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The Hidden Heart [MultiFormat]
eBook by Gayle Buck

  Regular     Club
List Price:  $5.00     $4.25
You Pay:  $2.75     $2.34
You Save:  45%     53.2%

eBook Category: Romance/Historical Fiction
eBook Description: Trapped by matrimonial plottings, Miles Trilby, Earl of Walmesley, did the unthinkable. He asked a dear friend to risk her reputation for him. Lady Caroline Eddington had always loved Miles. She would do anything for him. But, enter into a false betrothal? She was mad to agree. She risked more than her place in society. She risked her heart. Regency Romance by Gayle Buck; originally published by Signet

eBook Publisher: Belgrave House, Published: 1992
Fictionwise Release Date: October 2009


3 Reader Ratings:
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Available eBook Formats [MultiFormat - What's this?]: eReader (PDB) [232 KB] , ePub (EPUB) [229 KB] , Rocket/REB1100 (RB) [206 KB] , Adobe Acrobat (PDF) [691 KB] , Palm Doc (PDB) [237 KB] , Microsoft Reader (LIT) [195 KB] , Franklin eBookMan (FUB) [243 KB] , hiebook (KML) [513 KB] , Sony Reader (LRF) [271 KB] , iSilo (PDB) [192 KB] , Mobipocket (PRC) [244 KB] , Kindle Compatible (MOBI) [280 KB] , OEBFF Format (IMP) [338 KB]
Words: 71061
Reading time: 203-284 min.
Microsoft Reader (LIT) Format: Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud ENABLED
Adobe Acrobat (PDF) Format:  Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud ENABLED
All Other formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED


It was raining. The gray water hit the leaded windowpanes in a steady monotonous sheet. It looked cold outside, which made the warmth of the drawing room all the more congenial to its occupants. The room was ablaze with candlelight, only the farthest corners holding thin, wavering shadows, and a fire snapped cheerily in the fireplace behind the grate.

A footman silently and unobtrusively poured wine into the glasses that stood at the elbows of each of the fashionable gentlemen. The servant slipped quietly from the room without any of the four gentlemen having taken particular note of either his entrance or his exit.

The gentlemen's attention was focused on the playing cards in their hands. One gentleman's heavy brows were knit with the complexity of his thoughts. Another sprawled in a careless fashion in his chair, his thin lips curled in a lazy half-smile. Opposite them, the third gentleman sat with half-drooping lids, seemingly near asleep. The fourth, who was also the host of the impromptu card party, reached absently for his newly filled wineglass.

Lord Edward Heatherton, whose habitual expression of perpetual anxiety had deepened along with his concentration, broke the silence. "Dash it, Miles!"

The Earl of Walmesley set down his wineglass. He looked over the table at his frowning guest and gave a quiet laugh. "What, dicked again, Nana?" Lord Trilby asked, not unkindly.

"One should never bet against a man in his own house," intoned the third gentleman without opening his eyes.

Lord Heatherton, who was known affectionately to his closest cronies as "Nana" for his constant worrying, cast a fulminating glance at the sleepy-eyed gentleman. "All very well for you, Carey. You have lost but a pittance this night, whilst I...! But how was one to know that Miles's wretched luck would do such a complete about-face? I ask you! It is quite unfathomable. And it is no good saying one shouldn't bet against a man under his own roof, for it ain't true. Why, not two days ago in this same room, Miles scribbled a fistful of his vowels to us all."

There was general laughter about the table.

"You are a fool, Nana," said the thin-lipped gentleman in a tolerant fashion. He picked up his glass and threw back the wine in a quick swallow.

Lord Heatherton appealed to the earl. "Well, one couldn't have known, could one, Miles?"

"No," agreed Lord Trilby.

"This is the last hand for me," Viscount Weemswood suddenly announced. He stared into his wineglass, not bothering to guard his cards.

Lord Heatherton turned his head sideways so that he could see the cards thus exposed. He puffed out his cheeks in dismay and shook his head. Mournfully he said, "I am all rolled up twice over."

Upon the viscount's announcement, the sleepy-eyed gentleman abruptly sat up. Mr. Carey Underwood, now demonstrably wide-awake, demanded, "You're never going to attempt it in this weather, Sinjin."

The gentleman addressed raised his gaze to meet his friend's alarmed eyes. His sardonic half-smile widened. "Why? Have you laid your ready on me, Carey?"

Mr. Underwood swore. "You know very well that I have! And I don't wish to see my investment thrown away during the course of one of your freakish starts, my lord."

The Earl of Walmesley, who had remained silent, listening, eased his shoulders against the back of his chair. He yawned lazily before saying, "Come, Carey, Sinjin will hardly be so unconscionable as all that."

"There you are out, Miles. Sinjin cares for nothing while in the throes of one of his black tempers. Aye, nothing suits his lordship better than to set us all on our ears," Mr. Underwood said bitterly.

"You don't mean to set out in this storm, do you, Sinjin? The horses will do no good in it," Lord Heatherton said, his heavy brows puckered low over his soulful brown eyes. He sighed. "I've plunked down a pony on you myself, you know."

Viscount Weemswood glanced at the Earl of Walmesley. "And you, Miles?" he asked softly. "Do you also add your persuasions to those of our companions?"

Lord Trilby shrugged. He riffled his cards through his long fingers. "You may go to the devil for all that I care about the matter, Sinjin. You'll do as you wish in any event, whatever the rest of us may say."

"Well, if that ain't just like you, Miles! All unconcern and disinterest, even though you yourself bet sharply in Sinjin's favor," Mr. Underwood exclaimed.

Viscount Weemswood cracked a laugh. The expression in his cold eyes warmed as he said, "I am flattered, indeed. Your faith in me surpasses all understanding, my lord."

Lord Trilby lifted his brows. "Do you think so? I had thought that I expressed just the right dash of indifference. I am forced to conclude that I am losing my touch."

The viscount swung lithely out of his chair, casting down his cards as he did so. "So you are, my friend. Nana, you may claim my winnings from the last hand. I should not wish you to leave tonight with your pockets completely to let-not after you have expressed such touching concern for my cattle. Place it on my chances, if you wish. As for my racing tonight"--he threw a mocking glance in Mr. Underwood's direction--"I am not so damnable a fool as all that." His lordship made a careless salute that encompassed them all before sauntering to the door and opening it.

"I say, mighty handsome of you, Sinjin. You don't often make the kingly gesture," Lord Heatherton said, gratified. He began counting his gratis winnings.

Mr. Underwood stared after the viscount as his lordship disappeared through the open door. "No, it isn't like him at all." He glanced at the Earl of Walmesley. "I think that I shall go after his lordship, just to tag along a bit and perhaps share a cab."

"Sinjin will not turn a kindly eye on uninvited company,'' Lord Trilby said quietly.

"Don't I know it," Mr. Underwood agreed feelingly. He rose from his chair. "I've felt the sting of his damnable cutting tongue before this. All the same, his lordship is acting in a queer mood even for him. Well, see what he has tossed to Nana as coolly as you please, as though we don't know he is four quarters to the wind since the old gentleman up and married that mistress of his because she was increasing. Dash it, Miles, where's the justice in it?"

Lord Trilby fingered his wineglass. "One learns early enough that justice is blind, my idealistic friend."

Mr. Underwood was affronted. "I am no more an idealist than yourself, Miles! If I choose to ensure that Sinjin makes his way safely to his door, it is because I wish to protect my investment in this race." Mr. Underwood stared at the earl, daring his lordship to challenge his statement. When the earl only smiled, Mr. Underwood gave a sharp nod of satisfaction. He left the room, and the remaining gentlemen could hear his raised voice. "Weemswood! Wait a moment, for I've a notion to share that cab."

"I shall be taking my leave also, Miles," Lord Heatherton said as he finished collecting his winnings. He swept them into the capacious pockets of his frock coat.

The earl cast a glance at the clock on the mantel. "It is not above two-thirty in the morning and I am to be entirely deserted," Lord Trilby complained.

Lord Heatherton paused to look at his host, wearing his most anxious expression. "I hope you are not offended? The thing of it is, Miles, m'mother is in town and I promised that I would meet her tomorrow--today!--for breakfast, and I need to make myself presentable."

Lord Trilby was too familiar with the terror with which Lord Heatherton regarded his mother's infrequent London visits not to feel sympathy for his friend. "Then you must go, indeed. No, Nana, not another word of explanation is necessary. Females of any persuasion have a natural bent for making us poor fellows as uncomfortable as possible."

"That's it in a nutshell," Lord Heatherton said, relieved that the earl understood his predicament so well.

The Earl of Walmesley pulled the bell rope and when the footman appeared requested that Lord Heatherton's driver be notified of his lordship's desire to depart. The footman left. Lord Trilby picked up the more-than-half-emptied bottle of wine from the table and splashed a measure into Lord Heatherton's glass. He handed the glass to his friend. "Here, Nana, fortify yourself against the coming ordeal."

"Don't mind if I do," Lord Heatherton said, seizing on the wineglass. He was not usually given to excessive drink, preferring to sip appreciatively at a good brandy such as the earl served, but this time he downed the wine without hesitation. He coughed a little as he returned the glass to the table. "Thank you, my lord. You are a true friend," he said hoarsely.

"I am happy that you think so, Nana," Lord Trilby said, amused.

He walked with his last guest from the drawing room to the front door. "Pray give my regards to your mother, my lord," Lord Trilby said, speaking in a more formal fashion than was his wont for the sake of the servants' presence. He gestured for the footman to open the door and signal Lord Heatherton's driver.

"I shall be certain to do so, my lord. M'mother approves of you more than all the rest," Lord Heatherton said. At the earl's expression of mild surprise, he confided, "She once told me that you at least are respectable, not like Carey with his preference for the petticoats or Sinjin with his taste for hardened gaming."

"Indeed!"

Lord Heatherton's face split in a rare grin as he stepped out into the rain. He was delighted to have shaken even by a hair the Earl of Walmesley's famous and unshakable self-possession. With a wave, he dashed down the steps to his waiting carriage.

The door was closed by the footman, but Lord Trilby remained fixed where his friend had left him. He stood a moment more in reflection.

"Good God, I am become respectable. What an intolerable bore," he murmured. Then he shrugged and went upstairs to his bed, leaving the butler and the footman to straighten up the drawing room, put out the candles, and bank the fire.


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