by Jude Knight
To Claim the Long-Lost Lover
The Diamond and the Doctor
Jude Knight
Copyright 2021 Judith Anne Knighton writing as Jude Knight
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the author.
ISBN: 978-0-9951453-8-2
Created with Vellum
To Sue, the sister of my blood, my dearest friend, and to all the sisters of my heart.
For there is no friend like a sister
In calm or stormy weather;
To cheer one on the tedious way,
To fetch one if one goes astray,
To lift one if one totters down,
To strengthen whilst one stands.
Christina Rosetti, Goblin Market, 1862
To Claim the Long-Lost Lover
The beauty known as the Winderfield Diamond hides a ruinous secret. Society’s newest viscount holds the key.
Sarah Winderfield has refused every suitor since Nathaniel Beauclair convinced her to run away with him seven years ago, and then disappeared without a word or a trace. But now she needs a husband. She has a child to love and to protect, and the child needs a father.
She does not expect to meet Nate also on the marriage mart. Should she let him explain? Can she believe him?
Dragged back to England to feed his father's pride in family, Nate refuses to give into the man's demands that he take a wife. Those who beat and abducted him seven years ago said the only woman he will ever love would be married within the month to a husband chosen by her father.
But when he finds that Sarah is still single, he rushes to London. Surely, they can find again the promise they believed in when they were young?
Through a labyrinth of old rumours and new enemies, two long-lost lovers must decide whether or not to claim one another, and win the bright future they both desire.
Contents
Preface
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Epilogue
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About Jude Knight
Preface
April 1814
Sarah sat in the secretaries’ room, waiting for His Grace’s visitors to leave. “I shall tell the duke you want a moment of his time, my lady,” offered the man in charge, one of the Duke of Winshire’s foreign retainers. Sarah told him not to interrupt the meeting. The last thing she needed was to begin a painful interview with His Grace annoyed at her.
Uncle James is not like father and grandfather, she told herself. If she didn’t believe that, she wouldn’t be here, kicking her heels while each minute took an hour to creep by. Still, her heart pounded and her hands perspired. A lifetime of experience assured her that men were erratic, and powerful men expected her to sacrifice her own needs and wishes to their whims.
Not Uncle James, Charlotte had insisted. In any case, you have no choice. If you want money to start a new life, he will need to give his permission. He certainly isn’t going to do so without knowing your reasons. Charlotte had always been the braver twin, despite outward appearances.
She had offered to see the duke with Sarah. Up in the little sitting room of the chambers they shared, Sarah had refused. If she took Charlotte with her as support, how could she convince Uncle James she was capable of striking out on her own? Now, growing more anxious by the minute, Sarah wished for her sister’s supportive presence.
The murmur of voices in the other room grew louder. Sarah leapt to her feet as the duke’s door opened. A group of gentlemen exited, almost walking backwards as they assured His Grace of their goodwill, their co-operation, their thanks for his condescension in meeting them himself rather than sending an agent.
For a brief moment, Sarah wondered what they were talking about, but then the duke smiled at her from his doorway, and her own business with him consumed her again.
One of the secretaries took over to usher the guests out, and the Duke of Winshire held out his hand to Sarah. “You wished to see me, Lady Sarah? Come in, and I shall send for tea.”
Sarah firmly tamped down the urge to flee. She entered the duke’s study, breathing a little more steadily once she was inside. The room bore little resemblance to the lair to which she had been summoned by her grandfather when he decided to personally communicate his expectations, or to rebuke her for failing them.
It had been redecorated to the taste of its new incumbent. The great desk from behind which the former duke had handed down his edicts had been replaced. Light streamed in windows previously obscured day and night by heavy curtains.
His Grace underscored how much he differed from his father by not directing Sarah to the supplicant position before the desk and ensconcing himself behind it. Instead, he led her to a comfortable chair by the fire and took the one opposite.
The changes in decor weren’t enough to keep the memories at bay. Sarah could feel what little confidence she had leaking away, taking coherent thought with it. She must have shut her eyes, because her lids flew open when the duke leapt to his feet, saying, “This won’t do.” He was already out of his chair and striding for the door to the anteroom.
“Zagreb, I am taking my niece to the blue parlour. Redirect our afternoon tea, please. If I am late for the appointment with Mr Chalmers, please make my apologies. Ask him if he would like to visit the stallion he enquired about while he waits.”
Sarah blinked at him as he returned to stand before her, holding out his hand. His nod and his gentle smile reassured her. She allowed him to help her to her feet, place her hand on his sleeve and conduct her to the private door on the inner wall of the room—the one that led to the servant’s corridors.
“This was a room of horrors, Sarah, was it not?” He smiled down at her. “My father mostly ignored his children, and I must suppose his grandchildren, too. But when he did notice us, it was never to praise. Only to berate and punish.” He lifted a brow in question, and Sarah nodded, his understanding soothing her as much as leaving the office behind them.
He let them into the blue parlour, one of the smaller reception rooms on this business floor of the mansion that was their London home.
Sarah had recovered enough for an apology. “I am sorry to take you from your work, Your Grace. Uncle James, I mean.”
The duke shrugged. “The work exists to provide for those who are part of the duchy, Sarah. From you and the rest of my family to the least tenant’s child and the youngest scullery maid. If I cannot make time for the people, and particularly for my own family, there is no point to the work.”
Her grandfather, father, and brother had assumed the duchy and all its dependents existed to provide for them: for their wealth, power and pleasure. Mulling on that, and its costs to her and all she held dear, she barely noticed the aide delivering the tray. She started when her uncle handed her a cup of tea he had prepared himself.
The gesture—a man of his stature doing women’s work—reassured her as nothing else had. She blurted her errand. “Uncle James, I want my dowry. I want to retire to the country so I can raise my son myself.”
The duke’s only reaction was a slight widening of the eyes.
He took a sip of his own tea before he responded. “Your son. Are you with child, Sarah? Or has a great nephew been hidden from me these past two years since I arrived in England?”
The phrasing of the last question broke the dam on Sarah’s resentment and it burst out. “He has been hidden from me these past six years, sir. Since the day he was born and taken from me, though I begged to hold him just one time.” She stopped to blink back angry tears.
His Grace reached for her hand, and held it gently. “Tell me.” His voice was warm and concerned, and she found the words came easily at last.
“My grandfather ordered him put out to foster. Mama assured me that she had met the couple herself, but then the duke gave them money to move away, and she could not find out where they went. When you reinstated my pin money after the duke died, I hired an enquiry agent to find him. I just wanted to know that he was well and cared for.”
She swallowed, remembering the skinny, frightened, angry little waif that the agent, Mrs Wakefield, had introduced her to that morning. Searching her uncle’s eyes for condemnation and scorn, she saw nothing but compassion. “I take it he was not,” he commented.
“The foster parents my mother approved died last year. Their relatives did not want Elias—that’s what his foster parents called him—so he had been put into the parish orphan asylum. Mrs Wakefield said it was a dreadful place, and she could not leave him there.” Sarah clutched at her uncle’s arm. “I want to keep him, Uncle James. I can go somewhere I am not known, change my name, pretend to be a widow…”
The duke smiled. “We can do better than that, my dear. Did I not just say that the duchy is here to serve the family? And your little Elias is family.”
1
October 1814
“You must at least go up to London and look over the current crop,” Nate’s father said, for perhaps the third time during this interminable dinner alone.
His father had been delivering instructions and advice since Nate took up residence at Three Oaks, the estate of the Earls of Lechton. Nate had found that the technique he developed during the early years of his enforced naval service worked just as well on the pompous fool who had sired him. He made pleasant noises, while failing to offer any commitment, and listened just enough to ensure he didn’t trip over his own cleverness.
Most people, and his father was certainly among their number, were so convinced of their own superiority that it never occurred to them a subordinate might be quietly disagreeing with everything they said. They required only that said subordinate smiled agreeably and gave a vague nod from time to time.
“You need a wife, Bentham. Three sons, m’ brothers had between them and all of them single.” Nod. Nate could agree that his cousins had been single.
“You need to marry some well-behaved girl with wide hips,” Nate’s father insisted, “and bed her till you get a son on her.”
It didn’t work for you, Nate refrained from saying. His father had inherited the earldom thanks to the marital dereliction and deaths of his three nephews. He was determined that the Lechton line would continue through what he insisted on calling ‘the fruit of my loins’. The well-behaved girl he’d taken to wife once he inherited had produced three sickly daughters at twelve-month intervals, birthing the third with such difficulty she was unlikely to ever get with child again.
That left Nate, the banished son of his first marriage. Perhaps, as Lord Lechton claimed, he really did believe that Nate had died at sea. “I had only the frailest of hopes when I contacted the navy, my dear Bentham,” he had explained. “Imagine my delight to discover you were not only alive, but in Edinburgh.”
He had set the hospital where Nate worked into turmoil by writing to reclaim him under Nate’s honorary title as heir. To be fair, being called Bentham was better than ‘fruit of my loins’, as if Nate existed only by reference to his father.
Mind you, that was certainly Lord Lechton’s view. His world had revolved around himself when he was merely the Reverend Miles Beauclair, third son of an earl and vicar of three little villages on the ducal estate of one of the earl’s friends. His world view had not expanded when he came into his unexpected inheritance.
Nate smiled agreeably, masking his thoughts. You doomed your own hopes when you betrayed me seven years ago. And then the earl dropped a name Nate had never expected to hear again.
“I hope you’re not thinking about taking up with Sarah Winderfield again. It just won’t do. No. I cannot like the connection for you. She’s too old now, and a bloody reformer. Anyway, her uncle, the new duke, is not precisely the thing. A seventeen-year-old fresh on the market. That’s what you want. We’ll be able to train her up the way she should go.” He grimaced. “It will be a nuisance to have an unschooled female around the house again, but I suppose I can always go up to London.”
Nate sat stunned speechless, his mind blank of everything except the sound of Sarah’s name, echoing inside his head. His father kept talking, totally unaware that Nate had stopped listening.
‘Sarah Winderfield’, his father had said. Nate had been so certain she had long since been married off to someone else. Married, and out of his reach, with—no doubt—a parcel of children in her nursery, and a doting husband. Of course, her husband would be doting. Even a man chosen by that unthinkably arrogant sod, Sutton, and the cruel monster who sired him could not help but dote on a woman as lovely in her nature as she was in appearance.
Sarah Winderfield. All these years he’d been striving to forget her and she had never married? It had been almost the last thing he heard as her father’s thugs kicked him into unconsciousness under the supervision of her brother. “My sister is not for the likes of you. Forget her. She will be married within a month to a man of her station.”
He had wondered who it was. The sailors he served with were not the sort to collect London Society gossip, and even once he returned to the British Isles, to Edinburgh, he’d made no effort to find out. All that made life bearable was imagining Sarah was happy and well, even if some other man was giving her that happiness in his place.
He would stay out of Society, he had decided—avoid any place where he might see her. His continued existence put her well-being and that of her family at risk, and he wouldn’t see her hurt for the world.
And all the time, she had remained unwed. They did not marry her to someone else. His mind caught up with another useful pearl mixed in with the pig swill his father had been spouting—Her father must be dead. ‘Her uncle, the new Duke.’ And not just her father, Lord Sutton, but his father, the Duke of Winshire. They must both be dead. And her brother, thrice-damned Elfingham, whose riding crop had slashed his face that dreadful day, leaving a cut that became infected so he still bore the scar.
His father had asked a question. The sound of his voice was fresh enough in Nate’s memory that he could replay it. “So, when will you leave? What’s keeping you here? Not your stupid ‘medical clinic’, I hope. An earl’s heir playing at doctor.”
Nate ignored the usual slur on his profession, and on the clinic he had set up in the local village. Leave for where? “I beg your pardon?”
“Are you listening to me, boy? I’m telling you, best go now. Parliament has been called for the eighth of November, and if you’re at the starting gates you’ll have a chance to look the fillies over before anyone else can scoop them up.”
Would Sarah Winderfield be in London? Even if not, London was the best place to find out where she was. “You’ll be going up for Parliament, my lord?” And what kind of an ass thought being addressed as ‘my lord’ by his only son was a compliment?
Lord Lechton waved a pudgy hand. “I think not. Bad weather for travelling. No, I’ll go up in the Spring. Not much to the House, now the war is over.”
Over in Europe, at least. There was still fighting in America. And from what Nate had seen as he had travelled here from Scotland, the next job facing Parliament would be winning the peace. The number of crippled men in tattered uniform
s begging on the streets is a scandal and a crime. They weren’t the only signs that the poor had paid the costs of repeated wars with France over the past thirty years. Come to that, London might be an even better place to practice medicine than here in Lechford.
“When will you leave?” his father repeated.
Even without his new quest to find Sarah, the opportunity to escape his father’s company was too good to miss. “Tomorrow morning, my lord,” Nate said.
* * *
The Winderfield twins had shared a sitting room since they first moved from the school room floor. From the day of their debut, it had been a retreat in the long and silent battle with their father and grandfather to resist an unwanted marriage.
Now they were free to pursue their own concerns, their work frequently separated them. Sarah laboured to further the cause of women whose natural protectors were absent or predatory. Charlotte gave the same dedication to bringing education to those denied it by their sex or their place in society.
Their private room became a place where they could relax with the one person in the whole world who would always love and never judge. Even after Sarah moved earlier this year to a lodge in the grounds of one of the duchy’s smaller estates, she still had a place in her uncle’s homes, and the private sitting room was still a retreat.
Her visits to London had become rare but busy, as she travelled to meetings and entertainments in search of donors and political supporters, and Charlotte went to different events and also inspected establishments she supported, where she often rolled her sleeves up to be of practical assistance.