Read Good Earls Don't Lie Online
Authors: Michelle Willingham
Praise for Michelle Willingham
“Well written, aptly conveying a strong sense of family among the sisters, the quartet shows great promise.”
—4 stars,
RT Book Reviews
on
Undone by the Duke
“This genuinely funny and thoughtful third Secrets in Silk Regency romance is a delightful addition to the series. The elements of blackmail, vengeance, and forbidden love weave their way into the story, making this an outstanding page-turner.”
—
Publishers Weekly
on
Undressed by the Earl
“Rich with historical detail and insightful characterization,
Unraveled by the Rebel
, the second in Willingham’s intriguing Secrets in Silk series, is a lushly sensual treat.”
—
Booklist
on
Unraveled by the Rebel
“Two wounded souls find hope and redemption in
Surrender to an Irish Warrior,
a richly detailed and emotionally intense medieval romance.”
—
Chicago Tribune
“Memorable characters and exciting plot twists make this one worth hanging on to.”
—4.5 stars,
RT Book Reviews
on
To Sin with a Viking
ALSO BY MICHELLE WILLINGHAM
Secrets in Silk Series (Regency Scotland)
Undone by the Duke
Unraveled by the Rebel
Undressed by the Earl
Unlaced by the Outlaw
MacEgan Brothers Series (medieval Ireland)
Her Warrior Slave
“The Viking’s Forbidden Love-Slave”
in the
Pleasurably Undone
anthology
Her Warrior King
Her Irish Warrior
The Warrior’s Touch
Taming Her Irish Warrior
“Voyage of an Irish Warrior”
“The Warrior’s Forbidden Virgin”
Surrender to an Irish Warrior
“Pleasured by the Viking” in the
Delectably Undone
anthology
“Lionheart’s Bride” in the
Royal Weddings Through the Ages anthology
Warriors in Winter
The Accidental Series (Victorian England/fictional province of Lohenberg)
“An Accidental Seduction”
The Accidental Countess
The Accidental Princess
The Accidental Prince
The MacKinloch Clan Series (medieval Scotland)
Claimed by the Highland Warrior
Seduced by Her Highland Warrior
“Craving the Highlander’s Touch”
Tempted by the Highland Warrior
“Rescued by the Highland Warrior” in the
Highlanders anthology
Forbidden Vikings Series (Viking Age Ireland)
To Sin with a Viking
To Tempt a Viking
Warriors of Ireland Series (medieval Ireland)
Warrior of Ice
Warrior of Fire
Other Titles
A Viking for the Viscountess
A Maiden for the Marquess
“A Dance with the Devil” in the
Bedeviled
anthology
“Innocent in the Harem” (sixteenth-century Ottoman Empire)
“A Wish to Build a Dream On” (time travel to medieval Ireland)
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, organizations, places, events, and incidents are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.
Text copyright © 2016 Michelle Willingham
All rights reserved.
No part of this book may be reproduced, or stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without express written permission of the publisher.
Published by Montlake Romance, Seattle
Amazon, the Amazon logo, and Montlake Romance are trademarks of
Amazon.com
, Inc., or its affiliates.
ISBN-13: 9781503939769
ISBN-10: 1503939766
Cover design by Michael Rehder
Cover illustration by Judy York/
lottreps.com
For James—Your bright spirit and humor always make me smile. Thank you for bringing sunshine into each day. There’s no doubt in my mind that you have the Irish gift of the gab.
Contents
Chapter One
Yorkshire
May 1846
His head was killing him. It felt as if a hundred horses had trampled his skull, and right now he tasted blood and dirt in his mouth. After a moment, Iain Donovan gathered his senses, clearing his head.
The last thing he remembered was riding toward the Penford estate. He dimly recalled having passed a grove of trees when, abruptly, he’d been knocked off his horse. A shattering pain had crashed over him, and he vaguely remembered voices arguing and shouting.
But no one was here now.
Iain tried to sit up, and blood rushed to his head, threatening a loss of consciousness once again. He reached out to touch his brother’s signet ring, only to find it gone. A sense of fear rose up in him, and he uttered a foul curse.
No one knew him here. He’d never left Ireland before now, and this country was completely foreign to him. While his mother had taken his older brother Michael to London every Season, teaching him all the skills necessary to become the Earl of Ashton, Iain had been left at home. She had done everything in her power to ensure that he was the invisible spare, the hidden son of no importance.
None of that mattered now. He was the only heir left, and he intended to prove that he was
a man of worth. He would rebuild Ashton and help his people—even if that meant traveling across the Irish Sea to meet with strangers.
The wind sent gooseflesh rising over his skin, and when he realized he was no longer wearing a shirt, he let out another curse. Who would do such a thing? The bloody bastards had seized the shirt off his back, devil take them all and eat them sideways.
The thieves had stolen not only the ring and the few coins he possessed, but his horse, his coat, waistcoat, and shirt—even the shoes he’d worn. A fine welcome to England this was. After leaving the nightmare of Ireland behind him, he’d thought that here, everything would be better.
Apparently not.
Iain rose to his feet and studied the land around him. It was a fair day, with the sun shining over rolling hills and meadows. He supposed he could walk the remaining distance to the Penford estate, for it was only a few miles farther. Though he didn’t particularly like the idea of walking in his trousers and stocking feet, he had no other choice.
He grimaced as he followed the road leading toward Penford. All the baggage he’d brought from Ashton was gone now. He’d have to borrow clothes and shoes, and no one would possibly believe he was the Earl of Ashton. Without a coach, servants, clothing, or a signet ring, they’d think him a beggar at best.
His head was pounding from the mild wound, but more than the physical pain was a rising sense of panic.
Calm down,
he ordered himself. He would tell the truth about his ill luck, and surely someone would believe him. Lady Wolcroft had visited Ashton a few years ago. Surely she would remember him. After all, she was the one who had invited him to visit when she’d learned of the troubles they had suffered with the famine. His mother, Moira, and Lady Wolcroft’s daughter, Iris, had been good friends at boarding school. Moira had spent all her school holidays with Iris’s family and was like another daughter to them.
But friendship aside, he couldn’t suppress the rise of uneasiness. Aside from Lady Wolcroft and his tenants, very few outsiders even knew there
was
a spare, in addition to the heir. His gut twisted at his mother’s disregard, but he pushed the anger back.
Despite the circumstances, his younger sisters were depending on him to save their estate. For Colleen and Sybil, he would not fail.
Could
not fail. The task before him was greater than any he’d ever imagined, but he was determined to prove his mother wrong and restore Ashton to its former wealth.
And so it was that Iain had decided to travel across the sea, to leave his familiar homeland and dwell among strangers. And most of all, to offer himself up in marriage, in the hopes of wooing a wealthy bride.
Most men would never dream of such a thing, but his pride had crumbled as surely as the estate of Ashton. His brother was dead, and his sisters needed him. He’d be damned if he’d turn his back on them, forcing them to wed strangers. No. There was a way out of this mess, even if it meant offering himself up as the sacrificial lamb.
With each step, Iain gathered command of himself until he was confident that he
would
be welcomed at Penford, despite his bedraggled appearance.
As he continued along the dry road leading toward the hills, he saw sprouts of barley and rye emerging from the soil. The sight was a sobering contrast to the rotting fields he’d left behind at Ashton. The blight had destroyed their potato crops, until there was naught left, save a crumbling castle and enough debts to bury the family alive.
His mother and sisters had gone to stay with their aunt in New York, while he managed the affairs at Ashton. He had no intention of abandoning the estate or the people who had called it home for all their lives.
For they were starving. Too many of them had watched their crops rot in the earth, and they had nothing left. No livestock, no money—nothing to trade for food. Hundreds had left in the hopes of finding work elsewhere, but no one wanted Irish refugees.
Iain knew that if he wed an heiress, his bride’s dowry could help the tenants survive until the crops improved. And though he had little to offer, save his Irish charm and a decrepit castle, he had to try.
The road curved over a hill, and when he crossed the apex, he saw Penford within the valley. On the west side of the estate, he spied a lake, gleaming silver and gold in the morning sunlight. For a moment, he paused to enjoy the sight. The estate was near a village, though it lay in an isolated part of Yorkshire—not exactly the best place to find a wife.
But Lady Wolcroft had her own motives for bringing him here . . . and he would do anything necessary to form an alliance with the matron. She could bring him into her circles in London, introducing Iain to potential brides—and he was well aware that she had her own unmarried granddaughters. He would certainly consider the young ladies as marriage prospects before he left for London.
He continued the painful walk down the road, and when he turned the corner, he spied two adolescent boys on horseback. On
his
horse, Darcy.
Damn them all and may the crows feast upon their bones.
Iain didn’t call out to them, for they could easily outpace him. Instead, he began running lightly, hoping he could overtake them before they noticed his arrival. The rocks dug into the soles of his feet as he ran hard, and he bit back the pain. Almost there . . .
“The horse is mine,” one of the boys insisted. “I found him first.”
“No, he’s mine,” the other boy glared. “I’m going to tell Father that he followed me home.”
They couldn’t have been more than thirteen, he guessed. Their thievery was likely adolescent mischief, and he fully intended to get every last one of his possessions back. He quickened his pace, but within seconds, Darcy grew skittish and neighed, alerting the boys to his presence.
At that, Iain shouted out, “Stop, both of you! That’s my horse!”
“I told you we shouldn’t have done it!” one cried out, urging Darcy faster. “Go!”
His idiot horse obeyed the command and galloped hard until there was no hope of catching up to them. Iain ran as fast as he could, hoping to glimpse where they were going, but the boys disappeared into the trees.
He cursed beneath his breath, furious at the way this day had begun. It was bad enough to be robbed, much less by boys. But it wouldn’t take long to identify them to the authorities.
His feet were bleeding through his stockings, and his body was perspiring from the hard run. A sight he would be, arriving at Penford like this. He’d have to improve his appearance before arriving, or else they’d toss him back into the road like yesterday’s breakfast.
Iain walked the remaining distance to the manor house, keeping off the gravel road. Several of the tenants eyed him as he passed, but he kept walking, his shoulders held back as if it were the most normal thing in the world to arrive at an estate wearing only trousers.
Tall hedges stood beside the house, and a small arbor led into a garden. He hurried toward it, feeling sheepish about his lack of attire. It might be that he could find a footman or a gardener who could help him with clothing. But as he approached the garden, he realized that he had entered a maze of hedges. Curiosity got the better of him, and he began wandering through the boxwood aisles.
At one end, he saw a stone fountain with rosebushes planted beside it. Deeper within the maze, he found a bed of irises, their purple blossoms illuminated by the sun. And when he reached the farthest end, he saw lilies of the valley.
He stood for a moment at the edge of the maze, where it opened onto a green lawn. A lovely woman was seated upon a stone bench, a book lying beside her. Her hair was reddish brown, tucked into a neat updo beneath her bonnet. She closed her eyes for a moment, lifting her face toward the sun like a blossom.
The sight of her stole the words from his brain, and Iain decided that his missing horse could wait, for the time being.
Who was this woman? One of Lady Wolcroft’s granddaughters? It was possible, given her white morning gown trimmed with blue embroidery. Every inch of her appeared to be a lady. Iain took a few steps closer, fascinated by her.
The young woman dug her fingers into the stone bench, and her face tightened. Slowly, she eased herself to the edge of the seat, and she hunched her back. She gripped the bench hard, as if every movement was a struggle. Iain tensed, trying to understand her difficulty. It was only a moment later when he realized what she was doing.
She was trying to stand up.
The woman leaned heavily against the bench as she tried to force her legs to bear weight. When her knees buckled, she sat down again, her spirits dismayed.
Iain let out the breath he’d been holding. The pieces were beginning to fall into place. It might be that Lady Wolcroft had asked him here to help her granddaughters. If this young woman couldn’t walk, there was no chance of her finding a husband.
And yet, she had a courage that he admired. There was a quiet determination in her eyes, of a woman who would not give up. He understood her.
Softly, he emerged from the hedgerow, wanting to know who she was.
There was a strange man standing in her garden.
Lady Rose Thornton blinked a moment, wondering if her imagination had conjured him. Because he was also half-naked and smiling at her, as if nothing were the matter.
“You’ll have to forgive me for being half-clothed,
a chara,
” he apologized, “but I was robbed on my journey here by a group of damned thieving boys.”
Now what did he mean by that? Rose shut her eyes tightly and opened them again. No, he was still there. She filled her lungs with air, prepared to scream for all that was holy.
“I won’t be harming you,” he said, lifting his hands in surrender, “but I would be most grateful for some clothes. Not yours, of course.” He sent her a roguish grin.
She gaped at him, still uncertain of who he was. But she had to admit that he
was
indeed an attractive man, in a pirate sort of way. His brown hair was cut short, and his cheeks were bristled, as if he’d forgotten to shave. She tried not to stare at his bare chest, but he cocked his head and rested his hands at his waist. His chest muscles were well defined, his skin tawny from the sun. Ridges at his abdomen caught her eye, and it was clear enough that he was a working man. Perhaps a groom or a footman. Gentlemen did not possess muscles like these, especially if they lived a life of leisure. His green eyes were staring at her with amusement, and Rose found herself spellbound by his presence.
“Do you not speak,” he asked, “or have I cast you into silence with my nakedness?”
“Y-you’re not naked,” she blurted out. Her anxiety twisted up inside her, and she began babbling. “That is, you’re mostly covered,” she corrected, her face flaming. “The important bits, anyway.”
Not naked? What sort of remark was that? She was sitting in the garden with a stranger wearing only trousers, and she hadn’t yet called out for help. What was the matter with her? He could be an intruder bent upon attacking her.
But he laughed at her remark. It was a rich, deep tone that reminded her of wickedness.
Rose couldn’t help but wonder why on earth a footman was naked in her garden. “Stay back,” she warned, “or I’ll scream.”
He lifted his hands. “You needn’t do that. As I’ve said, I have no intention of harming you. I fear you’ve caught me in a kettle of pottage. Could you be helping me, if it’s not too much trouble?” With a slight lift of an eyebrow, he added, “I am here at Lady Wolcroft’s invitation.”
That nudged her curiosity. Why would her grandmother summon a stranger to Penford? Mildred loved nothing better than to meddle, but she wasn’t even here at the moment. She had gone to Bath only a few weeks ago.
Then again, it was entirely possible that this man was lying. Probable, even.