When a Rogue Meets His Match Read online




  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2020 by Nancy M. Finney

  Cover design by Elizabeth Turner Stokes

  Cover illustration by Alan Ayers

  Cover photography © Shirley Green Photography

  Cover copyright © 2020 by Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  Bonus novella Night of the Scoundrel by Kelly Bowen © 2019 by Kelly Bowen

  Hachette Book Group supports the right to free expression and the value of copyright. The purpose of copyright is to encourage writers and artists to produce the creative works that enrich our culture.

  The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book without permission is a theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like permission to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), please contact [email protected]. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

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  First Edition: December 2020

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  ISBN: 978-1-5387-6356-8 (mass market), 978-1-5387-6355-1 (ebook)

  E3-20201028-DA-NF-ORI

  Table of Contents

  Cover

  Title Page

  Copyright

  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 Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Epilogue

  About Elizabeth Hoyt

  Other Titles by Elizabeth Hoyt

  Praise for Elizabeth Hoyt

  Night of the Scoundrel 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

  Discover More

  About Kelly Bowen

  Explore book giveaways, sneak peeks, deals, and more.

  Tap here to learn more.

  Chapter One

  There once was a jolly tinker who tramped up and down the land selling his wares.…

  —From Bet and the Fox

  September 1760

  On the outskirts of London

  There is never a good time to be accosted by highwaymen. However, whilst emptying one’s bladder is a particularly bad time.

  Messalina Greycourt froze, the last drops of her urine tinkling into the pretty china bourdaloue she held between her legs. She stood awkwardly in the carriage, both her maid, Bartlett, and her uncle’s wicked factotum, Mr. Hawthorne, having stepped out to give her privacy not two minutes before.

  Outside the carriage it was ominously quiet, as if the shouted order, “Stand and deliver!” had stilled everyone there as well.

  She swallowed as she strained to hear any sound.

  Boom! The gunshot broke the silence.

  Messalina let her skirts fall.

  The carriage door flew open, and Bartlett was shoved inside. For a second Messalina saw Mr. Hawthorne’s savage face, his wicked black eyes glittering as he ordered, “Stay.”

  Then the door slammed shut on the sounds of shouts, gunfire, and whinnying horses.

  Bartlett, normally a sturdy, practical woman, looked at Messalina with wide eyes.

  The carriage rocked as if something large had been thrown against it.

  “How many highwaymen are there?” Messalina demanded.

  “I don’t know, miss,” Bartlett replied shakily. “Over half a dozen, I think.” Her gaze dropped to the bourdaloue still in Messalina’s hands, and she added more prosaically, “Oh, let me take that.”

  The bourdaloue looked like nothing so much as a gravy boat. Oblong and with a handle at one end, it was a delicate pink, gilded around the lip. Usually, of course, Messalina would hand it out of the carriage to Bartlett, who would dispose of the contents. Now her poor lady’s maid was left standing, holding a china vessel full of piss inside a rocking carriage.

  This was all Mr. Hawthorne’s fault. If the man had simply let her stop prior to nightfall as Messalina had suggested, she—

  The door was wrenched open again and a large, filthy man filled the frame, his fleshy lips pulled back in a leer.

  Bartlett shrieked.

  Messalina snatched the bourdaloue from the maid’s hand and flung it in their attacker’s face. The china dish bounced off his forehead, dousing him in urine. Messalina pushed him hard.

  He tumbled backward out of the carriage.

  She slammed the door closed after him and looked at Bartlett.

  The other woman’s face was white. “That was…erm…quick thinking, miss.”

  Messalina straightened, trying and failing to control the heat rising in her cheeks. “Yes, well. Needs must.”

  Outside, someone screamed and was suddenly cut off.

  Messalina found herself holding her breath in trepidation.

  The carriage door opened, and Gideon Hawthorne climbed inside.

  She let out her breath in a gusty sigh of relief before sinking to the carriage seat.

  “Oh, thank the Lord,” Bartlett said, exhibiting a hitherto unknown religious fervor.

  Mr. Hawthorne shrugged. “Or me.”

  Messalina fought an urge to laugh as Bartlett plopped down beside her.

  Then she saw the bloody knife Mr. Hawthorne was holding.

  His enigmatic eyes met hers. “I trust you are unhurt?”

  He’d killed for her—and himself, of course. “I’m fine.”

  Mr. Hawthorne nodded and sat. He produced a handkerchief and began wiping the blood from the knife, staining the fabric bright red as he did so. Without glancing up, he murmured, “I always clean a knife immediately. The blade can become dull if left…dirtied.”

  “I’ll be certain to wipe the blood from the many knives I carry,” she said tartly.

  “Do so. Besides,” he said with what sounded like perfect seriousness, “blood is ungodly hard to remove from fabric.”

  She stared at him, appalled.

  Mr. Hawthorne wasn’t a particularly big man. One didn’t immediately think on first glance, Here’s a fellow I should avoid at all costs if I value my life. It was the second look that did it. Then one noticed the competent, muscled frame, the dangerously economical way he moved, and his sudden stillness, as if he was gathering himself to attack.

  And then there was his face.

  Mr. Hawthorne had the countenance of a devil. His eyebrows formed a deep V over his eyes, the outer edges winging up in a demonic slant. On his right cheek was a long vertical scar, thin and ominous. He was an intimi
dating man.

  A frightening man.

  When Messalina could stand the silence no longer, she cleared her throat. “Well?”

  He glanced up at her. His eyes were gleaming black like his hair. “Well what?”

  Messalina’s own eyes narrowed. “Are the highwaymen gone?”

  “Of course.” He flicked the knife closed and somehow made it disappear into his coat before standing to knock on the roof.

  Hawthorne sat again, watching her unnervingly.

  There were only two servants in the carriage box. Even if Bartlett had overestimated the highwaymen, Mr. Hawthorne and his men had been badly outnumbered.

  “Did you worry for me?” His sly, rasping voice interrupted her thoughts.

  “No,” she said flatly.

  “You’d prefer a band of highwaymen to me?” His inflection had just a hint of the London streets.

  “Yes!”

  “Fortunately,” Mr. Hawthorne said softly, ominously, “you’ll never have the chance to make that silly choice. Not while I have possession of you.”

  “Possession.” Messalina glared at him even as she suppressed a shiver. Why would he use that word? As if he owned her. “Whatever makes you think you can—” she began, and then she noticed that he had taken something from his pocket.

  He held her bourdaloue, pink and dainty, in his hands.

  “I think,” he said, examining the vessel with unseemly interest, “that this is yours.”

  Messalina’s mouth dropped open.

  Bartlett snatched the dish from Mr. Hawthorne’s hands. “I never!” she muttered as she put the thing away.

  Mr. Hawthorne smirked, leaning back and tilting his hat over his eyes until only his curled lips could be seen.

  Messalina turned pointedly to gaze out the darkened window.

  A little over a week ago Mr. Hawthorne had waylaid her carriage in the north of England and informed her that her uncle, Augustus Greycourt, the Duke of Windemere, required her presence immediately. So immediately in fact that the duke had sent Mr. Hawthorne to personally escort her back to London. She’d been forced to abandon both her carriage and Lucretia, her younger sister, with whom she’d been traveling. There had just been time for Messalina to indicate to Lucretia that she should go to their eldest brother, Julian, for help before she’d been whisked away.

  After that, Messalina had spent a week traveling with the odious Mr. Hawthorne.

  She darted a glance at him from beneath her eyelashes.

  Mr. Hawthorne was apparently asleep now that the danger was over. His booted feet were crossed at the ankles, his arms over his chest. The carriage lantern threw a glow on a sculpted chin and breathtakingly high cheekbones. His mouth was curved at the corners as if even in sleep he were privately amused at some lewd joke. The upper lip was thin and strictly constrained to a classical Cupid’s bow, but the lower lip belied the upper’s repression with obscene plushness.

  He had the most depraved mouth Messalina had ever seen on a man.

  She looked away hastily. Mr. Hawthorne was a ruffian. Messalina knew—as did everyone else—that he’d emerged from the worst stews in London. There were rumors that her uncle had found him earning his living by competitive knife fighting. Mr. Hawthorne had been but seventeen at the time. Up until ten minutes ago Messalina had always dismissed that gossip as far too lurid to be true.

  She was beginning to revise that opinion.

  She eyed the white scar bisecting Mr. Hawthorne’s left cheek. It was thin and silvery like the trail of a teardrop. She would do well to remember that Mr. Hawthorne was a man accustomed since youth to savage violence.

  Messalina shivered in distaste and turned away again from her guard dog. Instead of woolgathering over Mr. Hawthorne, she ought to be considering Uncle Augustus’s purpose in summoning her. Mr. Hawthorne had flatly refused to inform her why her uncle wanted her in London. Naturally that had meant she’d spent the past week becoming more and more anxious.

  Not that she let it show.

  Whether Uncle Augustus had decided to exile her to the American Colonies, present her with a new riding mare, or cut her living expenses entirely, she would meet the news equally phlegmatically.

  The Duke of Windemere gorged on fear.

  Better to remember the small amount of pin money she’d saved over the last few years. When Messalina had saved enough, she would take Lucretia and disappear into the Continent or the New World.

  A place where her uncle could no longer dictate their lives.

  “Ah, now we’re in London proper, miss,” Bartlett whispered, nodding to the bright lights outside the carriage window. “It’ll be nice to sleep in a decent bed after so many nights on the road, if you don’t mind me saying so.”

  “Yes indeed,” Messalina replied, not bothering to whisper.

  Mr. Hawthorne didn’t react. He was either still asleep or pretending sleep, the better to spy on her.

  Messalina watched out the window as they trundled slowly into the West End, feeling quite weary and ready for a rest.

  It was nearly an hour more before the carriage drew up outside the towering classical facade of Windemere House, the London residence of the Dukes of Windemere.

  Mr. Hawthorne stirred immediately, sitting upright as alert as if it were morning, damn him.

  He looked at her, and for a moment she had the idea that his hard eyes had gentled. He seemed almost as if he wanted to tell her something.

  Then the carriage door opened, and a footman handed Messalina down. She glanced up from shaking out her skirts and couldn’t quite suppress a start.

  Augustus Greycourt, the Duke of Windemere, was waiting at the top of the stairs. He was a jolly-looking man, short and round, with a face that might seem kind if one was unaware of the rot within.

  Hawthorne came up beside her and took her arm. She glanced at his hand, confused. He had missed a bit of blood on his thumbnail.

  She shuddered.

  “Ah, Messalina,” Uncle Augustus said. “I was beginning to think you’d be late to your own wedding.”

  Messalina felt a chill run down her spine. Her wedding?

  Uncle Augustus continued, smirking, “But how could you be late when your bridegroom is also your escort?”

  Slowly Messalina turned her head.

  And met Mr. Hawthorne’s diabolically gleaming black eyes.

  * * *

  Gideon Hawthorne had always thought that Messalina Greycourt had the most fascinating eyes. They were gray—a cool, clear gray—with a ring of near black around the iris.

  He watched as those intriguing eyes filled with loathing—for him.

  Gideon looked away. He’d always known that she’d hate this plan. Still he felt a twinge—a very small twinge.

  Gideon’s gaze slid to Windemere. What was the old man doing? Messalina was a headstrong, smart, and stubborn woman. The duke knew she wouldn’t agree easily to a forced marriage. And yet his words were calculated to make Messalina dig in her heels.

  But perhaps that was what Windemere wanted: a fight that could end only one way—with the duke triumphant and Messalina humiliated.

  Gideon would have to make sure no such thing happened.

  Windemere grinned. “Come, girl,” he called to her. “Bring your fiancé inside so we can have a coze in my study.”

  Messalina’s features were blank. Most would have no clue that she was frantically thinking underneath her guarded expression.

  But Gideon had spent years watching Messalina’s face. He knew he had to prepare both his offense and his defense.

  His grip tightened around her upper arm. It was unlikely that she’d run off into the dark streets of London—Messalina was no fool—but the old man was doing his best to provoke her. And Gideon would be damned before he lost her now.

  His touch seemed to wake her. Messalina blinked and tried to pull her arm from his hand. She glared up at him when he refused to release her.

  Gideon let a small smile curve his lips
—better a scowl from her than to be ignored.

  Windemere interrupted their silent skirmish. “You’ve declined all the suitors I’ve put before you, Niece, but you shan’t wriggle free from marriage tonight. I’ve already sent for the bishop. If you want to marry in something other than stained traveling clothes, you’ll have to hurry.”

  Gideon shot a narrow-eyed glance at Windemere.

  The duke beamed down on them, damn him.

  Gideon leaned close to Messalina, murmuring, “We’d best go in.”

  “Naturally you’d say that,” she snapped in reply, but she stepped forward to climb the steps.

  As they drew level with the old man Messalina said simply and certainly, “No.”

  There was his girl. Gideon couldn’t help his silent satisfaction even if her stubbornness wasn’t to his benefit.

  Her flat refusal finally drove the idiot smile from the duke’s face. “What did you say, sweet niece? Pause before you speak, for I know you’ve been hoarding your pin money.”

  She paled. “What have you done?”

  “I have done nothing,” Windemere replied. “Hawthorne, however, has taken your little purse into his possession.”

  “Of course Mr. Hawthorne did.” Messalina’s glance at him was searing. “I do hope you enjoyed rummaging in my trunks.”

  Gideon raised an eyebrow, irritated by both her scorn and her words. “I assure you, I was quite bored.”

  That for some reason provoked a blush. “You’ve rifled through that many ladies’ possessions?”

  Before he could reply, the duke interrupted.

  “Enough!” Windemere said impatiently. “Messalina, you have no hope—not even any expectation of hope—of escaping me. Go to your rooms and prepare yourself for your wedding.” He paused and then said with studied nonchalance, “Unless you’d prefer to have Lucretia take your place?”

  Gideon felt a muscle twitch in his jaw. He’d agreed to marry Messalina and only Messalina. He had no intent—or desire—to marry Lucretia Greycourt.

  Messalina inhaled sharply as the duke laid down his trump card. She lifted her pigheaded little chin, but the slight tremble in her voice betrayed her. “I will never marry your henchman, nor shall my sister.”

  Gideon cleared his throat and gave the duke a pointed look. “It is chilly, Your Grace. Would you not like to talk with your niece inside by that fire you mentioned?”