A Proper Lord's Wife (Properly Spanked Legacy Book 2) Read online




  A Proper Lord’s Wife

  (Properly Spanked Legacy, Book Two)

  Annabel Joseph

  Copyright © 2020 Annabel Joseph

  Kindle Edition

  *

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

  All romantically involved characters depicted in this work of fiction are 18 years of age or older.

  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Page

  A Guide to the Properly Spanked Families

  Chapter One: Revenge

  Chapter Two: Such a Prospect

  Chapter Three: A Walk in the Gardens

  Chapter Four: How Lovely

  Chapter Five: Setting Expectations

  Chapter Six: Customary Intimacies

  Chapter Seven: Joined As One

  Chapter Eight: Lessons

  Chapter Nine: Loving and Wanting

  Chapter Ten: Waltzing

  Chapter Eleven: Starting to Understand

  Chapter Twelve: Business to Address

  Chapter Thirteen: Princess Felicity

  Chapter Fourteen: Honor, Honesty, and Truth

  Chapter Fifteen: Terribly Unfortunate

  Chapter Sixteen: Space to Breathe

  Chapter Seventeen: Forgiveness

  Chapter Eighteen: Naturalists

  Chapter Nineteen: Something Important

  A Final Note

  The Original Properly Spanked Series

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  About the Author

  A Guide to the Properly Spanked Families

  (and the characters you’ll meet in this story)

  The Marquess of Townsend

  (the hero of this book)

  eldest son of

  The Duke and Duchess of Lockridge,

  aka Hunter and Aurelia from

  Training Lady Townsend

  He is called Townsend or Towns by friends, but his future wife calls him Edward in private.

  Townsend’s sisters Felicity and Rosalind also appear in this book.

  Viscount Marlow

  eldest son of

  The Earl and Countess of Warren

  aka Warren and Josephine from

  To Tame A Countess

  His given name is George, but he goes by Marlow due to his inherited title.

  The Earl of Augustine

  eldest son of

  The Marquess and Marchioness of Barrymore

  aka, Minette and Augustine from

  My Naughty Minette

  Now that the previous Lord Augustine has inherited his father’s title of Barrymore, his oldest son now bears the name and title of Augustine. His Christian name, Julian, is rarely used.

  The Marquess of Wescott

  eldest son of

  The Duke and Duchess of Arlington,

  aka Arlington and Gwen from

  Under A Duke’s Hand

  In book one of this series, Rival Desires, Wescott and Townsend fought over a woman, Ophelia. Now happily married to Ophelia, Wescott is the only one of the four friends who isn’t single.

  Wescott’s sisters Hazel and Elizabeth appear in this book.

  Chapter One

  Revenge

  December, 1822

  Edward Lionel, Marquess of Townsend, strode across St. James Street feeling incredibly smug about his afternoon’s work. One day home from the continent, and he’d already engineered a satisfying act of revenge against his former friend, Lord Wescott.

  It involved getting married, yes, but sometimes sacrifices were warranted.

  He stopped in the doorway of his preferred gentlemen’s club, taking in the familiar scents of tobacco, smoke, and leather. Ah, it was good to be home, even if London was a cold, muddy mess in the thick of an early winter.

  He handed his cloak and hat to the attendant, smoothed his dark hair, and went to the dining room in search of his closest friends, Viscount Marlow and the Earl of Augustine. He’d barely entered when the two men stood, calling his name in a boisterous fashion more suited to a boxing emporium.

  “Is that Townsend I see?” Marlow said.

  “Look at him, in the flesh!” Augustine strode to him, grinning. “He found his way back to London after all.”

  He’d been gone so long their noisy breach of decorum didn’t bother him. He’d drifted around the French countryside for three long months, devastated that Wescott, one of his best childhood friends, had stolen the love of his life. The loss would always hurt—Lady Ophelia had been meant for him, he knew that—but at least he’d been able to pull off a satisfying counterblow.

  “Come and sit, Towns,” said August, his black hair messily tousled, as customary. “Are you hungry?”

  “We’re drinking more than eating,” Marlow confessed, pale blue eyes glinting beneath his famously white-blond hair. “We’ve missed you. How was the hunting in France, my friend?”

  He meant women, not wildlife. “Très bon,” Townsend answered, although, in truth, he’d been too heartsick to respond to any advances that came his way.

  He glanced around the half empty room. Things weren’t as busy at White’s outside the Season. Come spring, there’d be no empty tables, as married gentlemen returned from their countryside haunts. Speaking of married gentlemen… “Wescott’s not here, is he?”

  “No,” said August. “But if he was, we’d have to broker a peace between you. You can’t hold that grudge forever.”

  “I certainly can.” He poured himself a glass from the spiced brandy on the table. “He stole the woman I loved.”

  “I don’t know that he stole her so much as saved her life in a fire,” said Marlow.

  Townsend glared at him. “Even so, I can’t forgive him. You don’t know the whole story. The man is no longer my friend.”

  “The two of them are happy, anyway.” August ignored his obvious anguish to deliver the cursed update. “They’re content as lovebirds, now that they’re over their rough start. He took her to Wales and everything. Taught her how to fight with swords.”

  “He taught her swords?” Townsend found the idea preposterous. “She’s not strong enough to wield a sword. She’ll end up maiming herself.”

  “She’s not your worry anymore,” said Marlow. “You’ve got to face that. Lady Wescott’s happily married, and you’ve got to make amends with Wescott before Christmas, anyway, so the four of us can be friends again.”

  Townsend did his best to hold back a smirk. He generally tried to be a proper fellow, not the smirking sort, but his recent victory was too great not to gloat a bit. “He won’t want to be friends again when he learns what I’ve done.”

  “What have you done?” Marlow and August asked at once.

  “I’m going to be married,” he announced, raising his glass of brandy.

  “Married?” Again, both his friends spoke in unison. They both sounded displeased and ignored his invitation to toast.

  “It’s bad enough Wescott caught a leg shackle,” said Marlow. “Why are you getting married now?”

  “That’s fifty percent of us, right out of commission,” grumbled Augustine.

  “You’re supposed to ask me whom I’m to marry,” said Townsend.

  Marlow threw up his hands. “Fine. Who are you marrying, Towns? Who’s the unfortunate innocent?”

  “The Earl of Mayhew’s daughter,” he said triumphantly. “The woman Wescott was meant to marry before he lost her by ruining Ophelia’s life. Isn’t it
capital?”

  “The Earl of Mayhew’s daughter?” Augustine echoed. “Isn’t she—?”

  “In the country right now? Yes, but I’ve spoken at length with her father. We talked about how difficult a time she’s had since Wescott jilted her.”

  “But…Townsey…”

  “Of course, I didn’t mention Wescott’s name when I brought it up,” he continued over his friends’ protests. “That would have been unseemly, to confront him with the whole debacle, so I went about it delicately. Her father was instantly agreeable to a contract. He said, considering her situation, that Lady Jane would be happy to wed me right now. A Christmas wedding in Berkshire! I understand it, really. Wescott left her in a terrible lurch when he dropped her in favor of Ophelia.”

  “Townsend, dear fellow—” Marlow tried again to interrupt, but he held up a hand.

  “I don’t want to hear any scolding,” he said in a strident voice. “If Wescott can steal my intended away, I can steal his.” His friends would never understand how deeply Ophelia’s loss had wounded him. He took a drink of brandy, savoring the heat on his tongue. “The idea came to me halfway across the Channel, and I couldn’t get home fast enough. Thank God her father was in town or I’d have had to slog all the way to Reading. I would have done it, though, to pull this off.”

  “So, Towns, you’re engaged to Lady Jane, then?” said August.

  “Yes, and I’ll thank you not to argue about the civility of it. I do like Jane, from what I know of the woman. I’m not only marrying her for revenge. She’s quite pretty, isn’t she? I saw her at the balls last season, dancing with Wescott.” He smiled. “No more dancing for those two.”

  He finished his drink and put the cup back on the table. “Be happy for me, fellows. This is all working out exactly as I’d hoped. Jane and I won’t have much time to get to know one another before the wedding, but by the first ball of the Season, we’ll make a handsome figure together, and I’ll consider Wescott paid back for his perfidy in kind.”

  “His perfidy?” August shook his head. “Wescott didn’t even know you were in love with Ophelia when he rescued her.”

  “Don’t defend him.” He poured himself another drink, draining the already much depleted bottle. “At least not until I’m drunker.”

  His friends might believe he was acting hastily, or unreasonably, but in time they’d come to understand what he’d realized on his way home from France—that this was the only way to even the score between him and his former friend. It would torment him to see his lovely blonde Ophelia on Lord Wescott’s arm about town, it always would, but it would sting a tiny bit less when he was wed to Wescott’s beautiful Lady Jane.

  “What is it?” he asked his friends, as the waiter delivered a new brandy bottle. “Why must you look at me like that? I’m behaving more honorably than he did. He nearly ruined Ophelia, while I’m rescuing a recently jilted lady with a very generous marriage contract. Her father was so pleased by my offer, so surprised by my generosity he could barely speak.”

  “Oh, I imagine he was surprised, all right,” said Marlow. “You’re about to be surprised, too.”

  “What do you mean?” He looked from Marlow to Augustine. It was August who finally spoke.

  “Townsend. Dear friend. It was Lady June to whom Wescott had promised marriage. Lady Juuuune.” He drew out the name, emphasizing the vowel. “The same Lady June who married Lord Braxton a couple weeks after Wescott married Ophelia.”

  “Lady June?” Townsend blinked at his friend. “Are you sure?”

  “You utter boff. You’ve betrothed yourself to the wrong woman,” Marlow said. “Not only that, but Lady Jane—”

  August held up a hand, silencing him. “Be careful what you say now, Marlow. He’s going to marry her.”

  “He ought to be warned first, don’t you think?”

  Townsend’s brain was in a muddle, and it wasn’t from the strong drink. “What are you saying? Go back, please. There is a Jane and a June?”

  “Not very creative of the Mayhews, but yes.” Marlow blinked, half frowning. “It’s like naming your daughters Margaret and Murgaret, isn’t it?”

  “Or Agnes and Ugnes,” said August.

  “Charlotte and Churlette,” Marlow offered, warming to the game.

  “Shut up, would you?” Townsend waved a brusque hand. “Are you having me for a joke? I’ve never heard of this Jane, never seen her at any balls or gatherings.”

  “It’s no joke,” said Marlow. “June is the elder sister, the one Wescott was meant for. Jane is the younger. They’re not at all the same.”

  Townsend narrowed his eyes. “But when I spoke to Lord Mayhew of the way she’d been jilted, he agreed it had been a terrible thing.”

  “Because Lady Jane suffered the same misfortune,” said Marlow. “She’d been meant to marry the Earl of Hobart as soon as Lady June was situated with Wescott. They’d had a marriage contracted for years, because those two families are thick as thieves, but Hobart broke the engagement. Not for another woman. Just because. He’ll not be received by many families next Season because of it.”

  They all fell silent at the cruelty of such a maneuver.

  “Hobart refused to marry her, then?” Townsend pushed his drink away. “For what reason? What’s wrong with her?”

  Marlow and Augustine exchanged a woebegone look that did nothing to soothe his rising anxiety. “Tell me,” he insisted. “Tell me what I’ve done.”

  “I can’t believe you don’t know about Lady Jane,” said August. “She’s a frequent subject of gossip.”

  “I don’t listen to gossip. It’s rude and unmannerly.”

  “And informative,” Marlow muttered, “when it comes to prospective brides.”

  “Gossips are petty and tend to exaggerate the smallest flaws. Is there truly a problem? Don’t tell me she has lost her reputation somehow?”

  “No, nothing like that. I don’t know her very well,” said August. “She’s loosely acquainted with Wescott’s youngest sisters. They met while he and June were considered an item. Not to put too much a panic on it, but in some circles the sister has been called…Insane Jane.”

  “Her kinder nickname is ‘the naturalist,’” said Marlow. “Apparently, she’s been banned from the Exeter menagerie for protesting the animals’ captivity. She…” He swallowed hard, flushing. “She has apparently walked about in front of the building with a lettered sign.”

  Townsend gaped at him. “She has not.”

  “I believe she also snuck into a Royal Zoological Society meeting by dressing as a man. It’s not a well-known fact,” he added, as Townsend’s insides roiled in horror. “It hasn’t been proven or talked about much.”

  “Then it can’t have happened. Mayhew wouldn’t have allowed it, would he?” Townsend asked, hating the plea in his voice. “These tales about her can’t be true. I would have heard.”

  “Would have heard?” August scoffed. “You lunkhead, you couldn’t even figure out Wescott’s intended was June, not Jane.”

  “I haven’t paid attention to this season’s marriageables,” he said. “I meant to marry Ophelia. She was, and always will be, the love of my life.”

  “You can’t keep talking that way,” said Marlow sharply, looking around. “She’s married to your friend now, and Wescott won’t have you spouting off about your lost, unrequited love, especially in a public room like this. As for your hunger for revenge, I hope you’re happy. You’ve revenged yourself right into a disastrous engagement.”

  “Come, that’s an awful thing to say to him.” August turned from scolding Marlow and patted Townsend’s hand, perhaps in an effort to stop him drinking more brandy. “Look at it this way. You enjoy disciplining women, Townsey, and now you’ve got a good project to take beneath your wing. I’m sure it’ll only take a week or two for you to set this Lady Jane straight as an arrow. Why, she’ll thank you for developing her into a more proper lady. Surely she hates being maligned by gossips all the time.”

&
nbsp; “All the time? I can’t have a peculiar wife.” Townsend drew a ragged breath, then bent to rub his temples. “I have to find a way to escape this engagement or she’ll make me the object of ridicule. I didn’t realize to whom I was offering marriage.”

  “And how will you explain this error to her father?” Marlow drew himself up into a mocking example of Townsend’s stature. “I’m terribly sorry, Lord Mayhew, but I thought I was engaging myself to an entirely different sister for vindictive reasons.”

  “No, I won’t tell him that. I’ll tell him I didn’t understand…” He stopped, realizing how impossible such an explanation would be. “Bloody hell. I must go see my parents. Perhaps they’ll have some ideas, some way to undo this mess. My father has a persuasive way of speaking.”

  Marlow and August stared back at him, their expressions communicating doubts they were too considerate to express. To break an engagement for such a ridiculous reason, because he misunderstood who she was…and the poor woman so recently rejected by Lord Hobart?

  Oh God, what had he done? He hadn’t the least desire to marry an insane naturalist known for picketing outside the Exeter Exchange.

  “You’ll excuse me for quitting your company, friends,” he said, pushing away the brandy. “My life seems to have taken another turn for the worse.”

  “Tell your parents we said hello,” said Marlow. August continued to grimace at him, mirroring the sense of doom he felt.

  *

  Townsend checked in at his house to be sure his luggage had arrived, then dressed to go to dinner at his parents’. He thought of hiring a gig to their Regent’s Park mansion but decided to walk instead to disperse some of his panic, not to mention the smell of brandy on his breath. The Duke and Duchess of Lockridge normally would have been in the country by now, preparing to celebrate Christmas amid the wooded beauty of Oxfordshire. It was his fault they were still in London, awaiting his return from the Continent.

  He ought to have gone to them first, as soon as he’d arrived in London. He ought to have consulted them about his plan, proposing to Lady June, or Jane, whichever one Wescott had been meant for. His parents could have told him she’d already married another man. His sister Rosalind would have known, at least; at seventeen, she was an astute observer of the marriage market.