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The Desire of a Duchess

Author/Uploaded by Kathleen Ayers

THE DESIRE OF A DUCHESS THE BEAUTIFUL BARRINGTONS KATHLEEN AYERS Copyright © 2023 by Kathleen Ayers All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review. Editing by Midnight Owl Editing...

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THE DESIRE OF A DUCHESS THE BEAUTIFUL BARRINGTONS KATHLEEN AYERS Copyright © 2023 by Kathleen Ayers All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without written permission from the author, except for the use of brief quotations in a book review. Editing by Midnight Owl Editing Cover by Covers and Cupcakes CONTENTS 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 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 Chapter 21 Chapter 22 Chapter 23 Chapter 24 Chapter 25 Chapter 26 Epilogue Author Notes 1 Ellis Aperton, Earl of Blythe, rode across the expanse of meadow, lifting his face to the morning sun. A misty haze hung over the stretch of trees to his left, hiding the thickly forested area from view. Part of Ellis wished he could escape into that forest and not come back out. Perhaps find a tiny woodcutter’s cottage and spend his days in peace with no mother constantly haranguing him on duty and responsibility. He could attempt to write poetry and recite it to the trees and surrounding animals with no harsh critics to rebuke him. A sigh left him. While he adored poetry, his writing of verse was utter rubbish. Very well. He would take out the knife his father gave him and create a host of delicately carved trinkets. Possibly a squirrel that didn’t look like a frog. Or a flower that didn’t resemble a horse dropping. Fine. Wood carving was not exactly his forte either. Unfortunately, Ellis was equally terrible at sculpting in marble. Two years in Rome he’d tried, every moment fraught with frustration, though it had at least given him a reason to avoid London. Then he’d attempted poetry, something he dearly loved. He’d loitered around the Piazza di Spagna hoping the ghost of Keats, who’d lived and died in the area, might inspire him to produce the sort of words that touched hearts and souls. No such luck. After his return to London, a little over a month ago, Ellis had decided to merely carve animals and figures for his own pleasure and to amuse his sisters, all of whom had made a game out of trying to guess what it was Ellis had carved. Yes, he was that terrible. They’d done the same with the previous earl, their father. Ellis’s lack of artistic talent was clearly inherited. Alas, while Ellis adored sculpture, art, poetry, and music—another of his failings—he lacked the necessary skill for such pursuits. He was quite good with a pistol, a crack shot in fact, which was a good talent to have if he ever chose to do something romantic, like fight a duel. No one dueled anymore. He was decent with his fists, less so with a sword. Not like his friend Haven who was adept at anything remotely piratical. In truth, Ellis’s only useful skill, in addition to providing naughty innuendo, careless flirtation, and being attractive, was his ability to grow his fortune and care for his tenants. A good thing, though a trifle boring, because being an earl required both. His mother, Lady Blythe, was less pleased that Ellis also possessed what she called “common” tendencies. He could fix a plow, mend harnesses, and, to his mother’s utter horror, had once repaired the parish pump in the small village of Larch just outside his country estate. In his shirtsleeves. Mother had nearly fainted. Several village girls had swooned. Ellis urged Dante forward with a gentle nudge of his heels, clucking softly. Not Zeus, Demon, Hades or one of the other menacing, powerful, and pompous names his peers gave their steeds. But Ellis thought Dante a perfectly fine name for a horse. After all, he and Dante had been through the circles of hell together, including one over which his mother, Lady Blythe, presided. Taking a deep breath of the fresh morning air, Ellis felt some of the tension leave his shoulders. Distance from London and Lady Blythe, though he’d only recently returned, was welcome. He loved his mother. Truly. But the role of sole heir and only son came with navigating the abundance of her manipulations. Her suffocation of him had become intolerable, just as it had years ago when he’d first fled her gentle care for the delights of London. Only nineteen years old, Ellis had engaged an excellent steward to oversee things and, for the first time in his life, had sowed every wild oat in England. He hadn’t lacked for women, drink, or wealth. He still didn’t. Ellis’s golden good looks and charm assured his welcome. He’d had a perfectly marvelous time until . . . well, until his Mother had followed him to London. That had been the first time Ellis escaped to the Continent to avoid the indomitable Lady Blythe. He’d returned after less than a year and been immediately anointed London’s most eligible bachelor, much to his dismay. Ellis wasn’t unaware of his looks; how could he be? But he wasn’t overly vain about them either. After all, his appearance hadn’t been his doing, but was rather a result of his parentage, much like the title he carried and the fortune he held. He’d had nothing to do with any of it. Admittedly, Ellis was an acknowledged flirt. Something of a rake. But in his defense, he adored women as any man with five sisters and an invasive mother must in order to survive. His second foray abroad had been longer. Blissfully so. Then he’d returned, barely enduring a month before the petty tyrant dressed in canary yellow had forced Ellis to this remote location in Hampshire. He couldn’t flee the country again. But he could hide out here—at a long-forgotten hunting lodge his father had once used. Ellis hadn’t even been able to

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