Forbidden in February

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Authors: Suzanna Medeiros

Tags: #romance, historical romance, regency romance

BOOK: Forbidden in February
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Table of Contents

Title Page

A Year Without a Duke

Copyright

To learn more

Blurb

Opening

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Chapter Nine

A Year Without a Duke

Seduced in September

Excerpt from Seduced in September

Acknowledgments and About the Author

Also by Suzanna Medeiros

Forbidden in February

A Year Without a Duke, Book 2

 

 

Suzanna Medeiros

A Year Without a Duke

The duke has died. Long live the duke! The only problem is no one knows who the new Duke of Beckworth is. All of England wonders, but no one more so than the people who depend upon Beckworth for their livelihood. In 1816, a year so cold that the word “summer” is a cruel joke, that livelihood is even more uncertain. However, they are all about to find out, with the duke away, there is nothing more warming than scandal and love…

Jilted in January
by Kate Pearce

Forbidden in February
by Suzanna Medeiros

Seduced in September
by Genevieve Turner

An Affair in Autumn
by Jennifer Haymore

A Duke by December
by Sabrina Darby

 

First Digital Edition, January 2016

Copyright © 2015 Saozinha Medeiros

Cover design © Kim Killion

Edited by Victory Editing

ISBN: 9781988223001

This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

All rights reserved. Except as permitted under the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of the author.

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A Year Without a Duke
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Forbidden in February

Suzanna Medeiros

Robert Milton’s future as the valet to the Duke of Beckworth is uncertain. His employer has died, leaving no heir in sight. When Robert’s mother also dies, he discovers that her companion has taken over her household.

 

Isabel Durham’s dream of gaining her independence is almost a reality, but her cousin is determined to see her married to a wealthy but much-older man. Robert’s arrival in London is the answer to her prayers. Neither can deny the very real attraction sizzling between them and if he ruins her, she’ll be free of the unwanted marriage.

 

But Robert’s very existence has proven to him that romantic entanglements are to be avoided at all costs. His desire for Isabel could cost him the one thing he’s vowed never to lose—his heart.

Mr. Reginald Tompkins,

Richards, Thistlewaite and Tompkins Solicitors

Temple, London

 

My dear Mr. Tompkins,

Thank you so much for your kind consideration in keeping us informed as to the search for the new Duke of Beckworth. As you might imagine, there are several members of the ducal staff whose jobs are now in jeopardy until the new duke is found.

You have probably heard from Mr. Colin Ford, the assistant land agent, as to the mysterious disappearance of Mr. Morehouse and all the funds. I am certain that a man of your good sense and character will attach no blame to Mr. Ford who has proved to be an excellent manager of the estate so far. But, if you do decide to visit Beckworth Park, please be assured that you will receive the warmest of welcomes from all the staff that remain.

The duchess has written to suggest that any of the deceased duke’s servants who wish to seek employment elsewhere are free to do so. She asks that they present themselves to your office for a reference and the payment of any monies owing to them for their year of service. I believe she has already spoken about this matter to you and received your full support.

Please do not hesitate to write with any further instructions, sir. I remain, as always at your disposal.

Yours,

Henrietta Pemberley

Housekeeper, Beckworth Park

Chapter One

February 1816

London

Robert Milton tried but failed to shake off the apprehension that settled over him as he stood by his mother’s grave. They said bad news always came in threes. First his employer, the Duke of Beckworth, had died eight months before without having secured an heir, a fact that left Robert’s own future in question since they still hadn’t found his successor. And then he’d received a letter from his mother’s solicitor informing him that his mother had also passed away. Who would be next?

It had shocked him to learn his mother hadn’t been lying to him in her last letters. He’d refused to believe her claims that she was ill and that her doctor hadn’t given her long to live. Had even part of him suspected she was telling the truth, nothing would have stopped him from returning to London—heaven knew there was very little for him to do at Beckworth Park. But his mother had often lied to him, hoping to get him to return and fulfill her one greatest wish, something he just couldn’t do, and he’d dismissed those letters as merely her latest attempts.

When he hadn’t heard from her again in the space of a month, he’d begun to dread the worst. Even when she threatened never to speak to him again—one of her favorite weapons in the arsenal she employed to try to bend him to her will—she’d never gone more than a fortnight without writing to him. The solicitor’s letter had arrived just when he’d resigned himself to the fact that he would have to return to London to check on her health.

He was indeed in London now, but instead of yet another argument about why he wouldn’t visit his father, he found himself standing by his mother’s graveside, guilt riding him hard. If he hadn’t ignored her letters, hadn’t taken the shaky handwriting covering her last correspondence as further proof that his mother would stop at nothing to force a reconciliation between him and his father, his presence would, at the very least, have given her some comfort in her final hours. Instead, she’d died alone.

He stood there as though on a precipice, his future before him like a great chasm. His only real family was gone, and it was likely he would no longer be employed when the new Duke of Beckworth was found. Most gentlemen, after all, employed their own valet, and he was certain the same would hold true for the new duke.

Robert didn’t particularly enjoy being a valet, especially not to the fastidious, domineering duke, but it was something at which he excelled. Putting together colors and patterns came naturally to him, a product of his onetime love for drawing and painting. His years in service had given him a purpose in life that didn’t necessitate turning to his father for charity. Even if that were something he wasn’t set against, as the bastard son of the man’s cast-off mistress, it was unlikely his father would give him so much as a shilling.

Saying a final good-bye to his mother, his heart heavier than he’d ever remembered, he turned away from the grave and made his way back to the carriage that the Duchess of Beckworth had insisted he use when she’d learned of his errand that morning. He hesitated when the coachman asked him if he wished to return to the duke’s town house in Mayfair, the temptation to bury himself in some mundane task almost overwhelming. But there was no point in putting off the inevitable. He needed to attend to his mother’s affairs, ensure everything was still running smoothly at her house—the house in which he’d been raised. He wouldn’t be meeting with his mother’s solicitor until tomorrow morning, but a quick check of his former home would tell him if the servants were still there and being paid. After all, he knew firsthand how it felt to be a servant in a household that had no master. He’d have to let them know about his plans to sell the house, reassure them that he planned to give them good references. He owed it to them. Walters and Mrs. Harris had been with his mother since he was a lad and were as good as family.

He shivered, the cold February wind cutting through his coat, and gave silent thanks that the rain that had plagued him on his journey to London had stopped last night. He gave his mother’s address to the coachman, stepped up into the carriage, and settled back against the comfortable cushions. He couldn’t enjoy the almost-decadent splendor within, however. His mother’s disappointed face refused to leave his thoughts.

 

 

It surprised him that the house in which he’d grown seemed so much smaller than he remembered. Of course, since he spent the majority of his time at either Beckworth Park or the duke’s large town house in Mayfair, that was only to be expected. Especially since he hadn’t visited his mother in almost two years, making one excuse after another about being too busy to take time away from his duties whenever she learned he was in Town.

He stood before the narrow three-story house as the carriage pulled away, the coachman having explained that he needed to return to Mayfair. The building was nondescript from the outside, its cream-colored façade blending in with the houses that bordered it. No one would have guessed that a rich man’s mistress lived there, together with his bastard son at one time. Of course, after his father stopped visiting around the time Robert turned ten, that was no longer true. His mother had always portrayed herself as a widow, and essentially she had been just that for the past eighteen years. She’d certainly grieved for that lost relationship the same way a widow would.

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