Never Love a Scoundrel (12 page)

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Authors: Darcy Burke

Tags: #historical romance, #regency romance, #regency historical romance, #darcy burke, #romance, #romance series, #beauty and the beast

BOOK: Never Love a Scoundrel
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Lydia’s stomach pitched again. They’d discussed this topic before, but for some reason it was just too . . . painful today. She forced herself to smile, and tried very hard to make it genuine to put her hostess—and friend—at ease. “I’ll find a way. Eventually.”

“In the meantime, I think I’ll champion this Lockwood match. I’m sure he’s not disinterested. You’re the only young lady who’s drawn his favor.” She arched her brow at Lydia. “You don’t mind, do you?”

Lydia didn’t mind. She liked Lockwood. But his behavior wasn’t encouraging. Furthermore, what sort of life would she have if she were married to him? He was reclusive and scandalous—not exactly the prime qualities Lydia wanted in a husband. “What of his reputation? His
activities
?”

“He’d give them up, of course. I don’t think he’d continue to host his parties if he had something—or someone—else to fill his life.”

Why had he even started hosting them in the first place? She wished she knew more about his background. Aunt Margaret had told her some of it of course, but Lydia knew better than to take her tales verbatim. “That’s relieving to hear. However, who’s to say he won’t submit to a fit of madness and tear his house apart again?”

Mrs. Lloyd-Jones frowned. “It was a sad time. His mother had suffered a total mental collapse. They were close.”

“Were they?” Lydia asked softly, a new picture forming in her mind. One she understood all too well. He’d had a mother who loved him. And she’d been taken away. Just like Lydia’s.

“Quite.” Mrs. Lloyd-Jones sipped her tea. “Lady Lockwood took the death of her husband badly. She wore full mourning for over a year, and then never strayed from half mourning.”

This didn’t seem to fit with the woman Aunt Margaret had described. Would someone who was bitter over her husband’s infidelity honor his memory in such a way? “Aunt Margaret said she was very jealous of Lord Lockwood’s mistresses.”

Mrs. Lloyd-Jones blinked in rapid succession. “What woman isn’t? That doesn’t mean she didn’t love him. Indeed, if she was guilty of anything, it was of loving him too much.”

Lydia couldn’t imagine being that overwhelmed by emotion, likely because she tried very hard not to display any, which had become easier over the years. “But she went insane with it, didn’t she?”

Mrs. Lloyd-Jones’s expression turned sad. “Yes. I don’t know how it happened or if there was anything that could have been done to prevent it. She manages all right now, in the peace of the country, but she’s very fragile. She can’t return to Town, to the life she led before. It’s such a tragedy and not fodder for gossip.” She was warning Lydia about spreading this information, and Lydia couldn’t argue with her. The entire story seemed very tragic and not just because she’d met Lockwood and—as Mr. Locke had said—“formed an opinion about him.”

What was that opinion exactly? That he was interesting. Refreshingly honest. Exciting. Was there a way at all she could attract him? He’d seemed at least moderately intrigued by her—before he’d learned of her relation to Margaret. Perhaps she could prove to him they were not that alike. “Rest assured, I don’t wish to cause Lord Lockwood any pain. I will guard my tongue. Especially since you seem to think we’ll suit.” She gave Mrs. Lloyd-Jones a knowing smile and wink, hoping to interject a little levity into their tea. Things had turned far too maudlin, and Lydia endured enough of that living with her aunt.

“Oh, yes. You leave things to me, dear. I’ll have you and Lockwood to the altar before the end of the year. And how happy that will make me.” She beamed at Lydia.

Lydia wondered if it would make her happy, too. Then she pondered the notion of someone finding joy on her behalf and decided that alone would be enough.


Chapter Seven

THE FOLLOWING
evening Jason took up one of his two favorite positions at Lockwood House during a vice party. He lounged in a dark corner of the drawing room that gave him an excellent vantage point from which to view people as they arrived and decided where to go or what to do first.

Some went directly through to the gaming room. Others surveyed the feminine wares on display. The drawing room was always well populated with demimondaines who—for a fee—would entertain his guests and, as the evening wore on, were usually in lessening states of dress. Still others arrived with their own entertainment—in pairs, or trios, or whatever combination they preferred—and simply made good use of Jason’s facilities.

Jason’s blood thrummed more than usual. His parties could always be relied upon to boost his mood. It was a combination of things, not the least of which was witnessing the ton’s elite indulging their basest desires—and thinking about how he could ruin people with the things he knew. Though revenge against those who’d ostracized him would be sweet, it wasn’t the reason he’d begun these parties, and, perhaps surprisingly, he’d actually befriended some of the gentlemen. It would be interesting to see how they reacted now that he was back in circulation. Perhaps he
ought
to drop by White’s.

His eye was caught by a vivid scarlet gown sweeping into the drawing room. Cora Stroud was immediately set upon by a young buck. Her rouged lips parted in a beguiling smile. She’d flirt, she’d tease, she might even give him a taste or two, but she’d save the best for Jason, as she’d done the past, what—five months?

He’d never had a consistent paramour before. In the early days, he’d invited women here—courtesans who serviced him for a price and treated him the way he’d been used to, before he’d been scarred and branded a probable lunatic. Some left as soon as they saw him, others endured their evening and then opted not to return, and after a time, some began to ask to be invited again, while still more clamored for an invitation. With an armful of beautiful women to aid him, he was able to increase his social circle—the only one available to him—and so he’d invited a handful of wastrels to make a party of it. Then it had simply become habit.

Cora’s kohl-rimmed eyes found his, and she gave him a secret smile full of promise. Oddly, Jason’s desire didn’t stir, but he was distracted. Likely by the prospect of Ethan. He nodded toward her and then put her from his mind. He wanted to focus on the matter at hand. No distractions. Which is what he’d instructed his retainers as well, not that they were easily lured from their posts. Jason knew after one party whether a servant was going to succeed at Lockwood House. Watching the goings-on at one of his vice parties was not for the faint of heart, nor for the indiscreet.

Jason decided it was time to mingle. He moved through the drawing room, greeting guests who made eye contact with him through the slits of their masks. One couple came forward as he passed them. The woman clutched the man’s arm, and dipped her head down and then up. Then she leaned up and whispered something into the man’s ear. Despite her mask, Jason knew when he was being surveyed.

“We were hoping you might join us upstairs later this evening,” the man said. Jason couldn’t quite place him, but thought he might be a young man called Swindon.

“Though I’m flattered by your proposition, I’m afraid that’s not where my interests lie.” He offered a benign smile. “I do know some other gentlemen who come here looking for just that sort of thing, however, and I’d be happy to direct one of them your way. Or, I can have a member of my staff simply set something up for you.”

Swindon bent his head and spoke softly near the woman’s ear. Her mouth, just visible beneath her ebony mask formed a disappointed little moue, but she ultimately gave a slight nod.

“That would be appreciated, my lord. Thank you.” Swindon inclined his head and then escorted his “lady friend” away.

A footman opened the door for Jason to enter the sitting room. It was a smaller, more intimate room, with scant lighting. When attendees wished for a quieter atmosphere or if they simply couldn’t bother themselves to retreat to a chamber upstairs, they came in here for a modicum of privacy.

Jason passed a couple entwined on a chaise, the woman’s hand clearly stroking the man’s cock through his trousers. Privacy was not perhaps the reason they came in here. The drawing room was for looking. The sitting room was for
doing
.

He scanned the semidarkness for Scot, knowing that he was more likely to be stationed in this room than anywhere else. Jason found his valet near the wall, flirting with a pale blond Cyprian. She gave Jason a provocative smile as he approached and then took herself off as she recognized that he wanted a word with his retainer.

“There’s a couple in the drawing room. They’re looking for a male counterpart to join them upstairs. Are Pinnock or Blickleigh here?” Jason asked.

“I think I saw Pinnock in the billiards room. I’ll take care of it.” He cast a lingering glance at the Cyprian, who’d gone to a man lounging in the corner and had just dropped to her knees before him. He exhaled, muttering, “Later.”

Jason stifled a smile as he followed Scot to the gaming room where he spent the next half hour talking with various gentlemen and surveying the evening’s participants. He watched Pinnock eagerly leave the hazard table in order to meet Swindon and his companion upstairs. And he witnessed Mrs. Ulmer, a widow who never bothered to wear a mask and was one of the few women Jason invited, accepting the invitation of a much younger gentleman to join him in the fantasy room. Such couplings made Jason smile because it reminded him of why he loved to host these parties: Anything could happen at Lockwood House.

But still no Ethan.

Just as Jason’s frustration began to mount, a masked man stood from a table in the corner. As he made his way between the tables, Jason assessed his build and tried to determine his identity, but couldn’t place him—only his mouth and chin were visible beneath the black mask covering the rest of his face up to his dark hairline. The man sidled up beside him without formally addressing him, as if they were close friends. Jason’s neck prickled.

“Lockwood,” Ethan drawled. “I’m honored to be included in one of your legendary parties. I feel as if I have . . .
arrived
.”

The pompous ass. “You fool yourself if you think entrée to one of my parties will somehow solidify your tenuous position in Society. But come, let’s discuss it.” Jason turned and led him into the corridor where they would skirt the rooms open to partygoers.

“Going to your office?” Ethan asked, trailing just behind him.

Jason threw a feral smile over his shoulder. “I can’t think of a better place.” It was where their fight had begun all those years ago. Where Jason had found the bastard looking for a secret drawer in which their father had purportedly kept letters from Ethan’s mother.

A few minutes later they entered Jason’s office, which was situated in the back corner of the house. Bookcases lined the interior two walls while a window graced one of the exterior walls, and a massive fireplace dominated the other. Above the fireplace hung the portrait of their father in his youth. Ethan looked disturbingly like him—sharp gray eyes, a firm mouth, and a perpetual sense of . . . something broiling just beneath the surface, as if he had a secret or was simmering with some strong emotion. The painting captured a young man in his prime, before he’d taken a wife and saddled himself with responsibility, not that he’d ever let that interfere with his preferences.

Jason moved to the sideboard. “Whisky?”

“Yes,” Ethan answered from behind him. “New desk?”

Jason nodded as he poured whisky into two glass tumblers. “Do you like it? I had it made special.”

“What happened to the old one?” Ethan asked, his tone guarded.

Picking up a tumbler in each hand Jason turned. He offered a glass to Ethan. “I burned it.” Jason had never found the letters Ethan had been looking for. He hadn’t even searched. He’d simply had it broken down and fed to the fire.

Ethan accepted the whisky and whipped off his mask. Yes, the resemblance between him and the portrait behind him was unsettling. “Naturally.” His tone carried a bite.

Jason took a pull of his favorite whisky. Rich with heavy oak undertones, it was distilled in the lowlands of Scotland by one of North’s and Scot’s cousins and it soothed his roiling temper. He went and leaned against the sideboard. “This isn’t meant to be some sort of civilized meeting.”

“It isn’t?” Ethan asked with an innocence that didn’t match the flint in his eyes. “Why the whisky then? In fact, why invite me at all?”

“Tell me what you’re doing masquerading as a gentleman.”

Ethan shrugged. He gazed about the room in practiced nonchalance—or what seemed practiced to Jason. There was still that undercurrent of energy, of barely-contained something.

“It’s no masquerade,” Ethan’s voice had grown soft, but carried the edge of a sharpened razor. “I
am
a gentleman by birth.”


Half,
but you haven’t behaved as one.”

Ethan turned his body toward him, as if they were squaring off. Memories of that night seven years ago swirled about the room and thickened the moment. “And you have?”

Jason let his own darkness creep in and sneered. “I’ve done what I must, given what you left me with.” He turned his scar toward Ethan.

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