Cameron




  Table of Contents

  VIRTUE AND VALOR

  Acknowledgements

  Chapter 1

  Chapter 2

  Chapter 3

  Chapter 4

  Chapter 5

  Chapter 6

  Chapter 7

  Chapter 8

  Chapter 9

  Chapter 10

  Chapter 11

  Chapter 12

  Chapter 13

  Chapter 14

  Chapter 15

  Chapter 16

  Chapter 17

  Chapter 18

  Chapter 19

  Chapter 20

  Chapter 21

  Chapter 22

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Epilogue

  VIRTUE AND VALOR

  COLLETTE CAMERON

  SOUL MATE PUBLISHING

  New York

  VIRTUE AND VALOR

  Copyright©2015

  COLLETTE CAMERON

  Cover Design by Rae Monet, Inc.

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

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials.

  Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

  Published in the United States of America by

  Soul Mate Publishing

  P.O. Box 24

  Macedon, New York, 14502

  ISBN: 978-1-61935-853-9

  www.SoulMatePublishing.com

  The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party websites or their content.

  Acknowledgements

  I’ve grown so much as a writer in this, my fifth full-length novel and eighth titled work, because of one incomparable critique partner, SH. Her willingness to share everything she’s learned helped me drastically hone my writing skills—something I hope I do with each new work.

  To my little sisters

  Jody Georgette and Holly Minette.

  Ladies of incredible grace,

  fortitude, and creativity.

  You hold a special corner of my heart.

  Chapter 1

  London, England

  8 September 1818

  “There’s nothing for it.” Yancy tipped back his tankard and enjoyed one last bracing pull of dark ale. “It’s off to Craiglocky at first light. Unrest between the clans has escalated steadily since I visited there in July.”

  His companion, Lucan-Rochester, Duke of Harcourt, offered a non-committal grunt.

  Yancy scratched his nose and frowned. “Peculiar, that. In recent years, tribal disputes are rare, even in the Highlands.”

  “I am certain you are not overly distressed at the summons.” Harcourt gulped the last of the coffee he’d been nursing between sips of brandy. “You may be Bartholomew Yancy, Earl of Ramsbury and an English lord by birth, my friend, but you’ve displayed a distinct penchant for certain things Scottish.”

  Yancy glowered, sending a silent warning.

  Harcourt grinned, completely unabashed. “Come now, admit it. You’ve been sniffing about Isobel Ferguson’s skirts for the better part of a year.”

  Damn. Will he not let the matter go?

  Nonetheless, a stab of expectancy flooded Yancy.

  Anticipation always preceded a visit to Craiglocky Keep. Its laird, Ewan McTavish, the Viscount Sethwick, hailed as one of Yancy’s closest chums, and Isobel, Sethwick’s sister, was of particular interest.

  Possessed of a lively intelligence, she had matured into a magnificent beauty. Graced with cocoa-colored hair, streaked with creamy highlights, her eyes mirrored the shade of a tropical sea at sunset, and her peach-tinted lips . . . well, he’d give his earldom to taste their dewiness.

  However, she loathed him.

  None, but God in heaven, knew why. Until last December, they had gotten on famously, and he had been certain she harbored a distinct tendre for him.

  Holding his tankard, Yancy fingered the smooth rim.

  Charming, biddable, and educated, Isobel possessed every attribute a quintessential countess ought to, and he’d been of a mind to pay his address. Until she gave him the cut direct at her sister’s Christmastide ball.

  A rakish gleam entered Harcourt’s eyes. “By-the-by, how is your pursuit of the fair Scots lass progressing?”

  Tempted to ignore the taunting, Yancy instead lifted a shoulder and feigned nonchalance. “She treats me as if I am a sore-laden leper or the devil himself.”

  Harcourt threw back his head and roared with laughter, causing several patrons to turn and stare in their direction.

  Yancy stopped caressing his cup, a dismal substitute for the silken, ivory skin he yearned to trace his fingertips across. “The last time we met, I actually sniffed beneath my arms and blew my breath into my hand fearing an unpleasant smell might be the cause of her aversion.”

  Another robust burst of mirth from Harcourt followed Yancy’s disclosure. “Poor sot.”

  Yancy crossed his legs and returned his mug to the polished table. Tapping his buff-covered knee with slightly ink-stained fingers, he relaxed against his chair and turned his thoughts away from the vixen who had him at sixes and sevens.

  Scanning White’s dining room, he acknowledged several acquaintances with a slight inclination of his head.

  The club bustled tonight, a sort of pleasant male hubbub. A steady stream of London’s finest arrived for an evening’s entertainment or to escape the company of demanding females. An occasional guffaw interrupted the low murmur of voices and the clinking of silverware against dishes.

  Laden with the aroma of food, candles, and the stench of men doused in cologne or in need of bathing, the air hung thick in the room.

  Nasty habit that, drenching oneself in scent in an attempt to cover noxious body odors. Personally, Yancy enjoyed a good daily soak in the tub.

  Upon spotting Sir Gwaine MacHardy entering the cardroom, he grimaced. “MacHardy’s arrived.”

  “Why the bore hasn’t been banned from White’s altogether, I do not understand.” Harcourt’s clasp on his snifter tightened until his knuckles glowed white, and he shot the stout Scot a glare intended to lay MacHardy flat.

  “Nor do I.” Elbows resting on his chair’s arms, Yancy tapped his fingertips together. “I do wonder why he’s admitted, especially since he’s blatantly contemptuous of the English.”

  “Awfully smug p
rig for a feudal baron.” Harcourt pushed his coffee cup to the edge of the table, his dark gaze impatiently roving the room. “Where’s our waiter?”

  “You drink more coffee than anyone else of my association. Sleep less than any of them too,” Yancy observed matter-of-factly. Hence the need for copious amounts of the bitter brew, which Harcourt claimed helped keep him alert. “The practice cannot be good for your health.”

  Cynicism wrinkled Harcourt’s brow. “Are you pointing a finger at me? You, who confessed last week that you overindulge in spirits more often than you ought?”

  “No, I’m simply making an observation.” Resting his head against the plush chair, Yancy eyed his friend.

  Impeccable, as always, in his usual all-black togs, his blond hair neatly brushed, and his face smooth as a lad’s, Harcourt lounged in his seat. His gray eyes, the whites red-tinged, didn’t hold their customary wicked gleam.

  Returning Yancy’s appraisal, the duke’s lips swept into a mocking smile. “What?”

  “You look like bloody hell, Harcourt. Late night?”

  Yancy chuckled, fully aware of Harcourt’s mistress’s reputation and her insatiable carnal appetite. After all, he had introduced her to his friend, though Yancy hadn’t sampled her charms himself.

  That was one rule they, and their friends, strictly abided by; no sharing of women or sampling the same wares. The practice created too many complications and the potential to brew conflict amongst the rogues.

  Friendship before females—always.

  The comrades had lived by that motto until six of them had gone corkbrained and fell head-over-arse in love. So much for oaths of friendship. The pledge had been tossed aside with as little regard as a smelly, moth-eaten sock.

  Chuckleheads.

  True, his friends seemed blissful as mice in a full larder, and the women they had chosen as mates proved quite exceptional. Nonetheless, Yancy wasn’t such a slowtop he didn’t realize his friends had stumbled upon something exceedingly rare in their unions.

  From his observations, most leg-shackling appeared tolerable at best and, far more commonly, altogether torturous.

  Now, only he and Harcourt remained unencumbered by wives, except Yancy’s infernal obligations demanded that he acquire a countess. Every time he reluctantly contemplated selecting a spouse, Isobel’s lovely face hovered around the fringes of his consciousness.

  He’d never desired the damnable title. The Earls of Ramsbury who held the honorific before him hadn’t been noble men he proudly claimed as relations or whose footsteps he gladly followed in.

  Since inheriting the earldom, the one concession he refused to make pertained to his form of address.

  Devil it, he had been known as Yancy since Eton. The rest of the world could call him Ramsbury, or Honey Sop, or Flitter-Mouse for all he cared. However, to his closest friends and those he held dear, he would forever be Yancy.

  Harcourt yawned behind his hand, his signet ring glinting from the candles nestled in the silver candelabra centered atop their table.

  Yancy crooked an eyebrow. “Have you slept at all?”

  The duke motioned for a waiter to refill his cup.

  “No, I haven’t, not that it’s any of your business.” He covered his mouth and yawned widely again. “I severed my association with my mistress last evening. She had become too demanding and untrustworthy.”

  “She didn’t take receiving her congé well, I gather?” Yancy gave a lopsided smile. “Precisely why I refrain from such cumbersome entanglements. Dashed nuisance that, having to coddle and appease manipulating females.”

  Though a few, like his mother—God rest her tormented soul—made the best of her circumstances without complaint. Mother had filled her life with an excess of scripture, cats, shopping, and rich foods. The latter of which sent her to an early grave at a mere seven and thirty and corpulent to the extreme.

  Harcourt snorted and combed a hand through his hair. “Not well at all. I was compelled to call for a physician to administer drops to calm her hysteria. Why she thought I wouldn’t object to her sharing her favors with three other men while under my protection is beyond me.”

  Grimacing, Harcourt shut his eyelids and pressed two fingers there. “I wasn’t miserly with her either. A greedier woman I’ve never met.”

  Vulnerability registered on his face for a flash, then vanished. For all of his affected aloofness, Harcourt possessed a sensitive soul.

  Yancy grasped the first thing that sprang to mind and pointedly changed the subject. “Did I ever mention Cecily ensconced herself and that niece of hers at Bronwedon Towers a mere week after I inherited the title? Without my knowledge or permission, I might add.”

  He flicked bits of dried wax off the table. Too bad he could not rid himself of his stepmother and her niece as easily.

  “Then my dear stepmother dared to call herself the dowager countess and went on a spending spree that would shame the Prince Regent.”

  Harcourt tsked. “The nerve.”

  Brushing a waxy flake from his pantaloons, Yancy scowled. “And she had the pluck to assure the merchants I would cover her bills.”

  He pinched the bridge of his nose against the ache thinking of Cecily and Matilda always caused. They’d been thorns in his side since his father married Cecily. Thank God, at seventeen, he had been off to university shortly thereafter.

  “I put a quick stop to that, I’ll tell you.” He dropped his hand to his lap. “Told the merchants I refused to pay a single groat of her debt. Nipped her expenditures faster than clippers to a rosebud, I did.”

  Harcourt released a throaty chuckle. “For certain, she’s been a trial to you.”

  “Indeed.” Yancy heaved an exaggerated sigh. “Did she ever fly into the boughs over that last bit. Her screeches rang in my ears for days.”

  “Cannot abide a harpy,” Harcourt murmured sympathetically.

  For the past two years, Yancy permitted Cecily to reside at Bronwedon Towers during the summer months, which meant he avoided the estate like the seventh level of hell.

  Even worse, Cecily’s niece, Matilda, had attempted trysts with him the last three times they’d been under the same roof. A doubt didn’t exist that, despite having just seen her seventeenth birthday, the chit was no virtuous miss.

  Curling his lip, he grimaced at the memories of Matilda’s wagtail ways and Cecily’s constant harping. “Visions of that harridan are what have kept me content with casual liaisons these many years.”

  That and memories of Julia Cambrill—the voluptuous widow who’d captured his trusting heart at eighteen. She mauled it beyond recognition, and then, her hand on the arm of her latest conquest, had tossed his mangled heart at his booted feet.

  A satisfied smirk on her face, she had publically mocked him. “I need a man, not a boy, in my bed.”

  Chapter 2

  After ten years, the heat of Julia’s humiliation still sluiced Yancy. A drink or two typically helped erase her gloating expression from his mind. Forgetting he’d drained the cup, he seized his tankard.

  Confound it.

  “You have the right of it, Yancy. No commitments to muddle things, even carefully contracted ones.” Drumming his fingers on his thigh, Harcourt clenched his jaw for a moment. “Blast and bother, but females become emotional when they don’t get their way. And spiteful too.”

  “I’ll say.” Yancy directed his contempt at his empty cup.

  Spiteful and cruel.

  “Their histrionics and waterworks. Godawful.” Harcourt rolled his eyes dramatically and shuddered before snatching his brandy and emptying the glass in one gulp. “I may never marry.”

  Their waiter approached the table bearing a laden tray.

  “Most wise, Harcourt, if you can manage to avoid the trap.”

 
Harcourt’s countenance darkened. “I cannot, any more than you can, my friend. But I’m damned well taking my time, I tell you.”

  With a nod of thanks, Yancy accepted a crisp linen napkin from the servant.

  Alas, Harcourt spoke the truth as fate had refused to spare Yancy the aggravation of matrimony. More’s the pity.

  However, with a countess as delectable as Isobel Ferguson in his bed, he might make do. If she thawed her comportment toward him. He didn’t want a frigid ice-maiden between his sheets or beneath him either.

  The servant placed plates overflowing with thick beefsteaks, boiled potatoes, carrots, and herb-seasoned asparagus before them.

  Yancy sniffed in appreciation. His stomach answered with a rumbling growl. He hadn’t eaten since breaking his fast early this morning.

  After adding a basket of hot rolls and a dish of butter, their waiter filled the duke’s coffee cup then dutifully added three lumps of sugar and a generous portion of cream. Lastly, he placed a bottle of claret in the middle of the table, along with two sparkling crystal goblets. “Shall I pour, Your Grace?”

  The servant knew full well Harcourt preferred to uncork the bottle himself. Nonetheless, he respectfully made the same request every time he served the duke.

  Yancy quirked his mouth into a droll smile.

  The waiter’s consideration always earned him an extra guinea—precisely why the cunning chap made the gesture.

  “No, just leave the corkscrew.” Harcourt took a healthy gulp of the coffee, then winced. “Confound it. You might warn a chap the brew is scalding.”

  The servant’s bemused glance met Yancy’s, and Yancy winked.

  “Harcourt, it is always steaming hot. That’s how you request the beverage served.” Yancy waggled his fingers at the cup. “See those misty little tendrils curling upward? That ought to have warned you. They generally indicate heat.”

 

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