The Duke's Men [1] What the Duke Desires Read online




  “ANYONE WHO LOVES ROMANCE MUST READ SABRINA JEFFRIES!”

  —New York Times bestselling author Lisa Kleypas

  “JEFFRIES’S ADDICTIVE SERIES SATISFIES.”

  —Library Journal

  HELLIONS OF HALSTEAD HALL

  “Another sparkling series” (Library Journal) from New York Times and USA Today bestselling author

  SABRINA JEFFRIES

  Praise for

  A LADY NEVER SURRENDERS

  “Jeffries pulls out all the stops. . . . With depth of character, emotional intensity, and the resolution to the ongoing mystery rolled into a steamy love story, this one is not to be missed.”

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

  “Wonderfully refreshing. . . . A sizzling, emotionally satisfying romance. . . . Another must-read from one of the genre’s best.”

  —Library Journal (starred review)

  “Brimming with superbly shaded characters, an abundance of simmering sensuality, and a splendidly wicked wit, A Lady Never Surrenders wraps up the series nothing short of brilliantly.”

  —Booklist

  More praise for the novels in Sabrina Jeffries’s New York Times bestselling Hellions of Halstead Hall series

  TO WED A WILD LORD

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

  —Library Journal (starred review)

  “Another beguiling blend of captivating characters, clever plotting, and sizzling sensuality in the exceptionally entertaining Hellions of Halstead Hall series.”

  —Booklist

  HOW TO WOO A RELUCTANT LADY

  “A delightful addition. . . . Charmingly original.”

  —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

  “Richly imbued with steamy passion, deftly spiced with dangerous intrigue, and neatly tempered with just the right amount of tart wit.”

  —Booklist

  A HELLION IN HER BED

  “A lively plot blending equal measures of steamy passion and sharp wit.”

  —Booklist (starred review)

  “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)

  “Lively repartee, fast action, luscious sensuality, and an abundance of humor.”

  —Library Journal (starred review)

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

  —Booklist

  Savor frost-tipped wonders and passionate secrets all the year through, with this critically acclaimed holiday treasure from Sabrina Jeffries

  ’TWAS THE NIGHT AFTER CHRISTMAS

  Named One of the Best Romances of 2012 by Library Journal!

  “A moving Regency with heart, soul, and holiday spirit. . . . The compelling, fast-paced, and lively tale wraps up with several surprising, tear-jerking twists.”

  —Publishers Weekly (starred review)

  “Sharply witty, deliciously sexy, and infinitely endearing, this holiday gem strikes an emotional chord that will resonate long after the book has been closed.”

  —Library Journal (starred review)

  “An enchanting holiday charmer with a complex and captivating plot; characters that interact with emotional authenticity; and a rich set of conflicted, heart-tugging obstacles—all of which combine to provide a satisfying happily-ever-after set against a fun holiday backdrop. . . . A lovely, spirited Christmas winner.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  Thank you for downloading this Pocket Books eBook.

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  To all the wonderful people who adopted me in my college years since I couldn’t go home to visit my parents in Thailand—Aunt Shirley and Uncle Harvey Peshoff, Aunt Judy and my late uncle Jimmy Martin, my late aunt Gloria, and the entire Owens family: John, Donna (now deceased), Diane, Joyce, Johnny, and Pam. You’ll never know what your love and care meant to me.

  THE MANTON AND BONNAUD FAMILY TREE

  PROLOGUE

  Yorkshire

  1816

  “SACRE BLEU, GIRL, stop that pacing and come eat breakfast before you make me dizzy.”

  Fourteen-year-old Lisette Bonnaud halted, only to stare out the front window of the cottage. “But Maman, how can you not be worried about Tristan? He’s never gone all night! What if something happened to him while he and Papa were hunting yesterday?”

  Claudine Bonnaud waved her hand with the sort of elegant flourish that had made her a celebrated actress on the Continent before Papa had brought her back from one of his travels and ensconced her in this cottage. “Then we would have heard of it by now. Your papa would have sent a servant to fetch us, at the very least. More likely Ambrose took Tristan drinking after the hunt, and they ended up staying until dawn at the Green Inn.”

  Maman was probably right. It figured that Papa would take her brother somewhere interesting. Tristan always got to do everything. She never did. And Tristan wasn’t even that much older than her—just three years. It wasn’t fair.

  “Perhaps I should walk to Ashcroft to make sure that they’re there.” She cast a wistful glance out at the green woolly hills of the Yorkshire wolds that stretched for miles and miles.

  Maman lifted one perfectly plucked blond eyebrow. “You cannot go off to town alone, ma fille. It’s not seemly.”

  Blowing out a frustrated breath, Lisette returned to pacing. “As if anyone cares about propriety for a bastard.”

  “Lisette Bonnaud!” Maman said sharply. “Do not use that awful word to describe yourself! You’re the daughter of the Viscount Rathmoor. Never forget it.”

  “The illegitimate daughter of the Viscount Rathmoor,” she grumbled. “What happened to all of Papa’s promises to marry you?”

  Maman’s lips tightened into a line. “It’s . . . a complicated matter. He had to wait for the war with France to end. Marrying a Frenchwoman will create a very great scandal for your papa as it is. And for his legitimate sons.”

  Lisette eyed her mother askance. “The war ended a year ago, Maman. And the only one who cares about scandal is George. Waiting won’t change that.”

  Twenty-six-year-old George Manton was Papa’s legitimate son and heir, half brother to her and Tristan. He’d hated them ever since Papa made Maman his mistress. Even after George’s mother had died years ago, he’d still loathed the woman whom his father continued to dote on. And the children born of his father—their father.

  “George will come around,” Maman said dismissively, obviously uncomfortable with this line of conversation. “He will have no choice once your papa marries me.” She began to spread jam on a piece of toast with delicate strokes of the knife.

  Everything Maman did was delicate. Meanwhile, Lisette didn’t have a delicate bone in her body. She was unnaturally tall for a girl her age, with bony hips and large breasts that made her look off-balance. And her hair wasn’t Maman’s buttery blond, which gentlemen always seemed to admire. It was Papa’s ink black.

  She did try to make it attractive with the ribbons Papa brought her from his travels, but it was so wild and curly that such an endeavor was fruitless. Most of the time she ended up using the ribbons to embroider her gowns instead.

&nb
sp; “Maman, am I pretty?”

  Her mother blinked. “Of course you’re pretty, ma chérie. You’re my daughter, aren’t you? Don’t fret, one day men will vie for your attention.”

  She wasn’t sure she wanted that. Maman’s looks had only gained her a lifetime of waiting around for the man she loved to marry her. As a little girl, Lisette had believed in Papa’s promises to make them a real family one day. But lately she’d begun to lose faith in him.

  A heavy knock came at the entrance door. “I’ll answer it,” Lisette called out as she dashed into the hall to open it. She smiled when she saw her other half brother, nineteen-year-old Dominick Manton, standing on the doorstep.

  “You’re back at last!” she cried.

  Dom was as different from George as peas from pears. He’d been a childhood playmate to Tristan while George was off at school. As Lisette had grown older and begun trailing about after them, he’d been kind to her even though the villagers weren’t—and she adored him for that.

  But today he didn’t look happy to be here. “May I come in?”

  Her heart faltered as she noticed his bloodshot eyes, his colorless lips . . . the way he held himself as if he were made of porcelain. Something bad had happened. Oh, Lord.

  “Tristan!” she whispered. “Is he hurt?”

  “Where is he?” Dom countered.

  The question confused her. “I don’t know. He’s been gone since yesterday. You should talk to Papa; they went out hunting together.”

  He muttered a curse, then squared his shoulders. “Father is dead, Lisette.”

  The bald words were a slap to her face. As she gaped at Dom, wondering if she’d misheard, a choked gasp came from behind them.

  Maman stood frozen, the blood draining from her features. “Dead? C’est impossible! How can that be?”

  Dom ran a gloved hand through his thick black locks. “I can’t tell you much, Mrs. Bonnaud. I’m still piecing together what happened while I was in York. As best I can make out, while Tristan and Father were hunting, Father’s gun misfired and exploded in his chest. Tristan and the groom got Father back home and into his bedchamber, where George joined them. The groom fetched a doctor; George and Tristan stayed by Father’s side. They were both there when Father died shortly after sundown last evening.”

  As the truth of Dom’s words started to sink in, tears stung Lisette’s eyes, then slipped down her cheeks. Behind her Mama was quietly weeping, too, and Lisette went to her side. They stood there crying, wrapped in each other’s arms.

  Papa couldn’t be dead. She’d seen him just yesterday, when he’d come to fetch Tristan.

  Oh, Lord, Tristan!

  She shot Dom an accusing glance. “If Tristan was there when Papa died, why hasn’t he come home to tell us?”

  “I don’t know. I didn’t arrive at the manor myself until a couple of hours ago. But . . .”

  At his hesitation, Maman stiffened. “B-but what?”

  “We have to find him. George will be here any minute looking for him.”

  A horrible chill struck Lisette. “Why would George come here? He doesn’t think Tristan killed Papa, does he?”

  “No,” Dom said tersely, “though he probably would have tried to claim that if the groom hadn’t witnessed what happened.” Dom rubbed a hand over his weary features. “But George does think that Tristan stole Blue Blazes last night.”

  Shock made her gasp. Blue Blazes was Papa’s—and Tristan’s—favorite Thoroughbred. Papa had promised to give the horse to her brother one day. “You don’t think Tristan would do such a thing, do you?”

  “I don’t know. None of the servants is very clear on what happened after Father died. They said that Tristan eventually left, but George claims he returned in the dead of night to steal Blue Blazes. He’s gathering up men as we speak to capture Tristan so he can be charged with the crime.”

  Her blood ran to ice. “Oh, Dom, no! How can he?”

  “You know how George resents Tristan. He’ll do anything to ruin his life.”

  “Is that why you’re here?” Tristan strode forward from the end of the hall nearest the cottage’s back entrance, his blue eyes fierce upon Dom. His coat was torn as if he’d been running through the woods, and his trousers had mud caked up to the knees. “Have you come to witness my ruin?”

  “Tristan!” Lisette cried. “Don’t speak to him like that!”

  “I’m here to warn you,” Dom put in, his voice even. “If you did take Blue Blazes, you have to give him back.”

  A flush darkened Tristan’s cheeks as he marched inexorably forward. “Why? He’s mine. Father willed him to me, a fact that your arse of a brother could confirm if he weren’t determined to deny me my birthright.”

  “What are you talking about?” Maman whispered.

  Tristan laid his arm about Maman’s shoulder, then shot Dom a belligerent glance. “On his deathbed, Father wrote a codicil to his will. He left the horse to me, the cottage to Maman, and his collection of gewgaws to Lisette. He also provided an annuity for the three of us. George and I both witnessed him signing the document.”

  “Oh, Papa,” Lisette whispered as tears slid down the back of her raw throat. He had cared about them, enough to think of them in the end. And he knew how much she loved the small artifacts he’d bought in the various countries he’d visited, his tales intoxicating her with heady glimpses into what it might be like to travel the world.

  Tristan’s gaze blazed with unusual fervor. “But as soon as Father drew his last breath, George burned the codicil in front of me. He said he’d die before he let us have one penny.”

  Lisette reeled from the same shock that lit Dom’s face. Why did George hate them so much?

  Dom scowled. “George said naught of it to me.”

  “And that surprises you?” Tristan snapped.

  A pained breath escaped Dom. “No.”

  Tristan left Mother’s side to face down Dom. “So yes, I took the horse that belonged to me.”

  “You have to give it back,” Dom said. “Horse thieving is punishable by death. Somehow we have to sneak it back into the stables or have it be found wandering the fields or—”

  “Too late for that,” Tristan said calmly. “I sold it to a gypsy horse trader to give my family something to live on until I can find a way to provide for us.”

  “You sold it?” Dom snapped. “Are you mad? George will have you hanged for certain!”

  “Just let him try,” Tristan snarled. “I’ll tell the world what he did, what a lying, duplicitous scoundrel he is, and—”

  “No one will believe you, mon cher,” Maman said in a choked whisper. “They’ll say you have everything to gain by lying. George is the heir. He will win, and you’ll be hanged.” She began to cry again.

  Tristan crumbled in the face of her misery. “Aw, Mother, I won’t be hanged!” He went to gather her up in his arms. “Shh, shh, don’t go on so.”

  Lisette turned to Dom. “You have to do something. You can’t let George arrest Tristan!”

  “Damn it to hell.” Dom squared his shoulders. “All right, this is what we’ll do. Tristan, you’ve got to leave. Now. You can probably make it to the cave before George arrives. I’ll meet you there as soon as I can get away tonight.”

  “What cave?” Maman asked.

  The three siblings exchanged a glance. It was their private playground, the place where they’d always escaped parents and guardians—and George—kept secret by mutual agreement all these years.

  “Don’t worry, Mother, I know which cave he means.” Tristan glowered at Dom. “But I don’t see why I should be the one to run when it is George—”

  “Listen to your brother!” their mother cried. “I’m sure Dom will do what he can to make this right, but if you stay here and George has you prosecuted, it will mean ruin for all of us.”

  Lisette held her breath. Maman had been wise to use guilt on Tristan. Otherwise, the reckless fool would defy George up until the moment they put the noose a
round his neck.

  With a sullen glare, Tristan crossed his arms over his chest. “All right, Dom, suppose I do flee to the cave. Then what?”

  “I’ll try to convince George to do the right thing,” Dom said. “He’s more likely to do it without you around provoking him.”

  Hope sprang in Lisette’s heart. If anyone could convince George, it was Dom. “Listen to Dom, Tristan.”

  Tristan let out a long breath. “Fine. But if George persists in his lies—”

  “You’ll go to France,” Maman said stoutly. “I have family in Toulon.” She turned a pleading glance on Dom. “If it comes to that, can you get him there?”

  “I can get him onto a fishing boat at Flamborough Head. He’ll have to make his way to the port at Hull on his own. Then he can use some of the money he got for the horse to buy passage to France.”

  “Fine,” Maman said. “He will do it.”

  “Now, see here, Mother—” Tristan began.

  “No!” she cried. “I will not lose you and your papa! Do not ask it of me!”

  Tristan gritted his teeth, then gave a terse nod.

  “Come,” she said, taking his arm, “we’ll pack your things for the journey.”

  “No time for that,” Dom bit out. “I can get his things to him tonight. But he’s got to go now! George will be here any moment.”

  “Yes, go, Tristan!” Lisette urged, pushing him toward the back door. “Before George finds you.”

  Tristan paused at the end of the hall. “One thing you should know, Dom. Father also left money to you in that codicil that George burned. So if his actions go unpunished—”

  “I understand,” Dom said. “Now leave, damn you!”

  With a scowl, Tristan was gone.

  “I’d best gather up what he’ll need for the journey.” Maman disappeared down the hall, leaving Lisette alone with Dom.

  Dom took her hands. “I’m sorry, dear girl. About George, about Father . . . about all of it.”

  “It’s not your fault,” she mumbled. “We both know George does as he pleases, and as for Papa—”

  When tears fell again, he drew her into his arms to comfort her. She couldn’t believe Papa was dead. Just yesterday he’d given her a kiss and promised to take her riding sometime soon. So many promises, and now he could never fulfill them.