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Historical Romance: Saving The Rake A Lord's Temptation Regency Romance
Historical Romance: Saving The Rake A Lord's Temptation Regency Romance
Historical Romance: Saving The Rake A Lord's Temptation Regency Romance
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Historical Romance: Saving The Rake A Lord's Temptation Regency Romance

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Love is in the air Regency style. You will love this wonderful book filled with 2 parts of 2 different regency romances because it will leave you filled with love.
 

Dashing dukes, lavish ladies and enough romance to fill a season. Grab this amazing value box set to be swept away by dashing dukes and handsome lords.

Four inspirational regency stories. Journey with these ladies as they choose the man of their dreams and find their happy ever after.
 

Part 1: The Earl's Thoroughbred

Part 2: Lady Waverly's Bodyguard

 

If you're a fan of clean regency romance, you will love this book.

The book is a full-length regency romance in the historical romance genre.
 

LanguageEnglish
Release dateDec 11, 2019
ISBN9781393943563
Historical Romance: Saving The Rake A Lord's Temptation Regency Romance
Author

Eleanor Meyers

Eleanor Meyers is a hopeless romantic who believes that one should breathe and live on love. She is especially intrigued by the love tales of the Regency era due to the juxtaposition of tradition and love in a very stylistic fashion. At a young age, she is inspired by the works of Jane Austen and Georgette Heyer.  There is a strong romantic appeal about that era and it is Eleanor’s desire that readers will take time to come away with her through her writings and immerse oneself in that time when love was so pure and intense. In Eleanor’s writings, there is a pragmatic display of human’s imperfections; hence characters who may be flawed in certain ways. In the midst of dealing with one’s imperfections, a couple found love, found hope in each other and in God. Eleanor incorporated messages of redemption, forgiveness and sometimes inner deliverances from the bondages that so held a character for so long. It is her belief that no matter how seemingly hopeless one’s situation might be, there will always be hope. They key is to wait and to believe and to hold on. So come away with her and be enthralled in the beautiful Regency era!

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Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I liked that the story was short and sweet, but it didn't feel like I was reading a regency romance. It felt more like a modern story line where everyone just happens to be riding horses. More of a western feel to it. I also did not like how much the characters blasphemed.

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Historical Romance - Eleanor Meyers

saving the rake

a regency romance book

––––––––

eleanor  meyers

Copyright

Copyright © 2020 by

Eleanor Meyers

All Rights reserved.

No part of this book may be reproduced, scanned, or distributed in any printed or electronic form without permission. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.

*   *   *   *   *

Cover Design by melody simmons

https://bookcoverscre8tive.com/

Table of Contents

Copyright

For You Personally

Also By Eleanor Meyers

Prologue

Chapter 1

Chapter 2

Chapter 3

Chapter 4

Chapter 5

Chapter 6

Chapter 7

Chapter 8

Chapter 9

Chapter 10

Chapter 11

Chapter 12

Chapter 13

Chapter 14

Chapter 15

Chapter 16

Chapter 17

Chapter 18

Chapter 19

Chapter 20

Chapter 21

Chapter 22

Chapter 23

Chapter 24

Chapter 25

Chapter 26

Chapter 27

Chapter 28

Chapter 29

Chapter 30

Chapter 31

Chapter 32

Chapter 33

Epilogue

Preview of Next Book

ORDER OF BOOKS LIST . Also By

For You Personally

Publisher Notes

* * *

Got something to share?

I would want to hear from you!

So please do get in touch with me:

https://www.facebook.com/eleanormeyersbooks

eleanormeyersbooks@gmail.com

The Earl’s Thoroughbred

prologue

*   *   *

Jo Salling's face stung like fire. She stared at her uncle, too shocked even to cry.

He dropped his hand, glaring at her.

Someone should have slapped some sense into you before this.

My father never struck me—

More the fool he was, then.

Her uncle, the newly-created Marquess of Fairport, shook his head, retreating behind what she would always think of as her father's desk. When her father was alive, he had brought her around behind it to look at the studbooks, to examine the lineages of the horses he bred, discussing their strengths and their weaknesses until she knew them as well as she knew the steps of the galliard. Now, all Jo could think was that her uncle looked as if he was hiding behind the desk, almost afraid of her, despite how he had slapped her.

There is nothing you can do to sway my decision. There is no reason to keep up a stud farm when I have no interest in horses. The horses will provide a tidy profit when they are sold, and that is final.

But the horses on the farm are my father's life work! He has bred some of the finest horses ever seen in Yorkshire, and the lines represented here—

My brother was a fool who should have built his legacy on something besides horses, Josephine. I remind you, you are now my ward, and your continued comfort depends on my goodwill, something I will say is in shocking low supply for you this moment.

Jo reared back, narrowing her eyes at her uncle. Her father had never said very much about him before he died, and now she could see why.

You cannot do this. My father's legacy is not going to be... dismantled because you think that his work was not important.

I am afraid you are wrong, Josephine. I can sell those damn horses, and I will. Rest easy. Eventually, their sale will go to your upkeep. Your father left you a tidy inheritance, but at the end of the day, that goes to your husband when you wed. Until then, I am in control of it, and I hope you remember that in the days to come.

At Jo's furious look, something in her uncle gentled, and he stepped out from behind the desk again. She refused to flinch as his hand came up, but this time, instead of slapping her, he touched her other cheek, still cool.

So young, and so very unruly. Jo, I do not like this ugliness between us. I can't imagine that you do either.

No, Jo admitted. But you cannot do this.

I'm afraid you are wrong. I can do what needs to be done for the maintenance of this estate and to make sure you have the dowry you deserve. You are so young that you cannot see that yet.

Jo bit her tongue, because there was an insidious little voice in the back of her head that wanted her to give in. Her father's death had left her feeling more than a little scrambled, and this fight was only making things worse. That little voice urged her to give in, to let what was going to happen, happen... but if she did, she would also lose her last living link to her father.

Uncle Francis... please do not do this.

Francis Sallings looked pleased that she had addressed him appropriately, but he shook his head.

These sales will go forward. Someday, I know you will understand.

A thousand things rose up in Jo's mouth, poison ready to be spit, but she swallowed them. When he was calm, it was difficult to look at her uncle and see a man who had struck her, for all that her cheek still stung. She would only make things worse if she defied him, and right now, that wasn't what she wanted to do. Not yet.

Instead, Jo clenched her hands tightly into fists, spun on her heel, and stalked out.

Her father had died a month ago. Until this very moment, she had felt too shocked and numb to do anything but grieve him. Hearing about what her uncle intended to do with her father's work brought her back to life in a way that nothing else had.

You are very wrong if you think I am simply going to let you do this. Comfort and my inheritance be damned. I will not let my father's legacy be sold off simply to add a little more money to the family coffers.

*   *   *

chapter 1

*   *   *

West Riding, Yorkshire

The problem with the country, James Finley, Earl of Westmont, decided, was mostly the people. The cool spring air was bracing, perfect for a good hunt, and the greens of the Yorkshire countryside could make even an avowed city man like James himself stop and gape in shock at the purity of the color. However, even clean air and splendid greens palled when the land was populated with dour Yorkshiremen who cared less about the money James could give them than they did about the fact that he didn't have roots in the area extending back to the Conquest.

He had hoped, after the incident in London, that he could pass a few months rusticating in Yorkshire, missing the end of the Season, but entertaining himself in other ways. Yorkshire seemed to be as good a location as any, and when he had discovered that some of the recent years' finest hunters had come out of the region's stud farms, it had almost seemed like fate.

Of course, he hadn't counted on the region's suspicion of outsiders while he was learning more about its horseflesh. Even proclaiming his title hadn't made a difference; some of the finest breeders were earls and marquesses themselves, and peers or not, there was no fellow feeling to be found there.

We're not selling this year, James heard over and over again. Not to those without a recommendation or a sponsor.

James, who was not used to doors being closed in his face no matter what they said about him in London, could only laugh about it, because the alternative was befuddled rage. In fact, the best response he had gotten in West Riding wasn't due to his titles or his charm, but instead his horse.

Gunner was a tall bay gelding with the long and lean form characteristic of the descendants of the Godolphin Arabian. He was one of the most responsive horses James had ever owned with a gait as smooth as Irish cream, and the closest that James had gotten to actually seeing the famed Yorkshire stud farms was when one of the owners asked if Gunner was for sale.

Gunner most definitely was not, and now James rode him along the river road south of the River Ouse. Gunner was eager to run, and for a short while, James gave him his head, letting the tall horse stretch out his legs on the firm and smooth track. It was spring, the time when most of the country people were tending to their wakening farms and holdings. The road was empty, and James let his mind drift.

Yorkshire wasn't feeling particularly welcoming, and it would be at least another little while before he could show his face in London again. He was tempted to take some time away from England entirely, going north to Ireland, or perhaps south to Italy. The urge to roam was never all that far from his mind these days, and a man with a good horse could go nearly anywhere.

He pulled Gunner back to a canter and then to a walk before the gelding could thoroughly wind himself, and then James happened to glance right, toward the river. Splashing through the shallow water came the most beautiful mare James had ever seen. He pulled Gunner to a halt, staring in shock.

The mare was a perfect black, not a hair of white on her slim and elegant form, and she moved like music over the water. From where James sat, he caught a glimpse of her large deep eyes, her slightly dished face, and her deep chest.

Not an Arabian, but I'd bet Gunner's keep for a year that she has some of their blood in her. God, but what a gleam on her coat, and how lightly she moves.

James was so fascinated by the mare's bewitching beauty that it took him a moment to look at the mare's rider. For a mare like that, he would have expected a gentleman of the ton, or perhaps one of the ladies who rode on the hunt. Instead, he was surprised to see a grubby, stocky boy of perhaps thirteen years, most of his face hidden by a tattered cap. The boy was dressed like most of the men-of-all-work who were so common in Yorkshire, but he handled the mare with an expert touch on the reins. As James watched, the boy guided the horse through the water with care, guiding her only as much as she needed and otherwise letting her own superior instincts find her way.

As boy and mare gained the river road, they passed through a stray beam of sunlight, and James stared at the gleam on the mare's coat. He had been around horses since he could toddle, and he had never seen a shine like that. It was less like the fur on a real animal than it was like a mineral gleam, and before he had quite decided to do something about it, he urged Gunner forward to canter alongside the boy.

The boy gigged the mare to the left, gesturing for James to pass.

James ignored the gesture, falling in beside the pair.

Fine looking horse you have.

The boy scowled at him. What's it to you?

James ignored the boy's curt response. I know horseflesh, and I've never seen one like her before. I couldn't really let you pass without trying to find out more.

The mare tossed her head as if she could tell she was the topic of conversation, and the boy reached down to settle her with a hand on her proudly arched neck.

There, sweetheart, no need to be so proud. You could satisfy your curiosity with the studbooks or with the horse breeders hereabouts, sir. I am no scholar.

I've been reading the studbooks since I was a lad, and I don't know which Yorkshire you know, but no one here will speak to me. I'll have to settle for you.

The boy chuckled reluctantly. I'm afraid I have to disappoint you, sir. I've a long journey ahead of me, and I don't have time to instruct some gent on his horses.

There was something forced about the boy's tone, husky and almost squeaking by turns. The longer James gazed at the boy, the less pleased the boy looked. He had thought he was delivering the horse to his master's house after a run or a hunt, but now James wondered if there was something more dire at hand.

So, who does this horse belong to?

The boy turned his head to glare at him for a moment before looking away. The boy had wide green eyes that made James think of the green and living countryside around them. If the boy was some kind of nature spirit carrying the soul of the land in a human body, he was a sullen one. As a matter of fact, Jame thought wryly, that was nearly perfect for Yorkshire.

This mare belongs to the Marquess of Fairport.

There was something reluctant in the boy's tone, but James couldn't quite tease out what it was.

The marquess must trust you a great deal to let a boy as young as you out with such a fine animal.

The boy shrugged and urged the mare forward a little faster.

Without missing a beat, James clicked to Gunner and kept up alongside the pair.

Do you think your master would be interested in selling that mare?

No. I know he won't.

Very certain of yourself.

I am, sir.

The boy was still just a little too polite to keep from telling James to mind his own damn business, and James used that to his advantage. Ignoring the boy's sideways looks, he followed along beside. The more he saw of the mare's gait and carriage, the more the sun glinted on her coat, the more he was determined to add her to his own stable.

Is your master in residence where you are headed?

The boy looked at him warily, and once again, James got the idea that there was more going on than the boy wanted to reveal. What's it to you?

I've been in Yorkshire for a few weeks now, and I'll confess, I've not made too many social conquests hereabouts. I feel that perhaps with a man who appreciates horseflesh as much as your master does, I might do a little better.

The boy laughed, his voice cracking a little and making him cough. James could remember those awkward years, and he would be more sympathetic if he weren't having more and more suspicions about the situation.

Begging your pardon, sir, but the marquess takes his horses very seriously. One fine hunter, and I'll say that yours looks passing fine, isn't enough to be reckoned an expert in these parts.

And what does it take, in your estimation, then, to be a true expert on horses?

It takes me already knowing who you are; there's that for a start.

James laughed at the boy's effrontery, shaking his head.

You're lucky no one's whipped that sharp tongue out of your head for you.

I should like to see them try. Tempest and I would be in another county before you could even reach for me.

Her name's Tempest, then?

Yes, Tempest for her coat and for her nature.

Where did she get a coat like that? I've never seen the like.

The boy's mouth clamped shut, and he looked at James again warily. I don't think I've much interest in talking to you any longer.

What a shame then, because we seem to be going the same way. James was tired of dancing around the subject. Look, lad. It's time to be honest.

Is it?

Yes. You're not fooling me any longer. Why'd you steal the horse?

The boy pulled the mare up so quickly she snorted angrily. I didn't steal her! She's mine.

And I'm the Queen of Sheba. Actually, I'm James Finely, Earl of Westmont and Baron Redding. It's obvious something is going on, and I think I'm right. I think, for one reason or another, you took that horse from your employer, whoever he is. I don't need to know why, but I can help you. We can go back, tell him that you just ran into me, and I insisted on seeing the mare—

Why in the world would you do anything to help me?

I suppose because I like the look of your mare and—

It took James a moment to realize he was speaking to thin air. The young boy was off like a shot. With a touch of his heels to the mare's sides, she was a bolt of black lightning streaking down the road before them, and after a moment staring after the boy, James urged Gunner into a hot dash behind them.

And to think I was getting bored of the country.

*   *   *

chapter 2

*   *   *

Jo heard the man riding after her in pursuit, but once she got a few lengths ahead of him, she knew he wasn't going to catch her. Tempest was the finest horse to come out of her father's stables, and even as a yearling, her father had thought Tempest's like wasn't to be seen in England. Steadily, she pulled ahead of the man's sturdier hunter, and when she came around the bend, she turned the horse into the forest trails.

Tempest was fast and dainty-footed, and she followed one of the deer trails off the road a short distance. From there, shielded by the high bank and the new scrub, Jo kept her mare still as the strange man on the road thundered past. His gelding was of a high quality, she had known that immediately upon seeing it, but he was nothing compared to Tempest.

What a strange man. She hadn't expected to be stopped by a stranger on the road. Yorkshire, in general, was a place known for its stoic people, and no one stopped much to chat. The man was clearly not from the area, and perhaps that was why she found him so strange.

Well... it wasn't just how strange he was acting, if she were entirely honest with herself. His black hair and gray eyes were striking enough, and there was something strangely beautiful about his face. She supposed he would be called handsome if he stopped moving or kept his face still, but when he was smiling, teasing, and questioning, he had a kind of liveliness that made handsomeness seem secondary to his charm.

Jo had noticed right away that he sat a horse very well. With his tall and athletic form, the stranger looked as if he were born to be on horseback. A part of her absently wondered what he might do mounted on her father's own blood bay hunter, one of the tallest horses the Fairport stud farm had ever thrown. She flinched away from the thought because the blood bay Hauer was the first horse her uncle sold off to a visiting Prussian dignitary.

I can't think about this now. I need to concentrate on getting to London and to the Earl of Leaford.

She counted to five hundred, and then when she had not heard anything else, she guided Tempest back on to the road. Despite the day and a half they had already traveled, Tempest was still moving as if they were only out for a midday run.

London is just seven days away. If I can get to London, if I can get to the earl, everything will be fine.

With any luck, the strange man had given up and returned to whatever errand brought him to Yorkshire, or perhaps he had stopped for a drink somewhere and would not see her and Tempest sneak by. That was the only thing that mattered to her.

Tempest looked as if that run wasn't nearly enough for her taste.

Jo grinned as she thumped the mare's neck gently with her fist.

Sorry, pretty girl. We've got a long way to go, and there are no good stalls for us between here and London, I'm afraid.

She was just getting ready to take Tempest down the river road when she heard the sound of hoof beats behind her. Even this early in the year, there were plenty of hunting parties and various other riding expeditions going on in Yorkshire, and thinking nothing of it, she guided Tempest to the side of the road to give the group plenty of space to pass.

To her shock, however, it was not a group of gentry out for a ride or even a hunt. Instead, it was a trio

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