The Viscount's Valentine (Classic Regency Romances)
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The Viscount’s Valentine
Viscount Blackthorne is better known as Blackheart, a notorious rogue with a reputation for seduction. Forced to flee London and a young woman’s irate father, he escapes to the wilds of Yorkshire hoping to rest, relax, and wait out the scandal. The last thing he expects to find in the country is the stunning beauty he first eyed twelve years ago, the one woman who captivated his heart and made him question his ways.
The widow Honey Hockley has given up on romance and settled into the quiet simplicity of her small Yorkshire village. Before marrying her infirmed husband, she had one sparkling night of a London Season, a night she’ll hold on to forever. But Honey’s peaceful days are shattered when a handsome and mysterious stranger comes to town, forcing her to question her decision to accept a life alone.
Upon meeting, attraction flares, and it’s only Honey’s fears and the Viscount’s reputation that keep them apart. So while Honey works to accept the possibility that life and love may yet hold some surprises for her, the Viscount works to clear his name and win over the one woman he believes can make him virtuous again.
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A somewhat different version of this book originally appeared as the story “Wild Honey” in the anthology Valentine Rogues, published by Kensington/Zebra in January 2001, copyright © 2001 by Donna Lea Simpson.
Beyond the Page edition copyright © 2013 by Donna Lea Simpson.
Material excerpted from A Rogue’s Rescue copyright © 2002, 2013 by Donna Lea Simpson.
Cover design and illustration by Dar Albert, Wicked Smart Designs
ISBN: 978-1-937349-58-5
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Contents
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Excerpt from A Rogue’s Rescue
Classic Regency Romances
About the Author
Chapter One
1808
Valentine’s Day Ball
London
Lord Bron Alvarice circled Lord and Lady Never’s ballroom. They were holding their annual preseason Valentine’s extravaganza, and he had attended out of sheer boredom. He could think of no other reason why he was dressed in his usual best blue coat gazing stupidly at a lot of children in pretty white frocks as they danced with a collection of London’s bucks and beaux, floating about the red and white decorated room in a cotillion dance.
But the usual round of London excitements for a young man of means had become a dead bore. Mills, races, cockfights, gambling hells, opera dancers . . . he was twenty-four and bored to death with it all. He had a fund of excess energy that he had no idea what to do with. None of his other friends seemed to be suffering this dreadful ennui.
He spotted a friend, Derrick Laughton. He was doing the pretty to the chit his mother had chosen as his bride. Fairly sanguine about it he seemed, too. She was well enough looking, but had a tendency to bray when she laughed, and had a thick waist. Maxwell Prosper was in attendance as well, squiring an heiress who would be on the shelf if she did not find a husband this Season. Her besetting sin was a face like an Arabian horse and a shrewish manner. One or the other could be ignored, thought Bron, but both together . . . he shuddered.
Well, not for him. He was the future Viscount Blackthorne, but right now he was just Lord Bron Alvarice, and he intended to enjoy himself thoroughly before settling down to a life in leg shackles. So why did everything seem so devilishly flat?
He saw a crowd of young men near the row of chairs on the west end of the ballroom. There was a palpable air of excitement emanating from the knot of young gentlemen, and Bron wondered if some announcement about the war had been made and was being discussed. His pulse quickening, he advanced, only to see the knot separate and one young man lead a girl onto the floor.
She was breathtaking. There was no other word for the vision in palest peach muslin, her honey-colored hair dressed high in a coronet, with a circlet of white roses atop it, and her swanlike neck encircled in glowing pearls. She was graceful as the lucky man, one of Bron’s acquaintances, William Conroy, led her into the dance. It was a new dance, the quadrille; she gracefully walked through the steps with William, his face beaming red by the end of the dance, for he was stout and even the gentle pace she kept was usually beyond him.
Bron’s curiosity was raised, for William never danced. He watched them, and as his friend took the girl back to her seat, he saw the crowd of young men descend upon her again, like drones to the queen in a hive. She was irresistible, it seemed, and was casting every other girl in the place into the shade. The next dance was a country dance, and she was led out by a stranger to Bron, but her affect on him was just the same as it had been on Will. Drawn by curiosity, Bron circled and drew near to the crowd of her admirers.
“Like an angel,” one young man breathed, as he gazed at the girl who spiritedly moved through the country dance, one honey lock of hair dancing and bouncing on her pale shoulders.
“Exquisite,” his boon companion agreed. “And absolutely unspoiled. D’you know, she has danced with poor Dobbs, and he ain’t got a penny, and is homely as they come from the pox. Gives a fellow a chance, not like some o’ these nose in th’air types, I say.”
“A perfect angel,” the other young man breathed again, as he watched the object of his admiration.
Bron rolled his eyes. What gudgeons! No girl was so unspoiled if she was that beautiful. Straight out of the schoolroom she looked, though he had to admit she seemed to have more address than most schoolroom misses. He began to watch to criticize, intent on finding her fatal flaw, for certainly she must have one. All women did. But as the evening progressed and she stood up with any young man who asked, and treated them one and all to the same sweet smile, he wondered if her only fault would be that she was a simpleton. He wondered if he should ask her to dance just to confirm his guess, for she was beginning to prey on his mind.
He had found out her name, Miss Honoria Stillwell, and her age, just eighteen that very day, her birthday. He had even found out her nickname . . . “Honey,” of all things. It was enough to gag one with cloying sweetness. Even the society dragons, who could usually be depended on to find something wrong with e
ach girl, seemed enamored of her. One of the most severe, Lady Benton, pronounced her to be a “well-behaved, pretty sort of gel.” From her that was high praise indeed, she who found fault even with Princess Charlotte, damning her as a little hoyden.
William Conroy moved ponderously toward him with a smile beaming on his red face. “I say, Bron, well met!”
“Well met, Will. Did my eyes deceive me, or did I see you dancing earlier?”
Will flushed even redder, if that was possible. He snagged a glass of champagne from the refreshment table behind Bron and gulped it down, sighing afterward and wiping his mouth delicately with a kerchief. “You did see me dancing. How could one miss me?” he joked with his usual good humor.
“And I thought you never danced. What is so different about this chit?”
Both men glanced toward the floor as Honey Stillwell floated by in the figures of another country dance with an older man they both recognized as a confirmed bachelor. The look in his eyes, though, as he gazed down at his pretty partner and laughed at some remark of hers was bemused interest.
“She’s a stunner,” William sighed.
“Lots of pretty girls every year,” Bron said. “What’s so different about this one?”
Frowning in concentration, his friend gave it some thought. “Makes a fellow feel ten feet tall when he is with her,” he finally said. “And it is not just that she is so demmed pretty. Sweet, too. And smart! Heard her talkin’ about the war with Major Jenkins. Seemed to know what she was talking of, too. But it’s more than that.”
Cynically, Bron said, “So she’s perfect, is that it? A paragon. Flawless looks, smart, kind . . . what else do you need? You sound as if you are halfway in love with her. Should ask her to wed now.”
William rounded on his friend with an angry look in his usually placid eyes. “See here, Bron, I know how demmed cynical you are, but Miss Stillwell is off-limits for that kind of talk.”
One brow raised in as much surprise as he would allow himself to show, Bron gazed down at his hefty friend. Will never troubled himself to become enthused or angry about anything, but one would almost think he was willing to come to blows over this girl. “Come, Will, she is just a girl! Lots more of them every year. Sort of like roses, new crop every spring.”
The angry light died, and something wistful floated through the other man’s gray gaze. “Not like Miss Stillwell. I know I don’t have a chance with her . . . look at her! Surrounded by men so thick, if you shot a cannon you would kill half of London’s young bloods. But somehow, when we were dancing, she made me feel like I was the only man in the room. Never took her eyes from mine—you know how some of the girls use the dance to check out every man in the place . . . eyes wandering constantly. Not her. Got the feeling she was really interested in me.”
Bron made his adieus to his friend and strolled away. Will still watched her like a lovesick moonling from the edge of the floor, and Bron wondered if that was his own fate. He could not seem to take his eyes from her, and yet she had not even noticed him. That was a blow, for he was used, at six feet tall, to standing out among other men. Women generally made a fuss over him, sighing over his black hair and blue eyes as if no other man had ever had those assets.
But Miss Stillwell was too engaged in her partner’s conversation. Maybe she was just nearsighted. Couldn’t see past the tip of her delectable nose. But no, her look did not have that vacancy in it. The dance ended and her partner squired her back to her place beside an older woman of faded beauty, her mother perhaps, by their similar looks. And then the crowd closed in again.
Not for him that jostling good-natured competition, though. But still, he could not keep his eyes from her, and waited with a thumping in the region of his heart as a new partner led her out for a mazurka. Her step was light and her joy in the dance infectious.
“You seem as bloody infatuated as we all are,” came a deep voice at Bron’s side.
It was a good friend, Percy Scott, and he and Bron shook hands.
“She has a rare beauty,” Bron admitted grudgingly.
Percy gazed at him with curiosity. “Never seen you stare at anyone quite like that. And yet you haven’t joined her court, nor asked her to dance yet.”
Bron shrugged. “Two reasons. I’m afraid that if I get too close, I will find something to disapprove—no one can be so bloody perfect—and you know what the society dragons are like! One false move on my part and they’ll have me leg-shackled to the chit.”
“Worse fates than that to be suffered,” Scott mused. “Still, she’s worth the danger, my friend. She’s a rare ’un, and I say that as one who never goes for the chits in their first season. But her father’s in dun territory. She’ll be auctioned off to the highest bidder, I don’t doubt. Sad but true.”
“Still,” Bron said. “The season has not even officially started yet. He won’t do anything until the season is under way. A girl like that, even saddled with a poor family, should make a good match.” Even as he said it there was a sick feeling in the pit of Bron’s stomach at the thought of her with any man but him. It surprised him, and he admitted to a jolt of fear. Perhaps he should make himself known to the girl. But he was not in the market for a wife. He was too young, only twenty-four, and had a lot of living to do before putting his neck in the marital noose. Still . . .
“Is she going to be at the Stoddarts’ ball in two weeks? The one that opens the season?”
“She is,” Percy said. “I tried to bespeak a dance, but she very prettily said she did not want to fill her dance card before the actual night. You going to go?”
Bron made his mind up swiftly. He nodded. “I am. If I have not forgotten her face before then, I will dance with her.”
“Awfully good of you, old sport, to give her a chance like that,” Percy said, sarcasm dripping from his cultured voice.
But Bron didn’t answer, for at that minute his gaze had met with a pair of eyes the color of a summer sky, and he felt as if all the air had been sucked from his body. Miss Honey Stillwell, he thought, I look forward to our dance in two week’s time as I never thought I could look forward to anything.
• • •
Two weeks later the Stoddarts’ ball found him pacing anxiously by the entrance, waiting for a girl he had not been able to forget. The two weeks had dragged, even though he had filled it with mills and races and a trip to a friend’s in Brighton. His memory of her had become an obsession, his dreams at night filled with fantasy meetings between them, sometimes in a London ballroom, but more often on a heath somewhere in the middle of nowhere. He did not recognize the surroundings, but it was a wild place, rocky and hilly, and he saw her standing on a hilltop, with the wind lifting her honey-colored hair and tousling it. He would, in his dream, approach her and she would come into his arms as if she belonged there, and he would hold her close to his heart and whisper “Forever,” and then awaken with a jolt.
He had decided that it was a brain fever that would likely be healed the moment he danced with her and found her to be just an ordinary young lady. His obsession was being fueled by the mystery of her, and that last, long look, and the awareness in her eyes as she gazed at him.
“Percy,” he cried, seeing his friend, one of the few he could look directly in the eye and not look down at. They clasped hands, but Bron’s eyes returned to the entrance.
“What ails you, my friend?” Percy asked.
“Nothing,” Bron said, jolted from his vigil. He hoped he was not making a cake of himself. “I am just . . . I am looking out for Miss Stillwell. I wish to sign her dance card before it is filled.”
Percy looked at him curiously. “You must have been out of town this last week. Did you not hear the latest?”
“What latest?”
“Miss Stillwell is no more.”
Bron felt a jolt of pain streak through him. “She died?” he cried. “No! That is not possible.”
“Not dead, old man, merely wed. Her father sold her off to the highest bid
der, old Abner Hockley, saving himself the cost of a season. Clever, hmmm?”
“That glowing girl wed that horrible little wine merchant, Hockley?”
“Not willingly, gudgeon! Her father announced her fate to her, so the tale goes, and she ran from the city to some aunt in Bath. Father dragged her back and shackled her to Hockley right and tight. Don’t know what he did, but it is said that the girl did say her ‘I dos’ right enough.”
Bron felt a deep sadness for the lively, sweet girl who had promised to take the ton by storm. “What a fool of a father,” he said, his voice harsh. “Hockley is rich, but she could have had a duke! Money and title, she was that lovely.”
“It’s whispered that Hockley held the old man’s debts. Bought them up, then traded them for Miss Stillwell.”
All of the joy had gone out of the season for Bron.
• • •
Through the Years
He never saw her again, and heard that Hockley had taken his prize immediately to his home, somewhere up north.
In some way the jolt of that shock made Bron sick of himself. Poor Miss Stillwell did not have much choice in her life. Women didn’t. But he was a man, and his life could be whatever he wanted.
He wanted to do something with it, so he bought a commission in the cavalry, and advanced through the years to a captaincy, was decorated twice, saw action on the Peninsula, was wounded and invalided home, but recovered in time to have a hand at Waterloo, beside old Nosey himself. With Napoleon safely secured on his island, Bron sold out in 1816, after the death of his father and the ascension of himself to the title, and returned to the life of a London gentleman, wine and women, gambling and carousing.
Men called him Blackthorne now, for his title was Viscount Blackthorne, but among the young ladies of the ton, he became known as Blackheart, for his tendency to raise a young lady’s hopes, only to dash them time and time again. It was noted, though, that he had a soft spot for young ladies running away from marriages they were being forced into, or in which they were unhappy.