Wolfishly Yours

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Authors: Lydia Dare

Tags: #Romance, #Regency, #General, #Paranormal, #Fiction

BOOK: Wolfishly Yours
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Copyright © 2012 by Lydia Dare

Cover and internal design © 2012 by Sourcebooks, Inc.

Cover illustration by Alan Ayers

Sourcebooks and the colophon are registered trademarks of Sourcebooks, Inc.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means including information storage and retrieval systems—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without permission in writing from its publisher, Sourcebooks, Inc.

The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious or are used fictitiously. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.

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Jodie: For Brandt ~ Thank you for your smile, your sense of humor, and your adventurous spirit. I don’t know what I would do without you. I love you more than anything.

Tammy: For the many, many people at Sourcebooks who make this process so seamless. From the publicists to the editors to the artists and everyone who has their hands in the production, distribution, or handling of our books in any way, shape, or form, you have our utmost appreciation. We probably have no idea how many things you take care of, but we know that without you we could have wontons all over the place! So, thanks for all that you do!

One

Bristol shipyard, October 1820

Miss Liviana Mayeux shivered, and she cursed her father anew. Blast him for sending her to such a horrid place. She could very likely freeze to death before her feet touched solid land. The frosty English air swirled about her ankles and stung her lungs as she took a deep breath. She would never survive this ordeal. Never. She wasn’t meant to live in a climate such as this. Papa, of all people, should have known that.

When a shove to her back moved her forward, Livi stepped off the gangplank onto British soil and pulled her pelisse tighter around her shoulders, rubbing her hands along her arms and hoping against hope that warmth would finally seep into her bones. How in the world had her mother lived in this godforsaken frozen wasteland? Livi was certain her blood was much too thin, not to mention too hot, to survive here. Why had Papa done this to her?

She glanced back at
Vespucci’s Marauder
, one of her father’s many vessels and her floating home since she’d set sail from New Orleans, and contemplated stowing away for the frigate’s return trip across the Atlantic. Wouldn’t Papa be surprised if she returned to Louisiana all on her own? What would he do with her then? He’d have to come up with a different plan to turn her into a lady, wouldn’t he? Unless she could convince him otherwise. Not that she’d had much luck with that the last time.

“Mademoiselle Mayeux!” Captain Broussard called, breaking her reverie. The swarthy Frenchman waved his tricorn hat in the air to catch her attention as seamen bustled in front of him along the docks.

She certainly couldn’t sneak back on the frigate with Captain Broussard watching her. Livi suppressed a scowl as her maid touched her shoulder. “Over there, Miss Livi. The captain is waiting for us.”

“Marie, I don’t suppose you’d distract him so I could escape back onto the ship?” she asked hopefully. “I’ve got all of
Maman
’s jewelry with me. You can have whatever you’d like.”

Her maid glowered at her. “There are many men I wouldn’t be afraid of crossing, miss, but Philippe Mayeux isn’t one of them.”

“Papa’s not all
that
fearsome,” Livi protested. Only on the night of the full moon, but the rest of the time Papa was as gentle as a lapdog. Or mostly, anyway. However, he had been adamant when he’d announced that Livi would sail the Atlantic to live with the grandfather she’d never met. Papa had been quite unreasonable about the entire affair, which was very unlike him, all things considered. He usually couldn’t care less if she ran around in trousers or rode her gelding astride or caught crawfish with her brothers. Not until that blasted, busybody Father Antonio had insisted Livi was too wild for polite society.

Marie gave Livi a gentle push from behind, urging her forward. “Go on, miss. The captain is waiting for us.”

There was nothing for it. With Broussard before her and Marie behind her, Livi had no hope for escape. Well, at least not at the moment. She’d think of something. She had to. She couldn’t live in England, of all places. And she certainly was not about to be turned into an English lady. The idea made her stomach roil more than the choppy ocean ever had along her voyage.

The icy wind whipped about her skirts as Livi pushed her way through a crowd of sailors and dockworkers to where the captain awaited her.
Bon
Dieu
! How did anyone live here? Wretched, freezing place. What she wouldn’t give to be exploring warm swamps back home with Armand and Etienne right now. Livi clasped a hand to her head to keep her bonnet from blowing away in the wind and she scowled. Papa had never threatened to send her brothers across the Atlantic to become gentlemen. It was wholly unfair to send her away to turn her into a lady.

Captain Broussard stepped through the throng of men and offered his hand to Livi. “Mademoiselle Mayeux.” He gestured to a dour-looking young man adorned in a drab black coat. “This is Monsieur Turner. He works for Lord Holmesfield. He’ll see you the rest of the way.”

Mr. Turner looked Livi up and down as though he disbelieved she could possibly be the granddaughter of an earl. “Miss Mayeux?”

Livi stood her tallest. She’d known pirates and trappers and soldiers in her day, and she was not about to be cowed by some English servant, no matter if he did work for her grandfather. “You’ll be retrieving my trunks, Mr. Turner?”

The man tried, unsuccessfully, to smother an arrogant smile. “Just Turner will suffice, madam.” Then he gestured to a crested carriage a short distance away. “Let’s get you settled and then I’ll retrieve your things.”

Settled. Just as soon as he turned his back, Livi could make her escape. But then Marie linked her arm with Livi’s and huddled close to her. “This wind will do terrible things to your hair,” her maid whispered.

Livi sighed. How did she keep forgetting about Marie? Probably because at home, Marie never played the role of chaperone. At home Marie never cared what she did or didn’t do. But ever since Marie had given her word to Papa to keep Livi safe, her maid had become a blasted nuisance. She couldn’t possibly escape with Marie holding on to her. “I can’t walk with you so close,” she complained.

Marie snorted. “
Non
. You mean you can’t run off with me so close. Do you think I just met you, miss? I made a promise to Mr. Mayeux, and I’ll see you delivered to Lord Holmesfield if it’s the last thing I do.”

Livi frowned as she followed Turner to the carriage he’d pointed out. “I don’t know what you’re talking about, Marie. Where would I go if I ran off?”

Her maid harrumphed and muttered something, though it was drowned out by the whipping, briny-scented wind.

Where would she go, indeed?

***

Hadley Hall, Derbyshire

Grayson Hadley looked at the cup of tea before him. Certainly Lady Sophia had lost her mind. He
did
know how to drink tea, for God’s sake. He’d learned to drink from a teacup around the same time he’d learned to walk. And it wasn’t a skill one typically forgot.

“Well, Mr. Hadley, I
am
waiting,” his infernal tutor urged.

“Oh, yes,” his brother Archer, Viscount Radbourne, chortled from the threshold of the breakfast room. “Do show us how gracefully you can sip your tea, Gray.”

“If you don’t shut up, you’ll see how good my aim is, Arch, and you’ll be
wearing
my bloody tea.”

“Language, Mr. Hadley.” A beleaguered sigh escaped Lady Sophia and she rose from her spot at the table. “And please don’t think yourself superior to your brother, my lord. I have a cup of tea waiting for you as well.”

Archer snorted. “Hell will freeze over first, my lady.”

“Language, Lord Radbourne,” she admonished. “I’m certain you don’t want me to inform Lord Eynsford that you are being difficult again, do you?”

Gray picked up his cup and very slowly brought it to his lips. He took a small sip and then returned the cup to its saucer. He dabbed his lips with a napkin and said as smoothly as possible, “Might I be excused, Lady Sophia?”

This earned him a scowl from his brother and a winning smile from their tutor. “Yes, you may,” the lady agreed with a nod.

“Doing it up a bit brown, aren’t you?” Archer grumbled as Gray rose from his seat.

Making certain Lady Sophia’s attention was on Archer, Gray winked at his older brother. “Do enjoy your tea, Archer. It’s delicious.” Then he brushed past his sibling and strode into the corridor.

Freedom at last. Or at least until Lady Sophia thought up some new inane task for him to participate in. But with Archer’s flippant attitude, Gray was certain their tutor would be busy most of the day trying to break his brother’s spirit. She’d never accomplish that goal, which would allow Gray a little time to himself. And he needed time to himself to look over the financial papers the Hadleys’ solicitor had sent over in regards to their gambling endeavor. In fact, he needed to make a trip to London to see the man in person, but his training had kept him in Derbyshire the last month. Training and his oldest half brother’s edict that they learn to comport themselves in public or else. Nonsense, all of it.

“Grayson!” his mother squealed as he nearly knocked her to the ground.

“Oh!” Gray caught his mother’s arm and steadied her. “I am sorry. I didn’t see you there.”

Lady Radbourne shooed his hand away. “I am fine. Just watch where you’re going.”

“I’d better,” he agreed conspiratorially, “or Lady Sophia will have me walking corridors back and forth to prove I can do so without tripping or causing others to scramble from my path in fear.”

His mother giggled. “She’s only trying to help you.”

Gray’s brow rose indignantly. “By proving that I can sit through a concert without ripping someone’s head off or that I can drink tea without splashing it all down my cravat?”

“The three of you could use a little culture. It’s good Lord Eynsford has your best interests at heart.”

Gray scowled at his mother. His half brother could go hang for putting him through this ordeal in the first place. “The three of us? Somehow Wes has escaped this nonsense entirely.”

Lady Radbourne shrugged. “Well, Weston has a wife to manage him. You don’t.” She patted his shoulder as though in consolation. He shivered at the very thought of being saddled with a wife.

His twin had a wife he’d abducted and then eloped with. If any of the three of them needed gentleman training it was Weston Hadley, but Gray held his tongue as it was pointless to voice his thoughts on the matter. What’s done was done.

“Are you finished for the day?” his mother asked.

“As far as I know. Why?”

She grinned at him. “Lord Holmesfield asked me to call on him today. Would you like to accompany me?”

Holmesfield was an ancient prig and not a particularly healthy one at that. Gray could go the rest of his days without seeing their closest neighbor, but who knew what inanity Lady Sophia would come up with if he stayed. Gray inclined his head. “It would be my honor to escort you, Mother.”

She tucked her hand in the crook of his arm. “You can say Lady Sophia makes you do foolish things, Grayson, but I have seen you blossom under her tutelage.”

Gray somehow kept from growling. “I am going to pretend you didn’t say that.”

***

A prisoner, that’s what Livi was. Oh, the prison was an opulent one, to be sure, covered in silks and damask and adorned in gold trim. But a prison was still a prison. It would have been nice to have at least one ally in this foreign land, but Marie had assimilated into the British household much faster than Livi could have ever imagined. One would think her maid had completely forgotten the attempted English invasion only six years ago in New Orleans. Which was mildly infuriating. It wasn’t really that long ago, after all. Livi hadn’t forgotten those days, and she never would.

Men ranging from the notorious privateer Jean Lafitte to the courageous and ruthless General Andrew Jackson had sat in her father’s study back in those days, and Livi along with her brothers had waited in the corridor, their ears pressed against the door to listen to the plots and plans. Having heard all of Papa’s impassioned speeches against the British, she felt his turnabout in sending her to England like a dagger to her heart. Blasted traitor! She would never have thought him capable of such a betrayal to either his country or his daughter.

She’d dearly love to get her hands around Father Antonio’s collared neck for putting the idea in Papa’s mind to begin with. Blasted priest should mind his own business and keep his interfering nose out of…

A scratch came at her door.

Livi frowned. What was it with all the scratching? Sounded like a battalion of mice had taken up residence in Holmesfield Court. “Yes?” she grumbled.

Her door opened quickly and Marie stepped over the threshold. “His lordship would like you to join him in the blue parlor, Miss Livi.”

So he could tell her again that she would never amount to anything? Livi was perfectly happy sitting in her prison of a bedchamber. Well, not perfectly happy. She’d much rather be home. But she was happier in her bedchamber than she would be in her grandfather’s presence. When she arrived, the earl had taken one look at her and declared she didn’t resemble her mother in the least, and he hadn’t smiled at her since. Well, she
was
half French. What did he expect?

“I’m not feeling at all well. I believe I’ll just stay here, Marie.”

Her maid heaved a sigh. “Don’t make this more difficult than it has to be, miss. Lord Holmesfield is expecting Lady Radbourne any minute, and he would like for you to be there when the lady calls.”

Livi scoffed. “What do I care about some lady I’ve never met?” She shook her head. “
Non
. I’ll just stay here, Marie. And stop scratching at my door, will you? All my life you’ve knocked, and I don’t see why that should change now.”

Marie narrowed her dark eyes at Livi. “Because things
have
changed, miss. And once you accept that, you’ll be much happier.”

Livi suppressed a snort. “Happier? Hardly. If you’d like to help me secure passage to New Orleans, I’ll be as happy as you’ve ever known me.”

“Blue parlor.” Somehow, Marie had acquired an edge to her voice, like the strictest of taskmasters. “Now.” Where had Marie found that tone? She’d never used anything slightly like it in the past.

Livi started for the corridor. “I do like the old Marie much better, in case you were wondering.”

Her maid muttered, “I wasn’t.”

Well, Marie could stay in this wretched place forever if she liked it so much. But Livi needed an escape. And the faster, the better. Livi kept her head held high and navigated Holmesfield Court’s corridor and cantilevered staircase. Then she meandered around the first floor, in no hurry to see her grandfather until the inevitable couldn’t be put off any further. Livi took a steadying breath and then stepped into the earl’s blue parlor.

At once, her grandfather looked up from the ornate high-backed chair he was sitting in and let his dismissive eye sweep across her form. “I suppose that will do.”

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