Unlaced By The Highland Duke. Lara Temple. Читать онлайн. Newlib. NEWLIB.NET

Автор: Lara Temple
Издательство: HarperCollins
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Жанр произведения: Современная зарубежная литература
Год издания: 0
isbn: 9781474088961
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href="#litres_trial_promo"> Chapter Fourteen

       Chapter Fifteen

       Chapter Sixteen

       Chapter Seventeen

       Chapter Eighteen

       Chapter Nineteen

       Chapter Twenty

       Chapter Twenty-One

       Chapter Twenty-Two

       Chapter Twenty-Three

       Chapter Twenty-Four

       Chapter Twenty-Five

       Chapter Twenty-Six

       Chapter Twenty-Seven

       Chapter Twenty-Eight

       Chapter Twenty-Nine

       Chapter Thirty

       Chapter Thirty-One

       Chapter Thirty-Two

       Extract

       About the Publisher

       Chapter One

      London—1815

      ‘Lady Theale is here, Your Grace.’

      Benneit didn’t know what was worse—those words or the explosion of light that struck him as Angus hauled back the curtains. He groaned on both counts.

      ‘Aye,’ Angus replied and positioned himself at the bottom of the bed. With his scarred face he looked like one of the gargoyles carved on to the embattlements at Lochmore Castle come to perch by Benneit’s bed to remind him of his duty. Benneit shoved his head into his pillow.

      ‘What the devil does she want?’

      ‘Jamie.’

      Benneit tossed the covers aside and scraped himself off the bed.

      ‘Over my dead, drawn, quartered and pickled body.’

      Angus grunted. ‘Aye, lad. Shall I shave you?’

      It was more a suggestion than a question and, instinctively, Benneit dragged his hand over his jaw, wincing at the rasp.

      ‘No. She shall have to accept me in all my glory. What time is it?’

      ‘It is gone nine in the morning.’

      ‘Nine? Nine? I’ve barely slept three hours. What the devil is wrong with that woman?’

      Angus’s scarred face twisted into a momentary and awful grin.

      ‘You can sleep when you’re dead, Your Grace.’

      It was Benneit’s turn to grunt as he dragged off his nightshirt and went to the basin. There was a brutality to Angus sometimes and whether he meant to allude to Bella or not, it struck up her image, interred in the Lochmore family crypt. Eventually Benneit would be there, too. A fate worse than death... He breathed in to calm the reflexive queasiness at the thought, reminding himself that when that day came he would at least know nothing of it.

      ‘Send Jamie to her until I’m ready—if he’s awake. After half an hour of his undiluted company she might think twice about this campaign to take him to Uxmore.’

      ‘He’s down there now, lad.’

      Benneit wiped the water from his face and glanced at Angus, meeting the twinkle in the giant’s blue eyes.

      ‘Great minds thing alike, eh, Angus?’

      ‘When they think at all, Your Grace.’

      Benneit sighed and returned to the freezing water.

      * * *

      ‘Good morning, Lady Theale.’

      ‘You need a shave, Lochmore.’

      Benneit stopped, gathered himself and the comment hovering at the tip of his tongue, and proceeded.

      ‘Had I been given more warning of your arrival I would have obliged.’

      ‘Had you been given more warning of our arrival you would have been halfway to the border by now.’

      Benneit advanced on the elderly lady seated in his favourite armchair, plucked her weathered hand from where it rested on her cane and raised it to his lips.

      ‘No, only as far as Potter’s Bar. Not even for you would I set off before dawn.’

      She sniggered and gave his face a small slap before he straightened.

      He turned to search the room for his son and stopped. The word ‘our’ hadn’t registered at first, but now it did. Jamie was seated on the sofa, his stockinged feet drawn up under him, and on the other side of his favourite book of maps was a woman.

      ‘Papa, she’s helped me find Muck!’ Jamie announced, bouncing a little on his knees.

      ‘Did she? That is indeed impressive. But can she help you find Foula? Good morning, Mrs Langdale.’

      ‘Your Grace.’

      Her voice was deep, but as bland as her grey wool dress—flat and without inflection. During Bella’s Season six years ago Mrs Langdale, then Miss Watkins, wore Bella’s cast-offs and, being shorter and less endowed, she always looked like a scrawny hen rolled in a bed of shredded peacock feathers—those ostentatious clothes coupled with her unremarkable looks had not been a good combination. She was unremarkable except for her deep grey eyes that Bella had laughingly called the ‘orbs of truth’.

      ‘No one can lie to Joane if she puts her mind to their speaking the truth. She only has to look at you and before you realise it, the words are out there. Papa said she would have been useful to Wellington during the war.’

      He remembered Bella’s assessment of her poor cousin because it struck him as very apt and one of Bella’s rare flashes of insight.

      ‘And how is Mr Langdale?’ he asked politely.

      ‘He isn’t,’ she replied.

      ‘Died two years ago,’ Lady Theale hissed. ‘Really, Lochmore!’

      He felt his face heat with unaccustomed embarrassment and he bowed.