The Decadent Countess Read online




  “I will pay you ten thousand pounds.

  “I will also pay your passage back to Italy, which is now and must ever remain your home.” Leo saw the glitter in Miranda’s magnificent eyes. Ah, that had caught her attention! He took a step closer, trying to intimidate her with his superior height and size. The countess, however, was tall enough not to be intimidated, and she straightened her back and glared up at him. Leo could not help but be impressed. She had courage, he’d give her that! It was a pity she was totally without scruples, or morals….

  There was a moment when she might have spoken the truth. Cleared up this awful misunderstanding. Like a spluttering candle, the moment flickered and died. There was another flame growing inside her. Anger. It burned brighter and brighter until it was too great to be doused. The heat of it flooded Miranda until every ounce of her usual common sense had melted.

  How dared he speak to her in this fashion? How dared he make threats to her when she had come here hoping for the consideration due to Julian’s wife? She would make him sorry!

  DEBORAH MILES

  is an Australian. She lives in Victoria, in a house in an old gold-rush town, with her husband and two children. The family also includes three cats and a dog, who are all very pampered. When she isn’t writing, Deborah spends time in the garden, or reading, or embroidering very badly.

  The Decadent Countess

  DEBORAH MILES

  Available from Harlequin Historical and DEBORAH MILES

  The Decadent Countess #174

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  Contents

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter One

  Miranda Fitzgibbon tucked her hands into her sable-lined muff, and settled back into the hackney cab with a sigh of relief. Her face, which had been tinted a pale gold by the Italian sun, was presently white with fatigue, while uncharacteristic lines of strain framed a wide mouth more used to smiling. Her hair, a rich uncompromising auburn, shone bright in the gloom.

  At four-and-twenty years, she was young to be a widow. Not that her marriage to Julian Fitzgibbon had been an ordinary marriage, but still she had been fond of him. He had been a kind and generous man. Miranda wiped the tears from her lustrous dark eyes, shaking off her sadness and drawing on her impressive store of inner strength. She was not the sort of girl to let regrets weigh down her spirits. She preferred to remember her husband with gratitude and a smile.

  He had never wanted her to grieve.

  The hackney lurched to avoid another vehicle in the busy London traffic, and the lurch was repeated in Miranda’s stomach. Normally, she was a good traveller, but the nine-hour crossing of the channel and seven hours on a crowded coach from Dover had taken their toll on even her robust good health. Still, she was here now, back in England, and safe.

  Thanks to Julian, her long years of exile in Italy were at an end.

  The hackney cab turned the corner into a quiet street. It was May, and the trees were well covered in their green foliage. The buildings looked solid and dependable, much, thought Miranda, like the English character. Mayfair was an area of London unknown to her. Despite her father once owning a house nearby, Miranda had never lived here. She had resided with her mother in the country and, after her mother died, attended school in Hampshire until she was sixteen, when she had left to go and live in Italy with her father and her stepmama, Adela.

  As Miranda recalled, the other girls at the school had pitied and envied her in equal part. Her father, Count Ridgeway, was a handsome but weak man who, having begun to squander his inheritance at an early age, had now completed the task. However, Miranda’s stepmama, Adela, had an altogether more exciting reputation.

  She was known as the Decadent Countess!

  Miranda gave a reminiscent smile. Adela was far away and she, Miranda, was here, in Mayfair and fast approaching an audience with Julian’s relatives.

  That reminded her… Miranda opened her reticule and searched. The letter crackled in her gloved fingers and she drew it out, despite knowing the contents by heart. It was dated over six months ago, just before Julian died.

  His Grace, the Duke of Belford,

  Berkeley Square,

  London

  5th November 1809

  Leo,

  The bearer of this letter will be my wife, Miranda, daughter of Count Ridgeway. She needs your understanding and your assistance in establishing herself in English society after a long stay in Italy under somewhat difficult circumstances. You may be familiar with her stepmama, Adela, but be assured, Miranda is a sweet girl whose misfortune it was to be cast into a situation beyond her control.

  I know I can depend upon you, as can she.

  Your grateful and affectionate cousin,

  Julian Fitzgibbon

  Miranda smoothed the letter with one gloved finger. She was not expecting to be welcomed with open arms by the Fitzgibbon family—her marriage to Julian had been unconventional, to say the least—but she felt she had a right to their understanding and, as Julian had written, their assistance.

  ‘My family will take care of you,’ Julian had told her often enough. ‘I’m not pretending they’ll be over the moon, but that’s only because it’s so sudden and they haven’t met you yet. Leo’s a great gun, he’s my cousin Belford. Go to him if you need help—I always did. And you’ll have The Grange, that’s my manor house. It’s old and rickety, but I love it. You can live there if you don’t fancy setting up house with my mother. I haven’t got much of an inheritance apart from The Grange, but there should be enough blunt for you to live on. That is, until some rich blade falls in love with you, Miranda, as he’s bound to do!

  ‘Leo will look after you,’ he had whispered to her again as he lay dying. ‘Trust him.’

  And with those promises echoing in her ears, Miranda had come to London, to Fitzgibbon House in Berkeley Square, to the head of the Fitzgibbon family.

  The vehicle drew to a halt, and she stiffened her shoulders, unconsciously preparing herself for the awkward meeting. She had sent ahead of her arrival and fully expected to be shown into a room full of disapproving Fitzgibbons, Julian’s mother among them. And of course, his cousin Leo. And yet Miranda, despite never having met the Duke of Belford, had begun to think of him, and indeed had been encouraged to do so by Julian, as an ally and possible friend.

  As she stepped down from the hackney, Miranda looked up at the imposing house without really seeing it. Instead she was hearing again Julian’s weakened voice. Trust Leo.

  Miranda knew that, with very little encouragement, she would.

  ‘No, no, no! It won’t do, Leo. You must find a way to annul the marriage! Really, this is too much. First I am shown into your house by that dreadful supercilious Pendle, and now you will not listen to me!’

  ‘Pendle is my butler and has been for more years than I can remember. I cannot see what he has to do with the matter.’

  The rather large an
d imposing lady continued to fan herself vigorously, eyes closed, stiff curls powdered in the old way. The room was overwarm for a mild spring day, a fire burning high in the grate, and Leo Fitzgibbon, the Fifth Duke of Belford, longed to throw open a window.

  He controlled the urge.

  He seemed always to be controlling natural urges—it was part of being a duke. Instead, he leaned forward, so that the fine cloth of his coat tightened over his broad shoulders and spoke quietly but firmly.

  ‘Ma’am, you make too much of this. Julian was of age, and a sensible, clear-headed man. Just because this lady is not exactly the daughter-in-law you would have chosen does not mean—’

  ‘Oh, you can be so infuriating, Leo!’

  Her sharpness surprised him. Leo was not used to being spoken to in such a way, and he raised a dark brow. ‘Surely Julian explained his reasons for marrying her in his letter?’ he asked, his voice cooler than before.

  It was all, he felt, a storm in a tea-cup. Julian had always gone his own road but had never, so far as Leo knew, taken a wrong turning.

  ‘There was some nonsense about her needing his help because her nearest relative had died and left her in perilous circumstances,’ Aunt Ellen replied, her voice still on the verge of hysteria. ‘My poor boy obviously wrote his letter under duress, or he was too ill by then to…’ She swallowed and blinked hard, took a breath. ‘Portions of the letter were illegible, but I am sure none of that signifies. It contained no real details, Leo, merely an entreaty to be kind to her, to understand. And now I know why!’

  ‘Do enlighten me, ma’am,’ Leo murmured, bored.

  Mrs Fitzgibbon flicked him a furious look, but contained her emotions with a struggle. She was aware that Leo considered her an over-emotional female, but even he would not be so blasé when he heard the facts.

  ‘This…this Countess Ridgeway, as she calls herself, is notorious. It would not surprise me if she had never married Ridgeway at all! But then again the man was a weak fool, despite his looks… Well, that is beside the point. When Julian wrote to tell me he had married, I did not at first connect his wife’s name with that Count Ridgeway. I was disappointed, naturally, but too overcome with grief at the death of my dear boy. If I thought of it at all, I believed he truly had married this girl out of the kindness of his dear heart. You know how he was always so—’

  ‘The point, Aunt!’

  ‘Yesterday I received a letter from Lady Petersham. You know she is currently travelling in Italy? Well, I am sure she couldn’t wait to put pen to paper to tell me all the nastier details! Her letter was quite full of blots and scribbles. Dreadful creature.’

  Leo gritted his teeth.

  ‘Evidently Count Ridgeway had hardly buried his first wife—a sweet little creature!—when he married a second, and whisked her off to Italy of all places. He died a year ago and left her a widow. Lady Petersham writes that she is the woman my poor, poor boy has married.’

  Leo wondered where all this was leading. It had been last year when his aunt informed him of Julian’s marriage and, in quick succession, his death. There had been matters to deal with, and Leo had dealt with them. He had grieved for his cousin then, and still did, but he had thought the subject finished.

  Then, yesterday evening, while Leo was at his club, a note had come from his aunt expressing, in somewhat garbled terms, her dismay upon learning the identity of Julian’s wife, and that the new Mrs Fitzgibbon had written to inform the old Mrs Fitzgibbon she would be presenting herself at Berkeley Square on the following day.

  Leo had been about to call upon his aunt this morning when she had arrived on his doorstep.

  He was not pleased.

  At thirty-five, Leo considered himself a man of experience, and rightly so, for he had come into his inheritance eighteen years previously. He was a handsome man, but there was a coldness about him which made some people ask whether he had a heart at all. His cousin Julian, who had the fortunate ability of being able to see straight to the core of a matter, would have recognised that coldness as Leo’s response to the heavy responsibilities which he had been thrust into too young, and a life he often found shallow and disappointing.

  Unmarried, with a yearly income of twenty thousand pounds, his life was ordered very much as he wanted it. And yet lately Leo had felt the lack of something more. A niggling, irritating little wrinkle in his starched and ironed existence. Had he been a romantic man, he might have thought he lacked…well, romance, but Leo considered himself too phlegmatic to be romantic.

  ‘Surely Julian could be trusted to find a wife who would shame neither his name nor his position?’

  ‘You don’t understand, Leo,’ Mrs Fitzgibbon replied in shrill tones. ‘She’s quite, quite unsuitable! I don’t know how Julian could have been taken in by her, really I don’t. Clearly this Countess inveigled her way into the poor boy’s affections, hoping to obtain for herself a respectable name. She entirely lacks one of her own!’

  He shrugged indifferently, further infuriating his aunt.

  ‘Oh, Leo,’ she cried, ‘it is just too much! If you do not care for my feelings, then think of my poor, poor boy. You must do something.’

  Leo bit back an impatient snort. He looked at his aunt again, her flushed cheeks and heaving bosom. She was certainly not the most intelligent woman of his acquaintance, but he had never seen her this agitated.

  Grudgingly, he supposed that even level-headed young men had their weaknesses, and possibly this Countess Ridgeway had been Julian’s. And, if that was the case, as head of the Fitzgibbon family, it behoved Leo to act. He was not intimidated by the idea of confronting the cuckoo in the Fitzgibbon nest and sending her on her way as quickly as possible.

  ‘Leo!’

  Ellen Fitzgibbon’s sharp, irritated cry caused Leo to raise his dark brows over his dark blue eyes, a faint smile of enquiry curling his firm lips.

  ‘Leo,’ Mrs Fitzgibbon went on, her voice taking on a wheedling note in case she had offended him—it would never do to offend Leo when she needed his help. ‘As head of this family—’

  Leo sighed. ‘Yes, Aunt Ellen, I am well aware of my illustrious position. When are we expecting this…this harpy?’

  Mrs Fitzgibbon slumped in her chair with relief, her corsets creaking.

  ‘Any moment now. She wrote to advise me she would be arriving on the morning coach.’ An expressive shudder. ‘Do you know what they call her? Lady Petersham mentioned it in her letter, and as soon as I read it I had to call for my smelling salts.’

  ‘Do enlighten me, aunt. What do they call her?’

  ‘The Decadent Countess!’ Mrs Fitzgibbon gasped out the words, her corsets once again creaking dangerously.

  Leo’s blue eyes narrowed.

  All signs of amusement and boredom dropped away from him. He had had no idea it was this bad! Why had his aunt not told him this at the very beginning? Countess Ridgeway, the ‘Decadent Countess’, was notorious for her loose living. Leo only vaguely remembered Count Ridgeway, they had hardly mixed in the same circles, so that when his aunt had mentioned that gentleman before he had not immediately connected the two. He recalled him now: Count Ridgeway, a tall, laughing man who always lost at cards—one of his main reasons for fleeing across the channel—had been a harmless fool and of good family whatever his later actions.

  His second wife was neither of those things.

  Leo had not had the misfortune to meet her—her circles were not his—but he had heard enough about her to make her current position as his cousin-by-marriage unpalatable in the extreme.

  ‘What was Julian thinking of to saddle you with such a daughter-in-law?’ he asked, a hint of crossness creeping into his voice.

  Mrs Fitzgibbon smiled triumphantly. She knew the signs. Leo was angry. Leo understood at last her own feelings.

  ‘Very well,’ Leo went on quietly, looking even more cross. ‘I’ll buy her off and send her back to Italy.’

  His agreement came none too soon, for the next moment P
endle, the butler, was tapping discreetly on the door. It opened to his pinched and disapproving face, and he informed them, in the voice of a man who has eaten sour fruit, that there was a person at the door calling herself Mrs Julian Fitzgibbon and asking to see the Duke of Belford.

  Ah, now I understand everything!

  Those were the first words to enter Leo’s mind upon seeing Julian’s wife.

  He meant, of course, that he understood why his cousin had married a woman with the dubious title of the Decadent Countess. This understanding was followed by a sting of envy, something to which he had previously believed himself a stranger.

  How had the amiable Julian captured this fiery beauty, with her russet hair and dark flashing eyes? And then he reminded himself it was quite probable that she had captured him.

  Even so, there was something about her… That organ in Leo’s chest, which so many of his peers thought dead, quivered violently and began to beat to a wildly unfamiliar rhythm.

  Miranda was also surprised, so surprised that she instantly forgot the frosty reception given her by the manservant who had opened the door.

  Before this moment she had imagined Julian’s eyes to be the deepest blue imaginable. Now, she knew she had been mistaken. The Duke of Belford’s eyes were far darker and deeper and altogether more fascinating than Julian’s had ever been. Indeed, she was having great difficulty in directing her gaze away from them.

  Julian’s cousin was as tall as Julian, but broader across the shoulders, and he had glossy dark hair cut close to his skull. He also radiated strength. No wonder Julian had trusted him and urged Miranda to follow suit. How could one fail to trust so imposing and handsome a gentleman?

  Belatedly realising she was being addressed by the other person in the room, Miranda turned to Julian’s mother, murmuring a polite, ‘Excuse me, ma’am?’