From Duke till Dawn: 2018’s most scandalous Regency read. Eva Leigh
Чтение книги онлайн.

Читать онлайн книгу From Duke till Dawn: 2018’s most scandalous Regency read - Eva Leigh страница 4

Название: From Duke till Dawn: 2018’s most scandalous Regency read

Автор: Eva Leigh

Издательство: HarperCollins

Жанр: Приключения: прочее

Серия:

isbn: 9780008272609

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ been embroiled in le scandale de la Mademoiselle Emmeline. Doubtful that you’d know if St. Paul’s burned down. Which it hasn’t, by the by.”

      “Come on, Greyland,” Langdon cajoled. “I guarantee that a night at London’s most à la mode gaming hell will raise your spirits. Wine. Cards and dice. An abundance of pretty ladies.” He said this as though the presence of lovely females was the ultimate trump card. “Join us there tonight, even if only for a few minutes.”

      “What’s your alternative?” Ellingsworth added. “Geometry? Calculating the surface area of a sphere?” He feigned a yawn.

      Indeed, what was Alex’s alternative? Home was huge and empty, a reminder that his attempt to fill it with a wife and children had been an utter failure. And it was in moments like this—quiet, introspective times—that thoughts of The Lost Queen couldn’t be held at bay. They flooded him like a monsoon in a tropical climate. If he didn’t keep moving, he’d drown.

      He growled, “Give my driver the direction of this den of iniquity with its wine and dice.”

      “And ladies,” Langdon added with a grin. He and Ellingsworth wore matching smiles of satisfaction. “You’ll have no cause to regret your decision.”

      Regret. He’d done everything right. He always played by the rules, never forgetting the importance of his ducal role. He shouldn’t regret anything. But tonight, he’d loosen his grip on the reins of his ducal propriety. After all, what had being proper ever gotten him?

      A spring drizzle settled over the streets, calling forth scents of wet stone and manure. The slick cobbles gleamed like onyx as pedestrians and horses picked their way over the uneven stones. London grew loud with the rain as people shouted to each other and hooves clattered.

      The gaming hell was situated in a slightly raffish part of Piccadilly. It nestled between other stone-faced buildings, sporting a colonnade and the slightly overdressed look of a prosperous banker. Heavy velvet drapes concealed the windows. True to Ellingsworth’s word, well-dressed prospective guests were queued up on the curb, waiting for the doorman to admit them entrance. No one seemed to care about the rain—they were far too busy craning their necks to see how much farther they had to go before being admitted entrance.

      Alex had never seen such a thing in his many years of sampling London’s entertainments. He didn’t know he could still be surprised—which was both alarming and intriguing.

      The carriage drove past the queue on the way to the front door. He, Langdon, and Ellingsworth got out of the vehicle, then stood in the street, looking at the latest in gambling establishments.

      “I’m not getting in line,” Alex stated flatly. The very idea that a duke would queue up like a clerk buying his luncheon was utterly foreign.

      “That’s not a concern,” Langdon assured him. Leading the way, he ascended the front steps and approached a man in green livery.

      “Back of the line,” the doorman said without looking at Langdon.

      Langdon scowled. “I was here yesterday! With my friend.” He shook Ellingsworth by the shoulder.

      “Back of the line,” the servant intoned. “Got to make room for fresh faces, fresh blunt.”

      “We brought a new face with plenty of blunt,” Ellingsworth insisted. He pointed at a very irritated Alex. “This is the Duke of Greyland.”

      At last, the doorman’s impassive façade cracked. His eyes widened as he reached behind him to open the door. “Right this way, Your Grace.”

      “And my friends,” Alex said coolly as the other people in the queue shifted and muttered in discontent.

      “May of course enter.” The doorman waved them forward.

      Alex climbed the steps, then entered a foyer where another liveried servant took his coat, hat, and walking stick. The servant performed the same task for Ellingsworth and Langdon.

      “Ah, Your Grace! My lords!” A man of middle years with silvering hair and an extremely amiable countenance came striding forward, his hands outstretched as if welcoming old friends even though Alex had never met the man before. Somehow, word must have already reached him from the front of the house that a duke and two other noblemen were in attendance. “Welcome! All of you are most welcome to my humble establishment.”

      Humble wasn’t quite the word Alex would have used to describe the place. From the foyer, he could see into a large chamber adorned with crystal chandeliers, shining brass fixtures, equestrian paintings, and curtains fringed with gold braid. It was a cross between Carlton House and a brothel—though the two weren’t all that different from each other.

      “I am Martin Hamish,” the proprietor continued, a hint of Scottish burr in his voice. “And this institution of fortune is at your disposal.” Hamish snapped his fingers, and a footman appeared with three glasses of sparkling wine, which Langdon and Ellingsworth immediately seized. Alex slowly picked up the remaining glass and sipped at the wine. He was pleasantly surprised to find it of an excellent vintage.

      Hamish waved his hand toward the main gaming hall. “We have hazard, vingt-et-un, faro, which was quite favorable toward Lord Langdon. Plenty of excellent food and drink. I employ a cook straight from the court of poor Louis XVI. Lord Ellingsworth most particularly enjoyed our lemon cakes yesterday.” He beamed at them. “Trust me, Your Grace, my lords, you will find no more pleasant way to spend an evening than under my roof.”

      Alex nodded at Hamish, then ambled toward the large gaming hall.

      Ellingsworth turned to him. “Stake me a hundred pounds.”

      “What? No,” Alex said immediately. He had the money, but he’d seen his young friend lose cash like raindrops in a cupped hand. Ellingsworth went through his quarterly allowance at an alarming rate.

      “Then give me five thousand pounds,” Ellingsworth said easily.

      “Did you secretly imbibe a cask of whiskey on our way here?” Alex demanded.

      His friend rolled his eyes. “I’m sober.” He thought about it for a moment. “Mostly.” He exhaled. “The hundred pounds would set me up at the tables so I could win that five thousand.”

      “Which you need because . . . ?”

      “I have a project I’m working on.” Ellingsworth grinned. “A secret project.”

      Alex could just imagine what folly his friend wanted to finance. “An expensive secret.”

      Langdon dug into his coat pocket and produced a hundred-pound note. He held it out to Ellingsworth. “Enjoy, old man.”

      “My thanks.” Ellingsworth grabbed the money and hurried off toward the tables.

      “First of all,” Alex said with exasperation, “what the hell are you doing walking around with that much cash on your person? You’re a duke’s heir.”

      Langdon shrugged. “Most underground gaming in London is cash only. They’re not interested in my vowels, duke’s heir or no. Your other question . . . ?”

      “Why on earth did you give Ellingsworth the hundred pounds? He’s just going СКАЧАТЬ