Spotlight: A Lord Apart by Jane Ashford
/Publication Date: 3/26/2019
Family secrets, an unlikely alliance—and a love neither expected...
After his parents' sudden death, Daniel Frith, Viscount Whitfield, is struggling to unravel a web of chaotic family records. He is astonished to learn his father's will contains a mysterious legacy: a house left to a complete stranger. He knows nothing about the beautiful Penelope Pendleton and he's not sure he wants to...until she turns out to be a whiz at all those nasty tasks involved in estate administration...
Penelope has no idea why Rose Cottage was left to her. But it's a godsend after her brother's reckless actions disgraced her family. She had planned to stay out of Viscount Whitfield's way, not grow ever closer to him. But when they discover how entwined their families really are, Daniel and Penelope must collaborate to avoid a scandal that reaches much higher than they could have guessed...
Excerpt
Penelope found a man dismounting a fine blood horse on her doorstep. Stocky, brown-haired, with blunt features and a square jaw, he wasn’t classically handsome. But somehow he didn’t need to be. He held one’s attention by the sheer force of his presence. His expression suggested that he was accustomed to deference and obedience. Penelope took a step back. The last year had made her wary of such men.
The visitor looked her up and down. Was that disapproval? It couldn’t be hostility. Unless he’d somehow received word…no. Not yet. Impossible. Penelope wondered if she’d rubbed dust on her face. Her gown was crushed and wrinkled from hours in the post chaise, but it had once been expensive.
“I’m Whitfield,” he said.
The name was unfamiliar. Penelope relaxed a little. He must be a neighbor. “Hello, Mr. Whitfield. I am—”
“Not mister.”
“I beg your pardon?”
“Rose Cottage was part of my estate until my father willed it to you,” he went on. “I’d like to know why.”
“Your father?” Penelope forgot all else as she latched onto this piece of information. The solicitor who’d tracked her down and told her about the legacy had refused to give her benefactor’s name. The bequest was anonymous, he insisted. If she wanted the cottage she wouldn’t ask. And really, wasn’t gratitude rather more appropriate than questions? He’d been even more arrogant than this man. “Your father,” she repeated. “Not Mr. Whitfield.”
“My father John Frith, Viscount Whitfield,” he replied impatiently.
He was a viscount, and he was glaring at her.
Kitty appeared in the doorway. “There’s spiders in the wood pile, miss,” she said. “Big ones.” She spread her hands four inches apart as she gazed at their visitor with open curiosity.
The tickle of a cough began in the back of Penelope’s throat. Not now, not now, she thought, swallowing frantically. But she couldn’t stop it. The spasm came. The hacking shook her.
Their visitor looked startled, then concerned. “For God’s sake get her some water,” he said.
Kitty spread her hands. “We ain’t got so much as a bucket, sir.”
The truculent viscount put an arm around Penelope’s shoulders and urged her inside. By this time she could think of nothing but her heaving chest and streaming eyes.
“Pump some water,” the man said to Kitty when they reached the kitchen. “Hurry up!”
Kitty jumped to obey. The man examined the stream as it began to flow. Seemingly satisfied, he held cupped hands below the spout and let them fill, then brought the water to Penelope. “Here. Drink!”
Despite her plight, she hesitated.
“The water’s good,” he added. “It’s a deep well.”
It wasn’t the water, Penelope thought; it was the curiously intimate service. But she was desperate. She bent and slurped liquid from his palms. Her lips brushed his skin as she drank. His fingertips touched her cheek, leaving a startling tingle behind. Finally, somewhat recovered, she croaked, “Flask.”
Kitty struck her forehead with one hand and ran upstairs to fetch the item. When she returned Penelope took a deeper drink.
“You take brandy for your cough?” asked their visitor. He sounded amused and a bit scandalized.
“It’s water.” Her brother had used this flask for brandy. She drank again. At last the cough subsided. Penelope sagged, worn out by the paroxysm.
The unexpected viscount took her arm and led her out to the low stone wall that surrounded the front garden. “Sit. You’re ill.”
“I’m not. That is, I have a lingering cold, which will soon disappear.”
“You can’t stay here,” he said, looking around as if he hadn’t heard her.
“Yes I can.”
“I beg to differ—”
“Beg all you like, I’m not leaving.” It was rude, but Penelope wouldn’t be ordered about by this stranger. And no one would tear her away from her new home and sanctuary now that she had it.
“Who are you?”
“My name is Penelope Pendleton.” She waited for a sign of recognition. He showed none.
“Why you were left a house by my father?”
“I don’t know.”
“How can you not know?”
“Well, apparently you don’t know, and he was your father.”
This made him stiffen. “Tell me about your family. Where do you come from? Who are your people?”
Penelope went still, hearing similar demands, in harsher voices, echoing in her memory. Freely offering information had not done her much good since the killings in Manchester. “Must you loom over me?” she said to gain time.
But that was a mistake because he sat down beside her on the wall, bringing those dark probing eyes much closer.
A cough threatened. This time, Penelope let it come, aware that her struggles made her unwanted visitor uncomfortable. By the time the spasm was over, she’d decided that she wasn’t going to tell him anything. Not until she knew a great deal more. She sipped from her flask. “You really must excuse me,” she rasped. “I’m not prepared to receive callers.” This was her house. She had the right to refuse visitors, for the first time in endless months. A privilege she hadn’t appreciated properly until she lost it.
The irritating young woman gazed at Daniel from watering eyes. Miss Penelope Pendleton was pale. Her oval face was undeniably pretty, surrounded by blades of blond hair. Her blue eyes were large and clear, and they had the steady, stubborn resolve of a woman with something to hide. Daniel was the local magistrate; he knew that look.
She coughed weakly into her hand. Now she was being piteous on purpose, to make him feel like a bully. There were twisty corners to this young lady. Daniel felt a brush of the astonishing sensation that had run through him when she drank from his hands. Her lips had been so delicate on his palms. He had to find out more about her, for a variety of reasons.
“I really think I must rest,” she said.
He was betrayed into an exasperated laugh “On what? The bare floorboards?”
“I have quilts—”
“You can’t stay here alone,” he interrupted. The thought of her curled up in a nest of bedding was all too vivid.
“I’m not alone. I have Kitty.”
“And she is what, fifteen?”
“Sixteen,” said the skinny young maid, who had not effaced herself but loitered in the open doorway of the house watching them with frank curiosity. “Do you think the gentleman might see about the spiders?” she asked her mistress.
Daniel was beginning to like this girl. “Happy to,” he replied before Miss Pendleton could object.
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About the Author
Connect with Jane: Author Website: https://www.janeashford.com/