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A LADY'S DESPERATE CHOICE
When the loathsome Lord Bascomb
tries to force her into a marriage, Elizabeth Woolcot, against her
will, must appeal to her influential guardian. Nicholas Warring, known
as the Wicked Earl, is a darkly handsome charismatic figure---with the
power to save her but a past that could put her reputation dangerously
at risk. A ruthless womanizer, he has also been convicted of
murder---and barely escaped hanging.
A ROGUE'S
TAINTED HONOR
Elizabeth
can't help her attraction to the man who haunts her dreams---nor he
his hunger for her. But she knows it can never be. For Nicholas is a
married man. Then a heinous crime shatters their lives---and Nick is
the natural suspect. Elizabeth wants to believe in his innocence more
than life and love itself---but can she trust a man who has killed
before?
Excerpt:
Standing at
the door to the library, Elizabeth reached for the
silver knob, intent on finding something new to read. The knob turned,
the heavy door swung wide, and for a moment, she stood frozen in the
opening. A lamp was lit and the room was far from empty.
"Good
evening, Miss Woolcot." Nicholas Warring leaned back in a black
leather chair, a glass of gin in one hand, a thin cigar in the other.
The florid, foul-mouthed Nigel Wicker,
Baron St. George, sat like a puffed up toad in the seat across
from him.
"Good
evening, my lord. I didn't mean to intrude. I didn't
realize you were in here." They appeared to be playing cards.
Stacks of money rested in haphazard piles on the polished mahogany
table, and a fresh hand had been dealt face down in front of each of
the men. Elizabeth hesitated only a moment, then walked farther into
the room, determined not to be intimidated this time. Whether his
lordship approved or not, she had come for a book and she didn't
intend to leave without one. She set the branch of candles on the
table next to a row of leather bound books behind the two men.
"Gambling again, I see," she couldn't resist saying to the earl. "I
don't suppose this time you are winning?" He grinned at that. "Not so
you'd notice."
"Nick's a
demmed fine player," St. George slurred, "when he
puts his mind to it." The baron's thick lips curled up in
the semblance of a smile. "Fortunately, that doesn't happen
all that often." Ravenworth took a draw on his cigar, blew
several floating gray rings and watched them linger in the air.
"Miss Woolcot
doesn't approve of my gaming, do you, sweeting?"
The
unexpected endearment rolled through her, curled warmly in her
stomach. Elizabeth resented the intrusion, the ease with which he
could affect her. "You know I do not."
St. George
took a gulp of his drink, sat back, and belched loudly. Ravenworth
arched a sleek black brow in the man's direction."I believe you met
the baron a couple of days ago. "He took a sip of his drink. His hair
was mussed, his cravat missing, his frilled shirt undone several
buttons down. Smooth dark skin covered with curly black chest hair
appeared through the opening. He looked roguish and handsome and he
was obviously foxed, St. George even more in his cups than the earl.
Elizabeth
straightened her spine. "Yes, I believe we met just
yesterday afternoon." She had encountered Nigel Wicker walking with
Ravenworth in the mazeof hallways running through the house, and the
earl had been forced to introduce them. She pasted on a smile for the
overweight baron. "Good evening, my lord." But her gaze remained fixed
on the earl and she thought what a waste it was for a man likehim to
fall into such ruin. "As I said, I'm sorry if I'm
interrupting. I finished the book I was reading, but still couldn't
seem to fall asleep. I promise I shan't be long."
"Take as long
as you like, my dear," slurred the baron, leaning precariously
toward her. "Pretty little thing like you can disturb me any time she
likes." Until his arm snaked out
toward her waist, she hadn't realized how near to him she was
standing. "By jove, Nicky, old boy, she's a comely bit of
bag-"
In an
instant, Ravenworth was out of his chair, the thin cigar on the floor,
his drink spilled onto the table. St. George's blunt hand never
reached her. Instead the dark, long-boned fingers of the earl curved
painfully around the man's thick wrist.
"I told you
before, the girl is out of bounds to you and anyone else who comes
here. I thought I made myself clear." The baron's fleshy lips curled
in a grimace of pain and Nick released his hold. Elizabeth backed
away, pressing herself against a row of books.
Watching her,
the baron gave up a slow, lecherous smile.
"Very clear, my friend. I didn't realize you had a claim
on the lady yourself."
Ravenworth's
mouth thinned into a tight, warning line.
"The girl is under my protection, nothing more. Remember that, St.
George, and we won't have a problem."
Elizabeth
just stared. Her mind kept replaying a picture of the earl rising out
of his chair with the swift grace of a panther--andnot a single trace
of the drunken man he had appeared.
"Elizabeth,"
he said softly. "Are you all right?"
She blinked
several times, dragged in a soft breath of air.
"Yes...yes,
quite all right. I shall simply get my book and return upstairs."
"Fine, but do
it quickly."
She didn't
dawdle, just picked up one of Mrs. Radcliff's Medieval novels she had
spotted on the shelf two days ago, turned and hurried out of the room.
The sound of men's voices followed. She wondered what they were
saying, but mostly she thought about Ravenworth. He hadn't been
drunk-not really. Her suspicions grew more pronounced that the earl
wasa far different man than he appeared. He intrigued her, more than
any man she had ever met. Interest quickened her pulse as she decided,
one way or the other, she would discover the truth about the Wicked
Earl.
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