Monday, 26 March 2018

Enjoy a snippet of Maggi Andersen's new Regency Sons series. Captain Jack Ryder - The Duke's Bastard ~ Book One


Available for pre-order at 0.99cents. Released 4.3.18.

Book Description

Regency Sons


Captain Jack Ryder
Mr. Harry Feather
His Grace, Grant Neville, the Duke of Stamford

Lord Miles Hawkeswood, second son of Marquess Sterling

 Captain Jack Ryder - The Duke's Bastard

Book One


The death of Captain Jack Ryder’s father, the Duke of Stamford, leaves Jack restless. The duchess’ spiteful relatives have made his life a misery, and he wants nothing more than to escape London for a time. Dressed in buckskin breeches, he takes to the road on his horse, Arion, with the intention of visiting his mother’s grave in Ireland. But after one day, events conspire to interrupt his plans.
Jack finds himself not only caught up in a conspiracy of immense proportions, but also in a passionate love affair with a lady he cannot marry. Lady Ashley Lambourne’s father, the Marquess of Butterstone has been murdered, and Jack promises to find his killer.
A close friend of Jack’s from his army days, Harry Feather, heir to one of the largest fortunes in England, faces an arranged marriage to Lady Erina Roundtree. A tall half-Irish beauty, Erina is a spirited lady who makes it plain she doesn’t wish to marry Harry, either. Determined to enjoy a quiet existence after his years fighting Bonaparte, Harry fears Erina will run him ragged. Why he is indulging Erina in one of her harebrained schemes is beyond him when he should marry a quiet woman like Florence Beckworth.



Chapter One

Stamford, Hertfordshire, 1821

The horses proceeded down the avenue of ancient elms at a solemn pace, their black plumed heads bowing, as the Duke of Stamford was taken to his last resting place. His chest tight, Captain Jack Ryder watched the steam flow from the thoroughbred’s nostrils in the crisp, cold, air.
    “Chin up, old fellow.” Harry Feather, heir to Sir Ambrose, Baronet Feather’s immense fortune, walked beside Jack as they followed the hearse with a cortège of subdued friends, and relatives, a few of whom Jack wished to purgatory. The one thing he shared with the duchess’ family was mutual dislike. Close behind them was his cousin, Grant, heir to the dukedom, and Grant’s mother, Aunt Elizabeth. Jack was extremely fond of them both. Aunt Elizabeth had been the closest thing to a mother to him, visiting him at his boarding school to bring him cakes, she’d made his lonely life bearable.
    Jack scrubbed his hands over his face, as if the tiredness from too many nights of lost sleep while his father breathed his last, followed by the ensuing heavy sensation of grief, would be rubbed away. “Did as much as he could for me. Loved my mother, cared for her until she died.”
    Harry nodded. “Indeed. And not every peer sends their sons born on the wrong side of the blanket to Oxford.”
    “Then agreed albeit reluctantly to my request to join the army. Feared I’d do something reckless and be killed.”
    “He had good reason for it,” Harry said. “You did behave as if your life wasn’t worth much. Earned you considerable praise though.”
    “If he hadn’t been born a duke, Father would have married my mother. He was forced into a marriage to a woman he disliked.”
    “Who wasn’t kind to you.”
    “Can’t say that, exactly. She never acknowledged my existence.”
    Harry checked if anyone was within earshot. “The duchess was universally disliked. I’d be surprised if there were many who shed tears over her deathbed.” He turned back to Jack. “Do you mind that Grant has inherited Stamford?”
    “That drafty pile of stone?” Jack shook his head. “Why should I? I’ve known since birth it would be this way.”
    “Still, Stamford is a magnificent property and there are other investments.”
    “Father left me a living. The Northumberland farm.”
    Harry wound his scarf tighter around his neck, hunched his shoulders and pulled his hat down over his chestnut hair. “Is it in good condition?”
    “Yes. According to my father’s man of business. I’ve never been there.”
    Harry’s brown eyes widened. “Why not?”
    Jack shrugged. “Never had any reason to. It gives me a modest income, which is all I require.”
    “Is that the extent of your inheritance?”
    “It’s all I know about. I don’t expect anything more. Father bought me a commission in the army, and I saw that as a step on the ladder of life. The rest is up to me.”
    “But the war’s long over and now you’ve resigned your commission...”
    “I learned a few life skills during those years, did not you?”
    Harry shrugged. “I suspect you would have learned them anyway, Jack. All it did for me was make me realize how much I prefer a life of comfort over trekking through Spain in dreadful conditions and being shot at.”
    “Taught you discipline, toughened you up. Made you a man, Harry. You aren’t one of those soft indulged sons who waste their lives whoring and gambling about London.”
    Harry smoothed an invisible crease on his sleeve. “Have no fondness for it. But you should go and sort out that property after the reading of the will.”
    “Mm.” Jack watched the sway of the black and gold hearse moving along in front of them. He felt cut off at the knees when he tried to envision the direction his life would take. His father had given his life meaning and now it was stripped away. “Eventually.”
    “You’re in no hurry?”
    “No.” Jack drew his grief around him like a shroud, took a deep breath, and made a decision. “You know, being a bastard gives a man certain advantages.”
    “Oh? What would they be?”
    “I can go wherever I like without any call on my time. No parliament, no bending the knee to King George and his set.”
    “Some might care about those things.”
    “Well, it’s a good thing I don’t. Nothing can change it, can it?”
    “You’re accepted in society, Jack. People like you.”
    “Some do. Maybe some just liked my father.”
    Scattering fallen leaves, the hearse approached Stamford village churchyard where, hunkered down in the cold, villagers waited to see off a popular duke.
    “What do you intend to do next?” Harry asked. “Continue with your rooms in Town?”
    “No. I’m going to travel.”
    “Really? No desire for it. Saw enough during the war.”
    “Not the Continent. The British Isles. And not as a well-heeled gentleman.” The plan formed in Jack’s mind. “I’ll travel light like we did in the army. Just a small portmanteau, and Arion, my faithful stallion. I’ve seen little of my own country.”
    Harry shuddered and murmured something derogatory about how badly dressed he’d be, as the horses pulled the hearse to a halt before the family’s enormous stone mausoleum.

    Jack, with a deep anguished breath, took his place with the other pall bearers to carry his father’s coffin inside the stone edifice.


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