Rules for Reforming a Rake (42 page)

BOOK: Rules for Reforming a Rake
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Book 4 in the Farthingale Series is
A Midsummer’s Kiss
, the prequel to
Rules for Reforming a Rake
,
The Duke I’m Going to Marry
, and
My Fair Lily
. Yes, I’m finding that I think best backwards, especially with this Farthingale Series. The sisters have decided the order of these books and I am helpless to do anything but obey. So next is Laurel’s story, and Laurel is a handful. She thinks she’s in love with her childhood friend and is stubbornly determined to marry him, until she meets the handsome and equally stubborn Lord Graelem Dayne. She doesn’t meet him in the usual
ton
way: Laurel’s beast of a horse tramples Graelem and leaves him with a badly broken leg. That’s a problem for Graelem, for he has only one month to find himself a wife or lose a vast inheritance. Since he’s now forced to remain in bed for the month, he’s decided that only Laurel will do—but convincing the headstrong Laurel will be no easy task. Read on for a sneak peek at Laurel’s story, the fourth in the FARTHINGALE SERIES.

With love,

Meara

 

 

 
SNEAK PEEK OF THE UPCOMING BOOK
A MIDSUMMER’S KISS
BY MEARA PLATT
 
CHAPTER 1

 

 

Mayfair District, London

May 1814

 

GRAELEM DAYNE LAY
sprawled on his back in the middle of Chipping Way on this warm and sunny morning, writhing in agony and glowering at the snorting beast that had just burst through the open townhouse gate of Number 3 Chipping Way at full gallop and knocked him to the ground.

That horse, the color of devil’s black, was still rearing and fighting its rider while that rider struggled to bring it under control. As Graelem tried to roll out of the way, one of its massive hooves landed with full force on his leg, cracking sturdy bone.

“Hellfire!” The excruciating jolt of pain shot straight up his body and into his temples.

He was in trouble.

Serious trouble, not only because the horse was still rearing and out of control, but Graelem’s now-broken leg would make it impossible to complete the business he’d come down to London to accomplish. At the moment, he couldn’t walk and his every breath was a struggle as it came in short, spurting gasps.

What was he to do now?

There would be no balls, soirees, or musicales for him for the next month, that was for certain. He’d never cut a striking figure hopping about on one leg, for he was a big oaf even when on two functioning legs.

He glanced at the angry beast.

Hellfire again!
Just as Graelem thought he was about to be trampled once more, the beast suddenly lowered its massive hooves, let out a few soft neighs, and calmed. In the next moment, a blur of green velvet slid off the saddle and rushed toward him.

 “Oh, dear heaven!” The sound of a sweet, feminine voice reached his ears, and a soft hand came to rest upon his much larger, rougher one to draw it off the boot he was clutching. “Sir, you mustn’t touch your leg. I think it’s broken.”

“I
know
the damn thing is broken. Pull the boot off my leg!” He wished the rider had been a man so he could pound his fist into his face for so recklessly galloping into him and effectively destroying his critical plans along with his leg.

“Now!” he commanded, knowing the task would be much harder once his leg had swelled as it was starting to do now. Cutting through leather was no easy feat, and any attempt to do so would be far more painful than one swift tug done immediately.

“Of course. I’m so sorry!” She knelt beside him and braced her hands on the heel of the boot, letting out a sob as she apologized again.

Damn, why couldn’t she have been a man?

She seemed young, hardly more than a girl.

He inhaled sharply as those soft hands began to tug at his boot.

“I have it,” the young woman said in a soothing voice that flowed over him like warm honey. “Close your eyes and take another deep breath. I’m afraid this will hurt.”

He let loose with a string of invectives as another dagger-sharp jolt of pain stabbed up his leg and into his temples. His heart felt as if it were about to pound a hole through his chest.

“Oh, I’m so very sorry!” She set aside the boot and turned to face him. Her lips quivered as she struggled to hold back anguished tears.

“I know, lass.” He tried his best to answer gently, for she did appear sincerely remorseful. Although why he should care about her feelings when she was the cause of his misery was beyond him.

But whatever had possessed her to ride that demonic beast? Where was she going in such a hurry?

Before he had the chance to ask, he heard male voices calling out and the sound of hurried footsteps coming toward them. His blurred gaze remained on the young woman dressed in the dark green velvet riding habit. Had she really been the rider on that demonic horse?

“Amos,” she said with a shaken breath, “put Brutus back in his stall before Father orders him shot.” Then she turned to the other man who’d run out of the townhouse to lend assistance. “Pruitt, please fetch Uncle George at once.”

“Right away, Miss Laurel.”

As both men left to do her bidding, the girl called Laurel sank onto the grass beside him and took hold of his hand, cradling it in her lap. Her soft hands were shaking. As his vision cleared from the blur of pain, he caught a good look at her face and experienced another jolt. The girl was beautiful.

She was also trembling, obviously distressed by the incident. He felt the urge to squeeze her hand and assure her that all would be well. However, he dismissed the ridiculous notion at once. How could the mere touch of a chit who’d almost killed him affect him in any way but a desire for cold revenge?

Still, he couldn’t deny that his anger was fading... or that his blood was heating.

He attributed that surprising effect to the pain of his broken leg.

“Sir, is there someone we can summon on your behalf? I’ll send one of our footmen—”

“Lady Eloise Dayne,” he said with a nod. “She resides on this street at Number 5.”

“Lady Dayne? Oh, my heavens!” Laurel let out another unsteady breath. “Sir, are you by chance her grandson? The one who lives in Scotland and just arrived in town last night?”

He nodded again. “Indeed, lass. Graelem Dayne.”

“You’re Graelem... I mean, Lord Moray! And Eloise is your grandmother! Oh, this gets worse and worse.”

He arched an eyebrow. “Those men called you Laurel.”

“Yes, I’m Laurel Farthingale.” She still sounded as though she were about to burst into tears. “I live here at Number 3 along with my parents and sisters, and a horde of Farthingale relations come to London for the season. We’re your grandmother’s neighbors. Friends, too. Though she won’t be too pleased that I’ve almost killed her grandson. Are you in terrible pain?” She let out a quiet sob. “I wish there was something I could do to ease it.”

There was, but she’d finish off the job her horse had started and kill him if he told her what he was truly thinking.
Damn.
Was he that depraved? At the very least, his senses were addled. How old was she? Old enough to be out in society, he guessed, but not much beyond her first season.

She was pretty enough to be snatched up quickly, assuming she didn’t kill her beaus first.

She eased beside him and let out a mirthless laugh. “I’m in for it now. Probably punished for the entire summer,” she muttered.

“Sorry, lass.”

Her eyes rounded in horror. “You mustn’t be! This is all my fault. Truly, it isn’t much of a loss. This is only my first year out in society and I’m still quite overwhelmed by it. Everyone is so polite and mannered, I worry that I’ll never fit in. My parents think I’m too spirited. That’s the polite term they use, but they really think I’m a hot-tempered hellion. I suppose I am, as you’ve unfortunately discovered.”

He tried to fashion a response, but couldn’t, for he found himself staring into a pair of magnificent blue-green eyes that sparkled like sunshine on a Scottish mountain lake. His own baronial estate was on Loch Moray in the Scottish lowlands near the English border. It was a beautiful lake, almost as breathtaking as Laurel’s eyes.

Damn.
The girl also had a body that could bring a man to his knees. She sat too close, leaning over him in a way that got his heart pounding a hole in chest again... no, the pain was still addling his good sense.

He sank back, but couldn’t turn away from the girl. She was a pretty sight indeed. It wasn’t merely her shapely form, for the girl was fully clothed, the jacket of her riding habit buttoned up to her slender throat and the flowing skirt covering everything else that a man would wish to explore. He liked the scent of her as well, a hint of strawberries and warm summer breezes.

“Laurel, what’s happened here?” An efficient-sounding gentleman approached them, a thoughtful frown upon his face. He carried a black satchel with him, obviously a medical bag of some sort.

“Uncle George, this is all my fault! The gentleman is Lord Graelem Dayne. He’s Eloise’s grandson and I almost killed him!” She repeated the details of the accident to Eloise when she came running out and paused with her hand over her heart to stare in horror at his injury.

“Good morning, Grandmama. It’s not quite as bad as it looks.” He got out little else, for Laurel quickly jumped in to assure his grandmother that she had been completely at fault.

Eloise glanced at him and then her gaze shifted to Laurel.

“All my fault,” Laurel repeated with a tip of her chin, obviously determined to endure whatever punishment was to be meted out.

“Now, now, my dear,” Eloise said. “I’m sure my grandson will find it in his heart to forgive you. Won’t you, Graelem?”

He supposed he would. The girl may have been a little reckless, but she had been honest and had readily admitted her mistake. It spoke of her good character. Or was he too quick to forgive her because she was the prettiest thing he’d ever set eyes upon?

A lock of rich, honey-colored hair spilled over her brow.

He felt a sudden desire to undo the pins from Laurel’s hair and run his fingers through her exquisite, dark gold mane.

Laurel’s uncle said something about needing to cut through the fabric of his trousers before setting his broken leg. He nodded, not paying much attention, for his head was beginning to spin.

The last thing he recalled as he was suddenly overcome by a wave of nausea was Laurel nudging him onto his side and wrapping her arms around him as he emptied the contents of that morning’s breakfast onto the grass.

He always was one to charm the ladies.

***

Laurel kept a hand on each of Lord Moray’s shoulders to hold him up because his big body was still heaving even though he did not appear to have anything left inside him to come out. “Perfect,” he finally muttered, and sank back against her, too dazed to notice he was leaning against her and not a tree or the ground.

“Do what you must, Dr. Farthingale,” he said, lightly rolling his
R
s in the way Scotsmen did. However, it wasn’t a heavy brogue, but one mingled with English refinement, as though he’d spent time in both worlds.

He appeared the sort who moved about easily in both worlds, for there was a quiet confidence about him, even though he wasn’t at his best just now.
All her fault
.

Uncle George began to quietly explain what he needed to do to mend his broken leg. “Once properly set, I’ll fashion a splint around it. Then we’ll help you into Lady Dayne’s house.”

“Graelem, it’s best you stay with me until you recover,” Eloise said, wringing her hands in obvious concern. “You’ll need looking after for the next few weeks.”

Lord Moray closed his eyes a moment and nodded. “I had planned to stay at Gabriel’s townhouse, but I arrived late last night and haven’t bothered to unpack yet. Will you send word to his butler to bring my belongings here?”

“At once.” Eloise appeared relieved. “Gabriel’s is a big, empty house anyway. What with him gone off again to who knows where on his latest misadventure—” She broke off, suddenly tense. “No matter. It’s settled. You’ll stay here.”

Lord Moray turned toward her uncle. “Go ahead, Dr. Farthingale. Do what you must. Bloody thing hurts like blazes.”

 Uncle George cast her a light frown. “Hold him down, Laurel. This will only take a moment.”

Since Lord Moray was still leaning against her, she merely kept her hands wrapped around his shoulders and prayed he wouldn’t be too much to manage. He was far too big and muscled for her to restrain against his will. “Hold my hands, my lord. I think it will help.”

He ignored the suggestion at first. However, as her uncle worked on his leg and the pain appeared to become unbearable, he finally complied. His hands felt warm on hers, and she realized she was still shivering with fear... and guilt.

She might have killed the man!

Her heart broke with each twinge of his body. He refused to cry out despite the excruciating pain he must have felt, and she suspected he was purposely trying to spare her feelings. Of course, he couldn’t hide the sudden shift of his muscles at every tug and agonizing twist.

“I’m almost done, Laurel,” her uncle assured, sparing a glance to smile at her. A mirthless smile, for he was disappointed in her behavior, and the tension in his expression showed it.

She was relieved of the need to say anything when her youngest sisters bolted out of the house and stopped beside her to gawk. “Crumpets! Who is he?” Lily asked, while the other twin, Dillie, edged closer to his prone body, for he’d closed his eyes again and appeared to be resting. Or passed out.

The twins shrieked and drew back when he opened one eye. “Who are you?” he shot back.

Laurel quickly introduced them and then explained to her sisters what had happened. “Eloise knows. She’s preparing her guest quarters for his recovery.”

Dillie cast him a wry glance. “Welcome to London, Lord Moray.”

To Laurel’s surprise, he laughed lightly. “Not quite the welcome I had in mind, Dillie.”

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