To Tame a Wild Lady

Home > Romance > To Tame a Wild Lady > Page 1
To Tame a Wild Lady Page 1

by Ashlyn Macnamara




  To Tame a Wild Lady is a work of fiction. Names, places, and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  A Loveswept Ebook Original

  Copyright © 2017 by Ashlyn Macnamara

  Excerpt from To Tempt a Reluctant Lady by Ashlyn Macnamara copyright © 2017 by Ashlyn Macnamara

  All rights reserved.

  Published in the United States of America by Loveswept, an imprint of Random House, a division of Penguin Random House LLC, New York.

  LOVESWEPT is a registered trademark and the LOVESWEPT colophon is a trademark of Penguin Random House LLC.

  This book contains an excerpt from the forthcoming book To Tempt a Reluctant Lady by Ashlyn Macnamara. This excerpt has been set for this edition only and may not reflect the final content of the forthcoming edition.

  Ebook ISBN 9781101967850

  Cover design: Carrie Divine/Seductive Designs

  Cover photographs: Romance Novel Covers (couple), Fairytale Backgrounds (background)

  randomhousebooks.com

  v4.1

  ep

  Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  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

  Chapter 23

  Chapter 24

  Chapter 25

  Chapter 26

  Chapter 27

  Chapter 28

  Chapter 29

  Chapter 30

  Dedication

  Acknowledgments

  By Ashlyn Macnamara

  About the Author

  Excerpt from To Tempt a Reluctant Lady

  Chapter 1

  SHERRINGTON MANOR, SUFFOLK, AUGUST 1822

  All things considered, the morning’s ride had been a very bad idea.

  Lady Caroline Wilde, the second daughter of the Duke of Sherrington, reined in her mare and peered at the waterlogged landscape. The rain falling in a steady gray curtain over the rolling fields posed little more than a nuisance, though a cold one. But if Caro wished to ride to hounds with the most prestigious hunt in England, she couldn’t let a small thing like inclement weather stop her.

  In point of fact, her gender posed a far greater obstacle, but she might even overcome that barrier if she could prove herself worthy.

  Today, however, her troubles assumed a much different form—perhaps five feet and six stone of grubby boy.

  “Hang it all, where is that child?”

  Her only reply was the steady drumming of rain. The path at her mare’s feet was fast becoming a river of mud. She’d have to take care on her way back to the stables, but first she must find the boy.

  The task shouldn’t be difficult since the little imp had commandeered a mount of his own when he’d decided to trail after her. A quick survey of her surroundings proved that notion wrong. Not a single trace of another horse or rider presented itself.

  Cold droplets dripped from the brim of her hat to soak through her jacket and shirt. Boudicca snorted and pawed the ground. Caro patted the mare. “Ho there. I’ll get you back to the stables just as soon as I can.”

  The wet slap of hooves against packed earth cut through the rain’s constant beat. Behind her—the wrong direction—coming closer.

  With a press of her thigh, she turned Boudicca. Saddle empty, another horse pounded up the path toward the stables, shoving past in a spatter of mud. Caro sucked in a breath and wheeled her mount once more.

  Thrown. The boy had been thrown, but where?

  She spurred Boudicca away from home and back along the trail that led into the woods. She trotted through the trees, scanning constantly for a sign. Nothing. Nothing but branches and bushes and rain and mud.

  Soon she emerged onto cultivated land that belonged to the estate, bounded on one side by the road to London. Good heavens, had the lad taken it into his head to run off? But that made no sense. Since his arrival at Sherrington Manor at the end of the school term, he’d spent every waking moment in the stables, dogging Caro.

  Begging for riding lessons.

  “I want t’ jump them big hedges the way you do,” he’d told her on more than one occasion. Of course he wanted to jump. At eleven, he possessed more bollocks than brains.

  “You have to develop a steady seat and strong legs first,” she’d replied. “Not to mention your confidence. A horse can tell when you’re scared.”

  That had brought his back up. “Ain’t no one can call me scared,” he’d blustered, showing all the bravado of his father, the former Bow Street Runner who had married Caro’s sister.

  Jumps and enough mule-headedness to try it alone. Right. But beyond the low wall lining the road, there were no hedges on this side of the estate. Only fields, and the hay had already been harvested, leaving the land bare but for a low stubble.

  “Gus!” The wind tore her cry from her lips.

  No answer, but she hardly expected one.

  A few hundred yards ahead ran an irrigation ditch, churning with foamy, brown water. Her heart pounded harder. That, too, might provide an obstacle, not high like a hedge, but wide enough.

  She dug her heels into Boudicca’s sides. There. In the next instant, she saw him, no more than a pile of muddy clothes on the opposite side of the ditch. And that pile lay as still as stone.

  Damnation.

  At the edge of the water, she reined in Boudicca, not about to attempt the leap on uncertain footing. The mare’s hooves slid to a halt in the mud. Caro swung from the saddle and stared at the rising flood. Nothing for it but to venture across if she wanted to see to Gus’s injuries.

  With the first step, the bottom grabbed greedily at her booted foot. She yanked herself free, but the wild current snatched at her, its grip surprisingly strong. In the next instant, cold water closed over her head and stole her breath. With a splash, she righted herself, shivering as her breeches clung to her thighs and her hair came unpinned to flop into her eyes in a sheet of filthy muck.

  She flipped the offending tresses from her face. Her hat bobbed on the crest of the torrent out of reach. She gritted her teeth and waded across to the boy. “Gus?”

  Even this close, his inert form gave no response. A rapid examination showed no blood, no limbs bent at odd angles. Only an eerie stillness hovering about him that seemed to muffle the rain and the rushing of the ditch. Such silence had no business with an active eleven-year-old.

  Gently she rolled him over. His face was chalk white, his lips tinged with blue.

  “Gus?” She patted his cold cheeks.

  Nothing.

  She glanced at the ditch. Was it her imagination, or was the water running higher than before? Still, she must find the means of lifting the child and hauling him across if she was going to get him home.

  Kneeling beside him, she worked her arms beneath him and lifted. Her muscles strained with the exertion. Who would have imagined a skinny boy would weigh so much? Panting, she relaxed her grip for a moment before gathering herself for another effort.

  This time she managed to stand, but almost immediately her boots slid from under her, and she landed hard on her backs
ide, Gus on top of her.

  Oh damn, and blast it all. She would have given that sentiment her full voice, but her lungs were screaming for air. She heaved in a painful breath, and the clouds before her vision cleared.

  Out of nowhere, a figure loomed above her, the broad brim of his hat temporarily shielding her face from the cold patter of rain. She gasped as her gaze collided with the bluest pair of eyes she’d ever seen. Her mother had possessed a set of sapphires of that same deep, fiery color. The stranger’s eyes seemed to pierce her through, but perhaps that was merely the lingering pain of having the wind knocked out of her.

  The man’s expression betrayed nothing as he opened his mouth to speak. “It appears to me you could use my assistance.”

  —

  What sort of parents allowed their offspring to run wild in the rain? The question floated through Adrian Crosby’s mind as he stared at the bedraggled pair on the ground. Mud from head to toe. And what were they about, playing near an irrigation channel?

  Mischief, without a doubt. He ought to know because he’d been a boy such as these once upon a time, always into one scrape or another.

  The miscreant whose face he could see—quite delicate for a tenant’s son despite the mud spatters—opened his mouth to reply to Adrian’s offer of help, but nothing came out beyond a croak. The wretch had had the wind knocked out of him, if Adrian didn’t miss his guess.

  And that was to say nothing of the other, who still hadn’t moved. He lay inert across the first.

  Hellfire.

  Adrian crouched and dragged his hand across the second lad’s pale forehead. Beneath a layer of raindrops the skin was clammy. A gentle finger to an eyelid revealed only white. Out cold.

  “What happened?” Adrian asked.

  The first lad inhaled. “He fell.”

  Adrian gathered the younger boy in his arms and lifted. Straightening, he settled the limp body across his chest. “You fell and he fell on you?”

  “No.” The lad rolled with catlike grace and stood. Something struck Adrian about the movement as not quite adding up, but he couldn’t place what. “I mean he took a spill from a horse. I intended to take him home.”

  “Where did he get a horse?”

  “Same place I did.” The lad nodded at a spot past Adrian’s shoulder.

  Turning, he spied a mare waiting patiently beneath the downpour. A very fine mare, perfectly proportioned, muscular through the haunches. A jumper, that one, of sturdy stock. Far too fine for the likes of a tenant’s wayward son.

  Narrowing his eyes, he contemplated the lad once again. “That’s not—”

  The sight before him tripped him up. Had he thought the face fine-boned? The entire body was finely hewn and curvy. Sopping wet breeches clung to hips and a nicely rounded rump that could only belong to a female.

  Bloody hell.

  “Enough.” Her command cut in on his thoughts. “We need to get him to the manor and send for a doctor.”

  The manor. Right. She no doubt meant Sherrington Manor. Good Lord, the duke was kindly indeed if he’d be willing to call in a doctor for one of his stable lads.

  So much the better. Adrian had been headed toward a meeting with the duke when the rain had caught him. As it was, he was about to arrive for a business appointment wet to the skin. What was a little extra mud?

  “By all means, show me the way. Though I can’t help but note your mare is on the wrong side of the ditch.”

  “And what of your horse? Surely you didn’t appear out of thin air simply to come to my rescue.”

  His horse—the one he’d hired at the nearest coaching inn—awaited him at the side of the road. On the wrong side of the stone wall that separated the thoroughfare from the farmlands. And burdened with the weight of a boy, he’d be hard put to mount.

  He pointed with his chin. “Over there.”

  He hoisted his burden higher against his chest. The boy in his arms was sturdy enough, but his pallor lent his skin a translucent, otherworldly quality that canceled out the sure weight of his bones and rendered him fragile. A moan drifted from bluish lips, but something in that plaintive sound calmed Adrian’s thumping heart. At least the lad was alive and perhaps close to reviving.

  Adrian padded after the strangely dressed lass already starting for the fence.

  “Can you get him over the wall and onto your horse?” she flung over her shoulder. “I’ll show you the path.”

  He blinked the rain out of his eyes, but his renewed vision didn’t serve him any better. The way the rain had molded her breeches to her arse was downright sinful. He shook the thought aside. Now was not the time.

  Instead he stared pointedly past her to his mount, a heavyset but serviceable enough beast—as long as one ignored its bollock-busting trot—while she clambered over the wall.

  On the other side, she turned and held out her arms for the boy. Once again, the fineness of her bones struck Adrian. How easily he could span her wrists with his thumb and forefinger. “Are you sure?” he asked. “You couldn’t lift him before.”

  She glared in response, the hazel of her eyes somehow standing in contrast to the grayish-brown mud speckling her face. The same mud encased her hair, plastering it to her head and shoulders, masking both its length and color. “Lifting is different from supporting. At any rate, I slipped. In case you hadn’t noticed, it’s raining just a mite. Makes for treacherous footing.”

  He pressed his lips together to stave off the few choice words that leapt into his throat at her cheek and handed his burden over. She braced herself against the wall while he climbed the obstacle, mounted, and nudged his horse closer. He reached down, she heaved, and somehow he ended up with a filthy bundle of boy in his lap.

  He squinted at her, once more sizing up the delicacy of her build. Her lightness masked a distinctly unfeminine amount of muscle.

  “What about you?” he asked. Or more to the point, what about her mare, which was still on the wrong side of the damnable ditch, not to mention the wall lining the road. She’d been right about the treacherous footing. No sense in risking a costly injury to her mare trying to leap the barrier.

  She’d already swung her slender legs over the wall and jumped to the ground a little farther down the road so she could collect her mount without getting any wetter. Not that there could be a dry patch left on her.

  “Follow the road.” She pointed. “You’ll come to some woods in another furlong or so. I’ll meet you there and show you a shortcut.”

  Adrian forced his gaze away from the sight of her retreating form and clucked to his horse. The beast lurched into a plodding walk, but he didn’t dare chance a faster gait. The little blighter in his arms had already taken a pounding.

  Up ahead, the trees encroached. She’d meet him there, she’d said. Meet him on that fine specimen of a mare and show him the path to the manor. Far too fine a mount for one dressed as roughly as she. Something didn’t fit. She spoke too finely for a stable lad’s sister or the daughter of a tenant. Her accent—that fit perfectly with her mount and finely wrought bones. But her speech did jar with her garments and strength.

  It was only then that he realized—he’d no idea what to call her.

  Chapter 2

  “Good Lord, what happened to you?”

  As Caro hesitated just inside a back entrance to the manor—one used mainly by staff—her sister Lizzie emerged from the small sitting room she’d adopted as her personal writing lair. If Lizzie’s husband occasionally joined her there with the door barred, well…The space was out of the way and private for the most part.

  Caro had chosen this entrance for that very reason. The state of her garments wasn’t fit for the stable yard, let alone the manor’s more formal rooms. “Never mind that,” she replied. “Gus has had a mishap. We need to send for Dr. Fowler.”

  Lizzie paled. “Where is Gus?”

  “Right behind me.” Caro gestured to the stranger who had come to her rescue. Yes, he stood at her back, Gus cradled in his
arms, close, his presence a tangible thing. “He has him.”

  She’d have gladly supplied a name, but she had yet to learn it herself.

  He stepped closer still. Caro felt the movement as an increasing warmth, a subtle change in the pressure of the very air. A crack formed in the shell of mud and rain that encased her in cold. “Adrian Crosby, my lady.”

  “Oh. Oh dear. Yes, we’ve been expecting you.” Lizzie took a breath and called for a servant before advancing to brush Gus’s hair back from his chalk-white forehead. The boy’s lips were tinged purple.

  “He fell off his horse,” Caro supplied. “He’s been insensible ever since.”

  “Nowt seems to be broken,” Mr. Crosby added.

  A footman rushed up.

  “Alert my husband, and send for the doctor. Quickly. And order water heated.” Lizzie’s assessing gaze fell on each of them in turn. “Enough for three baths.”

  “I can—”

  Lizzie squelched Caro’s protest with a glare. “If I didn’t think you were about to catch your death of cold, I’d send you to bathe in the horse trough.”

  “I wouldn’t dream of fouling their water,” Caro countered despite the fact she’d been about to offer to strip off her muddy garments in an empty stall.

  “Instead you’re willing to befoul the manor, but there’s no help for that. We need to warm you. Mr. Crosby, you’ll understand if your interview must be set aside for the moment.”

  “Naturally.”

  Caro permitted herself a single, stolen glance. Crosby held his burden easily, as if the boy weighed no more than a doll. Only the bulge of biceps beneath a well-fitted jacket belied the slightest strain.

  She swallowed. Introductions were in order, as rapid as the situation allowed. “My sister, Lady Elizabeth.”

 

‹ Prev