The Earl and the Nightingale: Historical Regency Romance Novel
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The Earl and the Nightingale
Only he can see her true self…only she can make him feel alive…
Ella Edon
Contents
Thank you
About the book
1. Destitute!
2. Messrs. Braithwaite and Kerr
3. The Parisian Nightingale
4. Covent Garden
5. The First Encounter
6. Rules
7. Preparing for The End
8. A Family Funeral
9. Burying the Dead
10. On the Way
11. The Ball
12. The Prince Regent
13. After the Ball
14. Cordelia
15. Cheapside
16. The Egypt Crypt
17. Bubbles
18. Debts
19. The Unusual Mr. Uriah Screed
20. Ulysses
21. Tiger Alley
22. Cribbage
23. The Rookery
24. The Cutpurse
25. Vast Sums and Cigars
26. A Familiar Sight
27. D’Arcy Dancer, A Gentleman
28. The Second Shot
29. Stay with Me
30. The Next Morning
31. Interest
32. Screed’s Creed
33. Preparations
34. Little Chip
35. The Long Road Home
36. The Finest Ball in England
37. Wedding Preparations
38. The Wedding
Epilogue
Extended Epilogue
Afterword
Do you want more Romance?
The Earl’s Dangerous Passion
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About the Author
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About the book
A man with a brilliant mind, a woman with a brilliant voice. Together they are unstoppable...
Jonathan Anderson-Reese's life could not get turned more upside down in a single day. When his father commits suicide after losing the family fortune at Faro, Jonathan inherits the empty title of Earl and debts that threaten his very existence. As if things could not get more complicated for Jonathan, one night at Covent Garden, he encounters the most exotic and beguiling woman that will change all his plans...
Garance Monteux was on top of the world. Talented, wildly successful and breathtakingly beautiful she could have everything she wanted. But when she falls deeply in love with a certain Earl, Garance will risk her life along with his to help him win back his fortune and escape the moneylenders, even if he is engaged to another...
Will they manage to accomplish their purpose without hurting their hearts in the process?
Only he can see her true self…only she can make him feel alive…
Chapter One
Destitute!
“Good God!” gasped Jonathan, running his fingers through his thick auburn hair, and adjusting his ink-stained clothing. He had just seen his mother at the entrance to his student apartments in Oxford. He ran to her. “Mother! What in heaven’s name are you doing here?”
She was clearly distraught, dressed in black clothing, wearing crepe over her face as a veil, and tears staining her face. As soon as he realized this was not merely a social call, he embraced her heartily, catching himself before expressing his displeasure at seeing her in his Oxford flat.
Jonathan Anderson-Reese, the third of that name, only son and heir to the Earl of Yarmouth, was a brilliant young gentleman of twenty-two, excelling at Oxford, both academically and socially. He studied mathematics, just at a time when mathematics was vitally important to the world, or so he told everyone. Having excelled at Oxford for nearly four years, he was now well-connected in the best circles of Liberal Tories who had been exerting their powers and their desire for modernization throughout the realm. In his opinion, a first at Oxford, especially in Math, was of critical importance to his future. The fact that he was more than usually handsome, his tall, lean form causing many of the young maidens who frequented the town of Oxford to swoon, was a very helpful and fortuitous godsend. He had large blue eyes framed by longer and darker than usual eyelashes, a straight and well-formed nose, and long auburn hair that fell over his face in a fetching manner. The fact that Jonathan seemed totally oblivious to his effect on young ladies was a particular boon to his popularity. He was a modest man and very kind.
One of the most fascinating things about Oxford was how it often made one forget one’s connection to one’s own family. And so, the sudden appearance of Margaret Anderson-Reese, Countess of Yarborough, was a shock to his system, almost making him forget his manners. Nevertheless, his love for his mother allowed him to embrace and console her, despite the shock of seeing her in his dormitory, forbidden to women.
“Oh Johnny!” she cried in despair. “I bring the direst news!”
“What can it be, mamma?” he said, knitting his handsome brows, perplexed.
“It’s your father!” she said through a veil of tears.
“Why what has become of the old goat?” he said jokingly.
“Johnny, he has died,” she said flatly before beginning to sob.
Jonathan stopped smiling abruptly. “Dead? What do you mean? How can he be dead?”
She took him by the arm, away from his comrades, Peter Nunn and Simon Northridge, who were trying their level best to hide the fact that they were eavesdropping. She pulled him into his bedroom, which was in a shocking state of disarray, and whispered the dreaded news to him, directly into his ear. “Three days ago, your father… took his own life!”
Truthfully, Jonathan had wondered how the old duffer had lasted so long. He was far older than his mother, who, at forty-one, was still a shapely and attractive woman. Jonathan had the good fortune to have inherited her good looks, while his father, also named Jonathan, the Earl of Yarmouth, was nearly sixty, and looked a good deal older. Years of dissolute living, drink, and cigars had taken their toll on his face and his corpulent body, and he looked old enough to be her father. Nevertheless, in deference for his mother’s feelings, he bowed his head and nodded.
“Well, mother, we must soldier on. These are not times for inaction. What needs to be done?”
“Johnny, you must come with me today and help. I am in despair and there are people asking awkward questions.”
“Momma, forgive me. This is very distressing news. And, I don’t mean to be indiscreet, but may I ask how it happened?”
“He used his pistol.”
“Father had a pistol?”
“He had just received this awful weapon, only weeks ago. Some sort of thing called a revolver. They say he shot himself in the eye. And Johnny,” she added, again weeping copiously. “It was I who discovered him in his study.”
“Oh mother, that is ghastly!” said Jonathan, trying to collect himself, and trying to sound confident. “Now mother. Would you please allow me a few minutes to collect my necessities, and I shall join you? I’m afraid this news has yet to hi
t me.”
“Of course, Johnny. It is terrible, terrible news.”
“Yes, it is. But, mother, I am afraid that ladies are not allowed in the bedchambers of young gentlemen.”
“But I am your mother!” said Margaret.
“Be that as it may, you saw how my chums were ogling you. You are far too handsome a woman to be able to convince the dons that you are my mother. And I am such an old crow myself.” Jonathan said these words with the intention of calming his mother, whom he loved very much, and did his best to cover the shock and dismay of losing his father. True, his father had been a cold and somewhat aloof man, but he was still his father, and Jonathan had loved him regardless of all his flaws. He was not a kind man or a generous man, but he was the only father he had, and Jonathan slowly came to realize that losing his father, even under these circumstances, was heart-wrenching.
Jonathan had entered Oxford at nineteen and was now twenty-two - ancient in the eyes of many of his peers, who had entered at sixteen and were matriculating at twenty. Jonathan himself had only a single term remaining before he graduated, and so he was at first loath to abandon his studies. It was late January, moreover, and it was rather unpleasant to travel in winter, regardless of the mode of transportation. Especially if one had to go to Lincolnshire, which was a fair distance away.
His mother withdrew forthwith, and Jonathan began to assemble his necessities. As a student at Oxford, he was unaccustomed to dressing as the son of an Earl, but that, it seemed, was about to change. He would assume the mantle of Earl forthwith, he surmised. But, as he himself acknowledged to his friends, Peter Nunn and Simon Northridge, as he packed, he hadn’t the foggiest idea what was going on at the time. He was utterly befuddled by this news of his father passing and so he packed several combs but no socks, a periwig he had used in the Christmas pageant, but no topcoat.
“I say, lads,” said Jonathan, after he had ushered his mother into the drawing room and returned to his chambers. “Something quite grim has happened. You see, my father, The Earl of Yarmouth, has had an accident and has been shot.”
“Dear God, man!” said Peter Nunn with a look of consternation. “That’s rum luck. Is he to be alright?”
“I should say not,” said Jonathan. “He’s dead, you see.”
“Good Lord!” exclaimed Simon Northridge with a shudder. “Dead, you say? That’s a bit of bad luck.”
“Quite!” said Jonathan. “But the thing of it is, as the eldest son - indeed the only son - I must see to his estate. No time for emotion. I must spring into action, if only to preserve my mother’s emotional state from disaster.”
“What? You’re leaving Oxford?”
“I’m afraid so, Simon!” said Jonathan. “But it shall only be for a term, I think. It can’t be avoided. The old man was a bugger with numbers and his estate is sure to be in tatters.”
“Well it’s in good hands now, old man,” said Peter in a soothing voice. “You’re running first! Of course, if you leave now, I daresay, I shall take first.” He looked at Jonathan, who was clearly upset and decided to change his tone. “But, do know I shall be thinking of you every day, old sock.”
“Thank you, Peter,” said Jonathan, pulling his valise to the top of the stairs. “I’ll be back just as soon as I can. Wish me luck!”
“Yes, of course, old man,” said Peter. “Anything we can do, you let us know.”
“Perhaps you could find me a young woman of means. I have a ghastly feeling father has spent our fortune.”
Peter and Simon laughed, slapping him on the back, knowing full-well that Jonathan would never have trouble attracting a woman. Even among his friends at Oxford, both of whom were very handsome, he was known as the handsomest one.
“Don’t be daft, man!” said Simon, trying to sound helpful.
Jonathan turned and bumped his valise down the wooden stairs. He collected his mother at the foot of the stairs. “How shall we travel, mother?” he asked.
“I have hired a carriage,” she said. “It is waiting outside. It shall take us home. Nan travelled with me; you remember Nan, do you not, Johnny?”
He was distracted and ignored her comment. Nan, the mistress’ personal maid, was a mousy old crone with a pinched face, and Jonathan had never liked her much.
“Well, it is before noon, but even so, it shall take days. It’s two day’s travel to Stafford Manor. And I should think his solicitor is in London, is he not?”
“I haven’t the slightest notion, Johnny. That is why I need you so.”
“I see,” he said, trying to maintain his composure. “Do you know the name of his solicitors. Do you have his will, mother?”
“Oh, Johnny!” she replied. “I am still in the depths of despair having lost your father only three days ago. How can I turn to these sorts of things?”
She had a point. However, practical matters were most important in moments of trial and tribulation, as his philosophy professor had often noted. He decided to rest up on his trip to Lincolnshire and drifted off to sleep without comforting his mother.
The coach was relatively comfortable and the driver more than able to handle the difficult terrain. They stopped in a pleasant roadside inn halfway and took rooms while changing the horses. They arrived at Stafford Manor before supper the next day. When he managed to dig himself out from under the many blankets and wraps in the coach, he cleared frost from a small patch of the glass, to look out over his lands.
Lincolnshire in January was an uninspiring place, in a constant repeating pattern of greys, browns, and blacks. The trees had lost their leaves and stood silent sentinel against the winter cold. The snows had not arrived yet, which was a blessing as Lincolnshire could get large snowfalls at this time of year. Mercifully, there was nothing like that. It was just the hardened, frozen ground over which the coach had to travel that made the final few miles so uncomfortable.
Stafford Manor came into view before long, its pointed roofs standing in noble strength against the slate grey sky. It was coming toward darkness when they pulled into the courtyard, greeted by two grooms who took the horses and fed them. The coachman helped Nan and Jonathan’s mother from the coach and attended to the luggage.
Soon, the butler, Ponsonby, and two younger valets appeared. “Master Jonathan,” said Ponsonby, smiling sadly.
“So good to see you, old chap,” said Jonathan wearily. “Would you be a good man and have my rooms made up? I am simply beat.”
“That has been seen to, my Lord.”
Jonathan looked at Ponsonby in confusion. “So, he’s really gone, then.”
“He is most definitely dead, my Lord. I am most terribly sorry.”
The words sunk in with weight to Jonathan’s weary soul. Suddenly, he became aware that he was the sole provider and soon to be Earl of Yarmouth. This was a dread he had avoided for many years, and only now, when his old friend Ponsonby had begun to call him the title previously reserved for his father, did he realize the gravity of this whole series of events.
“And, where is he?”
“Well, he has been taken to the embalmers. I trust that was the right thing to do.”
“I suppose it is. But honestly, I haven’t the slightest idea. And his solicitors?”
“I know not. However, there are two gentlemen expected here in the morning at ten, and I hope they will be able to shed some light on his frightful affair. I am told to prepare you for some grim news, my Lord.”
“Grim, eh? Well, then I shall need my rest. First, mother and I are famished. Nan too. Can you rustle up something for us, and find a place for the carriage driver? I don’t know his name.”
“Jim is our man, my Lord. He has a room here. And your repast has been prepared and is awaiting your presence.”
“I see. Many things have changed in just a few years then,” said Jonathan.
“Yes, my Lord. And may I say, ‘welcome home,’ my Lord.”
“Thank you, Ponsonby.”
Jonathan climbed the stairs, pau
sed on the landing, looking at his childhood bedroom, and felt a wash of comfort roll over him.
“These two gentlemen…” Jonathan started looking back at Ponsonby, “who do suppose they are?
“I really don’t know, my Lord, but I fear the worst.”