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Abducted by a Fiery Lady (Preview)

Chapter 1: A Surprising Encounter

Luke leaned back in the leather chair and sighed.

Of all the things I wish for most, there’s nothing I wish more than for Carrington to shut up, he mused. He wasn’t about to say anything, of course. Although, he had the suspicion it showed on his face. He tried to wipe the sneer away, but failed.

Of all the things he wanted to hear, another of Carrington’s stories about his latest conquests was not one of them. Opposite him, Alexander Carrington, his grace, the Duke of Elsmoor, paused in his narrative to take a sip of brandy and give Luke a hard stare.

“What?” Luke asked mildly.

Carrington said nothing. He very pointedly said nothing. He tipped back the last of his brandy and slammed the crystal glass on the table, all the while keeping his icy gaze locked on Luke.

Luke frowned. What the deuce is the matter with him?

“I think it’s time I left,” Carrington continued. Again, he was staring at Luke.

Luke shrugged. “If you have some engagement to attend, then…”

“I think I am being encouraged to go,” Carrington said icily.

“Oh! Alex, old boy, not at all,” one of his friends – a fellow Luke barely knew – protested loudly. “We were all waiting to hear what happened next.” He looked put-out, giving Luke a pointed stare.

“I think I’m being encouraged to continue my narrative elsewhere,” Carrington announced.

He lifted his velvet jacket from the peg by the door and shrugged it on. Luke heard a low growl escape the vaguely-familiar man’s throat.

“By gumption, Carrington! I’ll give whatever knave’s putting you off a good lesson…”

“No need, Wiltshire,” Carrington said thinly. “Those of us with interesting lives can go and continue discussing them elsewhere.”

He raised a brow at Luke as he spoke.

Somebody chuckled. Somebody else cheered. On Luke’s left, Lord Canmure drunkenly pushed back his chair, springing to his feet in Luke’s defense.

Luke just raised a brow.

I don’t care if he thinks my life is interesting or not. I know that I find his quite boring.

He didn’t air that thought, however— he just gave Carrington a mild stare.

“If you want to go elsewhere, then, feel free. I’ll stay on a while longer.”

The room bristled with imminent violence. Carrington drew in a breath. His friends had all stood from the card-table and flanked him. On Luke’s side of the table, only Canmure and Exfield stayed. Luke, out of everyone in the room, was the only one who remained seated.

“If you’re so pitiable that you want to stay here and mope about Stella Longfield, then you can stay,” his adversary hissed.

Luke blinked. Outwardly, he stayed calm. Inwardly, he reeled from the blast. Stella Longfield! That was a cruel slap.

Few people, save Luke’s immediate friends, knew about his brief, but ill-fated romance. He had been truly interested in Lady Stella, but her attachment seemed superficial. She’d left town with only a distant goodbye, heading up to Yorkshire, where she’d become affianced to a Mr. Huntstone. Luke still mourned her loss.

Carrington held his gaze in open challenge.

“I think what I choose to think about when I drink is no matter for open discussion,” he said lightly.

This time, he did push back his chair. He felt his hand go to his belt as Carrington drew out one of his silk gloves. He felt that stony gray gaze hold his, and he stared back. The room tensed with the promise of violence.

“Well, lads, it’s time to light the lamps, what?” a voice mumbled indistinctly.

Luke let out a breath as the proprietor of Milway House, an old ex-soldier by the name of Major Banksfield, came in. He didn’t look at either faction, but went straight to the wall and started to pour the lamp-oil. All the same, Luke and every other man in the room knew the old Major’s policy about dueling. They knew he would go straight to the newly-created Watch and report them all. This, in turn, would attract the ire of the Prince Regent, who was vehemently against such scandal.

“I won’t forget this,” Carrington murmured.

“I might remember, too,” Luke replied insolently.

Carrington, who had been halfway to the door, turned around and glared at him. He was about to come back to Luke, but one of his friends, Wainsley, laid a hand on his shoulder.

“Come on, Alexander,” he said. “You know we should go.”

Carrington shot Luke a hard glare, but left. Their booted feet echoed down the hallway, then even that sound disappeared.

Luke leaned back in the chair, relaxing as he heard their horses leave the stables.

“That was close,” Exfield said. “What a clod-pate, eh?”

“Nothing happened, Exfield,” Luke said mildly, stretching as he shifted on the leather seat. He pretended nonchalance, but in truth, he was still tense from the encounter.

A duel with Carrington was no idle threat – the fellow was rumored to have shot an army officer recently. Nobody knew if it was true, but certainly Carrington’s skill with a pistol was well-known, and it wasn’t something Luke wanted to encounter first-hand. He lifted the remains of his brandy and drank it, wincing at the bad taste.

“This club could surely get better brandy?” he asked Canmure.

Canmure, Luke’s longtime friend from their Oxford days, gave him a squint-eyed stare. Whatever the quality of the brandy, he had been drinking it steadily since they arrived mid-afternoon, and was in no fit state to comment on anything.

Luke turned away, staring into the fire.

The Milway Club, like so many of the clubs in London, had many layers. On the surface, it was simply a place for a drink, cards, and relaxation. Luke knew there was prostitution involved, but he himself had never gone up to the rooms above the card-room. He also knew there were other aspects to the club, involving contraband and illegal trade, but he did not participate in them.

I wish sometimes that I could escape London. Life in the Indies seemed much better— more authentic.

He closed his brown eyes, recalling the feel of sunlight, bronzing his skin. The scent of spice on the air. The humid heat of the forests and the sound of myriad bright-feathered birds.

“Is this the card-room?” a voice said at the door.

Luke’s eyes shot open in surprise. He saw Exfield shoot to his feet, and Canmure turned his head, blearily staring in the direction of the doorway.

Luke looked there, too, and stared.

A young woman stood in the doorway. She was well-dressed, in a white muslin gown, which was trimmed with blue, and a blue jacket. Her bonnet was white, the ribbon-ties were blue satin. It was none of that which held his gaze, however, nor – though his eyes wandered there – her trim figure and high bust. It was her eyes. They were brown and warm as summer sun. Those beautiful eyes looked straight into his.

“Hello,” he said, swallowing hard. “Yes, it is.”

“I see,” she said carefully. “Can I come in?”

“Can you?” Luke asked. “I mean, um…yes, milady. Why not?”

He swallowed hard, again. He was goggling at her like a fish, and he caught himself, snapping his eyes from her lovely soft features, her rose-lipped mouth, and over to Canmure, who was so focused on the apparition in the doorway that he was about to fall out of his seat.

“Milady,” he said quickly, standing up and grabbing Canmure’s shoulders to pull him backward into the seat and save them all from embarrassment. “Sit here, if you like.”

He winced as Canmure grunted, then slumped back, reaching for the seat as though his brief intervention had merely been a passing mistake. He drew back the chair where Carrington had been sitting earlier.

“Thank you,” she said.

“Can I get you a drink?” Exfield asked.

His eyes had gone big. Luke, returning to his seat, stepped on his friend’s foot, making him shoot upright in his chair. As he glared at him, Luke forced a smile at the lady.

“I can find you some cordial?” he asked her.

“Um, thank you,” she said shyly. “That would be nice.”

“…name?” Canmure mumbled as Luke walked briskly across the room, looking for Major Banksfield.

“Um…what’s my name, you mean?” the woman said, quite affably. “I’m Miss Emilia Hudson.”

Luke conveyed quickly to the major that he wanted raspberry cordial, and the major gave him an odd look, but went to do as he asked. When Luke strode back to the table, Exfield and Canmure, both the worse for drink, were leaning forward in their seats, enraptured.

“I was in my coach, you see,” Miss Hudson was saying, as the two men listened intently. “And the wheel…there’s something wrong with it. My coachman has gone for tools, but I came in here, to see if I could find help.”

As she heard him come back, the woman twisted round in her seat and looked fetchingly at him.

Luke felt his insides melt. His whole body suffused with warmth. With that look of mute appeal, her big eyes wide, her mouth dropping into a sweet little “o,” she was breathtaking. He felt his lips lift in a smile, then realized that he must look as inane as his friends and pulled himself together.

“Um, the wheel?” he asked instead, sitting down with a thud. “You know what’s the matter with it?”

“Um, well, not exactly…” she said, sounding distressed.

Of course, she doesn’t, Luke! he told himself impatiently. What do you think she is, a bleeding carpenter? You probably wouldn’t know anything much more than she does about wheels.

“I see,” he said instead. “Well, do not fret, milady,” he declared with his best gallant-knight expression. “I will organize a coach for you.”

“You would?” she asked, eyes shining like stars. “Well, that would be ideal…” she began.

Then, to his horror, her face crumpled. Luke felt his heart turn to ice.

“What?” he asked, quickly reaching for his handkerchief.

Beside him, Exfield put out a hand to pat her shoulder. Luke glared at him so ferociously that Exfield let his hand drop to his side.

“Um, you see…” Miss Hudson said carefully, “I was traveling with luggage, and I had something important in the coach, to take back to Father. And now I don’t know what to do…”

Luke saw her take out a handkerchief and dab her eyes. He frowned.

“We can have it all transferred,” he said quickly, wishing that he’d come here in his own coach. “I can hire out the whole stage-coach, if need be?”

“It’s not so simple,” Miss Hudson said.

“Yes, it is,” Luke began grandly. “I have plenty of money, and…”

“It’s not that,” she said, dabbing at her tears. “It’s…I can’t explain!” I…” she looked at Canmure, who had fallen asleep, and Exfield, then back at him, almost as if she wished they were not being overheard.

I could wish that, too, Luke thought, feeing his own heart race. Miss Hudson, while fetching and lovely, was not a woman he could consider as a partner. However, he would like nothing more than to kiss her, to know her better. Maybe his father wouldn’t mind, or even know, if he asked him for the small apartment in Highbury to let her occupy, and…

“What is it?” he asked.

Again, she looked round pointedly at the two and back at him. “Sir? If you would only step outside with me a moment, I could show you.”

Luke almost gasped. He nodded, knowing he probably looked like a puppet in some grotesque booth show. Breathing deeply, he got a grip on himself. He nodded.

“Um, yes,” he said quickly. “Of course, Miss.”

She rewarded him with a big smile.

“Thank you, sir,” she said.

Shooting upright, Luke waited until she had left the room’s door, and then followed quickly outside. In the yard, she led him to a coach.

“What’s the matter?” he asked, expecting her to show him the damage. He looked down at it, casting his eyes on the wheels. Wooden and painted with dark varnish, it seemed undamaged, at least to his untutored eye.

“Not down there,” Miss Hudson said gently. “If you could look inside, please, sir?”

“Inside?” Luke swallowed hard. She wanted him to get in? Really?

Stepping eagerly up into the back of the coach, he sat down on the leather seat. Miss Hudson, much to his disappointment, didn’t follow him in. She stayed outside, round the back, out of sight.

“What is it?” he called again. “What was it you wish me to see?”

“Over there,” she said, again from round the back. Her voice sounded muffled. “On the seat, across the coach.”

“Where?” Luke asked, reaching across to the other seat. “Behind the padding, or…?”

As he rummaged around, trying to draw the leather-covered cushion forward, searching for whatever of import was hiding here, he heard a sound— the coach door, swinging shut.

“Miss Hudson?” he called. He pushed on the door. As he did so, he heard it lock, from the outside, a sharp click.

“Yah!” he heard the coachman yell, and to his utter astonishment, the coach whisked hastily away. With Luke trapped inside.

 

 

 

Chapter 2: An unexpected surprise

On the roof of the coach, Emilia hung on grimly as they sped away. Clinging to the driver’s seat that was largely occupied by the stocky body of Harris, their driver, she shivered as the cold wind cut through her outdoor cloak. It wasn’t only the cold that was making her shiver.

I do hope we can do this properly.

The abduction was easy – distressingly easy. Carrington had fallen for it with even more ease than Emilia had expected.

I wasn’t expecting a hardened smuggling-lord to fall for my ruse so readily.

She wasn’t sure whether to be pleased or discomforted. Had it really been so easy to tempt somebody into a coach? It wasn’t a skill she wanted to uncover in herself. And it wasn’t a side of gentlemen she wanted to know: it distressed her to think they were so ready to take advantage of an unchaperoned woman.

Now I know why June, my maid, always warns me not to go to the park alone.

“Where to now, milady?” Harris asked, interrupting her thoughts.

“Back home, Harris.”

Emilia wrapped her cloak more tightly about her and gritted her teeth, trying not to let her worries overwhelm her.

The coach rattled down the streets, flashing past coffee-houses and bakehouses, people promenading along the sidewalk. Emilia was glad she’d thought to sew the curtains together – there was no way that the Duke of Elsmoor could see out or alert anybody to his prisoner-status in the back.

At last, with her nerves shattered by worry, they drew up at her house.

“Into the coach-house, fast!” she ordered.

Harris chuckled. “Yes, milady. I know the idea.”

“I know, Harris,” she murmured. “Thank you.”

Of all the people on their staff, Harris was the only one who knew of her father’s illicit dealings with the Leedgate Club, and the Milway. He had run such errands for the earl before, and they could trust him with all kinds of information they couldn’t give anyone else.

Now, steadily, Harris guided the coach into the vast, darkened coach-house, slamming the doors. Emilia let out a sigh of relief.

“Blindfold him,” she ordered authoritatively.

Harris nodded and, without missing a beat, reached into the coach and gripped their prisoner by the back of the neck. A prize-fighter, who her father had rescued from the pit, Harris was as strong and unshakeable as he was trustworthy. He seemed to have subdued the fellow with no trouble, because aside from a brief and wordless scuffle, there was no difficulty. The next thing Emilia knew, he was drawing their prisoner out of the coach, his head covered by a black linen bag.

“Harris?” she asked, falling in alongside the man as he strode, still half-dragging their captive up the hallway.

“Yes?”

“You’re certain he can breathe…?”

“Mortal certain, milady,” he grinned. “There’s little holes, see?”

“Well, if you say so…” she trailed off.

He chuckled and started to march the fellow up the stairs.

Emilia followed behind. Her head reeled. Had they really succeeded in capturing the duke? She went through the events in her mind. One, find the club. He would be in the card-room, drinking with his friends, if she got there after lunch. He always was, or so her father said. Two, identify Lord Carrington. He was tall, her father had said, with a hawk-like face, and he was handsome, in his own way. He should be around eight-and-twenty years old. Emilia nodded to herself.

Well, this one’s tall, for certain. And hawk-like, and handsome, in his own way…

She shook her head at herself, impatiently. She wasn’t about to soften to him. This was the man who put her father through misery. He made her father cry!

She bit her lip, making herself cold with rage. She was showing him no quarter.

“In here, milady?” Harris asked. They had reached the top of the stairs. A small house, in comparison to their vast residence in the countryside, Mowbray House had a small attic with one cramped room. The door to this room was open now.

Emilia nodded. “Yes, Harris. In here.”

Harris shoved the duke through the doorway. He landed hard and Emilia winced as his knees hit the wood, resoundingly.

Harris shut the door and locked it, then turned to her.

“Anything else, milady?”

“No. Thank you, Harris. You can go.”

“Thanks, milady,” Harris said gently. “You take care, now.”

“Yes, Harris,” she called as he walked down the stairs. He had a slow, heavy tread, with a limp on his bad leg. “I’ll try.”

She waited until Harris had gone. Then, walking as quietly as she could, she headed back down the wooden servant’s staircase, through the door into the main hallway, and then up the carpeted hall to her father’s small study.

“Papa?” she called nervously from the doorway. She could hear him talking in a low voice, and knew he wasn’t happy if she overheard business.

“Thank you, Doctor Melling. You can go,” her father was saying. Then a pause. “Emilia?”

“Yes, Papa?”

They sat quietly for a moment. Emilia reached for a glass of water, and as she poured from the crystal jug, she studied her father’s face. He was flushed, too, and his eyes were too shiny.

“Papa?” she frowned. “What is it?”

“I’m ill, sweetheart,” he said. “Feverish. Doctor Melling was just here.”

“Papa!” Emilia shot upright. “Let me fetch something. A tisane, or a lotion, or…”

“No, daughter.” Her father waved a hand, smiling gently. “I’ll be fine. I have a concoction from Melling to take.” He pulled a face. “That will set me to rights. Now, try not to worry, eh?”

Emilia nodded, heart sinking.

“Father, I’ll try,” she said in a small voice.

How was she supposed to tell him what she’d done? He was in no fit state for a shock. He was flushed, his breathing labored. He looked worse than she recalled.

“Good, good,” he whispered. He was leaning on the desk, now. Sweat was beaded on his brow, his cheeks were red, and his eyes were strangely vulnerable. “I wish I didn’t have to…be so ill.”

Emilia reached out to take his hand. “Father. It’s not your fault.”

He nodded and squeezed her hand, then leaned back in the chair. “I suppose not.” Emilia, sensing that he wanted to sleep, tiptoed from the room. Rest was the only thing that would do him good at times like these.

Tiptoeing, she headed along the rich carpet and down the short stairwell that led to her bedchamber.

“Emilia Herston, you are going to have to do this yourself,” she whispered.

She felt terrified. But what else could she do? She couldn’t risk her father having a fit of apoplexy. That had happened once already, and she didn’t want it to happen again.

Slipping on comfortable slippers, she headed back along the plush hallway and to the servant’s corridor. She looked left and right, hoping June or one of the servants hadn’t seen her.

She knocked at the attic-room door.

“Hello?” she called.

When nobody answered, she remembered the obvious. He was still gagged by the sacking! She soundlessly unlocked the door and stepped in.

The bag was off his head. They hadn’t bound him, so he’d got it off himself. He was sitting with his back to her on the floor – the small room held no furniture – and he appeared to be staring into the cold hearth. His back was straight, legs crossed, hair a blond that caught the light of the lamp in the hallway, making it glow softly.

As the door opened, he turned. She saw his fine profile outlined in the lamplight. A long straight nose, full lips and flared nostrils— he was strikingly handsome, and eerily calm. She felt her heart soften, then tensed.

This man made your father ill! If it wasn’t for his worries, she was certain, Papa would be well.

She stiffened her back and pushed her way into the room.

“Stand up,” she ordered.

With steady grace, the man got to his feet. He wasn’t fast, but moved with a fluid economy of gesture that made her think of the dancers at the opera, or the lithe grace of a cavalryman. He turned to face her.

“You wish to talk?” His voice was grave.

Emilia swallowed hard. He was taller than her by the length of her hand, and his lithe posture made him seem taller still. He looked down his nose at her and she felt reduced.

She tensed her spine, feeling angry, and stared frostily into his eyes.

“I do,” she said.

“I see,” he replied.

His calm disarmed her. Expecting rage and defiance, she had come prepared for a fight. This peaceful equanimity was discomforting.

“You must be aware why you’re here,” she said slowly.

“On the contrary, I am mystified.”

“Very well,” she said, unconvinced. She paced to the wall, then turned, meeting his gaze. He stared back, unruffled.

“You will guess, perhaps, why you’re here, when I tell you my name is Lady Emilia, daughter of Barton Herston, Earl of Mowbray?”

He raised a brow. “I’m pleased to meet you, milady. You did not inform me of that, earlier.”

Emilia swallowed hard. “No matter,” she said sternly. What would her father say? She made her back straighter, trying to pretend she was the Earl of Mowbray, herself. “The matter at hand is, why do you think you are here?”

“No idea,” he said. He looked at her with mild interest. “I trust you will inform me, however…?”

“Wait,” she said, holding her hand up. She saw him raise a brow again, and felt slightly silly.

Letting her hand drop to her side, she paced away again.

“You are aware my father is a man of little patience,” she said carefully.

“I’ve not had the pleasure of the earl’s acquaintance,” he said inscrutably. “I trust he does not bring that impatience to bear on you, milady?”

He sounded concerned, of all things!

Emilia felt a sudden stab of remorse. This man, the Duke of Elsmoor, was so upright. It seemed impossible to believe he was the same man whose unreliability had tormented her father these past months! He was far more in command of himself than she would have been and she started to feel a grudging admiration for it.

Stop it, Emilia. This man is to blame for all your father’s suffering.

“You know perfectly well why you’re here.”

“Why?” he challenged.

Emilia raised a brow. “If I were my prisoner, I would use my manners. You aren’t aware of the danger of your situation, are you?”

“You’re threatening me?”

Emilia felt his incredulity as a scorn. She glared at him. How dare he act as if she was of no consequence, her threats laughable? “I’m not threatening idly,” she said softly, struggling with rage. “My father, the Earl of Mowbray, has many friends. Most of them aren’t the sort of people you’d wish to meet. They might take pleasure in rearranging your fine features.”

“I’m gratified you think they’re fine.”

Emilia felt herself blush.

“I didn’t say that,” she said gruffly. “However, trust me, if you don’t pay the five thousand pounds you owe, my father will make sure the debt is extracted by force.”

“What debt?” His eyes were enormous as he looked at her in utter confusion.

Emilia shut her eyes, fighting for control. “Yes, debt. The cash you owe him, for dues fairly won in cards. And…other things.” She hesitated. What was it, exactly, that her father had said the duke owed him money for? She couldn’t exactly remember. It was something to do with Irish liqueur.

“If I am accused of owing him money, you might at least let me know on what, and from when,” the duke said smoothly.

“Why should I furnish you with that information?” Emilia snapped, feeling her confidence returning. “If I told you, there’d be no telling how you’d try to fool me.”

“Try me,” he said. Was it her imagination, or was there a twist of a smile on his face…? She felt a strange tingle in her belly and looked down at her feet, her face reddening.

“I prefer not to,” she said. “I have no interest in deepening the acquaintance, nor in exchanging lies. My father told me never to trust his grace, the duke.”

“Duke of what?” the man said. He stared at her.

Emilia ran a weary hand down over her face. “Don’t try and act innocent,” she said. “I know perfectly well who you are, and you’re the Duke of Elsmoor.”

“I’m not the Duke of Elsmoor,” the man protested. He was standing up now, about five paces away from her. His fine-boned, haughty face was twisted in shock. “I’m Luke Preston, Lord Westmore… I’m twenty-eight, and I was born in Surrey. You can ask anybody. It’s all true.”

“You’re twenty-eight?” Emilia felt her brows rise in surprise. She had thought him older – somehow his confidence and composure belied his age. He was closer to her own age than she thought.

“Yes,” he said. “Why? How old do I appear to be?” He was smiling again, and she felt irritated.

“None of your business,” she snapped. She saw his brows shoot up and felt a tingle of satisfaction. She rubbed her hands on the skirt of her white figured muslin-gown. They were getting damp.

“I don’t know what’s going on,” he said carefully. “But I’m not who you think I am. You have the wrong person.”

“Of course, you’d say so,” Emilia flashed back. “You want me to let you out. I don’t expect the truth out of you. Not yet.”

He shook his head, and sank back onto the velvet-covered seat. He looked disheartened. Emilia studied him in the quiet. With that fine, wavy hair and that delicately-modeled face, he was easily the most strikingly-handsome fellow she had ever seen in her life. He also knew what suited him – the elegant brown velvet jacket and white shirt with its frothily-knotted cravat made him look every inch the city-gentleman. She was surprised – she hadn’t expected her father’s enemy to be so refined.

“I don’t know what you think is going to happen if you keep me here,” he said after a long moment of silence. “If I scream, somebody will hear me and you will be obliged to let me out of here.”

Emilia tensed. How dare he assume she had acted on some whim of her own! Had he not been listening to anything she’d said?

“My servants are loyal to me. If they heard anything, they would pay it no mind. Everybody knows who you are and why you’re here. And besides, do you think I would put you in the middle of the house? Nobody will hear you scream up here.”

He slumped forward, covering his face with his closed hands. Emilia felt again a softening of her heart towards him. She wasn’t cruel, and the thought of kidnapping anyone didn’t make her happy. She wouldn’t be doing this if it wasn’t for her father!

He’d be so relieved, if he knew I’d done this for him.

“Look,” Emilia said raggedly, after the silence had stretched beyond the point of sense. “I’m going to go away and leave you to reconsider your situation and your story. I will send you some tea and biscuits – you’re likely hungry and it’s past five o’ clock. Then I will come back. And this time, the truth, please? No funny stories about being somebody else.”

“But I am somebody else,” he protested.

“I don’t believe you,” Emilia said harshly. “I’m leaving now. I urge you to be ready to tell the truth when I return. The faster you comply, the sooner I can let you go.”

With that, she turned and walked out of the room, closing and locking the door after her.

She heard him knock on it from inside, but steeled herself. She walked away, the key in her pocket.

The sooner he tells the truth, she told herself, the sooner I can release him, and the better for all of us.


If you liked the preview, you can get the whole book here

    • Thank you for your kind words my dear Chris! I can only hope that you will find it just as interesting until the end.

    • I’m so glad that you enjoyed it thus far my dear Lauree! I hope that you will find the rest just as good.

  • This was delightful and different. The way it started off then led to different path was good. I still have a smile on my face. Can hardly wait for the whole book.

  • Wonderful opening sentence making me feel that this hero is an indolent creature. But it goes on with more & the reader discovers he is not at all indolent & that Carrington, his grace, the Duke of Elsmoor is NOT a nice person & our likely villain. I love the rest of this club-like atmosphere & the disturbance of the heroine into what is normally a forbidden place for a woman, the card room of the club! And then the reaer is surprized once again with the amazing abduction or our hero by said lady via the seemingly innocuous plot to have him inspect the wheel of her carriage & trapping him inside the vehicle!!
    Just a fabulous introduction to what will be a simply delicious story complete with vicious villain & handsome hero. I look forward to reading what happens next.

  • Interesting twist on the usually formulaic damsel in distress. I’m looking forward to reading the rest of the story

  • What a marvelous start, how is he going to convince her that he’s not who she believes he is? Is her father the actual scoundrel? Is there genuinely chemistry between them? As the plot thickens how much trouble will she find herself in and is this exactly what he needs to distract him of his previous ill-fated love affair. And I want to know why he doesn’t think she’s suited for him.
    Yes a good start, very….

    • I’m really glad that it intrigued you my dear Robyn! I hope that you will find answers to your questions in the complete book! 🙂

  • The first two chapters were delightful. I can just picture this innocent lady walking into a card room which was just not done back then. It is really cute and made me smile how she got him into the carriage. A great start for your book. I can see some humor in this book. I look forward to finish the book!

  • Have read all the comments and agree with most of them. I am a little confused by the fact our heroine was even allowed into the club. I also have a hard time believing her strong belief that she has the right man after he so adamantly stated he was not who she said he was. In my opinion, I would have questioned whether I had the right man. How did she manage to not be attacked in her first visit? The man (Luke) being abducted would have grabbed her and forced her to take him home. Why didn’t he? Too many unanswered questions for me.

  • This is going to be a very interesting story. Very risky abducting a duke. I want to see how that works out. Just one point. When Emilia enters the attic the duke is sitting on the floor because there is no furniture. A bit later he sank
    Back into a velvet seat. Am I wrong? Rosalie

  • I have really enjoyed and loved these 2 chapters. I will definitely buy the book so I can finish reading it.

  • Interesting story. Instead of being kidnapped as is the usual storyline, the Lady is the kidnapper. Can’t wait to see how this will develop.

  • Ok i am totally intrigued great start to the storyline I now need to read the rest of the book can’t wait till the release date. Sorry I am an impatient reader.

  • Wait until she finds out she has the wrong guy! The characters and story so far has sparked my interest. Looking forward to seeing how it all unfolds.

  • The first two chapters of Abducted by a Fiery Lady are intriguing. Believability in the two main characters, Emilia and Luke, and their interactions, is slightly stilted, but engaging. I love the plot, it’s strong, and yet I felt how Emilia conned Luke into her carriage could have been further developed.
    I look forward to reading the entire novel. 😁

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