RUNAWAY
Duchess
{ London Ladies, Book One }
JILLIAN EATON
Dear Readers,
Runaway Duchess was first published in 2013. Since then it has undergone quite a few renovations, and I am pleased to offer you the latest version, complete with over 50 pages of never-before-read bonus scenes!
Charlotte and Gavin have always held a special place in my heart. Whether this is your first time reading their story or your fourth, I hope you love every page.
Fondly,
Jillian
Two Hearts,
One Burning Passion…
“Are you going to kiss me?” Charlotte asked.
In the dancing candlelight her eyes were endless pools of shimmering amber. Gavin shifted closer and her eyes widened, but she did not look away or fight to be free of him. He wet his lips. The small motion drew her gaze to his mouth, and the naïve curiosity he saw flicker across her face was nearly his undoing.
“Bloody hell,” he murmured. From inside his chest his heart pounded and his pulse raced, as if he were an eager schoolboy again about to lose his virginity. When had a woman affected him like this, let alone a slip of a girl with fire in her hair and steel in her eyes?
Never.
The answer was never.
“Tell me to let you go,” he said roughly, dragging one hand from the door to cup the delicate curve of her jaw.
“Why?” she whispered.
Why indeed? Throwing caution to the wind, Gavin muttered a savage oath as he claimed her mouth with his...
The Runaway Duchess is a work of fiction.
All of the characters, organizations, and events
portrayed in this novel are either products
of the author’s imagination
or are used fictitiously.
Copyright © by Jillian Eaton 2013
2nd Edition © 2020
Cover by Wicked Smart Designs
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All Rights Reserved.
Except for use in any review, the
reproduction or utilization of this work in whole
or in part in any form is strictly forbidden.
Praise for the London Ladies Series
“[The Runaway Duchess] is fast paced and filled with chemistry. A must read for any historical romance readers who love a good romp through England.” – My Book Addiction and More
“[The Runaway Duchess] will sweep readers off their feet and into a whirlwind of romance and intrigue.” – Night Owl Review Top Pick
“I cannot get enough of Jillian Eaton’s writing! [Spinster and the Duke] is up there in my favorites from her.” – Jessica Williamson, Goodreads
“[Forgotten Fiancee] is an enjoyable story that is difficult to put down.” – InD’tale Magazine
“What stands out to me the most about [Forgotten Fiancee] other than the romance is how well Eaton can tell a story.” – The Bookish and the Romantic
“[Lady Harper] is a very cute little story of love at first sight!” – Beverly Ross, Amazon
Other Books by Jillian Eaton
London Ladies
Runaway Duchess
Spinster and the Duke
Forgotten Fiancée
Lady Harper
Secret Wallflower Society
Winning the Earl of Winchester
Courting the Countess of Cambridge
Desiring the Duke of Duncraven
Bow Street Brides
A Dangerous Seduction
A Dangerous Proposal
A Dangerous Affair
A Dangerous Passion
A Dangerous Temptation
Duke for All Seasons
The Winter Duke
The Spring Duke
The Summer Duke
The Autumn Duke
Duchess for All Seasons
The Winter Duchess
The Spring Duchess
The Summer Duchess
The Autumn Duchess
Wedded Women Quartet
A Brooding Beauty
A Ravishing Redhead
A Lascivious Lady
A Gentle Grace
Swan Sisters
For the Love of Lynette
Taming Temperance
Annabel’s Christmas Rake
Christmas Novellas
A Rake in Winter
The Winter Wish
The Risqué Resolution
Natalie’s Christmas Rogue
Marquess Under the Mistletoe
Table of Contents
Praise for the London Ladies Series
Other Books by Jillian Eaton
Chapter One
Chapter Two
Chapter Three
Chapter Four
Chapter Five
Chapter Six
Chapter Seven
Chapter Eight
Chapter Nine
Chapter Ten
Chapter Eleven
Chapter Twelve
Chapter Thirteen
Chapter Fourteen
Chapter Fifteen
Chapter Sixteen
Chapter Seventeen
Chapter Eighteen
Chapter Nineteen
Chapter Twenty
Chapter Twenty-One
Chapter Twenty-Two
Chapter Twenty-Three
Chapter Twenty-Four
Chapter Twenty-Five
About the Author
The London Ladies
Spinster and the Duke
PROLOGUE
CHAPTER ONE
Chapter One
London, England
May 1815
“I will not marry him.” Standing with her arms crossed and her jaw set, Charlotte Vanderley shook her head from side to side, sending her unruly mass of red curls whipping across her face. “He is old and grotesque and I would not want him if he were the last man on earth!”
“Pin your hair up dear, you look like a heathen.” Unimpressed by her daughter’s belligerence, Lady Bettina Vanderley sipped her tea and smoothed a wrinkle from her skirts. Always impeccably dressed and well put together, nothing grated on Bettina’s nerves quite like a coiffure that was loose or a stay that was not pulled tight.
A woman of quiet reserve and a spine of steel, she blamed every single one of her gray hairs on Charlotte and often wondered what she had done so wrong to deserve such a troublesome child. There was no denying the girl her beauty (and for that Bettina took full credit) but as for everything else… Well, it was well known the late Lord Vanderley had always been much too indulgent with his only daughter. And this, Bettina thought sourly as she took in Charlotte’s flushed cheeks and the rebellious gleam in her hazel eyes, is the result.
Ignoring her mother’s demand to tame her hair, Charlotte stalked across the parlor and stared broodingly out the window to the street beyond. It was late in the afternoon, and as a result the notoriously busy London traffic had slowed to a crawl. It would pick back up again once the supper hour drew near, but for now all was quiet and uncharacteristically calm.
A group of raggedly dressed young boys raced passed, disrupting the temporary solace with their loud, raucous laughter. They kicked a dirty red ball between them and Charlotte released a wistful sigh when they disappeared from view. What she wouldn’t do to be outside right now; to feel the sun on her face and the wind in her hair. To be able to run and yell and do all the things proper young ladies were never allowed to do.
Instead she was stuck indoors with nothing to occupy her time save the thought of her recent engagement to the horrible Duke of Paine, an old lecher thirty years her senior who had already se
en two wives dead and buried. Why he had need of a third Charlotte was not certain for he had two living sons, the “heir and the spare” as the saying went, and both were in good health. Why he wanted her in particular she was even less sure. They had never even crossed paths until three weeks ago when she nearly tripped over his cane at a garden party. Flowers began arriving with her name on them by the dozens the very next day, and she had been unable to shake him loose since, no matter how persistently she ignored him.
Her dearest friend and closest confidant, Miss Dianna Foxcroft, was of the mind that the duke wanted another wife so he could succumb to his “manly urges” whenever he pleased. Having read more than her fair share of dime novels, Charlotte knew exactly what sort of “manly urges” Dianna was referring to, and just thinking of the duke’s wrinkled hands on her body made her sick to her stomach.
Now, less than a month after their initial meeting, she woke to find herself engaged to a man she despised. All things considered, it was not a very good way to begin one’s week.
“I still cannot believe you allowed the announcement to be printed without my permission.” Catching her mother’s frown out of the corner of her eye, Dianna spun in a half circle and tossed back her hair. “This is not the Dark Ages. If I do not want to marry him, you cannot make me!”
“You are behaving like a petulant child.” Fluffing a hand through her auburn hair, now streaked liberally with gray, Bettina straightened even further in her chair and linked her hands together over one demurely crossed knee. “It is a great honor to be engaged to a duke, especially one of such wealth and social status.”
“I do not care how titled or rich he is!” Charlotte cried. “I want to marry for love, not money.”
For the first time a hint of true annoyance flashed in Bettina’s blue eyes and twin blotches of color appeared high on her cheeks. “You are a foolish girl with foolish dreams who knows nothing of the real world or the perils that exist within it,” she said scornfully. “One day you will thank me for this, mark my words.”
“Well it will not be today,” Charlotte declared dramatically before she spun smartly on her heel and stormed out of the parlor, taking great satisfaction in slamming the door behind her. The loud noise echoed through the silent town house, startling a maid who had been making her way up the stairs, her arms piled high with fresh linens.
“I am sorry,” Charlotte said automatically and the maid, a quiet girl with long brown hair by the name of Tabitha, shook her head and mustered a shy smile.
“Not to worry, Lady Charlotte.”
“Here, let me help you with those.” Bounding up the staircase, Charlotte whisked half of the linens out of Tabitha’s arms and into her own.
The maid darted a nervous glance towards the parlor.
“You know your mother does not like you to help the staff, Lady Charlotte,” she whispered. “Do you remember how upset she became when she found you planting bulbs with the gardener?”
“What she doesn’t know will not hurt her,” Charlotte said dismissively. “Are these going to the closet on the third floor?”
“Yes,” Tabitha said, her face drawn tight in apprehension.
Charlotte sighed. The maid’s fear of being caught doing such an innocent thing as accepting help was yet another reason she was constantly at odds with her mother. Bettina was of the (popular) opinion that servants were to be neither seen nor heard. She ruled her household with an iron fist and had been known to fire a maid over the most trivial of grievances.
Charlotte, on the other hand, was of the firm belief that a person’s title – or lack thereof – did not dictate who they were or how they should be treated. She knew her views were considered outlandish by most, but she clung to them nevertheless, and took every opportunity to help the overworked staff whenever she could.
After all, it was not their fault her mother was stingy with her coin and refused to hire the adequate number of servants a town house of this size demanded. Having a knack for figures, Charlotte knew her mother could comfortably afford four household maids instead of the two currently employed, and she felt a constant sense of guilt that Tabitha and the other maid, Rose, were forever hustling from one chore to the next with nary a break in between while she sat around day in and day out wasting hours of her life on pointless embroidery patterns.
“Leave my Mother to me,” she commanded briskly, “and lead the way.”
With one last, furtive glance at the parlor, Tabitha hurried up the winding staircase with Charlotte right behind. The moment they reached the safety of the third floor the maid’s shoulders relaxed and she released the pent up breath she had been holding. They were now in the servant’s quarters; the one place in the house Bettina would never dream of entering.
Comprised of a narrow hallway, two small adjoining bedrooms, one large linen closet, and a washroom hardly big enough to stand upright in, the third floor was little more than a finished attic. It was also where Tabitha and Rose lived, as was common in most households of the nobility. In exchange for working day in and day out the maids received a monthly stipend, but what they really worked for was their room and board. Despite the long hours and grueling work it required, being a maid was considered a luxurious position amongst the lower class, especially if the family they worked for was well off. It meant a roof over their heads and food in their bellies, two things that were in alarmingly short supply out on the streets.
“Thank you, Lady Charlotte,” Tabitha said once all of the linens were put neatly away. “That was very kind of you.” Tucking up a stringy piece of hair that had come loose from her cap, the maid managed another small smile, although she kept her gaze carefully averted, no doubt the result of being told never to look a member of the peerage directly in the eye for fear of being perceived as insubordinate.
Time and time again Charlotte had attempted to draw Tabitha out of her shell, but the maid was too terrified of losing her job to ever risk befriending her employer’s daughter. It was with some surprise, then, that Charlotte felt resistance on the back of her skirt as she turned to leave. “Yes?” she asked, her brows knitting together in puzzlement when she saw Tabitha had purposefully stepped on the train of her dress to detain her. “Is there something else you need help with?”
The maid’s face was pale and her lips trembled as she struggled to form words. “I… May I speak frankly, Lady Charlotte?”
“Of course. Please say whatever you like, Tabitha.”
It appeared that was all the urging the maid required. “If I were you I would not want to marry the duke either,” she said in a rush. “He is a wicked, wicked man. Servants talk, and I have heard… Oh,” she gasped, her eyes darting from side to side as if she feared the thin plaster walls had ears. “I do not know if I dare repeat it.”
Charlotte grasped Tabitha’s slender arm and squeezed. “Tell me what you know,” she said urgently. “Please, Tabitha.”
But it seemed the maid’s temporary surge of courage withered. “I cannot, Lady Charlotte.” She bit her lip and hunched her shoulders. “Someone might hear.”
“Who? My mother is still downstairs and the last I saw of Rose she was in the kitchen cutting up carrots. If you were ever to tell me something, now is the time and this is the place. I will not tell anyone I heard it from you. I promise.”
But Tabitha only gave a quick, fearful shake of her head and remained silent.
“Very well.” Not wanting to bully the poor girl into giving up her secrets, Charlotte released her arm and gently asked, “Is there somewhere else you would feel more comfortable speaking? Somewhere you will not be afraid of being overheard?”
“Do you know where Twinings is?” Tabitha said after a long pause.
She nodded. “Yes, of course.”
“Could you meet me there tomorrow? At noon?”
Charlotte had no idea why Tabitha would find more comfort in divulging her secrets at London’s busiest teahouse than a, but she nodded in agreement nevertheless. If
the maid truly did have damning information about the duke then she needed to hear it, and soon. Considering how fast her mother had been able to have their engagement announced in the papers, she shuddered to think how quickly she could have a wedding arranged.
“Will you be able to get away from the house?” she asked the maid.
“Tomorrow is errand day. Her ladyship will not expect me back until late in the afternoon.”
And Charlotte already had an idea forming of how she could escape without arousing suspicion. Feigning a bright smile, she passed a hand through her curly locks, sweeping the fiery red mass over one shoulder. Her thick hair really would be easier to tame in a tight twist or even a braid, but since she knew having it unbound irritated her mother to no end, she wore it down as often as she dared.
““Very well,” she said. “Tomorrow it is.”
“You had best be on your way now, my lady.”
Charlotte nodded and headed for the stairs, secretly eager to return to the second floor. It was sweltering in the attic and she could feel a line of sweat making its way down between her shoulder blades in a slow, uncomfortable trickle.
She couldn’t imagine having to sleep up here. If her mother would have allowed it, she’d have gladly shared her bedchamber with the maids rather than force them to endure such cruel heat. But she knew Lady Bettina would have been horrified at the idea of her daughter sleeping in the same room as a servant, and thus she’d never bothered to bring it up.
At least, not yet.
“Wait!” Tabitha called out shrilly as Charlotte began to descend the stairs.
“Yes?” she said, her slippered foot hovering in mid-air. “Is there something else?”
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