by Christi Caldwell, Eva Devon, Elizabeth Essex, Anthea Lawson
Charlotte’s jaw dropped at the exorbitant sum.
“To the duke’s niece, the Right Honorable Lady Mabel Baroness Roundtree, His Grace the Duke of Courteland leaves a single payment of five thousand pounds.”
“Not an annuity?” Lady Roundtree choked out in affront.
“You’ve a wealthy husband,” Lady Upchurch pointed out dryly. “Isn’t your current portion far greater than five thousand pounds?”
Lady Roundtree sniffed. “One can never have too much money.”
“To the duke’s daughter, Miss Charlotte Devon,” the solicitor continued, “His Grace the Duke of Courteland leaves an annuity of one thousand pounds for the rest of her life.”
Charlotte’s jaw dropped in disbelief. One…thousand…pounds. For the rest of her life. Her heart thudded. The sum was unthinkable.
“Mrs. Fairfax,” she stammered inanely. “I’m Mrs. Fairfax now.”
“Mrs…Fairfax?” Lady Upchurch turned to Lady Roundtree. “Is this the woman you claimed was an angel sent to earth because she performed nothing short of a miracle organizing your downstairs staff?”
Lady Roundtree glared back stonily.
Lady Upchurch arched a disbelieving eyebrow toward Charlotte.
“The very one,” Charlotte admitted, peering up through her lashes with an embarrassed smile.
“There,” Lady Pettibone said briskly. “Surely no Courteland has hubris enough to blame an angel for the sins of her father. Do you disagree, Mabel? Are you qualified to cast the first stone?”
Lady Roundtree shook her head mutely.
Charlotte could not gloat over witnessing a baroness being put squarely in her place. Her head was still spinning at the sum she had just received. It was enough for a non-Society family to live quite comfortably. More than enough. She tried to catch her breath. Her mother had no debts, or Charlotte would pay them off without blinking an eye. Anthony—
Anthony. This could shorten his contract with the Duke of Lambley. Next year, perhaps, they could purchase a small cottage in the country. It would not be the life Anthony had hoped for, but it would have to do. She let out a shallow breath. ’Twas actually far better than she had dared to dream.
“How did the duke learn of my existence?” she asked in a small voice.
“He always knew,” Lady Pettibone replied flatly.
Charlotte’s heart fell. Her father hadn’t been ignorant of her existence. He simply hadn’t cared.
Lady Pettibone’s tone was imperious. “I, however, only learned of the matter after my brother took ill.”
Charlotte glanced up.
“I came to his bedside to oversee the final draft of his will,” Lady Pettibone continued. “When I saw no mention of Mother’s ruby necklace or ear bobs, I inquired as to their whereabouts. When Courteland confessed he had given them to the mother of his illegitimate daughter, I was shocked not to have learned of his indiscretion earlier.”
Charlotte flinched. She had spent her life fighting to be seen as someone of value. Even now, after inheriting an annuity, she was still nothing more than a mere indiscretion.
She lifted her chin. The devil could take the lot of them! She didn’t care about their high-flown opinions or their world-weary lack of interest. She was a person whether they cared to acknowledge her or not. If her esteemed “betters” had no use for her, well, the feeling was mutual. She didn’t need their approval.
Lady Pettibone cast a cold eye at her niece. “While a by-blow is not in fact a legal relation, a family such as ours must meet our obligations.” She lifted her nose. “I handed Courteland that quill, and informed him that he would fulfill his responsibility, by God, even if it was on his deathbed.”
Charlotte’s chin jutted defiantly. “Thank you, my lady. No one appreciates your attention to obligations more than I do.”
“You were Courteland’s responsibility,” Lady Pettibone corrected. “You’re my niece. You may not have known your father while he was alive, but now that he’s gone… In my home, you will always be welcome to call. I hope you do.”
Shock stole the breath from Charlotte’s lungs as she stared at Lady Pettibone in amazement. And in hope.
Of all the fashionable people who had disdained and belittled her, these were the individuals who should despise her the most. She was an embarrassment. She had no legal claim, yet had been bequeathed money that would otherwise have gone to them. She was a bastard. A whore’s worthless mistake.
And yet the most feared dragon in London would welcome her into her home.
Charlotte’s throat stung. Perhaps she wasn’t worthless after all.
Perhaps she was family.
Chapter 23
In a daze, Charlotte left the Courteland estate. She was so focused on scanning the street for potential hackney cabs that at first she didn’t even register the smart black barouche at the end of the walk, with its beautiful open carriage and gorgeous matched horses.
Until her husband leaped down from his perch to swing her into a sweeping kiss.
“Anthony?” She gazed up at him breathlessly. “What are you doing with a barouche?”
“Celebrating!” He swung her up and into the carriage. “Borrowed it for the rest of the afternoon.”
She blinked in surprise. “Celebrating? But I haven’t even told you—”
“Not the Courtelands. I don’t care a fig what they think you’re worth.” He pulled himself up onto the seat beside her and kissed the tip of her nose. “I know you’re worth everything. And I’d like to prove it to you.”
“To prove…what?” she stammered in surprise.
Rather than reply, he shook the reins and set the carriage in motion.
She laughed in delight as the wind fluttered her bonnet and chapped her cheeks. Until this past week, she’d never ridden in a conveyance more prestigious than a humble hackney cab. And even that wasn’t a privilege she took for granted.
She’d thought the baroness’s fine coach-and-four would be the pinnacle of her elegant travel memories, but this—this! The sun on her face, the wind in her hair, the warmth of her husband at her side as the horses clopped smartly into Mayfair and down Upper Grosvenor Street.
When an expansive, bustling garden appeared at the end, she turned to her husband in wonder.
“Hyde Park?” She clasped her hands to her chest and laughed in pure joy. “We’re going riding in Hyde Park?”
“Where else does a gentleman take a lady?”
Before she could remind him she was nothing of the sort, they were already inside the park and entering the legendary cavalcade known as the Ring. She tamped down her bonnet to hide her face.
Fashionable people filled the park. Charlotte’s eager eyes could scarcely drink it all in. Dashing gentlemen in splendid driving clothes. Elegant ladies in sumptuous day dresses, eye-catching feathers, glorious spencers. Even the liveried servants were the very picture of impeccable taste and unparalleled style.
She tried to stare everywhere all at once. “How many people are here?”
“A thousand, perhaps.” Anthony grinned at her obvious delight. “It’s mid-afternoon. By six, there will barely be room to move and you will be begging me to leave at once due to your boredom with it all.”
She smacked his elbow. Now that she was Mrs. Fairfax, the wife of a town gentleman, she would never beg him to leave. This experience was thrilling. She hoped to stay until they were the very last carriage left on the graveled path. She could almost pretend she belonged.
To her surprise, Anthony pulled the barouche to a stop at the inner edge of the Ring and leaped out to the grass below.
“Anthony,” she hissed as she gripped the side of the barouche to stare down at him in consternation. A few of the fine ladies and gentlemen with painted crests on their carriages gave them curious glances as they passed. She tried to avoid eye contact with them. “What are you doing?”
“Charlotte Fairfax,” he called out loud as he dropped to one knee. “We may have wed by
accident, but our marriage is no mistake. You are the love of my life and I would do it all over again. In fact, I’d like to.” He gazed up at her and raised his voice even more. “Will you do me the honor of accepting my hand in marriage, in a proper ceremony before God, with both our families present?”
She gripped the edge of the barouche even tighter as tears pricked her throat. Blast the romantic man. He’d brought her amongst the crème de la crème in London…to pick her.
“I love you, Charlotte Fairfax. I love your quick mind and your big heart.” He cocked his head. “I even love the snorts you make in your sleep and the way you have no sympathy whatsoever for the stains ruining another pair of my breeches right before your eyes.”
She burst out laughing and reached out to him. So what if the smart set were watching? Let them witness the true treasure Charlotte had discovered.
“I love you, Anthony Fairfax. I choose you of my own free will. I love the way you make me laugh and keep me safe. I even love your positively abysmal luck at the gaming tables. Had I not divested you of every penny you possessed, we wouldn’t be here today. I shall be proud to call myself your wife for the rest of our lives.”
With a grin, he sprang back into the carriage and brought her fingers to his lips. “I’d kiss you until you gasped for air, but such behavior is considered scandalous amongst this crowd. Perhaps I can tempt you into returning to the townhouse?”
“I’ve a better idea.” She pulled the folded bequest from her reticule and handed the document to Anthony. “How about we find a townhouse to rent and celebrate somewhere private?”
He stared up from the papers in shock. “One thousand pounds? Per annum?”
She blinked at him innocently. “There should be enough to commission a bedchamber, don’t you think?”
“If not, there’s always the Kitty and Cock Inn,” he suggested.
“Mmm,” she murmured as she laid her head on his shoulder. “I did enjoy the Cock Inn.”
“The lady’s wish is my command.” He snapped the reins to set the horses in motion.
Charlotte looped her arm through his and smiled in farewell at the sea of fashionable people blurring by. She no longer yearned to be part of their world.
She had everything she needed right there.
Chapter 24
Anthony sat at the head of the crowded dining table in his and Charlotte’s new townhouse and grinned at all the family members who had joined them for their wedding breakfast.
His radiant bride, of course. His mother-in-law. His parents. His sister, Sarah, and her husband, Edmund. Even his twin nephews were in attendance, although they appeared far more interested in sucking their thumbs than in the aromatic foodstuffs that crowded the dining table.
Sarah looked up from the boys. “You have such a lovely home.”
“I have my wife to thank for that.” Anthony sent a loving glance across the table at Charlotte.
She shook her head. “We have my inheritance to thank for the townhouse. I have Anthony to thank for everything in it.”
His mother raised her brows. “Did you win a large wager?”
“I refused to touch a single penny,” he said blandly. His propensity for gambling had never been a secret. “When Charlotte insisted married couples should share all windfalls equally, I spent the next fortnight researching investment opportunities.”
“He picked steam-powered cotton mills. He doubled his outlay within a month.” Charlotte’s voice filled with pride. “He is a genius.”
“I’m lucky,” he corrected. “You’re the genius. Tell them how you saved Lady Grenville’s life by helping her to decide whether or not to purchase her children a puppy.”
She smiled back at him. “There are now two book clubs vying for my membership.”
“Soon we shall require a second basket for calling cards.” He gestured over his shoulder toward the fireplace.
Because the wedding had been for family only, the mantel had already begun to collect cards from well-wishers. Every lady Charlotte had ever helped had sent their regards. Anthony’s friends had also joined in the fun. Even Maxwell Gideon had written a letter of congratulations, as well as a note offering fifty pounds’ credit at the Cloven Hoof.
Anthony had chuckled and thrown temptation directly into the fire, where it belonged. Everything he needed, he had right here at this table.
“A toast.” Charlotte’s mother lifted her glass. “May your luck never cease, your joy never dim, and your hearts always be full.”
Eyes twinkling, Anthony’s sister Sarah raised her glass. “And may the twins soon be blessed with a pair of cousins to play with.”
A grin curved his lips. He could certainly drink to that.
His heart softened as he met Charlotte’s eyes across the table. He had gambled more than any man ought, and won more than any man deserved. He had a wife he was loved. Family who supported him. Money he earned honestly, rather than wagered. Friends who sought his time, not his pocketbook.
Happiness filled him. This was more than simple good fortune. Anthony wasn’t merely the Lord of Chance.
He was loved.
Epilogue
Charlotte gripped the reins tightly in her gloved hands as she steered their shiny new barouche into the cavalcade in Hyde Park. She sat between her husband and her mother—the two people she loved most. It was only fitting for the three to be together in their new carriage for its very first promenade.
Her mother’s lively blue eyes took in their fine surroundings with enthusiasm. She sighed over every nattily dressed lord or lady, and cooed in delight at the spotted Dalmatian carriage dogs accompanying the grandest coaches.
Anthony, however, only had eyes for Charlotte.
It was he who had suggested a drive along the Ring for their barouche’s first outing. He who had agreed without hesitation when Charlotte had teasingly asked if she could take the reins. And now she had them.
It was exhilarating. Empowering. Terrifying. She wasn’t at all certain whether the horses were heeding her command or simply falling into step with the endless stream of carriages.
“Look,” her mother whispered. “A gentleman with a painted crest upon his coach has matched our pace, as if he wishes to speak with us.”
“I can’t look,” Charlotte said through gritted teeth as she clutched the reins. “I’m liable to careen right into him.”
Anthony tugged the reins from her white-knuckled hands and greeted the gentleman. “Good afternoon, Lambley.”
“Fairfax.” The duke inclined his head toward the ladies. “Mrs. Fairfax. Miss Devon.”
He drove off without another word.
Charlotte’s mother stared in shock. “Did a duke just publicly acknowledge us?”
“He probably ruined our reputations by doing so,” Anthony assured her. “We’re far more respectable than Lambley.”
Charlotte shook her head fondly.
Now that Anthony had finished repaying his gambling debts, he had no legal responsibility to keep his position as the night butler for the duke’s scandalous masquerades. He claimed he stayed on solely to relieve the duke of his money, but Charlotte rather suspected her husband enjoyed feeling useful. She certainly did. In certain circles, her name was the first to surface when someone was in need of good, sound advice.
“Fairfax!” A handsome gentleman with thick golden locks and a brilliant white smile rode up beside them on a black stallion.
“Lord Wainwright.” Anthony tipped his hat. “Heading to a ride on Rotten Row?”
“You must tell me who the divine creature was in the emerald dress,” Lord Wainwright said in hushed tones. “The one in the scarlet plumed mask with the diamond eyeholes. I am desperate.”
“I’m afraid I cannot help.” Anthony’s tone was firm. “You could consider speaking to the party’s host.”
Lord Wainwright rubbed the back of his neck. “He won’t tell me. He said you wouldn’t either, but I had to try.”
Befor
e Anthony could respond, the handsome gentleman cantered off on his stallion.
“Who is Lord Wainwright?” Charlotte asked once the dust had settled behind him.
Anthony grimaced. “Do you remember when you asked me if I knew any scandalous dukes and earls? That is the rake I’m delighted you didn’t meet before you met me. That particular earl has cut quite a swath in the ballrooms—even the masked ones.”
She nestled into him. “When shall I be invited to attend one?”
“As long as Wainwright might be there?” Anthony clutched his chest in mock horror. “Never.”
“Charlotte,” her mother hissed, rapping her knee with a fan. “Charlotte, look. That crest belonged to the Duke of Courteland.”
As the coach-and-four passed, Charlotte realized one of the ladies inside the carriage was Lady Pettibone, her terrifying aunt. Their eyes met.
Charlotte tensed. Not being evicted should she appear at the lady’s private estate was not at all the same as being given leave to acknowledge their tenuous relationship in public. She held her breath.
Lady Pettibone inclined her head. “Mrs. Fairfax.”
The breath whooshed out of Charlotte’s lungs in relief. “Lady Pettibone. Lovely to see you.”
Lady Pettibone’s coach pulled farther ahead, and the ladies inside disappeared from view.
Charlotte’s mother looked at her in awe. “Lady Pettibone greeted you?”
Charlotte lifted a shoulder as if the uncertainty hadn’t very nearly stopped her heart.
The truth was…it didn’t matter. It had taken her all this time to realize that most of London’s inhabitants hadn’t the least idea who she was, much less were aware of the circumstances of her birth. Even her mother’s once-infamous face no longer raised many brows. Despite the size of this enormous city, Charlotte spent the majority of her time in relative anonymity.
She was just herself now: Mrs. Charlotte Fairfax. Giver of advice, and member of lively book clubs. Now that Anthony was out of debt and they could afford to leave the city, she no longer desired to. She leaned her head against her husband’s strong shoulder in satisfaction.