Forget Me Not
Melissa Lynne Blue
The characters and events portrayed in this book are fictitious. Any similarity to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental and not intended by the author.
Forget Me Not
Copyright © 2012 by Melissa Lynne Blue
Cover Design by Rae Monet
All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form by any electronic or mechanical means—except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews—without written permission.
For more information: www.melissalynneblue.com
Dedication
For my wonderful and supportive friends and family. And also for Marie…without you this book wouldn’t be here today.
Chapter One
Wheaton Abbey, England
June 1816
The scene below Lydia Covington’s third story bedroom window resembled a cloud in heaven or, bathed as it was in the glittering silver of the full moon, Zeus’ Mount Olympus. White was the primary shade to declare the day—Lydia was not overly fond of white, she always managed to spill on it—and the finest cottons, satins and silks had been draped generously over the lavish courtyard. Roses of every hue splashed color along the aisle her father would walk her down in just a few hours time—ten to be exact. The notes of Pachelbel’s Canon floated round and round her head preparing for the wedding march. Lydia’s jittery fingers tapped against the window ledge. Soon she would be paraded through the courtyard before every prominent family and member of the peerage. Her marriage to the third Viscount of Northbridge was the social event of the season.
The thought, the entire scene, was enough to turn her stomach.
It was more than being put on display before all of Britain. She’d been betrothed to Rolland Kensington for a little over five years, the engagement was not new to her, but before tonight, this very moment, it had never seemed real. With the cool breath of reality whispering down her neck so came the realization she wasn’t ready. At the age of twenty her life seemed to be… over. To become a viscountess was the quintessence of girlish fantasy, but the viscount—her viscount—did not fit the bill of the man of her dreams. In a word, Rolland Kensington was most definitely a fop, and quite likely a coward.
The knight of her dreams was tall, dark, roguishly dangerous, and most scandalously Irish. Lydia could listen to an Irishman talk all day and never tire of his voice... she sighed with a smile. Four years before she had seen one man, a soldier, who molded perfectly to her mental image of such a man. Tall and dark with pale green eyes the color of the sea her soldier—a young captain—had captured her attention, and most probably her heart, during a military procession. Their gazes had locked for but a moment, but the moment had been enough, and on impulse she’d given him a token as he’d passed. Even now the memory of his eyes could set her heart tripping. At the ball the following night the captain had sought her out, Brian Donnelly. Even his name was perfection. She’d spent the night dancing with him, and even waltzed in his arms. At the eve’s end he’d gifted her with a single blue bloom, a Forget-me-not.
Even now she couldn’t help but wonder… Did he ever think of her?
Her gaze fell to the leather bound sketchbook clutched in her hands. How many times had she drawn his face, never quite able to capture his haunting eyes? Dare she open the book? She knew better than to gaze upon his likeness, especially tonight of all nights. Slowly she opened the volume, letting her gaze caress his handsome visage. Lydia had a better than average hand when it came to drawing, but she’d never managed to do Captain Donnelly justice. Now she feared even her sweet memories would fade. The pressed Forget-me-not slipped from its hiding place between pages and fluttered to the floor. Lydia bent to lift the flower, contemplating the simple blue bloom as she twirled it between thumb and forefinger.
Over the years she’d been groomed, trained, molded in every visible way to become the ideal wife of a peer and the dreams of her handsome Irish knight mingled with memories of her handsome Irish captain had evaporated as water in the fire. But tonight with panic enveloping her every emotion she realized just how fervently her subconscious had clung to the shred of hope that a dream knight would magically appear, scale the wall to her bedchamber, and sweep her off her feet. Rescue her from the mundane existence sure to come. Lydia shook her head, a silly fantasy to be sure.
Truthfully Lord Northbridge—the man she was doomed to share her life with—did not even seem to like her. The viscount was near twenty years her senior, thick in the middle with soft hands that had likely never seen a day’s work, and his ever ruddy cheeks lent tale of his like for strong drink. She could forgive his age and looks—not so much his dependency on spirits—if she could name even one occasion for an intelligent thought to have slipped from his mouth. That afternoon her stepmother, Olivia, had given her the talk. Lydia’s cheeks burned just remembering the lecture, and the mere thought of the slovenly lord touching her with his soft, foppish hands was enough to create a well of bile in her throat. It was too much.
Physically ill Lydia turned dejectedly away from the window glimpsing her reflection in the full-length gilded mirror across the room. Even in the dim moonlight her complexion was a ghastly shade of green or at the very least a bit pale. Staring into the glass, Lydia could not quite divine the composed visage of the ton bride she would be expected to display the following day. Garbed in a white cotton night dress with her boring brown hair braided over one shoulder and her equally boring, too wide, brown eyes she did not look like a soon to be viscountess, she looked like… Lydia. Her eyes slid to the white muslin wedding gown hung across the front of the bureau. Olivia had felt simple elegance key for the wedding day, and she’d been right. The gown was perfect in its unassuming grace; the white courtyard polished to a dreamlike refinement; it would seem everything about her upcoming nuptials was perfect.
Ha! Perfect her left foot. Perfect for Lord Northbridge whose gambling debts had reached catastrophic proportion. Perfect for her father, knighted for military service and a successful businessman, nothing was enough for Sir William Covington. Born the son of a common farmer, his daughter had become little more than another stepping-stone for higher standing in the eyes of the peerage. It was not even enough that he was sure to be elected the next Prime Minister of Britain. The betrothal, the marriage contract, the whole of the situation was perfect for everyone but her.
Panic boiled over.
Without another thought Lydia hiked up the skirt of her night robes and bolted for the door. Fleeing silently through the upper level of the manse she headed for the servants stairs. The hour was well past midnight and the majority of the household should be sleeping; none stirred when she slipped into the orangery. Lydia reached the outside door and glanced right then left to ensure no one would see as she bolted across the dewy blades of grass toward the stables. As dampness seeped through the thin cloth of her nighttime slippers her mind whirled around the thought of disappearing into oblivion, becoming her own woman. Truly beginning anew.
With the one hundred pounds she’d stashed, traveling to Scotland would not be a problem. If the money ran out she could always hock her jewelry for a pretty price. The diamond pendent lining her throat bobbed against her chest, it would fetch enough to see her through a few weeks at least. The engagement ring as well would be worth a fair amount.
Lydia’s thoughts flipped to the correspondence she’d sent to her Aunt Madeline in Edinburgh. The older woman had little patience for Lydia’s controlling father and had agreed to assist Lydia without hesitation. Maddie had even secured interviews for a governess position.
Still… Lydia had never defied her father on so grand a scale, and abandoning a
peer at the altar would be tantamount to social suicide. Not that she cared for the opinions of the ton, but there would be no escaping a confrontation with Papa. He was an intelligent man, and would track her down without difficulty. Lydia steeled her courage. With Maddie’s help she could withstand her father’s tirade and support herself long enough to settle into a governess position.
As luck would have it the stable too appeared deserted. A few lanterns cast dim light across the aisle, guiding her way. Her sorrel mare, Lady Jane, stood in the fourth stall on the left. Cautiously she swept down the barn aisle watching for signs of any stable hands stirring as she passed. A soft nicker met her approach.
“Hello, beautiful girl,” she breathed, afraid to raise her voice and risk being discovered. She stroked the animal’s velvety soft nose. “What would you say to getting out of here?”
Dear Lord, what am I thinking? To run away on my wedding day?
Despite her preparations and logic, doubts whipped through her mind. She’d led a sheltered life, was this act of desperation nothing more than girlish immaturity? Perhaps even fantasy. The embarrassment to her father would be irreparable if she stood up the viscount. Of course Sir William had never asked what she wanted from life, had merely announced one afternoon that she was betrothed and immediately redeployed to France. She stood in limbo staring into the round, trusting eyes of her beloved Lady Jane, warring with the knowledge of her duty and the desire to flee.
Decision made Lydia darted into the tack room, passing by her sidesaddle for one that would allow her to ride astride. Feeling her way through the inky darkness she located the wooden chest where her bundle of boy’s breeches, shirt and riding boots were secretly stashed. Quickly she changed, stuffing the length of her hair beneath an oversize tweed cap, and tiptoed back to Lady Jane’s stall.
The horse shifted, whickering as Lydia slipped in, searching for treats.
“Quiet, girl, I don’t have any apples now, but I’ll get one later. I promise.” Hands shaking, Lydia saddled her mount, and surreptitiously led Lady Jane into the aisle.
The low hum of voices drifted down from the loft. Heart in her throat, Lydia jumped straight up in the air, yanked on the horse’s bridle and half-dragged the mare from the barn. She could not be caught now.
In the yard Lydia kept her back to the wedding pavilion, her father would be devastated on the morrow, but for once she was making a decision on her own… for herself. How often had Sir William lectured on the importance of “creating opportunities for oneself”?
She palmed the reins, turned the stirrup out and lifted her leg to mount.
A dark shadow grazed her peripheral vision a split second before the solid weight of a man plunged headlong into her, bearing her brutally to the unforgiving ground. “Ouff!” The wind rushed from her lungs. Her head swam and for a moment separating the stars spattered across the heavens from the stars floating before her eyes was impossible.
“Just what is this all about, boy?” The man pinned her hands above her head. “Lookin’ to steal Sir William’s horse are ye?”
Lydia blinked, once, twice, trying to halt the world spinning around her. For a moment she lay stunned, staring up at her attacker. The breath froze in her throat. Lying on top of her was the vision of her dark knight. The very soldier she’d danced with and dreamt of for four years thereafter. Brian Donnelly. He may well have stepped from a page in her sketchbook. His wildly curling hair shone black in the dim light of the night, his dark brow furrowed over glistening pale eyes, and—
“What the hell?” Brian’s gaze raked critically over her face. He reached up to snatch the tweed cap from her head. Disbelief washed over his features. “Miss Covington?”
Not even a flicker of the man she’d known four years ago touched his eyes. Her heart, the whole of her soul, ached. “Yes,” she spat, at last regaining her voice. “Now kindly get off of me. It’s rather difficult to breath.” Lydia couldn’t be sure if the difficulty stemmed from his bulk or the overpowering thrill of his presence. Tremors of awareness fairly danced across her skin. She willed the sensations to stop, for some time now she’d known that Brian had in fact forgotten her.
For the last year he had been employed in her father’s stables as a horse trainer, Brian Donnelly was famed across Britain for his ability to work with horses. On the rare occasions their paths crossed he never so much as glanced in her direction, but that hadn’t prevented her infatuation from flaring back to life. Lydia supposed it was silly to remain so affected by a single night, however, it was not so much the man she desired, but the way he’d made her feel. For that small space of time, in Captain Donnelly’s eyes, she’d known what it was to be special. In his sea green gaze she’d seen a glow of adoration that had never sparked Lord Northbridge’s eyes. And now… staring into the very eyes she held so dear, she knew she could never settle for anything less. If given the chance to break away she would find a man to cherish and respect her that she could treasure in return.
If she ever managed to leave.
“I said, get off.”
He didn’t budge. “Not until ye tell me what’s goin’ on here.” His eyes flicked toward Lady Jane grazing a few feet away. “It’s after midnight, I can think of no logical reason for ye to be out here with a saddled horse, disguised as a lad.” His gaze shifted back to her, a small, mocking smile quirking his lips. “Why, Miss Covington, it looks as if ye’re runnin’ away.”
Lydia narrowed her eyes, ire piqued. “I don’t see how any of that is the business of the hired help.”
Brian’s face hardened and she knew the barb struck home. “Seein’ as I’m hired to look after these horses. It is very much my business if ye’re sneakin’ about in the dark of night like a regular criminal.” He lifted on his arms above her, knelt, and rocked back on his heels. “Ye are runnin’ away.” He chuckled, the moonlight enhancing the amusement dancing across his handsome face. “I must say, lass, ye’re goin’ about it all the wrong way.”
“Don’t be ridiculous.” Lydia scrambled to a stand, backing away from Brian’s intimidating frame, thankful for the shadows masking the heat blooming in her cheeks. If she could just reach Lady Jane before he decided to make a lunge for the animal’s reins…
He flashed a melting grin, the gesture so perfectly boyish her heart flopped. “I’d say ye’re the one bein’ ridiculous.”
Lydia ground her teeth. “If you’ll please excuse me, sir, I’ll be about my business.”
Brian stood, laughing lightly, his every movement fused with such power and self-confidence, Lydia’s knees quaked. “The only business ye’ll be about is puttin’ that horse where she belongs, and gettin’ yerself back up to the house. I’d hate to be bangin’ on Sir William’s door this time of—Hey!”
Lydia reached Lady Jane and, in one fluid movement, grabbed the saddle and swung onto her back.
“Get off that horse,” Brian roared, charging toward her.
“Let’s go, Janey!” Lydia hunched over the mare’s shoulders, kicked her sides, and grinned saucily as they swept past Brian. The condescending lout.
At the last moment, the skilled horseman seized Lady Jane’s bridal, pulling the horse in a tight circle. Unprepared for the assault, Lydia wobbled, one foot popping out of the stirrup. She grasped a chunk of mane, barely recovering her seat. Brian looped a burly arm about her waist, dragging her out of the saddle, and trapping her against the honed strength of his chest. Lydia’s heart raced. The man’s body heat seared her, everywhere, and she was entirely too aware of the sculpted muscles crushed against her.
“Unhand me you brute!” Lydia shoved against him, but to no avail, Brian’s hold proved unrelenting. “I could have you fired for this. My father—”
“Oh, shut up, you spoiled, ungrateful little chit! Don’t threaten me with yer father when ye’re all but spitting’ in his face.”
Lydia stilled. Shocked. Their eyes locked as he settled her to the ground. Heat fairly cracked through the air. “I’ll
have you know, sir— Whoa!” Brian wrapped an arm around her lower half and slung her over a broad shoulder like a sack of potatoes.
“Runnin’ away my arse,” he scoffed. “I happen to know a thing or two about it, and you are not serious.”
Outraged she beat against his back. “Let me go!” No one had ever treated her thus.
“No.” He hefted a shoulder upward, successfully knocking the breath from her yet again. Brian strode back into the barn, leading Lady Jane. “The only place ye’re goin’ is home to bed where ye belong. Ye’ve no idea what’s good fer ye.”
Lydia growled under her breath, wanting to lash out, but biting her tongue waiting for an opportunity to present itself. Just what she needed, yet another man telling her what was best.
Once inside, Brian dumped her unceremoniously onto a pile of ratty horse blankets, grumbling all the while about spoiled, rich brats.
She glowered up at him.
He met her glare, appearing thoroughly unimpressed, took Lady Jane into her stall and proceeded to untack her.
“I warned you, Lucas MacGregor,” a dangerous voice boomed from the loft directly above them. “No one crosses me. My instructions were implicit. You were not to make a move until after tomorrow night.”
“Please. It’s not what you think. I—” A grisly crunching followed by a throaty gurgle interrupted the second man’s words.
Frozen, Lydia locked eyes with Brian, unsure what to make of the exchange until a man fell from the loft to land not six inches from her feet. A shriek erupted from her as a gush of burgundy blood splashed across her battered tan breeches. Her mind screamed, Run, but she was rooted in place, transfixed by the lifeless gray eyes of Lucas Macgregor. A strangled sob wrenched from her throat. She knew Lucas; he made deliveries to Wheaton Abbey every Thursday afternoon with a smile and a wink. He couldn’t be dead. Surely he would sit up, flash her his ever sunny smile—
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