Wicked Angel

Wicked Angel Read Online Free PDF Page B

Book: Wicked Angel Read Online Free PDF
Author: Julia London
Tags: Romance
well.
    Lauren desperately hoped he was right. There was more need at Rosewood than a fledgling vegetable trade could support. With Abbey's help, she began to plan for a future that included dairy products and wool to be traded for more substantial assistance.
    She cherished her friendship with the marchioness. For once in her life, Lauren understood the quotation,
    "
of all the heavenly gifts that mortal men commend, what trusty treasure in the world can
countervail a friend?
" And contrary to what she might have expected, Abbey did not seem remotely concerned that she was penniless. Even when Mrs. Peterman blithely informed the marchioness that Lauren was, in reality, the widowed Countess of Bergen, Abbey did not seem to mind that Lauren had been less than forthright about her identity.
    The two women grew even closer, oddly enough, because of Fastidious Thadeus. In constant pursuit of Lauren, he had finally worn her to the limits of her patience and she had confided her dilemma to Abbey.
    When Abbey was through laughing—she insisted that Lauren was no more suited for Mr.
    Goldthwaite than she was for the now infamous old hog, Lucy—she helped Lauren steer clear or her ardent admirer. But poor Mr. Goldthwaite could not be convinced; he never missed an opportunity to stare at Lauren with all the longing of a dog trapped on the wrong side of a door.

Chapter 3
Sutherland Hall, England
    Alexander Daniel Christian alighted from the sleek traveling chaise the moment it rolled to a halt in front of his massive Georgian mansion in Southampton. With a curt nod to a footman, he swept through the double oak doors and into the marble foyer where two more footmen waited with his butler, Finch.
    "Welcome home, your grace," Finch said with a bow.
    Alex tossed his hat to a footman. "Finch," he responded blandly, and handed the butler his leather traveling gloves. Another footman in the silver and blue livery of the Duke of Sutherland stepped forward to divest him of his cloak. "You may inform my mother I have returned. Where shall I find the correspondence?" he asked as he straightened the French cuffs of his silk shirt.
    "The study, your grace."
    Alex nodded and strode swiftly down the marble corridor, his polished Wellingtons clicking softly beneath his determined stride. He did not glance at the new damask wall coverings, nor the dozens of roses displayed on the consoles along the hall. As he crossed the threshold of his study, he shrugged out of his coat, tossed it carelessly to an overstuffed chair of dark green velvet, then strolled to the intricately carved Louis XIV desk in the middle of the large room. "Whiskey," he said to a footman and picked up the correspondence. Settling gracefully into a chair of burgundy Corinthian leather, he sifted through the stack of letters that had accumulated during his two weeks in London. In addition to standard business correspondence, there were a few invitations to social events. Those he tossed aside. His eyes fell upon a missive sealed with the signet of his solicitors in Amsterdam. Ignoring the whiskey the footman placed at his elbow, he tore it open. Scanning the letter quickly, he cursed softly.
    Christ
, he had more trouble with that blasted trading company! He abruptly crumpled the report of yet another loss and tossed it across the room in the general direction of the fire. As if the rash of recent losses wasn't enough, Britain's tariffs were strangling him. If he actually
had
cargo, the import taxes were so damn high as to make it almost economically unfeasible.
    Restlessly he stood and picked up his whiskey, dismissing the footman with a terse nod as he crossed to the bank of floor-to-ceiling windows. He stared at the massive green lawn and gazebo at the edge of a lake marking his brother's grave. Alexander Christian, Viscount Bellingham, was not supposed to be the Duke of Sutherland with all the attendant responsibilities of the family fortune.
Anthony
was supposed to be the
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