Don't Bargain with the Devil Read online




  “ANYONE WHO LOVES ROMANCE MUST READ SABRINA JEFFRIES!”

  —New York Times bestselling author Lisa Kleypas

  The Sinful Suitors

  THE PLEASURES OF PASSION

  “Known for her sensual, smart love stories with their marvelously witty dialogues and unforgettable characters, Jeffries crafts another winner in her Sinful Suitors series. From the heart-wrenching prologue to the HEA, readers will be utterly captivated.”

  —RT Book Reviews (41/2 stars, Top Pick)

  “Quick wit, lively repartee, and delicious sensuality drive the elaborate plot of this sinfully delightful addition to Jeffries’s latest series.”

  —Library Journal (starred review)

  THE DANGER OF DESIRE

  “With its irresistible combination of witty banter, well-defined characters, and a wonderful surfeit of breathtaking sensuality, the latest in Jeffries’s Sinful Suitors series is a straight flush.”

  —Booklist (starred review)

  “This book is a must-read, with enough humor and heart to leave you vaulting between tears and laughter.”

  —Heroes and Heartbreakers

  THE STUDY OF SEDUCTION

  “Jeffries employs the classic marriage-of-convenience plotline to its best advantage. . . . She knows what readers want and she delivers on every level.”

  —RT Book Reviews (41/2 stars, Top Pick)

  “Richly nuanced characters . . . powerful sexual chemistry . . . a wonderful treat for both new and longtime fans of this consistently satisfying author.”

  —Booklist (starred review)

  THE ART OF SINNING

  “With every book, Jeffries grows into an even more accomplished writer whose memorable characters and unforgettable stories speak to readers on many levels.”

  —RT Book Reviews (41/2 stars, Top Pick)

  “Veteran historical romance author Jeffries launches her Sinful Suitors Regency series with two effortlessly crafted charismatic protagonists.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  Also from New York Times and USA Today bestselling author

  SABRINA JEFFRIES

  The Duke’s Men

  IF THE VISCOUNT FALLS

  “Jeffries’s addictive series satisfies.”

  —Library Journal

  HOW THE SCOUNDREL SEDUCES

  “Scorching. . . . From cover to cover, it sizzles.”

  —Reader to Reader

  “Marvelous storytelling. . . . Memorable.”

  —RT Book Reviews (41/2 stars, Top Pick, K.I.S.S. Award)

  WHEN THE ROGUE RETURNS

  “Blends the pace of a thriller with the romance of the Regency era.”

  —Woman’s Day

  “Enthralling . . . rich in passion and danger.”

  —Booklist (starred review)

  WHAT THE DUKE DESIRES

  “A totally engaging, adventurous love story with an oh-so-wonderful ending.”

  —RT Book Reviews

  “Full of all the intriguing characters, brisk plotting, and witty dialogue that Jeffries’s readers have come to expect.”

  —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

  The New York Times bestselling “must-read series” (Romance Reviews Today)

  The Hellions of Halstead Hall

  A LADY NEVER SURRENDERS

  “Jeffries pulls out all the stops. . . . Not to be missed.”

  —RT Book Reviews (41/2 stars, Top Pick)

  TO WED A WILD LORD

  “Wonderfully witty, deliciously seductive, graced with humor and charm.”

  —Library Journal (starred review)

  HOW TO WOO A RELUCTANT LADY

  “Steamy passion, dangerous intrigue, and just the right amount of tart wit.”

  —Booklist

  A HELLION IN HER BED

  “Jeffries’s sense of humor and delightfully delicious sensuality spice things up!”

  —RT Book Reviews (41/2 stars)

  THE TRUTH ABOUT LORD STONEVILLE

  “Jeffries combines her hallmark humor, poignancy, and sensuality to perfection.”

  —RT Book Reviews (41/2 stars, Top Pick)

  “Delectably witty dialogue . . . and scorching sexual chemistry.”

  —Booklist

  Thank you for downloading this Simon & Schuster ebook.

  * * *

  Get a FREE ebook when you join our mailing list. Plus, get updates on new releases, deals, recommended reads, and more from Simon & Schuster. Click below to sign up and see terms and conditions.

  CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP

  Already a subscriber? Provide your email again so we can register this ebook and send you more of what you like to read. You will continue to receive exclusive offers in your inbox.

  To my wonderful Puerto Rican sister-in-law, Erika Martin, who helped me with the Spanish in this book.

  Thanks for being such a doll!

  Chapter One

  Richmond, Surrey

  Late April 1824

  Dear Charlotte,

  How thoughtless of your drawing instructor to quit just before the Easter term begins! At least you have Miss Seton to help you until you can replace the irresponsible woman. Though I do hope she has grown out of what you called “her inability to think before speaking.”

  Your friend and cousin,

  Michael

  Lucinda Seton needed an impressive suitor, and she needed one now.

  A prince would be her first choice, but she’d settle for a duke or even a marquess, preferably one who was filthy rich.

  Not that she cared about riches, oh no. Expensive phaetons tearing neck-or-nothing through town made her retch, and hothouse roses made her sneeze. Jewels were rather nice, but a lot of trouble to watch out for when strolling with one’s maid in the parks.

  No, she wanted an impressive suitor for one reason only: to make Peter Burnes eat his words.

  Tears stinging her eyes, she paced the bedroom at Mrs. Harris’s School for Young Ladies that would be hers for the next few weeks. Fie on that wretch! She jerked a shawl from her half-unpacked trunk. How could she still be crying over him? And how could that heartless blackguard choose some milk-and-water miss over her?

  The memory of their humiliating exchange at last Saturday’s ball made her cringe as she tucked her shawl into the chest of drawers. Bad enough that she’d foolishly asked him how they stood. But his answer . . .

  Given my new position in society, Lucy, I require a more suitable wife. Someone of a settled and responsible disposition, not a hot-blooded hoyden who says the first thing that pops into her head.

  Hunting through her trunk, she found her pencils and the sketch pad containing the drawing she’d done of him a year ago, back when he’d thought she might be a suitable wife. She stared at the tousled curls and beatific smile that always made her heart turn over, then drew a pair of vile-looking horns on his head. She wasn’t an irresponsible hoyden. She wasn’t!

  All right, perhaps she was a trifle outspoken. But what was wrong with that? He’d enjoyed it well enough when they were children running about the regiment.

  You’re the kind of woman a man dallies with, not the kind he marries.

  Dallies with! She gnawed on her pencil, remembering the first time Peter, a seventeen-year-old general’s son three years older than she, had laughingly stolen a kiss from her. Had he been dallying even then? Had she assumed it meant something when it had meant nothing to him?

  And after she’d waited months for him, too! She’d been so sure Peter would marry her. Before his departure on the Grand Tour, he’d even called her his “one true love.” He’d kissed her again, so sweetly it had seemed a declaration, especially when he’d told her to wait for him
.

  But once he’d returned, that was all forgotten. Instead, he’d called on her dressed in costly splendor, sporting a fine gold watch and talking down to her.

  You’re too impassioned, too curious about things no lady should deign to notice. You can’t help it—it’s in your blood.

  Her foreign blood. Peter knew that Lucy had been adopted by Colonel Seton, the man she called Papa. Her real father had been an English soldier, her mother a Spanish woman of uncertain background. Not that Lucy could remember, since they’d died in the war when Lucy was only four.

  But Peter didn’t care about that, did he? Oh no, he only cared about the precious blood that her mother had passed on, which he seemed to think seethed with Spanish wildness and passion and fire.

  Well, she’d show him wildness and passion and fire! With quick slashes of her pencil, she added a pointy tail that curved out from behind the modest frock coat he’d worn back when he was plain old Mr. Burnes, before he’d unexpectedly inherited the earldom of Hunforth.

  That’s when he’d become “too good” for her, too conscious of his precious lineage and important connections. That’s when he’d become exactly like every other man in English society.

  Although most people assumed Papa was a widower and Lucy his daughter, they soon learned otherwise from the gossips. Lady Kerr, her stepmother, had gently warned her that her odd parentage might prove an issue for high sticklers, especially since she wasn’t a great heiress like her friends. And though men had shown her some interest during her first season, she’d had no offers. Not that she’d encouraged them—she’d been waiting for Peter. But she would have thought one would have made an offer anyway.

  Unless . . . Oh, Lord, what if Peter were right about her? What if everybody thought she was some hussy not good enough to become a respectable man’s wife? Was that why men were always eyeing her bosom and trying to kiss her on balconies? They never seemed to do that to the other girls.

  They certainly never did that to Lady Juliana. Rich, elegant, boring Lady Juliana, whom Peter had apparently chosen as sufficiently suitable to be his bride.

  Fresh tears sprang to her eyes. How dared he spurn her? The other men didn’t surprise her; half were sheep who did what their mamas said. But Peter was supposed to be . . .

  Hers.

  She’d make him rue the day he’d rejected her. She had started to sketch a knife protruding from his treacherous heart when a knock came at the door. Hastily, she thrust the sketch pad beneath a pillow and bade the person enter.

  Her stepmother glided into the room with her usual grace, another trait Lucy lacked. “Your father has finished his discussion with Mrs. Harris.” Lady Kerr, who’d been married to Papa for little more than a year, surveyed the harum-scarum pile of clothing on the bed. “So we’re leaving. And he’d like to say good-bye.”

  “I’ll be along shortly.”

  Lady Kerr glanced at the open trunk. “Shall I help you unpack first?”

  “I don’t need your help!” Lucy snapped, then regretted it when Lady Kerr flinched. Lucy softened her tone. “It’s kind of you to offer, but I can handle it alone. There’s no reason for you to alter your plans.”

  Lady Kerr’s halfhearted smile pricked Lucy’s conscience. The woman had tried hard to be her friend. Papa had even hinted at how much it would mean to Lady Kerr to have Lucy call her Mother, but Lucy couldn’t bring herself to do it. She chafed at Lady Kerr’s constant reminders to lower her voice and mind her tongue and not laugh at men’s rough jokes. If all a mother did was chide, perhaps she was better off without one.

  At least Lady Kerr improved Papa’s life. Though she didn’t always approve of his blustering, she did love him. And she was right for him, too, strong and calm to balance his impetuous nature, and never daunted by the addle-brained things he did when distracted. Lady Kerr would make certain he didn’t forget his hat.

  Of course, managing Papa had been Lucy’s job until she’d left for school. She missed that—and the dinners when he’d spun tales of India or the evenings when she’d practiced her sums for his approval. Life had been simple then.

  A sigh escaped her.

  As usual, Lady Kerr mistook it. “You don’t have to stay. Your father and I would love to have you go with us to meet Venetia in Edinburgh. Surely another instructor can teach drawing until Mrs. Harris can replace the teacher who quit.”

  Lucy returned to unpacking. “Actually, I look forward to the teaching. Edinburgh is such a bore, and I should stay busy until the Season is in full swing.”

  And she needed to show Peter Burnes that she wasn’t irresponsible. After she impressed him with her levelheaded behavior as a teacher, he would grovel at her feet, admitting he’d been wrong and begging her forgiveness.

  She might forgive him. She might not. But she could do neither if she were stuck up north while he pranced about town with Lady Juliana.

  Taking her stepmother’s arm, Lucy guided her toward the door. “You should go. You know how Papa is about waiting.” Besides, she wanted them both off so she could wallow in her misery.

  They walked down in silence to find Papa pacing before the stairs. When he heard them and looked up, his irritation altered instantly to pleasure.

  Most of it was for Lady Kerr. And the countess’s blush further illustrated their bond.

  A painful yearning pierced Lucy. Would a man ever look at her like that and make her blush? Even Peter hadn’t managed that. She wasn’t the blushing sort.

  “There’s my lassies!” Papa boomed. His manner of speaking was one thing Lady Kerr hadn’t civilized out of him. “Come now, Maggie, no dawdling. We must make haste while the weather is fine, eh, Lucy?”

  “No rain is our gain,” Lucy parroted his oft-used remark, left over from her childhood in Spain and Portugal during the war, when long marches in bad weather meant pure misery.

  “You’re all settled, then?” he asked Lucy as Lady Kerr took his arm.

  Papa and Lady Kerr were going off together. Without her. It was all she could do to manage a smile. “I’m fine.”

  With a frown, he looked her over. “You don’t look fine to me. It’s that idiot Peter Burnes, isn’t it?”

  She blinked. “How did you—”

  “I’m no fool, lass. I know ye had yer heart set on him, and I saw yer face when he and that snooty Lady Juliana danced together three times at Saturday’s ball. I always thought him a bit of a fribble, but I never took him for a fool until now. Ye’re better off without him, d’you hear?” He chucked her under the chin. “Don’t be wasting another thought on that jackanapes.”

  The fact that her unobservant Papa had noticed what had gone on between her and Peter was so unexpectedly sweet she burst into tears.

  He stood frozen in shock until Lady Kerr nudged him. Then he hastily drew Lucy into his arms. “There, now, lass, didn’t mean to make you cry. It’s not so bad as all that, is it? Sh, sh, hush now.”

  The familiar scent of Guard’s Bouquet on his collar calmed her, reminding her that he was still her dear Papa, no matter whom he’d married.

  Lady Kerr held out a handkerchief, and Lucy took it gratefully, casting her stepmother a tremulous smile as she dabbed at her eyes and nose.

  “As I told you,” Lady Kerr said, “we’d be happy to have you come with us.”

  The kind remark nearly brought back Lucy’s tears, but she stifled them ruthlessly. When had she become such a watering pot?

  Steadying her shoulders, she pulled away. “I can’t. I need to keep busy, and Mrs. Harris could use the help. I’ll be fine. Really, I will.”

  “We’ll be back in three weeks,” Papa said, “but if you need us sooner, just send word.”

  “Thank you, Papa.” Lucy kissed his cheek, then, on impulse, kissed Lady Kerr’s. The bright smile she received in return made her wish she hadn’t been so sharp with her earlier. “I’ll miss you both,” she said, and truly meant it.

  She accompanied them to the coach and followed it to the end
of the drive. As she strolled back, she balked at facing her unpacking. It would only provoke more tears, and she was sick of crying.

  She made a sharp turn and headed across to the blooming cherry orchard that separated the school from its neighboring estate, Rockhurst. According to Mrs. Harris, Mr. Pritchard had been trying to sell it, but no one would meet his exorbitant price, since the house was nearly beyond repair. So Rockhurst had lain vacant for the past three months, which was why she felt free to wander into its orchard.

  As she entered the trees, a breeze sent blossoms tumbling about her like snowflakes, and her heart lightened. Unable to resist the enticement, she kicked off her kidskin slippers and began to twirl amidst the falling blossoms as she’d done when she was a girl. The more she twirled, the less her heart ached. Her hair pulled loose from its pins to fall about her, twirling with her.

  For the first time in days, she felt free to be herself, without Peter’s nasty words taking her to task. When she was gasping and too light-headed to make another turn, she threw herself to the ground. Tucking her hands beneath her head, she stared up at the branches and lifted her face to the blossoms drifting gently onto her gown.

  If only life could always be like this, just cherry blossoms and spring. Or even as it was during her blissful student days here, when she and the other girls learned geography and the waltz and how men could deceive you—

  A sigh escaped her. She should have heeded those lessons. Instead, she’d let her imagination run away with her, soaking up the nonsense in that scandalous book of harem’s tales she and the girls had read in secret. She’d convinced herself that one day she and Peter would marry and try . . . all those . . . naughty . . . things . . .

  The previous night’s tear-torn sleep caught up with her, and she fell into a doze. She was dreaming of a harem where the women were in charge and the sultan had to do their bidding, when a deep male voice penetrated her haze.

  “What have we here? A local lady come to welcome me to the neighborhood? Or a goddess descended from Mount Olympus to sport with a mere mortal?”

  Lucy’s eyes shot open. Was she still dreaming? The devilishly handsome man standing at her feet could easily be a sultan, with his olive skin and eyes the color of roasted almonds. He’d clearly just come from a bath, for his glossy black hair lay damp on his neck. Shockingly, he wore only a white shirt tucked into black pantaloons tucked into a pair of top boots, with no waistcoat, coat, or cravat.