From USA Today bestselling author Julie Anne Long comes the second book in an exciting new historical romance series, the first since her beloved Pennyroyal Green series.
*****
A Palace of Rogues Novel
by Julie Anne Long
Genre Adult Historical Romance
Publisher Avon Books
Publication Date October 29, 2019
Blurb:
He has devilβs blood in his veins. At least, thatβs always been the legend. How else could the Duke of Brexfordβs notorious bastard son return from the dead? The brutal decade since Lucien Durand, Lord Bolt, allegedly drowned in the Thames forged him into a man who always gets whatβand whoβhe wants. And what he wants is vengeance for his stolen birthright . . . and one wild night in Angelique Breedloveβs bed.
Angelique recognizes heartbreak when the enigmatic Lord Bolt walks into The Grand Palace on the Thames, and not even his devastating charm can tempt her to risk her own ever again. One scorching kiss drives home the danger.
But in the space between them springs a trust that feels anything but safe. And the passionβexplosive, consumingβdrives Lucien to his knees. Now his whole life depends on proving his love to a woman who doesnβt believe in it . . . because his true birthright, he now knows, is guardian of Angelique Breedloveβs heart.
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*****
Excerpt:
CHAPTER ONE
Mrs. Angelique Breedlove stared at the little tokenβa sort of half unicorn, half lionβnestled in the manβs palm. The firelight nicked a glint off the signet ring gleaming around one of his long fingers.
The kind of fingers poets and musicians are said to possess.
And excellent lovers.
Also, probably stranglers and pickpockets.
For Godβs sake. Fingers were just fingers. It was just that staring at the token was easier than looking into the manβs face. She still had vertigo from the last time sheβd done itβthirty seconds ago.
βI donβt know what he is, Mrs. Breedlove, but I donβt think I shall ever forget seeing himβ was how their maid Dot had described the man when sheβd admitted him to The Grand Palace on the Thames all of minutes ago.
Normally Angelique and Delilah would meet with potential new guests in the reception room, but in the parlor across the foyer the party celebrating three marriages was still underway, and everyone was just drunk enough to think that a round of pianoforte and singing was a good idea. She turned her head and was treated to a view of the vast dark O of Mr. Delacorteβs wide-open mouth, through which a surprisingly decent, albeit loud, baritone poured. Everything Mr. Delacorte did lacked nuance.
Sheβd warrant the man in front of her was all nuance.
Suddenly the black-and-white marble foyer floor between her and the party and the parlor seemed like an ocean.
She cleared her throat. βIβll allow this token bears a close resemblance to half of the token Mrs. Hardy and I have in our possession here at The Grand Palace on the Thames, sir. Of course, I suppose itβs always possible youβve murdered our mystery guest and stolen his half of the token, and then came straightaway to The Grand Palace on the Thames to take up our best room.β
Well. That emerged a little more waspishly than sheβd intended. Apparently her senses were overwhelmed and were mounting a defense.
βDo I look as though Iβm capable of such a thing?β
He sounded as though he genuinely wanted to know.
Angelique raised her eyes and found his expression oddly grave. His eyes were a crystalline green, like moss agate, or mist over a moor. It was as peculiarly difficult to hold his gaze as it was to hold a lit coal. It was far too . . . alive . . . and complicated. He aimed this gaze out over cheekbones that called to mind a pair of battle shields arrayed side by side. His mouth was a long, sensual curve. Not a classically beautiful face. It was something better, or perhaps worse: it was fascinating.
She flicked her thoughts away from that notion the way she would flick her skirts away from an open flame.
βRather,β she said shortly. βBut then, I suspect we all are, given the right circumstances,β she added. βHumans are capable of so many things.β
βYou begin to interest me, Mrs. . . .β
She tipped her head pityingly. βBegin?β
Was she flirting? Surely not. She would no sooner do that than blithely step out in front of a runaway barouche. In her life, the consequences would have been identical, at least metaphorically.
But all at once she could feel the difference in the quality of his attention. As if someone had lit a candle in a pitch-black room.
When he began to smile she redirected her gaze to a safer place, which turned out to be the flowers in the vase on the mantel, which were drooping as if theyβd all been dosed with laudanum. She enjoyed a bracing dose of exasperation for Dot, whose job it was to make sure they were fresh.
Where the devil was Dot?
Ah, she could hear her now, as a rattle of teapot and cups on a tray approaching. It was a perilous journey for Dot every single time. Dot and gravity had an uneasy alliance.
At last she appeared in the doorway.
Thus began the slow, delicate journey to settling it on the table between the settees.
The man watched this with apparent fascination.
βI donβt believe you mentioned your name, Mr. . . .β
βItβs Lord, Iβm afraid.β
βOh, of course it is. Who but a lord would find it amusing to communicate through tokens.β
βNecessary,β he corrected evenly, sounding as insufferable as that supercilious little man whoβd appeared one night weeks ago with half of a token and paid them three guineas to hold a room for a mysterious stranger. βNecessary to communicate through tokens. My name is Lucien Durand. Viscount Bolt.β
The tea tray crashed noisily into place.
The perfidious Dotβs shoes were already clicking across the foyer at a run.
Leaving Angelique alone with a madman.
βI agree that humans are capable of nearly anything, given the right set of circumstances,β he said conversationally, as though he hadnβt just claimed to be someone the entire ton knew had been dead for a decade, and who, before that, had taxed the broadsheetsβ ability to come up with hysterical adjectives. βAlthough murder certainly seems a good deal of effort to go through for an opportunity to stay here at the . . .β
A faint puzzled frown settled between his eyes as he took in the pretty but well-worn settees facing each other before the fire, arrayed atop the thick but faded rug (frays artfully hidden beneath furniture legs); all of those in shades of rose, the hearth facade fashionable decades ago, the table with its nick out of one leg, also skillfully disguised.
Since theyβd combined talents a few months prior, Angelique and Delilah had seen any number of people glance around just that way: bemused, but not necessarily censorious. As if wondering at the source of the roomβs charm. One could not place a finger on its source any more than one could bottle sunshine or air. Its charm was that it was well-loved and it knew it.
Madman or not, it seemed her pride was at least as powerful as her sense of self-preservation. She would not sit idly while someone criticized their beloved room.
She cleared her throat. βLord . . .β
On the off chance sheβd heard him wrong the first time.
βBolt,β he confirmed, pleasantly.
Hellβs teeth. She drew a sustaining breath.
At best he was a charlatan.
A gorgeous, gorgeous charlatan.
βThe comfort and security of our guests is paramount at The Grand Palace on the Thames, so Mrs. Hardy and Iβwe are the proprietressesβtypically like to have a conversation with a potential guest to ascertain whether someone is mad or otherwise unsuitable before we invite them to stay.β
He studied her.
βInvite them, do you?β His tone was skeptical. But his voice was suddenly startlingly soft.
Instantly, alarmingly, it was easy to imagine that voice in her ear, from the next pillow, whispering the things heβd like to do to her.
βYes.β The word emerged absurdly huskily. It sounded rather like she was giving permission to something. βYes,β she repeated firmly. βUltimately we give careful consideration to who we invite to stay, as weβd like all of our guests to feel comfortable and safe. And our business is thriving, much to our gratitude. Weβre even contemplating a little expansion. And in case youβve any doubts, the king himself sat just there not long ago.β
His eyes followed her gesturing hand to the pink settee.
He examined it a moment.
He turned back to her.
βNow whoβs mad?β he said gently.
Β
βExcuse me, Lady DerβMrs. Hardy.β
Delilahβthe former Lady Derring and new Mrs. Hardyβgave a start when Dot stage-whispered hotly next to her ear. She was panting as though sheβd come at a run.
βWhat is it, Dot?β
βA man has arrived to inquire about a room and Mrs. Breedlove is speaking with him, but . . .β
She sank her teeth worriedly into her bottom lip and said nothing more.
Delilahβs eyebrows arched aggressively, prompting Dot to continue.
βWell, I think perhaps you ought to join her.β
Delilah exchanged a swift glance with her husband. He was planning to leave for Dover with Sergeant Massey for a short spot of business in an hour or so, and she wanted to soak up his presence.
But Dot was not in the habit of making recommendations. Cheerfully following orders, and occasionally getting them right, was her forte.
She had proven to be rather a savant at describing guests, however.
βIs he behaving in an . . . ungentlemanly manner, Dot?β
βWell, no. He is one of the most gentlemanly gentlemen Iβve seen, but not in the way youβd expect. His kit is very fine and his boots, well, theyβre Hoby, and the way he stands is very . . . and you know how they are, Lady DerringβI mean Mrs. Hardy. Gentlemen, that is.β
βI do indeed know how they are.β
βHe has only said a few words. His voice is very fine and low. He is merely standing there, mostly.β
βSo the trouble is . . .β Delilah coaxed. She could feel the fine strands of her patience groaning like the buttons on Mr.Delacorteβs vest.
βWell, there are two troubles. Mrs. Breedloveβs cheeks have gone pink.β
Well.
This was fascinating.
βWhere are they pink?β Delilah asked swiftly.
βHere and here.β Dot pointed to places high on her cheekbones.
Angelique typically sailed through her days like a swan on a sea of jaded wit and cool aplomb, all born of worldly experience. Very little occurred to change the color of her face, unless it was the heat of the kitchen on baking day.
βI see. What was the second thing, Dot?β
βOh, youβll think me silly . . .β
βI would never dream of thinking such a thing,β Delilah lied.
βI believe I saw the letter βBβ on his ring!β she said excitedly. βOh, Lady Derβthat is, Mrs. Hardyβdo you suppose he could be . . .β she lowered her voice to another stage whisper, pressed her knuckles to her lip β. . . the Lord Bolt? Itβs just he looks so . . . so . . .β
She clasped her hands together and gazed at her mutely, blinking her huge pale blue eyes.
Apparently not even the broadsheetsβwhich Dot read with religious fervorβcould provide her with a sufficiently hysterical word.
Delilah silently counted to three to fortify her patience. Ten would have been better but time seemed of the essence.
βThat poor misguided young man drowned in the Thames a decade ago. A life wasted. Unless youβre a newspaper that peddles gossip, in which case they profit from him still.β
βBut the broadsheets said someone who looked just like him walked into Mantons last week and shot the heart out of every target and walked out again without saying a word. Scared everyone silly, they said!β
βBut, Dotββ
βAnd that someone who looked just like him walked into his favorite glove maker in the Galleria and paid for a pair that Lord Bolt had ordered specially just before he died, black with brown wrists, and walked out again! Right dear they were, too.β
βDotββ
βAnd that Lady Wanaker claimed her loins had started up a burning out of nowhere like they always did when Bolt wasββ
βDot, please!β
β. . . and that a mysterious wager appeared in the betting books at Whiteβs, signed and dated with the word βBolt,β and it said βI wager every penny I possess I will have revenge.β I ask you! It fair made me shiver, it did! And no one saw who did it.β She pressed her knuckles against her teeth.
βDOT.β
Dot raised her eyebrows as if sheβd made her point.
Delilah sighed. βOh, Dot. Didnβt we discuss the wisdom of believing all the gossip you read? I admire your enthusiasm for reading, but might I suggest something more calming? Mr. Miles Redmondβs book about the South Seas usually puts me right to sleep. It might be just the thing.β
Dot looked crestfallen. βYes, Mrs. Hardy. Of course youβre right. Itβs just he told Mrs. Breedlove that his name was Lord Bolt, you see. So I just assumed.β
Delilah went still.
She darted another glance at her husband. Who arched a brow.
βWe wonβt be longer than a few minutes,β she told him.
And if they were, he would be there in moments, because Captain Hardyβs unique gift was knowing when she needed him.
Β
Lucien was accustomed to the stares of beautiful women. Countless times heβd watched conclusions made and discarded scud across their faces like clouds on a breezy spring day. They noted the flawlessly sleek black coat, clearly sewn by the lads at Weston. The gold watch fob. The signet ring. The English accent so elegant and precise every consonant seemed to have been turned on a lathe. The exquisite manners, the charm precisely calibrated to weaken feminine knees.
But then there were the contradictions: the childhood French that haunted the contours of his words and syntax. The long, lean body clearly not raised on great platters of English roast beef. And no proper Englishman went around with eyes like his: Vert, comme un chat, one woman, tangled in his sheets, had purred on a memorable occasion. βLike a devil,β another had hissed on a very different memorable occasion. There was indeed something just shy of feral about him, something that implied that one could never predict what heβd get up to, and the fact that this unpredictable man was dressed up in aristocratic finery made them deliciously uneasy.
He had once cared that he did not fit anywhere.
Until heβd learned that he could use this to his advantage.
He was not in the business of making anyone feel more comfortable about anything.
So he let the beautiful ladies of The Grand Palace on the Thames stare, and he said nothing.
On the little table between them, the two pieces of the token lay locked together like lovers, reunited at last. Mrs. Hardy had fetched the other half from upstairs.
Mrs. Hardyβs dark eyes were soft and curious and she wore a gentle smile. Mrs. Breedlove seemed to actually be pressing herself back against the settee. Her chin was up a little, and her hands were folded perhaps more tightly than they ought to be, though her expression was decidedly cool. As though nothing ever surprised her. Their dresses, one red, one golden, overlapped in a shining spill of silk on the seat between them.
Mrs. Hardyβs eyes went to his new gloves, which heβd removed and laid aside on the settee next to him. Black leather, with brown wrists.
They fixed there for a time.
He spoke first.
βI should have thought youβd surround the settee with velvet rope and erect a plaque if the king sat here.β
βAh. Well, weβve only the two pink settees at the moment, you see,β Mrs. Hardy said.
She poured the tea from a pot painted all over with periwinkles.
βAh,β he said, taking great pains to sound fascinated.
She eyed him sardonically as she handed his tea to him. They both knew this exchange was inane.
He took it with a gracious nod. He drank it without sugar, without cream. It was a habit of childhood he could not abandon and it niggled him a bit. It spoke to a time when such things, the niceties and enhancements of life, simply could not be had.
βI once, in fact, sat on the kingβs knee. At the sort of party ladies such as you would certainly not be invited to attend. I was three years old.β
It was a deliberate, testing bit of wickedness.
Neither of them even blinked.
Which he liked.
βLord . . .β
βBolt.β Heβd happily say his name just like that, all day long, knowing full well the impact it had and not giving a damn anymore.
βVery well. We thought weβd perhaps have a conversation before we admit you to The Grand Palace on the Thames, since we know only what weβve read about you, you see,β she said.
βYou have me at a disadvantage, then, as I have read nothing about you.β
They didnβt laugh.
Mrs. Breedlove gave him a tolerant little smile. βAnd it is such a struggle to remain out of the broadsheets.β
When he grinned at this, she turned her head away ever-so-slightly from him, toward the mantel. The line of her fine jaw and the slope of her throat, and the way her skin took the light like a pearl, suddenly struck him as almost insufferably lovely. It made him feel fleetingly restless, as if someone had dragged a hand over his fur backward.
βPerhaps the most pertinent thing weβre read about you is that youβre dead,β Mrs. Hardy pressed on.
βBoo, Iβm a ghost,β he said mildly and fanned his fingers in mock fright.
Two strained smiles greeted this.
βLord . . .β This was from Mrs. Hardy.
βBolt.β
βMay we presume that youβre claiming to be the very same Lord Bolt who raced a high flyer down Bond Street?β
βNot at all.β
There was a pause.
βYouβre not claiming to be the same Lord Bolt who fought a duel with the Earl of Cargill and shot him in the shoulder?β Mrs. Breedlove also had an interesting recollection of his exploits.
βNo.β
βAnd youβre not the Lord Bolt who wagered a thousand pounds by writing in the Whiteβs betting book that a hummingbird wouldββ
βNo.β
βOr that you wagered five hundred pounds that you could get a donkey to kick Lordββ
βNo.β
βBut . . . then . . .β This was Mrs. Hardy.
βItβs the word βclaimβ I feel I must take issue with,β he clarified. βIt rather implies a defense must be mounted, wouldnβt you say, in support of an assertion? Shall we choose a different verb? I was born Lucien Durand. My father is the Duke of Brexford. He was not married to my mother. My mother, Helene Durand, was beautiful, kind, and a bit of a fool. Hence my existence in the world.β He gave them what was meant to be a bit of a self-deprecating smile. βFor which I am certain you are grateful.β
They regarded him with tiny polite smiles of their own.
He had the sense they wouldnβt have minded sliding the hairpins from their coiffures and jabbing him.
He liked their composure and their obvious intelligence. It wasnβt boring. He loathed boredom and he found it more and more difficult to tolerate dull people with anything like grace.
βTo further expound, my father, the Duke of Brexford, persuaded the king to confer upon me the title and the modest lands when I was ten years old. I was in favor then, you see.β He said this very, very ironically. βItβs safe to say I am no longer. But I am still a viscount.β
βI feel I must point out that this portion of Lord Boltβs . . . history is rather widely known in London and in other parts of England,β Mrs. Breedlove said gently. βAmong those who read the broadsheets, most particularly.β
Bolt gave this the tiny taut smile it deserved. βSome weeks ago you decided to choose to accept one half of the token on the table and three guineas from a small, maddeningly efficient, nondescript, supercilious man, the sort who manages the sorcery of both blending into the wallpaper and nettling like a burr beneath a saddle, to hold your finest room for his employer, who would be me. His native dialect is irony, which you would probably come to understand if you spent a few years working for me as well.β
Their silence told him they remembered him well.
βI donβt believe that was mentioned in the broadsheets,β he concluded.
βDoes this supercilious man have a name?β Mrs. Hardy said suddenly.
βExeter. Mister Exeter.β
βMister E,β Mrs. Hardy repeated, wonderingly, on a hush. The women shared a secret, a swift little mirth-filled glance he could not quite interpret. βAnd heβs your . . .β
βSolicitor. After a fashion.β
βAre we given to understand that you did not, indeed, drown in the Thames? There was a funeral, you know.β
βMore after the fashion of a celebration, in some quarters,β he said calmly. He was certain he knew precisely who celebrated. Just as he knew precisely how heβd wound up in the Thames.
βIt was reported that some women rent their garments,β Mrs. Hardy told him, dryly.
He smiled placidly. βThey generally do when Iβm about.β
Mrs. Breedlove had turned to study the flowers on the mantel with a little frown.
He knew this because heβd looked immediately for her reaction.
Mrs. Breedlove leaned forward a little. βHelp us to understand something, Lord Bolt . . . If you didnβt drown, then . . .β
βAs I was leaving a gaming hell I was accosted by two men and hurled into the Thames. I survived. Donβt know who the poor bloated soul was who was fished from the river and presented as proof of my demise, but it wasnβt me. I was on my way to China by then on a serendipitous clipper ship. Scooped from the water. Iβm fortunate I did not wind up in a pie, like an eel.β
βThis is London. One should never take for granted what winds up in a pie,β Mrs. Breedlove said evenly.
Frankly delighted by this, he transferred the whole of his attention to her. The later afternoon light through the window burnished her hair the color of an old doubloon, a shade or two darker than her gown.
βWords to live by,β he said gravely.
She turned ever so slightly away again, as though he were the sun, and not the great orb aiming beams through the window.
A silence ensued.
The room was comfortable, heβd grant it that. The proportions were gracious and pleasing. Through the sturdy closed doors came the strains of a muffled reel. A bit like the way it would sound if ghosts were having a party. Lucien had reached adulthood feeling both on the outside of things and at the center of things (usually gossip), and for an instant he felt that way again.
βAs for that duel . . . It takes particular skill to avoid a target as big and black as the Earl of Cargillβs heart. He can still use his shoulder, but Iβll warrant he thought twice about using his mouth that carelessly again.β
They went perfectly still.
Mrs. Breedlove leaned forward just a little, and it took every scrap of breeding his father had insisted he acquire to keep his eyes on her face and not where they yearned to go, the expanse of creamy dΓ©colletage. βLord . . .β
βBolt. Or Viscount Bolt, if you prefer.β
βIf you could help us understand why youβve chosen to . . .β she paused ostentatiously β. . . favor . . . our establishment with your resurrection? And what are your plans for the future?β
Oh, well done, Mrs. Breedlove, he thought. He had a weakness for a good, irresistibly subtle piss-taking.
He met her direct gaze evenly. Her eyes were hazel, full of soft greens and golds, a surprisingly gentle color in such a coolly possessed woman. A bit like a spring dawn. The gears of time suddenly slipped. …
Β© 2019 Julie Anne Long
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USA Today bestselling author JULIE ANNE LONG originally set out to be a rock star when she grew up (and she has the guitars and fringed clothing stuffed in the back of her closet to prove it), but writing was always her first love. Since hanging up her guitar for the computer keyboard, her books frequently top reader and critic polls and have been nominated for numerous awards, including the Rita, Romantic Times Reviewerβs Choice, and The Quills, and reviewers have been known to use words like βdazzling,β βbrilliant,β and βimpossible to put downβ when describing them. Julie lives in Northern California.
Website http://www.julieannelong.com/
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Giveaway:
To celebrate the release of ANGEL IN A DEVILβS ARMS by Julie Anne Long, weβre giving away a paperback copy of Lady Derring Takes a Lover by Julie Anne Long!
GIVEAWAY TERMS & CONDITIONS:Β Open to US shipping addresses only. One winner will receive a paperback copy of Lady Derring Takes a Lover by Julie Anne Long. This giveaway is administered by Pure Textuality PR. Giveaway ends 11/12/2019 @ 11:59pm EST.
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