“Take her to the east tower,” Lady Glenys replied. “Both Miss Windham and Miss Charlotte are in the Dovecote.”

  Charlotte looked to be enjoying her first convincing ladylike swoon.

  “Miss Windham,” the man said. “If you’ll join us?”

  He had green eyes framed with dramatic dark brows, and his expression held no flirtation, no suggestion of humor at Charlotte’s expense. Sober and steady when sober and steady were desperately needed.

  “My thanks,” Elizabeth said, falling in step beside him. “Who is this Merlin Jones?” And who are you?

  “He’s the innkeeper at the nearest coaching inn, and known to occasionally mix up a bad batch of summer ale. Because he serves the suspect brew only to those traveling on, he’s not held accountable for his mistakes.”

  Charlotte’s rescuer spoke with the lilting diction of the educated Welshman, and even carrying Charlotte up a grand curved staircase, his strength was not taxed. Something about the angle of the gentleman’s jaw suggested Mr. Jones would be held accountable this time.

  “The Dovecote is one of the tower suites,” he said. “The views are lovely, and you’re close to both the family wing and the guest wing. If the apartment is not to your liking, I’m sure Lady Glenys can see to other arrangements.”

  He was local, then, a neighbor, cousin, or close friend of the family. Was he a guest at the house party?

  “I’m sure the accommodations will be fine. Charlotte, how are you feeling?”

  “A little better,” she said, lashes fluttering. “What a lovely castle.”

  “Haverford Castle can be cold as the devil’s root cellar in winter,” the gentleman replied. “This is your suite.”

  He carried Charlotte straight into a circular chamber graced with three windows. The walls were more than two feet thick, the plaster a mellow cream. A lone red rose stood in a crystal vase on the sideboard.

  The gentleman set Charlotte on a tufted sofa and regarded her, his hands on his hips. In his dusty boots and with a streak of dirt on one sleeve of his riding jacket, he might have been a steward assessing a heifer gone off her feed.

  “Fresh air, I think,” he said, wrestling two of the windows open. The latches screeched in protest, but the breeze was heavenly. He knelt before the sideboard and opened a cupboard. “At the risk of being indelicate, you might also need this.”

  He rose, holding a porcelain basin painted with daffodils.

  “At the risk of being pathetic,” Elizabeth replied, taking the basin, “we thank you. You are very kind, sir.”

  Though not exactly proper. Why didn’t the fellow introduce himself?

  “Haverford is known for its hospitality as well as its library,” he said. “Shall I send the housekeeper to have a look at you, Miss Charlotte? I must warn you that some of her remedies bear results that make Merlin’s bad ale look like meadow tea.”

  “I’ve brought a few tisanes,” Elizabeth said. “Charlotte will come right with time, quiet, and rest.”

  Charlotte’s ailment also provided the perfect excuse for missing the first night’s buffet, a cheering thought when Childe Harold was the alternative.

  The gentleman bowed. “I’ll leave you then, ladies. A footman is on duty at all times at the top of the main staircase, and will alert the kitchen should you need anything. Welcome to Haverford.”

  Elizabeth dipped a curtsy, and then took the place beside Charlotte when the gentleman had quietly closed the door on his way out. He was a handsome specimen, in a mature, un-fancy way.

  A bit short on charm though. “Shall you live, Charl?”

  “I’ve been carried to my boudoir in the arms of a duke,” Charlotte said, flopping against the back of the sofa. “I’m not sure I can bear the strain such an honor has put on my maidenly nerves.”

  “That was His Grace of Haverford?”

  Charlotte began unbuttoning her cuffs. “I stood up with him for a minuet three years ago. Doubtless, he’d be pining for me still if he’d bother to recall the occasion.”

  Elizabeth set the basin on the low table. “I am certain you’ve been his elusive dream all this time. What sort of duke fails to introduce himself?”

  “One focused on aiding a damsel in distress. I was truly having a bad moment. Did you bring any peppermint tea with you?”

  Alas for His Grace, if Charlotte was more interested in peppermint tea than the duke’s manly attributes.

  “Mama sent along practically everything but henbane and eye of newt. I’ll find a footman to fetch us hot water and a tray. Do you suppose the bedroom is up those stairs?”

  Steps curved along the portion of the wall that lacked a window. Like the furniture, chandelier, sconces, and upholstery, the bannister was in the elegant, refined style of the last century.

  “I’ll have a look,” Charlotte said, “but unhook me and unlace me before you go, lest I expire for want of air.”

  Elizabeth obliged, then went in search of a footman. Upon inspection, Haverford Castle was all of a piece, its decorative scheme reminiscent of the grander styles and more elaborate flourishes of a bygone era.

  Plaster cherubs smiled down from intricate molding, old-fashioned Sèvres vases held single blooms in the occasional windowsill. The floors were polished wood, which was fine for keeping down the dust, but doubtless contributed to the castle’s winter chill.

  All very orderly and understated, of which Elizabeth approved. She was orderly and understated herself, on her good days. Though when she considered what she’d seen of the castle and what she’d seen of its owner, she admitted that this house party hadn’t started off like any of the others she’d endured.

  No bowing, fortune-hunting bachelors, no effusive greetings from women who secretly wished Elizabeth to the Antipodes merely because Papa was titled.

  But one handsome, healthy duke with green eyes and a practical streak. What a pity Elizabeth hadn’t met him ten years earlier, when she’d still believed fairy tales could come true somewhere other than the pages of a storybook.

  Don’t miss these other books in the Maiden Lane series!

  Now Available

  Other titles by Elizabeth Hoyt

  The Raven Prince

  The Leopard Prince

  The Serpent Prince

  The Ice Princess (novella)

  To Taste Temptation

  To Seduce a Sinner

  To Beguile a Beast

  To Desire a Devil

  Wicked Intentions

  Notorious Pleasures

  Scandalous Desires

  Thief of Shadows

  Lord of Darkness

  Duke of Midnight

  Darling Beast

  Dearest Rogue

  Sweetest Scoundrel

  Duke of Sin

  Once Upon a Moonlit Night (novella)

  Duke of Pleasure

  Duke of Desire

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  Elizabeth Hoyt, Once Upon a Maiden Lane

 


 

 
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