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Miss Hastings' Excellent London Adventure (Brazen Brides Book 4)
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Wealthy banker Adam Birmingham, spurned by mistress, offers marriage to small-town orphan Miss Emma Hastings, who arrives in London to discover her uncle—his neighbor—murdered.
"Cheryl Bolen’s charming romances never fail to enchant me. I can count on her to deliver a story full of humor, romance, and a very happy ending." — Shana Galen
"I wish I could give it more than five stars. Cheryl Bolen is in a league of her own. . . the queen of Regency romance." — Buried Under Romance
Cheryl Bolen’s Books
Regency Historical Romance:
Brazen Brides Series
Counterfeit Countess
His Golden Ring
Oh What A (Wedding) Night
Miss Hastings’ Excellent London Adventure
Marriage of Inconvenience
House of Haverstock Series
Lady by Chance
Duchess by Mistake
Countess by Coincidence
Ex-Spinster by Christmas
The Brides of Bath Series
The Bride Wore Blue
With His Ring
The Bride’s Secret
To Take This Lord
Love In The Library
A Christmas in Bath
The Regent Mysteries Series
With His Lady's Assistance
A Most Discreet Inquiry
The Theft Before Christmas
An Egyptian Affair
Pride and Prejudice Sequels
Miss Darcy’s New Companion
Miss Darcy’s Secret Love
The Liberation of Miss de Bourgh
The Earl's Bargain
My Lord Wicked
His Lordship's Vow
Christmas Brides (Three Regency Novellas)
A Duke Deceived
Romantic Suspense:
Falling For Frederick
Texas Heroines in Peril Series
Protecting Britannia
Murder at Veranda House
A Cry In The Night
Capitol Offense
World War II Romance:
It Had to Be You (Previously titled Nisei)
American Historical Romance:
A Summer To Remember (3 American Romances)
Miss Hastings’ Excellent London Adventure
(Brazen Brides Series, Book 4)
Cheryl Bolen
Copyright © 2017 by Cheryl Bolen
Miss Hastings’ Excellent London Adventure is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored or transmitted in any form or by any means without the prior written permission of the author.
Table of Contents
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
EPILOGUE
Chapter 1
A lady does not enter a tavern. If Aunt Harriett could see her niece now, she would surely perish of apoplexy. For Miss Emma Hastings not only was the sole lady—indeed, the only female—at the tavern at The George Inn, but she had also committed the most deplorable breach of decorum imaginable. She had no chaperon.
Emma should not be chastised for these mortifying transgressions. It was not her fault that her uncle had failed to meet the post chaise that had carried her from Upper Barrington to London.
When she'd disembarked from the vehicle and gathered her own portmanteau, she'd been too exhilarated to be alarmed that Uncle Simon was not there to greet her. Such a cacophony of sounds she'd never before heard. Conveyances ranging from pony carts heaped with turnips to grand carriages borne by four matched bays all rattled and pounded along the broad street. The laughter of ragged children, the snarling of hackney drivers, the hawking of flowers from ill-dressed women all fascinated her. Foghorns on the River Thames thrilled the young miss who'd never been farther south than Nottingham. This was a thousand times more exciting than the May Day Fair at Upper Barrington.
She continued to stand beside her portmanteau in the innyard whilst she waited for Uncle Simon. One hour passed. Had he not received her last letter telling him the time of her arrival? Perhaps he had mixed up the time. Perhaps he had misread her scratchy three for a five. After all, her penmanship was rather lamentable. That had to be it! Uncle Simon would claim her at five.
But five o'clock came and went, and still Uncle Simon had not come. It wasn't as if she would recognize him. She had never actually seen him. Therefore, every man of an age near that of Uncle Simon's five-and-fifty years had drawn her scrutiny. But the lone young woman dressed modestly in sprigged muslin and a hand-knitted red shawl standing beside a large portmanteau drew little scrutiny from any of them.
It was when the rain started to fall that she lugged her belongings behind her and took shelter within the tavern. She'd taken a chair next to a small round table by the window and far away from the taps, hoping none of these strange men would take notice of her. Never trust a man. All they're interested in is their vile needs. Or so Aunt Harriett had assured her—not that Emma exactly understood what those vile needs were. Nevertheless, Emma would not risk inciting her aunt's incendiary temper by even so much as making eye contact with any of these men.
She would continue to peer from the window in the hopes of spotting a middle-aged man who might be her uncle.
Though Miss Emma Hastings' knowledge of the world was extremely limited, within a few minutes inside The George, she knew from their voices these men were not from her class. It wasn't that she was nearly as high-and-mighty as Aunt Harriett, but Auntie had raised her to be cognizant of their close kinship to Sir Arthur Lippencott. They must always conduct themselves with propriety—and not be too familiar with sottish men such as those now sharing the chamber with her.
When darkness fell, panic set in. He's not coming. There had been some terrible miscommunication. What was she to do? She did not have enough money to pay for a night's lodgings. Or even a hackney ride to Uncle Simon's lodgings at 302 Curzon Street. She hadn't needed money. Uncle was a wealthy man.
With pounding heartbeat, she watched through the frosty window as the lanterns were lighted along the perimeter of the innyard. She knew enough of the world to know that London was its largest city. Thousands and thousands of people resided here. How would she ever find her uncle?
She did know that he lived in the West End and knew his address by memory. Perhaps she could try to walk to his house, though lugging a portmanteau behind her would be difficult.
Drawing in a fortifying breath, she stood and slowly approached the long bar. The man on the other side was talking and laughing with patrons but stopped when he saw her approach. The fellow turned to her, his manner reverent. She was struck over the white hairs threading his bushy black eyebrows. "May I 'elp you, m'am?"
"Indeed you can. Can you tell me if we're in the Wes
t End?"
All the men standing up to the bar guffawed.
He did not. He merely shook his head solemnly. "No, m'am. We ain't."
"How long will it take me to walk to the West End?" she asked.
His eyes widened. "A lady can't go about walking at night."
"You, sir, have not answered my question."
He drew a deep breath. "I suppose a body could walk to the West End in about an hour."
"And which direction would a body walk?" she asked.
He extended his arm forward. "That a way, but we is south of the River Thames. If one wants to go to the proper West End, one crosses the river first, then walks westward that a way. North of the river be a might better place to be walking after dark."
Emma considered leaving her portmanteau in the care of those at the inn, but as it contained all her worldly goods, she could not risk having it stolen. She would haul it herself—even if it would hamper her progress.
As Miss Emma Hastings determined to find Uncle Simon's house, she was equally determined that Aunt Harriett would never learn of her niece's nocturnal foray in the country's wicked Capital.
At least the rain had let up, she assured herself as she left The George. She walked the short distance to the river and stood on the quay for a few minutes, watching the ships and barges float down the busy Thames. All her life she’d wanted to experience this. Fog rose up from the water to obscure from her vision the other side of the waterway.
In spite of the fears which spiraled through her, she was happy to be in London. I don't want to ever go back to Upper Barrington. It wasn't that she didn't love Aunt Harriett and wasn’t grateful to Auntie for raising her orphaned great niece. But after twenty years living with a stern elderly woman who was considerably older than her friends' grandmothers, Emma was ready for adventure.
She crossed the bridge and was soon in a section of London which was even more bustling than the area she'd just left to the south. This was unlike anything she could have imagined. Even though it was night, all the shops along this busy street were open and brightly lighted. There were so many conveyances on the street, they got snarled, and more than one driver was heard saying words that would have sent Aunt Harriett running for her smelling salts.
It was impossible to walk these streets and not recall Aunt Harriett's tales of women being murdered by the madmen who lived in the Capital. "They've fished their strangled bodies out of the Thames and from the Serpentine in Hyde Park," her aunt had warned.
Emma's heart pounded faster. If she walked very fast, surely no madman would try to get her attention. How, though, did one walk fast when dragging a portmanteau slowed her so wretchedly?
Her arms ached from the bones outward, and she found herself panting for breath that most certainly had dissipated. She had to stop every dozen paces to change hands—and to recover her breathing. Even though she wore gloves, she could tell that the strap had etched into the flesh of her hands.
When the rain returned, she could have wept. Every piece of clothing upon her body got drenched, and with the falling temperatures, she shivered so hard her teeth rattled.
The likelihood of perishing from freezing was far greater than dying at the hands of a madman.
Progress was slow.
She had covered at least a mile, possibly two, when she looked up to see Westminster Abbey. She crossed a street and came to stand in front of the towering Gothic edifice. Here, in front of this awe-inspiring building where kings were crowned and poets were buried, a sense of serenity washed over her. After more than a week of travel—some of it spent with distant cousins to spare the cost of a roadside inn—Miss Emma Hastings felt as if she’d found her home. She stood there for several minutes. Somehow, she knew she'd reached the West End. Her sanctuary.
* * *
Adam Birmingham set down his empty brandy glass and with narrowed eyes observed his brother stride into White’s. From the expression on Nick’s face, it was clear he was as out of charity with Adam as Adam was with him. The elder brother stormed up to Adam’s table and spoke with measured anger. “I thought you must have died.”
“A pity a man cannot die of a broken heart,” Adam slurred. “I am compelled to keep drawing breath though I’ve lost the only woman I could ever love.”
Nick lowered his long limbs into a chair across from Adam. “I never for a minute thought you’d perished from a broken heart, but I was concerned when you weren't at the bank today. In more than a decade you've never missed a day there. Your staff was so alarmed, they alerted me.”
“I drank myself into a stupor last night." Adam shrugged. "Woke up in a strange bed quite late thish afternoon.”
Nick eyed the empty brandy glass.
Adam nodded at the waiter, who rushed to replenish it. “Leave the whole bottle.”
Nick shook his head. “I’m not staying.”
“I wasn’t offering. I plan to drink the whole bloody thing. I will drink until I cannot remember the name Maria.”
“You’re only hurting yourself. It won’t bring her back.”
“She was the first woman I ever endowed with a house, and look how I was repaid!”
“Has it not occurred to you that there are things other than your wealth that a woman wants?”
Adam scowled. “I should have offered marriage like that Italian bloke who snatched her away from me.”
“She obviously wanted marriage, but I’m not saying that you should have offered for her. Were she The One, you would have wanted her for your wife. I know it’s hard for you to believe now—now when the pain of her loss is so fresh—but you will love again. You will find a woman who you will love far more than you ever loved Maria.”
“Impossible. Maria was perfection. So beautiful. So talented. So . . . so affectionate.”
“Her affectionate nature is likely the reason you didn’t offer marriage. She’d been with many men, and you don’t want that for your wife.”
Adam’s black eyes singed. “How dare you impugn the woman I love! Why, if you weren’t my duther, I’d challenge you to a bruel.”
“You’ve had too much to drink. Come, let me see you home. Why isn't your driver near?”
“I sent him away. I plan to drink until White’s runs out of brandy.”
“It’s best you drink at Curzon Street. You don’t want to humiliate Agar after he sponsored us at White's.”
“I’m staying here.”
Nick stood. "I cannot persuade you?"
Adam shook his head from side to side with the determined sweep of a contrary lad.
* * *
Many hours later he collected his cape, top hat, and walking stick, left the establishment on St. James Street, and began to walk home.
Then he felt the patter of rain. What a fool he'd been to send home his driver. It was beastly cold—and thoroughly miserable. But even in the state of inebriation he knew himself to be in, he could easily find his way home in a little over five minutes. Better to rush along than to wait in this weather for a hackney.
Not even the thick, silvery fog could disorient him. He'd made the trek too many times. Of course those other times he'd observed the route from the comfort of his luxurious coach whilst his coachman guided them home.
His greatest threat could be footpads. He was, after all, a Birmingham. They were known far and wide as the richest men in the kingdom. Fortunately, there weren't many people out on a wretched night like this.
After he crossed Piccadilly and heard a dragging sound a short distance behind him, the hairs on the back of his neck prickled. He turned around sharply but could see nothing in the soupy fog. Clutching his walking stick which he could use as a weapon, he stood there on the pavement, every sense alert.
There emerged from the fog a girl. Or was it a young woman? She looked awfully young—possibly old enough to have just left the schoolroom. He would have been powerless to determine the color of her hair for she resembled nothing so much as a wet pup in need of a good meal
.
When their eyes met, she smiled. "You look like a gentleman. I have refrained from speaking to any man who was not a gentleman."
So she wasn't a loose woman. Her voice was cultured. He bowed. "Your servant." It was then that he noticed she was lugging a portmanteau behind her. What the bloody hell?
"Could you direct me to Curzon Street?" she asked.
Bosky he might be, but this was a mighty coincidence. Was this some ploy to rob him? He did not respond for a moment. Soft rain slickening his face, he stood there gazing at the young lady. There was something incredibly vulnerable looking about her. She was small of stature and from her dress and lack of sophistication, provincial. As she stood there, shivering, a querying expression on her face, he knew she was sincere. A more innocent face he'd never beheld. "As it happens, that is my direction. I will accompany you there." He eyed her portmanteau. "Please, allow me to assist with your trunk."
She brightened. "Do you know my uncle, Simon Hastings?"
"The name rings a bell, but I daresay it's not someone I know well." If he weren't so inebriated, his recall might be more accurate. He began to haul the cursed portmanteau behind him, wondering what it held but refraining from asking.
The young lady moved to his side. "I shouldn't like you to think me a doxy or something equally as frightful."
Good lord, he'd never heard that word pass the lips of a gently bred woman. He did not know how to respond. He could hardly tell her that because of his vast experience with doxies he was assured that she was not of their ilk. Instead he merely said, "Anyone would know you are a lady."
"Thank you. Though I have never met my uncle, he's invited me to come live with him in London. I've just arrived today from Upper Barrington, but Uncle failed to meet my coach."
So that explained why the lady was hauling that monstrosity. "Could you not have hired a hackney to carry you to Curzon Street?"