The Perfect Lover

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Authors: Stephanie Laurens

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BOOK: The Perfect Lover
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THE
PERFECT
LOVER

Stephanie Laurens

 

 

This book is dedicated to my readers near and far
who have followed the Cynsters from
their first appearance to the present.
You most truly are the wind beneath my wings.

Contents

List of Characters

 

Chapter 1
   “Hell and the devil!” Simon Cynster reined in his bays,

Chapter 2
   “I never would have thought you a coward.”

Chapter 3
   “Well, then, miss!” Lady Osbaldestone sank into the armchair . . .

Chapter 4
   “Now remember—think strategy!”

Chapter 5
   James’s words proved prophetic; the priory was every bit as accommodating as he’d intimated.

Chapter 6
   Portia sat at the luncheon table and let the conversations flow past her.

Chapter 7
   She really didn’t want to know.

Chapter 8
   The crucial question, of course, was what emotion was it that was growing between her and Simon.

Chapter 9
   They walked side by side across the gardens, then on via the path through the woods.

Chapter 10
   Portia stared at the muscled expanse of bare chest suddenly on display.

Chapter 11
   She blinked,then stared. “What did you say?”

Chapter 12
   The idea was too intriguing to deny.

Chapter 13
   Much good did it do them; there was so much nervousness about the breakfast table,

Chapter 14
   The next morning, Kitty, more accurately Catherine Glossup née Archer, was laid to rest . . .

Chapter 15
   “No.” Stokes answered the question put to him by Lord Netherfield;

Chapter 16
   None of them liked it.

Chapter 17
   Portia strode rapidly across the lawn and on toward the lake.

Chapter 18
   A footman was waiting at the top of the stairs to conduct them to the room . . .

 

Announcing the Bastion Club Novels

 

About the Author

Also by Stephanie Laurens

Credits

Copyright

About the Publisher

L
IST OF
C
HARACTERS

 

 

Simon Cynster   friend of James Glossup

Portia Ashford   in Lady Osbaldestone’s train

Charlie Hastings   friend of James Glossup

Lady Osbaldestone (Therese)   distant cousin to Lord Netherfield

 

Viscount Netherfield (Granville)   father of Harold, Lord Glossup

Harold, Lord Glossup   present owner of Glossup Hall

Catherine, Lady Glossup   Harold’s wife

Henry Glossup   their oldest son

Kitty Glossup, née Archer   his wife

James Glossup   second son of Harold and Catherine

Oswald Glossup   third son of Harold and Catherine

 

Moreton Archer   Kitty’s father

Alfreda Archer   Kitty’s mother

Swanston Archer   Kitty’s younger brother

Winifred Archer   Kitty’s older sister

Desmond Winfield   pursuing Winifred Archer

 

George Buckstead   close friend of Harold Glossup

Helen Buckstead   George’s wife

Lucy Buckstead   their daughter

 

Lady Cynthia Calvin   connection of the Glossups’, widow

Ambrose Calvin   her son

Drusilla Calvin   her daughter

 

Lady Hammond   society matron, distantly related to the Glossups

Annabelle Hammond   her elder daughter

Cecily Hammond   her younger daughter

 

Arturo   the handsome leader of a band of gypsies encamped nearby

Dennis   a younger male gypsy hired as a temporary summer gardener

 

Blenkinsop   the butler

 

Mr. Basil Stokes   the police inspector sent by Bow Street to investigate

Late July, 1835.
Near Glossup Hall, by Ashmore, Dorset.

H
ell and the devil!” Simon Cynster reined in his bays, his eyes narrowing on the ridge high above Ashmore village. The village proper lay just behind him; he was headed for Glossup Hall, a mile farther along the leafy country lane.

At the rear of the village cottages, the land rose steeply; a woman was following the path winding up the berm of what Simon knew to be ancient earthworks. The views from the top reached as far as the Solent, and on clear days even to the Isle of Wight.

It was hardly a surprise to see someone heading up there.

“No surprise she hasn’t anyone with her, either.” Irritation mounting, he watched the dark-haired, willowy, ineffably graceful figure steadily ascend the rise, a long-legged figure that inevitably drew the eye of any man with blood in his veins. He’d recognized her instantly—Portia Ashford, his sister Amelia’s sister-in-law.

Portia must be attending the Glossup Hall house party; the Hall was the only major house near enough from which to walk.

A sense of being imposed upon burgeoned and grew.

“Damn!”
He’d yielded to the entreaties of his longtime friend James Glossup and agreed to stop by on his way to Somerset to support James through the trials of the house party. But if Portia was going to be present, he’d have trials enough of his own.

She reached the crest of the earthworks and paused, one slender hand rising to hold back the fall of her jet-black hair; lifting her face to the breeze, she stared into the distance, then, letting her hand fall, gracefully walked on, following the path to the lookout, gradually descending until she disappeared from sight.

She’s no business of mine
.

The words echoed in his head; God knew she’d stated the sentiment often enough, in various phrasings, most far more emphatic. Portia was not his sister, not his cousin; indeed, she shared no blood at all.

Jaw firming, he looked to his horses, took up the slack in the reins—

And inwardly cursed.

“Wilks—wake up, man!” Simon tossed the reins at his groom, until then dozing behind him. Pulling on the brake, he stepped down to the road. “Just hold them—I’ll be back.”

Thrusting his hands into his greatcoat pockets, he strode for the narrow path that led upward, ultimately joining the path from the Hall that Portia had followed up the rise.

He was only buying himself trouble—a sniping match at the very least—yet leaving her alone, unprotected from any wastrel who might happen along, was simply not possible, not for him. If he’d driven on, he wouldn’t have had a moment’s peace, not until she returned safe and sound to the Hall.

Given her propensity for rambling walks, that might not happen for hours.

He wouldn’t be thanked for his concern. If he survived without having his ego prodded in a dozen uncomfortable places, he’d count himself lucky. Portia had a tongue like a double-edged razor—no way one could escape being nicked. He knew perfectly well what her attitude would be when he caught up with her—precisely the same as it had been for the past decade, ever since he’d realized she truly had no idea of the prize she was, the temptation she posed, and was therefore in need of constant protection from the situations into which she blithely sailed.

While she remained out of his sight, out of his orbit, she was not his responsibility; if she came within it, unprotected, he felt obliged to watch over her, to keep her safe—he should have known better than to try to fight the urge.

Of all the females he knew, she was unquestionably the most difficult, not least because she was also the most intelligent, yet here he was, trudging after her despite his certain reception; he wasn’t at all sure what that said of
his
intelligence.

Women!
He’d spent the entire drive west considering them. His great-aunt Clara had recently died and left him her house in Somerset. The inheritance had served as a catalyst, forcing him to review his life, to rethink his direction, yet his unsettled state had a more fundamental genesis; he’d finally realized what it was that gave his older cousins and his sisters’ husbands their purpose in life.

The purpose he lacked.

Family—their own branch of it, their own children—their own wife. Such things had never seemed critical before; now they loomed as vital to his life, to his satisfaction with his lot.

A scion of a wealthy, wellborn family, he had a comfortable lot in life, yet what worth comfort against the lack of achievement he now felt so acutely? It wasn’t his ability to achieve that was in question—not in his mind, nor, he’d warrant, in any other—but the goal, the need, the reason; these were the necessities he lacked.

Crucial necessities for a satisfying life for such as he.

Great-aunt Clara’s legacy had been the final prod; what was he to do with a rambling country house if not live in it? He needed to get himself a wife and start building the family he required to give his life its true direction.

He hadn’t accepted the notion meekly. For the past ten years, his life had been well run, well ordered, with females intruding in only two arenas, both entirely under his control. With countless discreet liaisons behind him, he was a past master at managing—seducing, enjoying, and ultimately disengaging from—the wellborn matrons with whom he habitually dallied. Other than that, the only females he consorted with were those of his own family. Admittedly, within the family, they ruled, but as that had always been the case, he’d never felt constrained or challenged by the fact—one simply dealt with it as necessary.

With his active interest in the Cynster investment business together with the distractions of tonnish society, with his sexual conquests and the customary family gatherings to season the whole, his life had been pleasantly full. He’d never seen the need to linger at those balls and parties graced by marriageable young ladies.

Which now left him in the unenviable position of wanting a wife and not having any useful avenue through which to acquire one, not without setting off alarm bells that would resonate throughout the ton. If he was foolish enough to start attending the balls and parties, the fond mamas would instantly perceive he was on the lookout for a bride—and lay siege.

He was the last unmarried male Cynster of his generation.

Stepping up to the top of the earthworks’ outer wall, he paused. The land fell away in a shallow sweep; the path continued to the left, leading to a squat, covered lookout set into the earth wall some fifty yards on.

The view was magnificent. Sunshine winked on the distant sea; the silhouette of the Isle of Wight was distinguishable through a soft summer haze.

He’d seen the view before. He turned to the lookout, and the female presently in it. She was standing at the railing, gazing out to sea. From her stance and stillness, he assumed she hadn’t seen him.

Lips setting, he walked on. He wouldn’t need to give any reason for joining her. For the past decade, he’d treated her with the same insistent protectiveness he applied to all the females of his family; doubtless it was her relationship—the fact she was his brother-in-law Luc’s sister—that dictated how he felt about her despite the lack of blood ties.

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