Free Read Novels Online Home

The Earl of Sunderland: Wicked Regency Romance (The Wicked Earls' Club) by Aubrey Wynne, Wicked Earls' Club (16)

The Earl of Basingstoke by Aileen Fish

Here’s Chapter One of the next Wicked Earl in our club:

Chapter One

May 1815

London

Last night at Almack’s, a particular earl was observed dancing with a certain Lady P.W. three times! A short time later, it was remarked upon that neither person could be found. Lady P.W. was later discovered beside her friend, Lady M. G. Where had she been hiding, and who had she been with?

Lady Phoebe Woodson snapped her diary closed and set it on the small table beside her chair, patted the leather cover, then carefully aligned her inkwell to its side. “You looked so lovely dancing with Hartshorne last night, Marjorie. Those sapphires you wore matched your eyes.”

“I’m exceedingly happy with him. I still have trouble believing we’ve been married almost seven months. To think a year ago I was ready to wed someone else.” Marjorie sighed and looked toward the window, her face glowing in the sunlight streaming through the glass, which highlighted her short, black curls.

“You two are perfect for each other. Now it’s my turn. I must find the man who’s perfect for me. I’m twenty-four and am still single, isn’t it shocking? Papa has been giving me stern looks when each day passes and no gentleman has sent flowers or offered to walk with me at Hyde Park. I won’t return to the country without an accepted proposal.”

In truth, Phoebe had already found the man she desired with all her heart. She’d brushed aside the flirtations from three men over the years, unable to consider anyone but him—Nathan Carruthers, Earl of Basingstoke, with his wickedly handsome dark features, and glittering brown eyes, was the most handsome man of her acquaintance.

At least, she assumed his eyes were brown, and they must glitter, given how his smile lighted his face. She’d never stood close enough to be certain of the shade. Never danced with him, or pretended to stumble so she could fall into his arms.

Her problem was getting Basingstoke to notice her. They’d been introduced three years ago, but for all she knew, he’d promptly forgotten her.

“Do you think he’ll attend Lady Albright’s ball tonight?” Phoebe asked.

“Who? Hart won’t be there. He mentioned meeting a friend at his club.”

“Oh dear, I forget you cannot hear what I think.” The friends laughed. “We’ve known each other so long, I sometimes believe I know exactly what you’re thinking.”

“Ah, now I understand,” Marjorie said. “You meant Basingstoke.”

Phoebe actually blushed, her cheeks burning so much they must be bright red. “I’m foolish to think of him, aren’t I?”

“You’re foolish to think your father would allow you to even dance with him, much less marry. All those friends of his…the scandals…the rumors…even if only half are true, those men are truly wicked.”

“But doesn’t the thought of kissing one of those scoundrels excite you, just a little?” Seeing Marjorie’s frown, Phoebe continued. “Well, wouldn’t it have before you married? The gossip surrounding them might be as exaggerated as your husband’s situation was. Hartshorne wasn’t guilty of that scandal with his brother’s wife. Or rather, the woman his brother ended up marrying. That would have been quite the scandal the other way, wouldn’t it?”

Marjorie’s scowl hadn’t softened. “That W pin on Basingstoke’s lapel tells you all you need to know about him. Wicked. Your parents would never forgive you for associating with such a man, and you’d be ruined in Society’s eyes.”

“Very well, I’ll forget about Basingstoke.” But she wouldn’t stop detailing the rumors surrounding him in her diary. Embellishing them…making herself the willing victim of his debauchery, or what she assumed that entailed. Those stories she wrote might be as close as she ever came to a grand romance, so she’d take her enjoyment where she could find it.

***

Nathan Carruthers, Earl of Basingstoke, scooped his winnings from the center of the table and stacked the coins with his prior winnings. The club he and the so-called Wicked Earls frequented was quiet, the smell of stale pipe smoke lingering in the air. His friends and fellow earls, Grayson and Weston, passed their cards to the dealer, Sussex.

Grayson drank from his glass. “What’s this rumor I hear about you, Basingstoke? You’re planning to leave the club soon?”

“Leave? Never!” He eyed each of his friends, searching for the laughter they must be holding back.

“That’s not what I heard. You’ve decided to end your days of freedom and marry.” Sussex shuffled the cards and dealt.

Basingstoke coughed to cover his gasp of surprise. He’d mentioned something of the sort to his friend, the Duke of Thornton, but Thorn was very tight lipped. Who could have overheard? “That’s not precisely what I said. I don’t think I mentioned marriage, as such. I simply said it might be time to consider a family.”

The three men laughed loudly, and Basingstoke gritted his teeth.

“Last I heard, the one required the other, at least for a man of our station,” Weston said. “Although, the ton is convinced you’ve already fathered a son.”

“Leave Gabriel out of this discussion, or any other,” Basingstoke barked.

Grayson nodded. “What could have put such a thought into your head? You’re young…what, twenty-eight?”

“I’m twenty-nine, but that’s beside the point.” Nothing had caused him to waken one day and decide he needed a wife. Several members of their club had lately found love, but he wasn’t envious of them.

He didn’t think so, anyway. No, this was a whisper that he heard at odd moments of the day, while riding his horse or sitting alone with a book. A very subtle notion that he should probably ignore.

But he was starting to like the idea. Not the part where he had to search for the right young lady—he dreaded that the most. The result…the feeling of satisfaction when he sat opposite his wife at breakfast, or he read aloud to her in the evening under the glow of a lamp, those were what he looked forward to.

In other words, a marriage completely unlike his parents’.

“Basingstoke, when you’re done wool-gathering, it’s your call.”

He wasn’t even certain which one of the men spoke, but he quickly took his turn before anyone else could add to the good-natured derision.

In the morning, he would actually look through the invitations piling on his desk and see where to begin his search. He had no fear of running into one of the wicked earls in a ballroom, so he could enjoy his evening without the catcalls they’d likely offer.