Also by Amanda Forester
HIGHLANDER
The Highlander’s Sword
The Highlander’s Heart
True Highland Spirit
HIGHLAND TROUBLE
The Highlander’s Bride
My Highland Rebel
THE CAMPBELL SISTERS NOVELLAS
The Highland Bride’s Choice
The Wrong Highland Bridegroom
The Trouble with a Highland Bride
MARRIAGE MART REGENCY
A Wedding in Springtime
A Midsummer Bride
A Winter Wedding
THE DARING MARRIAGES REGENCY
If the Earl Only Knew
Earl Interrupted
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Copyright © 2018 by Amanda Forester
Cover and internal design © 2018 by Sourcebooks, Inc.
Cover art 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.
Scripture quotations are taken from the Holy Bible, King James Version, which exists in the public domain.
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.
Published by Sourcebooks Casablanca, an imprint of Sourcebooks, Inc.
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Contents
Front Cover
Title Page
Copyright
Foreword
One
Two
Three
Four
Five
Six
Seven
Eight
Nine
Ten
Eleven
Twelve
Thirteen
Fourteen
Fifteen
Sixteen
Seventeen
Eighteen
Nineteen
Twenty
Twenty-one
Twenty-two
Twenty-three
Twenty-four
Twenty-five
Twenty-six
Twenty-seven
Twenty-eight
Twenty-nine
Thirty
Thirty-one
Thirty-two
Thirty-three
Thirty-four
Thirty-five
Thirty-six
Thirty-seven
Thirty-eight
Thirty-nine
Forty
Forty-one
Forty-two
Forty-three
Forty-four
Forty-five
Forty-six
Author’s Note
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Back Cover
For the courage to try something new and the wisdom to appreciate what you have, and to Ed, who does both.
Foreword
The Earl of Darington and his sister, Lady Kate, are twins, yet, like any brother and sister, they have their own perspectives on the world. The twin books in the Daring Marriages duo tell the story of a most-impromptu house party at Greystone Hall from the viewpoint of each twin. If the Earl Only Knew followed Lady Kate as she fell in love (most unwillingly) with the Earl of Wynbrook. Now, in Earl Interrupted, we get an opportunity to see the same house party through the eyes of Lord Darington as he is thrown into the company of the irrepressible Miss Emma St. James. Read the books in any order and enjoy!
One
High Seas, 1810
The Earl of Darington was hunting. He shifted his stance on the quarterdeck as the ship pitched in the treacherous storm. He squinted into the driving rain at the black outline of his quarry. Captain Esqueleto was rumored to be in these waters. Given the recent discovery of a wrecked ship and murdered crew, Dare believed the tale.
Esqueleto had been terrorizing the high seas for more than a decade. He was known to make a series of calculated strikes on valuable treasure ships and then disappear for years at a time, presumably enjoying his riches.
“Is it Esqueleto?” asked Mr. Everett, his first mate.
“No,” responded Dare, the ship finally near enough to determine her identity. “It’s the Jade, a French privateer.”
“Even better,” muttered Everett with some relief. No one had ever gone against Esqueleto and lived. A French privateer would make a handsome prize, though no doubt it would prove a worthy adversary.
Darington’s ship, the Lady Kate, was as fast as she was tough and was gaining on the French frigate. Dare surveyed his domain, ensuring his experienced crew was at quarters and ready.
“Run out your gun. Prime!” Men scurried to obey Darington’s command with skill and precision.
“Aim high, aim for the masts. Fire!” Darington shouted the command as the French frigate came into range. Explosions blasted through the raging storm. The Lady Kate shuddered with excitement at the simultaneous blast and recoil of the cannon. Acrid smoke rolled down the decks, a stench not even the torrential downpour could wash away.
“Over again. Lively now.” Darington had trained his crew to fire as well as any ship of the line, and a moment later, Lady Kate’s guns were singing again in an orderly and deadly chain.
The ships passed out of range and Darington gave the command to come about for a second pass at their enemy. He held up a hand to block the rain from his face, evaluating the damage to the enemy ship. The main-topmast of the Jade had shattered and was hanging limply, dragging in the ocean over the port side. The crew on the enemy frigate scrambled to cut themselves free of the broken mast, which was slowing their craft considerably.
“Looks like they’re making a run for it, but we got ’em, sir,” said Everett with a grin.
Darington squinted into the storm. He had not earned the reputation for being a feared privateer by being foolhardy. While other captains were all flash and bluster, he was somber, steady, and had never failed to take a prize after he set his sights on one.
“No, Mr. Everett,” replied Darington calmly. “They are waiting for us.”
Everett squinted into the storm. “Well, I’ll be damned. You’re right.”
The French ship had allowed her sails to continue to drag in the waves and slow them down so they could line up their cannon for a direct shot down Lady Kate’s bow. That French captain was a tricky one.
“Hard larboard,” commanded Darington.
“Cap’n?” Everett gasped. “Heeling so fast, she’ll broach.”
“She’ll hold.” His ship, a quick frigate named for his sister, was tough as steel and resilient as the lady for whom she was named. Kate would never go down without a fight, and neither
would his ship. “Hard larboard.”
Whatever the misgivings of his crew, his command was carried out immediately. Dare had led these men for years. He trusted them as they trusted him.
“Hold tight and ready the port side,” commanded Darington, grasping the railing of the quarterdeck as the ship pitched. Frigid ocean waves crashed over him, but he remained firm. The ship groaned and strained, but they were coming around the enemy ship. Instead of sailing into a trap, they were the ones coming up from behind.
They were so close now he could hear the shouts of the men on the enemy ship. By the time the Jade’s crew realized what he was doing, it was too late to correct their mistake.
“Fire!” shouted Darington. Canons roared and the main mast on the enemy ship shattered and fell. The ship was crippled but still dangerous. Grappling hooks flew from the deck of the Lady Kate, bringing the wounded Jade close enough to board.
“Boarders, follow me!” thundered Darington. He jumped through the twisted rigging onto the deck of the Jade, pistol in hand, his sword at his side.
Dare quickly dispatched an attacker and scanned the deck for the Jade’s captain. He saw the man in a gilded coat fighting on the quarterdeck and made his way through the seething mass of violence toward his object. Darington leapt onto the quarterdeck, just as the Jade’s captain knocked down one of his men. The Jade’s captain was skilled, but Dare had years of experience and drew his sword, striking fast, using his speed and long reach to his advantage.
The French captain was pressed back and retreated out of range for a moment, glancing down at the fight on the deck, which had turned in favor of the Lady Kate’s crew. Darington stepped back to allow the man to accept his defeat as a gentleman.
“I, Captain Lord Darington, demand your immediate surrender.”
The French captain’s jaw dropped for a moment, but he collected himself and ground his mouth shut, his jaw rigid. “I, Capitaine Desos of the Jade, do tender my surrender.” At the word from the captain, the crew of the Jade surrendered.
Darington gave the glowering French captain and his officers to some of his men to take on board the Lady Kate as others in his crew searched the ship.
“Cap’n! Cap’n, you are going to want to see this!”
Dare followed the sound of Everett’s voice into the hold. His first mate stood before an open chest, his eyes sparkling. Though Dare had been sailing as a privateer for five years and served with the Royal Navy before that, the sight before him gave him pause.
Gold. Gold! And lots of it.
Everett began smashing the locks off of more chests and found them similarly laden. This was not just a French privateer, but a treasure ship.
“Well, Mr. Everett, I do believe we have become rich men. Let’s get this cargo aboard the Lady Kate before this storm takes us all.”
The news spread fast among the crew, and no amount of wind and rain could dampen their spirits at the sudden windfall. In contrast, Captain Desos stood in sodden misery alongside his officers under the pouring rain and the trained rifles of Darington’s crew.
The Lady Kate was in better condition than the Jade, but she also had taken damage in the punishing battle, and debris was scattered across the decks. The ship pitched and everyone shifted to gain footing, while bits of splintered wood and mangled metal slid across the decks. A piece of wood that Dare had found days ago from a submerged gig in shallow waters hit Desos in the foot. The French captain picked up the board and Dare put a hand on his sword, ready for any sign of danger. Desos met his eye, pausing for a moment, then dropped the potential weapon with a shrug.
“I give you the choice of being taken back to Gibraltar in irons or being set in a gig to make it back to shore as you are able.” Dare offered the French captain the choice as he was a fair man.
“I take the gig,” replied Captain Desos grimly, for it was rough sailing, yet he fared a better chance with the weather than with British justice in Gibraltar.
“So be it.”
Dare watched as chest after chest of silver, gold, and other valuables were loaded onto the Lady Kate. He had been sailing as a successful privateer for the past five years, but this was the largest prize yet. Even after the admiralty courts had had their say, his portion would be generous. Five years ago he had set out to restore his fortune, and he had more than accomplished his goal. With his latest prize, he had enough to repay the investors in his “shipping” business and still be a wealthy man. Of course, that meant London.
Dare’s satisfaction over his conquest of the Jade dissipated. Given the choice between the danger of life as a privateer or high society, he vastly preferred the mayhem of the high seas. But he was no coward. Now that his fortune had been restored, it was time to take his place in society. It was time to find a wife.
A…wife?
Suddenly feeling unbalanced, Dare put a hand on the mizzenmast for stability. As the Earl of Darington, he had certain duties and responsibilities. He had no more excuses to avoid them. It was time to take a wife.
The awful reality of his predicament crushed down on him with bruising force. Heaven help him, he might be forced to speak to some young thing just out of the schoolroom to find said wife. And if she declined his proposal, he would have to speak to—oh, the horror of it all—more ladies.
Life as a privateer was dangerous, but stepping into London society to find a wife? That was far more treacherous.
* * *
Captain Desos barked orders at his men as they strained against the oars of the gig in the writhing sea. Another wave crashed over the bow, soaking him in the freezing salt water. If he survived, he would see that Darington regretted ever taking his ship.
For a moment, Desos had been afraid Darington would recognize him, but of course, the young captain did not know him. If he had, Darington would never have let him go.
Desos somehow needed to retrieve the treasure Darington had stolen before his father discovered its loss. Cold fear seeped through his skin to his very soul. If his father learned he had lost all their treasure—to Darington no less—his father would kill him.
He expected nothing less from Esqueleto.
Two
Waverley Hall, January 1811
“You want me to marry my brother?”
“Honestly, Emma, must you be so gauche?”
“Forgive me. I must have misheard you.” Emma St. James took a breath of relief. “I thought you said you wished me to marry Eustace.”
“I only made a suggestion. Something must be done.” Regina Ludlow St. James, Emma’s stepmother, fanned herself furiously. Regina was of a ruddy complexion, and her coloring always reddened when irritated, angered, or embarrassed. Despite Emma’s best efforts, her stepmother always seemed to flush a florid palette whenever they spoke. Emma tried to avoid her as best she could, but her tactics were becoming less and less successful.
“I am sorry if I have distressed you, Stepmother,” apologized Emma, eyeing the door. Despite the cold winter day, the brisk walk outside would be a relief from the uncomfortable conversation. “Would you like me to inquire after tea?” Emma began to rise, hoping to make her escape.
“No, no, do not run off again. This needs to be settled once and for all. You will be turning twenty-one in a fortnight!” Regina pronounced Emma’s crime with narrowed eyes, as if it were entirely Emma’s fault for reaching her majority.
“Please do not distress yourself, Stepmother,” said Emma. “I understand I will come into my inheritance, but I have no intention of—”
“Forcing me out of my home? Leaving me destitute?” cried Regina, pulling a handkerchief from her bosom and blotting her puffy eyes. She had once been a beauty but resisted the passing of time with the liberal application of cosmetics, the powder highlighting every line and wrinkle, giving her skin a crepey appearance.
“Of course not,” responded Emma, thou
gh if she was honest, the thought of no longer living with her stepmother was not an unappealing one. “I understand my father left the estate to me, but—”
“He left everything to you!” cried Regina, her eyes flashing.
“He did leave you a jointure.” Emma tried once more to convince Regina that she was not the injured party. Her father’s will had left the majority of the estate to Emma, though held in trust until she turned twenty-one. The two trustees, her stepmother and stepbrother, saw Emma’s coming into her majority as a threat.
“A mere pittance,” said Regina with a sob as she buried her face in her handkerchief.
“I have no intention of casting you out.” Emma intended to be comforting but it came out as more of a sigh. As she drew nearer to her majority, she was having to endure her stepmother’s dramatics with increasing regularity.
“No, of course not, dear.” Regina looked up with dry eyes. “For you are the sweetest girl, my dear, lovely daughter. I could not love you any more than if you were my own flesh and blood.”
Emma smiled tentatively in return, never quite sure about her stepmother’s sincerity.
“I…I do have another notion, which would be a great service to an illustrious person, a peer of the realm. You like to be useful, do you not?” Regina gave her a cajoling smile.
“I do like to help as I am able,” Emma replied in tentative agreement, doubting she would approve of Regina’s new scheme any more than she had appreciated any of the other plans her stepmother had devised.
Regina held up a letter with an air of importance. “I have learned that the Earl of Langley is concerned that his grandsons make appropriate matches. His daughter ran off with an American sea captain, and they live like savages in Boston or some such—oh!” Regina blinked at Emma, clearly forgetting her audience. “But that can be nothing to you, can it, dear? The point is, Lord Langley has eligible grandsons, sea captains I believe, and he has made polite inquiries about sending appropriate brides. He is determined to have his grandsons marry respectable English girls, not one of those brash Americans.”
Emma stared at her stepmother. Was she really so desperate to secure her own comforts that she would banish Emma to the New World to get it? Emma paused, waiting for her to say it was all in jest, but Regina returned her gaze with a distressed, pleading one of her own.
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