Drew Barlow, Earl of Denmere,
slouched on the brocade sofa and crossed his legs at the ankles. His highly
polished Hessians gleamed in the light from the fire. He stared at the flames
that danced and sent sparks flying up the chimney.
"What does an impoverished
earl do?" He addressed his question to the portrait above the chimney
piece. To restore the estates pillaged by his predecessor, marriage to an
heiress with a considerable fortune and probably a father in trade was
essential. While some members of the ton would look askance at his choice, his
family had created enough scandals to make the taint of trade a mere blemish.
He groaned. His mother’s passionate
nature, his father’s drunken behavior, the late earl’s obsession with gaming.
All played a part in his need to wed and his antipathy toward marriage.
A log fell and sent a rain of
sparks flying. The Dowager Countess of Denmere was the only woman he respected.
His need to marry money was as much for her as for the estates and to pay the
debts left by his distant cousin.
Aldora had rescued him from a drunk
and abusive father. She had seen to his education, and thought not related to
him other than by marriage, had treated him like a son. She deserved the
comforts he couldn’t afford to give her.
The library door opened to reveal
his host. Drew’s London house had been rented,
and for the past two weeks, he’d been a guest in his friend’s Mayfair
townhouse.
Tristan Atwell, Duke of Cairnton,
strode into the room. Only a white shirt relieved the stark black of his riding
clothes. He held a crop in one hand and leaned against the Adam’s mantelpiece
to study Drew. "Town is a bit thin of company these days."
Drew nodded. "I should have
come in March but I had a dozen problems to untangle."
"I have the acquaintance of a
wealthy widow who would favor an earl as a second husband. Would you like me to
arrange an introduction?"
Drew shook his head. "A widow
is used to controlling her own fortune and bestows her favors where she
will."
Tristan lifted a crystal decanter
and filled a glass with port. "A loan? My pockets are deep."
Drew considered the essential
purchases needed to put the estates in working order and shook his head.
"They’re not bottomless. I didn’t come to town to drag you into my
financial problems."
"Let me have your cattle. A
team of grays might lighten my reputation."
"And ruin your image."
Drew chuckled. "Why not one of whites?"
Tristan shrugged, "You make
being a friend difficult."
Drew looked up. Would Tristan, who
always had blunt to spare, understand the need to pull himself from the River
Tick? With an infusion of a goodly sum, the farms and herds would bring a
profit. "Tattersall’s will do the honors. Having me as your guest is
enough."
Tristan shook his head.
"Anyone who contemplates marriage is either a fool or desperate."
"I plead guilty to both
conditions." Tristan’s raised eyebrow and sardonic expression made Drew
laugh. "I do what I must. What do you hear from Michael and Niall?"
"From Niall, nothing."
"I’m sure he’s in the thick of
action. He was always one to love a fight. And Michael?"
Tristan’s stance relaxed.
"He’s awaiting the birth of his heir or heiress. Never thought he’d be the
first caught in the parson’s mousetrap." He turned from the window.
"What say you join me for an evening at Eugenie’s? Her charming cousin,
the fair Janine, frequently asks about you."
"Another time." Drew
followed his friend to the door.
While women looked on him with
favor, he seldom accepted their invitations to dally. To surrender was to flirt
with the loss of control, something he couldn’t afford. Too often, he’d seen
what happened to a man who gave in to his passions.
A footman approached. "Your
Grace, a message for the Earl has arrived. His man’s in the kitchen and awaits
an answer."
Drew accepted the note. As he read
the contents, he frowned.
"Bad news?"
"She wants me to come home.
She has received a letter concerning something I must attend to at once."
"Another demand for money from
some tradesman?"
Drew’s casual shrug belied a deep
sense of frustration that threatened to drag him to the depths. In the year
since his distant cousin’s death, there had been many such demands. "The
note is vague and so unlike her. I fear the news has overset her. I’ll leave at
once."
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