Read The Devil You Know Online
Authors: Victoria Vane
against the certainty of a ducal cornet. DeVere realized she had
found
his
side of the scale wanting when, with no more than an
apologetic shrug, Caroline placed her dainty, white-begloved fin-
gers upon the sleeve of the Duke of Beauclerc. Without even a
final glance back at her erstwhile lover, Caroline and her duke
departed.
Ludovic was incredulous. Although his first inclination was
to wipe the duke’s smug expression from his bloated face, pref-
erably with his fist, he realized the true rage he should have felt
never surfaced. Certainly his pride was injured, but he would
have expected to feel far more upon being so properly jilted.
Right
curious, that.
Chuckling at his dispassionate conclusion, Ludovic took up
Beauclerc’s abandoned drink with an inward smile as another
consoling thought came to mind. The burning question of Caro-
line’s capacity for fidelity no longer plagued him, but he would
soon ensure that it plagued the good duke instead.
***
“Damme,” said Ned a few hours later in Ludovic’s crested
carriage. “I’m stunned. Ludovic Lord DeVere, legendary lover,
cast aside like some old shoe?”
“Lady Caroline and that old fop? I never would have believed
it,” Annalee agreed.”It’s truly beyond comprehension. You were,
by all appearances, the perfect couple.”
“Your naiveté astonishes me,” Ludovic said.
“I must say I regret to see your cynicism prove itself yet
again,” Ned replied.
“Cynicism?” Ludovic laughed. “I am nothing if not a realist,
dear Ned. In all fairness, do you honestly think that in Caroline’s
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stead, you would not also have grabbed for the golden goose?
Damned if I wouldn’t have!” He smiled, a broad flash of even,
white teeth. “But don’t fear I shall spend any tears over it, ol’
chum, especially when she consoled me in advance with such a
magnificent parting gift.”
“What do you mean?” Annalee asked.
DeVere’s lips twitched. “Dear, sweet, innocent Annalee, I
leave it to your devoted husband to illuminate you.”
Ned scowled. Annalee blushed. “So it’s truly over between
you?” she asked.
“Truly,
it
never was,” DeVere said. “I never even made the
formal proposal and would not have pursued her in the first place
were it not for my damned Pater. Though he didn’t take to the
shackles himself ‘til he’d turned the half century mark. If there’s
aught that I can’t abide, it’s hypocrisy. The bloody devil rebuking
sin is what that is!”
“Surely one can’t blame a man for wanting to ensure the con-
tinuation of his line,” Annalee remarked.
“It’s a damnable obsession,” DeVere said. “He’s bloody well
fixated on his death, though he’s already managed to linger at its
door far longer than is considered civil.”
“You really ought not to speak of your own father in such a
way,” Annalee reproached.
“You might feel differently if ever you met the poxy, old
bas—”
“He’s justifiably distraught, my dear,” Ned interjected with a
gentle hand over his wife’s. “A gentleman needs to blow off steam
in such circumstances as these. Why don’t I take you home?”
She arched a brow. “So you and DeVere can go back out and
get thoroughly foxed?”
“Well, yes,” Ned confessed. “That’s generally how it’s done.”
Annalee gave them both a warning look. “Just promise me no
fisticuffs, Ned.”
“Fisticuffs?” He appeared to be affronted. “Why the devil do
you think I would engage in fisticuffs?”
“I’ve ears on my head. I know how you and DeVere were
used to entertaining yourselves.”
“But that was long before I met you, my sweet.” Ned raised
her hand to his lips.
7
The Devil You Know
She gave a disbelieving huff. “You shan’t bamboozle me,
Neddie. I know leopards do not change their spots.” She looked
to DeVere with a scowl. “I don’t relish the mortification of collect-
ing my husband from the round house come morning. Do you
understand me, my lord?”
DeVere smirked. “Absolutely, my lady.” He added to Ned in
an undertone, “Since I don’t see the ring in your nose, I can only
imagine she’s put one through your ba—”
“Ah! We’ve arrived!” Ned pronounced as the carriage lurched
to a halt. “I’ll escort Annalee inside and return directly.”
Ludovic watched them depart arm-in-arm, musing how three
short years of so-called connubial bliss had nearly emasculated
his best friend. He pulled a flask of brandy from his breast pocket,
up-ending it in a salute to the beneficent guardian angel who had
allowed his own near escape from the same woeful fate.
8
Victoria Vane
Chapter One
Epsom, Surrey, 1779
While her traveling companion softly drowsed, Diana pulled
aside the velvet curtain of the post-chaise, lost more in her own
musings than in study of the landscape which was now greatly
transformed from the hills, escarpments, and broad valleys of
south Yorkshire whence they’d departed to the more gently roll-
ing chalk downlands of Surrey.
The pace in which they’d traveled could only be described as
leisurely, with frequent stops at points of interest and a three-day
shopping spree in London, after which they’d had to acquire an
entire baggage coach. Yet, travel-weary after long days of rough
going on the muddy and ill-repaired roads, Diana was envious
of the gentlemen whose mere gender allowed them the freedom
to gallivant the countryside on horseback. Had it not been for
Annalee, she might well have thrown decorum aside and joined
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The Devil You Know
them. Her gaze returned to the gently snoring form of her cousin
and dearest friend.
The carriage unexpectedly jolted to a halt. A brisk knock on
the window followed. Diana opened the door just as Sir Edward
Chambers dismounted from his horse and handed the reins to his
groom. Annalee stirred, her soft brown eyes opening wide and
doe-like. “Are we arrived at last?” she asked.
“We are indeed, my love.” Her husband entered the carriage
with a grace and agility remarkable in such a large man. “I trust
the journey has not been too trying?”
Though professing nothing but robust health to her husband,
the prominence of her fragile cheekbones and pale blue shadows
beneath her eyes belied Annalee’s exuberant claims. It was her
sixth pregnancy, and none had gone easy. After a difficult birth
with her daughter Vesta, the physician had warned that she might
never carry another child to term. Yet disconsolate after four mis-
carriages, Annalee was still determined to produce a male heir.
To all outward appearances, Edward and Annalee were the
perfect couple. Part of Diana wanted to believe their happiness a
façade, if only to ameliorate her own discontent, but their affec-
tion and Annalee’s multiple pregnancies were proof enough of
their genuine affection. Diana couldn’t help a deep pang of envy
but consoled herself that at least she’d never had to suffer the an-
guish of a miscarriage or the intense suffering of a stillbirth as
Annalee had. But her own womb ached in its emptiness and her
heart with paroxysms of longing. If there was one word that best
described her entire life, it was surely
unfulfilled.
“Not at all, dearest. I have never travelled with greater ease,”
Annalee replied.
“I am much relieved,” Edward said.
Diana averted her gaze at the overt display of affection as Ed-
ward plied a kiss to Annalee’s hand, his warm gaze resting on
her with a loving concern. “I’m still glad to have arrived at last,”
said Annalee. “I don’t think I could have endured another day
confined to this carriage, although I surely could not have with-
stood it at all without Diana. I am so glad you and Lord Reginald
accepted Lord DeVere’s invitation.”
Diana forced a laugh. “One never has to give Reggie much
encouragement to try a new horse. He accompanied our head
groom a sennight ago with our two best horses, my mare to breed
10
and a stallion to race. Reggie said it would be advantageous to ac-
custom them to the lay of the land.”
Guileless Annalee gave her a compassionate smile, and sud-
denly, Diana realized that they already knew the truth. Reggie
had had no need to accompany the horses to Surrey. Employing
an army of grooms to attend their beloved horses, he had sought a
convenient excuse to avoid the trap of days on end in her compa-
ny. Yet Diana was determined to maintain her sham, the precious
pretense that had become indispensable to her life.
“He was probably wise to have done so,” Edward said. “He’ll
not find worthier competition than amongst DeVere’s racing
stock.”
“It would not hurt Reggie in the least to suffer a set-down,
though I should hate to see our own horse lose. I fear my husband
suffers the hubris of one who remains undefeated for three racing
seasons,” Diana said.
“His pride should be the least of your concerns,” Edward re-
marked.
“What do you mean?” Diana grew instantly wary, given Reg-
gie’s predilection for drink and weakness for gaming.
“I’ve already warned Reginald to take care in any manner of
wager with DeVere. Whether it be cards, dice, or horses, he has
the devil’s own luck.”
Diana’s brows puckered in censure. “You mean the viscount
is a wastrel.”
Annalee gave a subtle nod.
“I would not say so,” Edward argued. “He is my best friend,
after all. No, I would best describe DeVere as a capricious man
with a subversive streak. He won’t be ruled by anyone.”
“You may paint him whatever shade you like, dear Edward,
but if the boot still fits...” Diana gave a disdainful sniff. “And such
men are ruined every day. It’s inconceivable how many live in
such selfish degeneracy to the destruction of their own noble
houses and without the least compunction.”
Ned raised a hand in objection. “Pray disabuse yourself of
that notion, my dear Diana. Though one might deem DeVere’s
behavior self-destructive, I assure you he has not diminished his
family fortune a whit. A true Midas touch has he. In fact, DeVere
is the luckiest ba—” Annalee shot him a warning look. “…devil I
know.”
11
The Devil You Know
“Is that so?” Diana’s lips curved into a half smile. “Then be-
twixt Reggie and DeVere, this shall surely prove a diverting ex-
cursion.”
With that pronouncement, the chaise occupied by its two
ladies and gentleman owner, with their outriders, servants, and
baggage train, passed through the wooded eminence surround-
ing the vast estate to make its grand entrance through the gates of
Woodcote Park.
Laughing and
***
chattering, the small troupe alighted from their
carriage in front of an elegant stone and stucco façade, initiating a
flurry of activity. Several grooms emerged from nowhere to take
charge of coach and horses, while an army of footmen material-
ized to unload their baggage.
Amidst this scene, their host appeared at the top of the white
marble landing, affecting a pose with his quizzing glass, and pre-
sumably assessing the efficiency of his staff. Diana thought he
closely resembled a king surveying his domain. Strikingly garbed
in peacock-blue silk brocade with cascades of Mechlin lace, he ap-
peared in all the sartorial splendor of his lofty station. Her initial
impression of arrogance and hauteur shattered, however, with his
rapid descent down the stairs. He was upon them in an instant,
pulling Edward into a hearty embrace.
“Ned, you dull dog, it’s been too long! And my dear Annalee,
lovely as ever.” He took possession of her hands, but instead of
the expected brush over her fingers, he bussed both of her cheeks
in the continental style. Diana stood in the background observ-
ing the viscount with bemusement. He was
nothing
like she had
expected.
Annalee prompted Diana forward. “My Lord DeVere, may
I present to you my cousin, the Baroness Diana Palmerston-
Wriothesley.”
His gaze of cobalt-blue met hers, and Diana’s smile froze on
her face, an unfamiliar and unsettling frisson of physical aware-
ness sweeping over her as he took her in from head to toe in a
swift, and by his show of strong white teeth,
appreciative
apprais-
al. For a woman who took pride in her self-possession, she was
strangely discomposed when he raised her fingers to his lips, his
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Victoria Vane
thumb skillfully settling on the bare expanse of skin just above her
glove, setting her pulse skittering.
“Baroness.” The timbre of his voice, the curve of his lips, was
fraught with meaning, sending a jolt of heat to a place low in her
belly. He gave a shallow bow that set his gaze on a horizontal
plane with her breasts and lingered there much longer than prop-