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New York Times bestselling author Candace Camp invites you back to Stonecliffe for a second adventure! Action and romance ensue on this adventurous trip through the beautiful English countryside.

A Rogue at Stonecliffe

A Stonecliffe Novel

by Candace Camp

ISBN: 9781335513106

Publication Date: June 27, 2023

Publisher: Canary Street Press

Blurb:

When the love of her life left without any explanation, Annabeth Winfield moved on despairingly, knowing she’d never have a love as thrilling as her first ever again. Sloane Rutherford was roguish and daring, but as Annabeth grew up, she realized that their reckless romance was just a passing adventure, never meant for stability. Twelve years later, Annabeth is engaged to someone new, ready to start her life with a dependable man.

That’s when Sloane returns. And he brings with him a serious warning: Annabeth is in trouble.

After spending the last dozen years working as a spy, Sloane thought he’d left espionage behind him. But now a dangerous blackmailer is after Annabeth. Sloane offers to hide his former lover at Stonecliffe, the Rutherford estate, but stubborn Annabeth demands to be part of the investigation. As the two embark on a dangerous and exciting journey, memories of their past romance resurface. Sloane and Annabeth aren’t the wide-eyed children they used to be, but knowing they’re wrong for each other makes a nostalgic affair seem very right…

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Excerpt:

CHAPTER ONE

1822

Sloane Rutherford wasnot a man who hesitated. He made his decisions, for good or ill, and he lived with them. But today he sat slouched at the breakfast table, food untouched, turning a note round and round in his hand, unable to make up his mind. Should he go to the wedding or not?

Actually there was no question whether he should do it; clearly he should not. The question was whether he would. The event itself didnโ€™t figure into his thoughts. While he was surprised and faintly pleased by the fact that Noelle had invited him, he held most of his own family in disregardโ€ฆand they looked on him with even less liking. Estranged wasnโ€™t the word for his relationship with the Rutherfords. Shunned would be more like it.

So, no, he had no interest in the wedding itself, no reason to go, and normally he would have tossed the invitation in the ash can. But what drew him almost painfully to attend was precisely the thing that set up an equal ache of reluctance inside his chest: she would be there.

โ€œAnnabeth?โ€ Marcus said from the doorway.

Sloane glanced up, startled, and scowled at his father.

โ€œSo youโ€™re reading minds now? One would think you would have done better at the card tables.โ€

โ€œYes, wouldnโ€™t one?โ€ Marcus replied amicably, and strolled across the room. โ€œSadly, it didnโ€™t seem to work that way. And your problem didnโ€™t take much intuition. Itโ€™s written all over your face.โ€

Marcus settled into a chair across from Sloane. Clad in his dressing gown and soft slippers, Marcus looked every inch the indolent aristocrat that he wasโ€”his luxurious white mane of hair combed back stylishly, his jaw smooth from his valetโ€™s shaving, and his dressing gown made of the richest brocade and cut to fit perfectly. Even if he looked somewhat more worn than his age from years of reckless living, he was still a handsome man.

Sloane wondered if his father might catch the eye of some wealthy widow who would take the man off his handsโ€ฆbut no, Marcus was equally banned from the tonโ€”more because of Sloaneโ€™s history than his own numerous vices.

โ€œWhat are you doing up so early?โ€ Sloane asked, ignoring Marcusโ€™s comments. โ€œYou usually donโ€™t stir from your room until ten or eleven.โ€

โ€œUnfortunately the only appointment Harriman had available was at the ungodly time of nine. Itโ€™s quite difficult to get in to see him on such short notice.โ€

โ€œAh, your tailor. That would be enough to pull you out of bed.โ€ Sloaneโ€™s mouth quirked up. Marcus was still a peacock at his age. No doubt the bill the tailor sent Sloane would be enormous, but Sloane didnโ€™t mind. Heโ€™d far rather spend his money on his fatherโ€™s fashion than on some of Marcusโ€™s other habits.

โ€œBut I wonโ€™t complain. I was lucky he was able to make room to see me.โ€

โ€œI expect heโ€™s grateful that I pay your bills on time, unlike most of his aristocratic clients,โ€ Sloane said dryly.

โ€œAnd Iโ€™ll have the entire afternoon to enjoy the prospect of the wedding,โ€ Marcus went on.

โ€œA wedding?โ€ Sloane asked skeptically. โ€œYou look forward to weddings?โ€

โ€œNot everyone is as much of a hermit as you are. Some of us find social occasions agreeable.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not a hermit.โ€

โ€œMmm, yes. No doubt thatโ€™s why you spend so much time alone, brooding. Cornwall suits you perfectly.โ€ Marcus picked up the cup of tea the footman had just set before him and took a sip, his blue eyes twinkling with amusement. โ€œBut this wedding, I must admit, offers rather more entertainment than the usual one.โ€

Sloane made no response. The last topic he wanted to discuss was this wedding.

But his father needed no reply. He went on, โ€œFor one thing, there is Noelle, the lovely bride herself, and the potential of gossip over her scandalous past.โ€

โ€œI canโ€™t see how running from Thorne is any scandal,โ€ Sloane interjected. โ€œAnyone with sense would do so. I find it far stranger that she stopped.โ€

Marcus chuckled. โ€œYes, he is a dull one, isnโ€™t he? But I suspect Noelle livens him up. Still, the wedding offers more excitement than that. Lady Lockwood can always be counted on to cause some sort of contretempsโ€ฆthough hopefully she will not bring her dog. Of course Lord Edgerton will be there. I believe he annoys her ladyship even more than her first son-in-lawโ€”who knows what barbs she will cast his way?โ€ He paused, then added, โ€œAnd just imagine the stir if you show up.โ€

Sloane grunted and slid back from the table, standing. โ€œWhich is precisely why I am not going to the wedding.โ€

โ€œOf course not. Thatโ€™s why you havenโ€™t tossed out that invitation. Why you were sitting there mooning over it when I came in.โ€

โ€œI wasnโ€™t mooning over anything. I was justโ€ฆโ€ He trailed off his sentence with a grimace.

โ€œYou were just contemplating whether facing down your relatives outweighed the prospect of seeing Annabeth Winfield.โ€

โ€œI donโ€™t give a tinkerโ€™s damn about facing my relatives.โ€

โ€œAhโ€ฆthen itโ€™s whether seeing Annabeth is worth the pain.โ€

โ€œDonโ€™t be absurd.โ€ Sloaneโ€™s voice held little conviction, and he turned away, walking over to the window. He crossed his arms and gazed out at the street below. A moment passed, and he said in a quiet voice, โ€œIt would be foolish to see her.โ€

โ€œNo doubt.โ€ Marcus let out a sigh. โ€œThe foolish things are always the ones you most desire.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve done well enough not seeing her for eleven years.โ€ Being out of the country most of that time had helped. But even since he returned to England, Sloane had avoided Annabethโ€”well, maybe there was that one time when he first returned and heโ€™d stood outside Lady Lockwoodโ€™s house in the dark to get a glimpse of Annabeth coming down the front steps and getting into a carriage. With Nathan. Sloaneโ€™s lips tightened at the thought.

It had come as something of a shock to see her at Stonecliffe two months ago. He had not realized that she and Lady Lockwood were visiting or he wouldnโ€™t have gone there.

But as he had stood in the entryway with Noelle and the others, a door had opened down the hall, and there she had been: her soft brown hair in a little disarray, her face faintly flushed from activity, carrying a basket full of flowers. And in the moment, he couldnโ€™t speak, couldnโ€™t move, could only stare. She was as lovely as ever. And he was as dumbstruck as ever.

Heโ€™d turned and left like someone had shot at him. He wasnโ€™t sure whether he even tossed a goodbye to Noelle and Carlisle. And bloody Nathanโ€”of course heโ€™d been there. That moment had disrupted Sloaneโ€™s carefully nurtured indifference, and even after his heart stopped beating like a madmanโ€™s and heโ€™d reminded himself that heโ€™d gotten over her years ago, he had not been able to keep his mind from going back to Annabeth time after time. Like a tongue returning to a bad tooth.

Behind him his father said, โ€œWhy do you continue like this? Why donโ€™t you go to see her, tell her how you feel?โ€

Sloane snorted. โ€œIโ€™d have to fight my way through the butler and probably Lady Lockwood, too, to talk to her.โ€

โ€œIโ€™ve never known you to avoid a fight.โ€

โ€œMaybe not. But I canโ€™t fight Annabeth. And sheโ€™s the one who hates me.โ€

โ€œHow do you know that?โ€ Marcus persisted. โ€œSheโ€™s never married in all this time. She has no money, of course, but a sweet, pretty girl like that? Sheโ€™s bound to have had plenty of offers.โ€

โ€œNo doubt.โ€ Sloaneโ€™s jaw tightened. โ€œBut that doesnโ€™t mean sheโ€™s been pining after me. I broke her heart. I knew I was breaking her heart. And the fact that I broke mine as well wouldnโ€™t have made her feel any better or despise me any less.โ€

โ€œWhy donโ€™t you tell her the truth?โ€ His fatherโ€™s voice turned sharp, his usual affability gone. โ€œExplain what you did. Why you did it. Tell her that bastard Asquith blackmailed you into it.โ€

Sloane whirled, his eyes flashing. โ€œI canโ€™t tell her that. The truth would cause her just as much pain now as it would have then. I knew when I did it that I was sacrificing her love for a lifetime. I just thought my lifetime wouldnโ€™t last very long.โ€

Letting out a disgusted noise, Sloane started out of the room. Before heโ€™d taken two steps, there was a furious pounding at the front door. Frowning, he turned toward it. The pounding continued, along with someone shouting his name. Sloane reached the entry hall just as the footman opened the door and began an indignant dressing-down of the boy before him.

But the boy on the doorstep paid no attention and shoved his way past the footman, calling again. โ€œMr. Rutherford!โ€

โ€œTimmy.โ€ Sloane strode toward the door, alarm rising in him. โ€œWhat is it? What the devil areโ€”โ€

โ€œItโ€™s the docks, sir. Mr. Haskell sent me. Youโ€™ve got to come quick. The new warehouse is on fire.โ€

Excerpted from A Rogue at Stonecliffe by Candance Camp.
Copyright ยฉ 2023 by Candace Camp and Anastasia Camp Hopcus.
Published by arrangement with Harlequin Books S.A.

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Author Info:

Candace Camp is a New York Times bestselling author of over sixty novels of contemporary and historical romance. She grew up in Texas in a newspaper family, which explains her love of writing, but she earned a law degree and practiced law before making the decision to write full-time. She has received several writing awards, including the RT Book Reviews Lifetime Achievement Award for Western Romances. Visit her at http://www.candace-camp.com.

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