A Christmas Charade

A Christmas Charade

by Karla Hocker
A Christmas Charade

A Christmas Charade

by Karla Hocker

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Overview

A charming Yuletide romance painted with gorgeous Regency detail.
 
Elizabeth Gore-Langton was hardly in a position to refuse accompanying Lady Astley to the Christmas party at Stenton Castle. After all, a paid companion must follow her employer’s wishes. It scarcely mattered that Elizabeth would be forced to face the man who had unknowingly broken her heart years ago during her first season. Most likely, the Duke of Stenton wouldn’t even recognize her. But once she looked up into his dark, piercing eyes, she knew this was a man who forgot very little and forgave even less. Well, she was no longer a blushing schoolgirl, and the dashing duke would soon find that a broken heart, once mended, could be formidable indeed!
 
Clive Rowland, Fifth Duke of Stenton, was in no mood for a holiday gathering. But the Christmas gala would provide the perfect cover as he investigated reports that French agents were doing a brisk trade in stolen documents along the Sussex coast. It would be devilishly difficult to play the host while tracking down traitors, but Clive was up to the task—provided he kept his wits about him and didn’t get distracted by yule logs and Christmas folderol . . . or the delightful charms of the disturbingly familiar Elizabeth. She was hiding something, to be sure, and Clive liked nothing better than unveiling a lady’s secrets!

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781626815759
Publisher: Diversion Books
Publication date: 09/01/2018
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 266
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Karla Hocker, a native of Germany, was the author of fourteen Regency novels and various novellas. She attributed her love of the English language and her fascination with the Regency period to a three-year stay in England. Karla lived with her family—and far too many cats—in San Antonio, Texas. She passed away after a battle with cancer on May 28, 2004.

Read an Excerpt

CHAPTER 1

One of the invitations sent out by Clive Rowland, Fifth Duke of Stenton, was delivered at an elegant manor house near Hitchin in Hertfordshire. The butler placed it beside Lady Astley's plate, then handed the rest of the post and two papers to Sir John Astley.

Miss Elizabeth Gore-Langton was in the breakfast room with Sir John. She hardly ever received a letter, but no one who saw her stare at the folded vellum beside Lady Astley's plate could suspect her of envy. The butler certainly did not. He rather thought Miss Gore-Langton looked flustered at the sight of the letter, her color fluctuating from pale to rosy pink and back to pale.

Sir John, shuffling through his own considerable stack of post, glanced up briefly. "Is that the Stenton frank on Louisa's letter?"

"Yes." Elizabeth's voice was flat. "Yes, it is."

"Good. Louisa will be pleased."

"Pleased, Sir John?" Elizabeth removed her gaze from the ducal frank in the corner of the letter and looked at her employer's husband. "An understatement if ever I heard one."

He chuckled. "Aye, she'll be in alt."

Elizabeth stirred cream and sugar into her tea. Yes, Lady Astley would be ecstatic. Sir John did not hide his pleasure either. If the letter contained the expected invitation, they would soon be seeing their son Stewart, who had returned from the Peninsula almost three weeks ago.

Juliette, the Astley's daughter-in-law, had written that Stewart's left arm had to be amputated just above the elbow. Although he was doing fine physically, he was in low spirits and did not wish to drive to Hertfordshire or have his parents come to London.

But, Juliette added, she knew how much they must wish to see their son. They must not worry; she would arrange everything. Her cousin, the Duke of Stenton, was planning a Christmas party at Stenton Castle. He had asked Juliette and Stewart to join him, and Juliette would see to it that the Astleys received an invitation. Then they could all be together at Christmas.

"I only hope Louisa will be strong enough for such a long journey," said Sir John, whose thoughts had run along similar channels as Elizabeth's. "But between you and me, we'll make her as comfortable as possible. Won't we, m'dear?"

"Of course we shall."

Elizabeth knew she must go to Stenton with Lady Astley — if the duke had indeed issued the invitation. She had been engaged to make things as easy and comfortable as possible for the squire's wife, who suffered from a weak heart. It would be the shabbiest thing if she were to ask for a holiday now, merely because she did not wish to see the Duke of Stenton.

The breakfast room door opened to admit Lady Astley, a frail-looking woman in her early fifties. Her delicate features had a pinched look, as though she had suffered a restless night. But her eyes lit up at the sight of the letter by her plate.

"From Stenton!" Bestowing smiles on her husband and her companion, she broke the seal and scanned the sheet of paper covered in a bold scrawl.

Elizabeth watched the glow deepen on Lady Astley's face, and her heart sank. If she had harbored some slight hopes that the letter contained a polite excuse, that his grace could not have Sir John and Lady Astley stay at the castle for Christmas, these were now dashed. There was no doubt that the expected invitation had arrived.

"We are going to Stenton Castle!" Lady Astley exclaimed unnecessarily. "Elizabeth dear, we shall have to get busy packing!"

Elizabeth smiled. She could not possibly match Lady Astley's enthusiasm — not if she must face the man with whom she had believed herself head over heels in love eleven years ago, but who had never noticed her beside her friend Rosalind.

Of course, she knew now that it hadn't been love. Merely infatuation. She was no longer a green girl, a shy seventeen-year-old miss making her first curtsy to society. She was a staid, twenty-eight-year-old lady's companion. She had acquired dignity and composure. And pride would see her through any embarrassment she might suffer when a gleam of recognition lit his dark eyes.

Tuesday, the eighteenth of December, 1810, was a clear, crisp day. A hint of snow hung in the air when Clive Rowland, Fifth Duke of Stenton, and his friend Lord Nicholas Mackay left London early in the morning. Snug in heavy, caped driving coats, Russian fur caps covering their heads, the gentlemen were undismayed by a snowflake or two, or by a blast of winter air. At five-and-thirty they might not be striplings, but neither had they reached the state of decrepitude that demanded a closed carriage, numerous rugs, and hot bricks.

The farther south the two gentlemen traveled, the less they thought about the weather and merely congratulated themselves that they had sent their luggage and valets ahead and, against the advice of well-meaning acquaintances, had chosen the duke's racing curricle as their mode of travel. The lightness of the vehicle had twice saved them from getting mired, and the duke's matched team of grays carried them swiftly over the first half of their journey.

After an early but substantial luncheon at the King's Head in Rotherfield they continued with a hired team that might not be as good as the duke's own but was by no means made up of laggards. By afternoon, they had penetrated the elevations of the South Downs and were bowling through the village of West Dean — five miles north of Stenton Castle as the crow flies, but twice the distance by road.

For the first time since he had agreed to reopen the castle, Clive felt a stirring of curiosity and excitement. Stenton, on the promontory of Beachy Head, had since medieval times been the Rowlands' main seat, yet he had never seen it. What he knew of the castle's history, he had learned from his uncle, Lord Decimus Rowland; for Clive's father, the fourth duke, had spoken of Stenton as little as possible.

Clive flicked the whip over the leaders' ears. "Less than an hour, Nick, and we'll be there."

Lord Nicholas, a sporting gentleman, cast his eye over the deep ruts, the sharp curves and steadily increasing steepness of the road. He also took into consideration that his friend had never before traveled to Stenton.

"An hour," he said. "I'll wager a monkey you won't do it in under an hour."

"Done."

Nicholas pulled a watch from the pocket of his waistcoat. "It lacks ten minutes till three o'clock. Good luck, old boy."

For almost a mile they drove in silence. Despite a sudden rush of impatience, Clive had no intention of pressing the horses and settled them at a pace he could easily control even on this abominable road that, from the looks of it, hadn't seen repairs since his father abandoned Stenton forty-one years ago.

He cast Nicholas a sidelong look. "Think I don't know you've been burning to ask questions about this Christmas gathering at the castle? Might as well come out with them, since I don't plan to spend the rest of the trip in silence."

"Hmm," Nicholas said lazily. "I could say I didn't want to distract you, but I know that won't go over."

"No, it won't. The man — or woman for that matter — who can make me drop the reins or do something equally foolish has yet to be born."

Digging his chin into the fur collar of his driving coat, Nicholas stretched his legs as much as was possible in the curricle. "Truth is, old boy, you closed up like an oyster when I asked a question or two in London. I got the notion I was sticking my nose into matters that don't concern me."

"I apologize. I did not mean to snub you." Clive negotiated a hairpin turn around a rare stand of trees, then settled back against the squabs. "Unfortunately, I did not get word until this morning that it's all right to take you into my confidence."

"You sound like a dashed government official."

"Not an official, Nick." Clive gave the fur cap a nudge that put it at a rakish angle on his dark hair. "A government secret agent."

The news would have startled anyone but Lord Nicholas, who was well known for his unflappable calm and his indolence.

"Suspected as much," Nicholas said. "Matter of fact, it wouldn't surprise me to learn you've been an agent for the past ten years."

"The deuce!" Clive gave a bark of laughter. "Damn it, Nick, you have a nasty habit of taking the fun out of every bit of news I want to spring on you."

"Gammon! May say I wouldn't be surprised, but — Dash it, Clive!" Betraying a more than perfunctory interest by the removal of his chin from the warmth of the collar, Nicholas looked straight at Clive. "You admit it, then?"

"Yes, I admit it. I went to Whitehall after Rosalind's death. Volunteered my services. Of course, what I really wanted was a commission, but, as my father pointed out, Harry was already in the army."

"Aye. Was in Holland at the time, wasn't he? Then came home on furlough and got buckled. And lost no time putting Lady Harry in the family way."

Clive nodded, but absently. His mind was on the six brief months of his own marriage. Rosalind had contracted the smallpox — the dickens knew how or where! And two days before his twenty-fifth birthday, he had been a widower. With a slight shock, Clive realized that in January it would be eleven years since Rosalind's death. No wonder his memories of her were blurred.

But, eleven years or not, he remembered the pain, the rage when she died, the desire to destroy something — someone. He had targeted those violent emotions on France, on the upstart Napoléon Bonaparte, whose armies had overrun Holland, Belgium, Germany, Italy. When he approached his father, however, the fourth duke had blanched and begged him in an unsteady voice to reconsider.

The duke was a strong, powerful man who usually looked and acted as though he were fifty years old rather than seventy. His distress had brought Clive to his senses. He had remembered that he, his younger brother Harry, and their sister Fanny were the fourth duke's second family. The only close family. Clive's mother, the duke's second wife, died in childbirth when Clive was eleven, Harry seven, and Fanny barely two years old. It was inconceivable that the duke, at age seventy, could remarry and start a third family should both his sons be killed in the war against France.

Quietly, Clive had given up his dream of joining the army and vanquishing Bonaparte. Then Harry had married Margaret Standish, and before he returned to his regiment the news was out that Lady Harry was enceinte. Clive did not doubt that his brother had sired a son — an heir, should something happen to both Clive and Harry.

Without telling his father, Clive went to the Secretary for War and volunteered his services. For six years he led a dangerous double life that, until Margaret's confinement, cost him a pang of conscience each time he faced his father. He was Clive Rowland, Marquis Sandown, the son and heir of the Duke of Stenton; and he was the daring spy, using a number of different names to travel in France, Italy, and the Netherlands. Only during the brief Peace of Amiens did he visit Paris as the Marquis Sandown.

Clive was at home when the news arrived at Stenton House in Grosvenor Square that Harry was killed in a battle near Maida in Italy, but there was nothing he could do to soften the blow for his father. The fourth duke was seventy-six years old. He suffered a stroke from which he did not recover, and on the thirteenth of August, 1806, Clive was the Fifth duke of Stenton.

Nicholas, as though he had followed Clive's thoughts, said, "I wager those cloth-heads in Whitehall made you resign when Harry and your father died."

"They did, even though I pointed out that Harry left a son."

"And a daughter," Nicholas said wryly. "Had the pleasure of meeting them both. Twins. That must have been a surprise."

"It was, although Margaret says it shouldn't have been. Apparently, they've had twins in the family for generations."

"Nothing has changed since Harry and your father died," Nicholas pointed out. "You haven't married and filled your nursery. So why the sudden change of mind at the War Office?"

"This past year, several important documents were lost or went astray at the Horse Guards."

"The Horse Guards," Nick repeated softly. "That's where Wellington's dispatches come in, don't they?"

"Precisely. And Yorke of the Admiralty reported similar problems. Secret memoranda apparently lost for a day or so, then recovered in some file when they had no business being filed at all."

"And the war's been going badly for us." Nicholas's blond brows knitted. "A traitor ... damn his guts! It fair makes my blood boil."

Clive briefly took his eyes off the road. "I didn't think there was anything at all that could ruffle your calm."

"Well, you're wrong. Got strong feelings about a lot of things. Just don't show it. But how do you figure in that mess?"

Noting a stretch of fairly straight road ahead, Clive flicked the reins. "There are reports of a smugglers' nest on the Sussex coast, where not only contraband is landed but also French agents. It is feared that copies of our most secret documents leave the country from —"

"Don't tell me," drawled Nicholas, reverting to his habitual languor. "This smugglers' nest is at Stenton."

"Unfortunately. Or, perhaps, I should say fortunately, since it was what rescued me from a life of boredom."

"Yes, I see now why you'd leave town during the uproar about the Regency Bill. 'Twas what puzzled me the most about this whole business. What with the Whigs already celebrating their victory and all."

"Let's hope there won't be a regency. The latest word from Windsor was that the king is getting better."

Nicholas grimaced, whether at Clive's optimism or because the wheels had hit a rut was impossible to tell. "King's been ill since the Golden Jubilee in October. A bad attack. Doesn't even know Amelia died. His favorite daughter, poor man! Heard he dreams she's gone to Hanover."

"Dash it, Nick! The mere thought of a regency, and Prinny's Whig friends appointed to high posts, is more than flesh and blood can stand."

"Aye. Let's talk about your business in Sussex. Are you acting on Liverpool's orders, then?"

"Yes and no. The War Office certainly has a hand in this scheme, but so does the Admiralty and the Foreign Office."

"Smoky, if you ask me." Nicholas cocked a brow. "Or so damned important that for once they put duty before their departmental bickering?"

"It's important. And so secret that Liverpool, Yorke, and Wellesley did not even brief their aides. And neither would they risk sending me to a deserted castle. Someone might smell a bubble and start asking questions."

"Dragoons!" said Nicholas. "Lots of 'em on the coast. Why didn't —"

"Dragoons could clean out the smugglers' nest, but chances are they'd lose the French agent in the fracas."

"Aye, and it's the spy Whitehall is after. He's the one to point a finger at the traitor. Or traitors. And that's where you and your castle come in. But why the house party?"

Clive slowed the horses as he caught his first glimpse of Stenton Castle in the distance. High walls concealing most of the main structure, four crenellated round towers ... nothing fanciful, yet, somehow, impressive.

"Clive?"

"Ah, yes. The Christmas gathering. It's my cover, Nick. If I had gone to Stenton on my own with nothing to do but patrol the beach, the smugglers might have smelled a rat and refused to land such a dangerous cargo as a spy. We'd have to waste time looking for the spy's new landing place."

"Quite. But I cannot help thinking that a houseful of guests will be a nuisance."

"On the contrary. I have chosen my guests with care. They'll be involved in solving their own problems, or feuding with each other. There won't be any interference or unpleasant surprises — like one of them deciding to hang on to my sleeve."

"That's all very well, but your duties as host ..."

Clive removed his gaze from the gatehouse and the open gate, which were now clearly discernible. He chuckled. "That, my friend, is where you come in. You'll substitute for me when the occasion demands."

Nicholas sat bolt upright. "The devil you say! You don't think I'll be left behind while you go after smugglers and spies!"

"What?" Clive did not drop the reins or even slacken his grip, but he did not check his voice. "Dammit, Nick! This is not the time to try one of your jests on me."

"No jest. Want to have an adventure. And if that surprises you, it shouldn't. Remember how we used to chase pirates and smugglers on the pond at Belfort?"

Clive stared at the friend whose sudden hankering for an adventure threatened to overset his carefully laid plans.

(Continues…)


Excerpted from "A Christmas Charade"
by .
Copyright © 1991 Karla Hocker.
Excerpted by permission of Diversion Publishing Corp..
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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