Vice

Vice by Jane Feather Page B

Book: Vice by Jane Feather Read Free Book Online
Authors: Jane Feather
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couldn’t disguise the voluptuous swell of her bosom beneath her demure bodice, the swing of her curving hips beneath the simple country gown that Lady Forsett insisted she wear.
    Her hair had excited him as much as the hints of her body. A blazing, unruly mass of springing curls that seemed to promise an uninhibited and passionate nature. At first she’d been friendly, smiling at him, her green eyes warm, but then he’d made his mistake and yielded to the prompting of the lascivious dreams that swirled through his nights. He had attempted to kiss her, and she’d nearly scratched his eyes out. From then on her gaze had been cool and suspicious,her voice had lost its rich current of merriment, become distant and dismissive.
    George’s lust had not diminished, but anger and resentment had added a malevolent fuel. Now he saw his father’s bride as the usurper. A twisting, manipulating bitch who had ensnared Sir John Ridge in his dotage with the promises of her youthful body. And in exchange for those promises she had been rewarded with the dower house in perpetuity, together with two thousand acres of prime land and all revenues accruing from its thick forests and tenant farms.
    George had listened to his father’s measured explanations for giving away George’s inheritance. He had protested, but to no avail. Sir Brian Forsett had been adamant that these were the only terms on which he would agree to his ward’s becoming Lady Ridge. And Sir John had been willing to agree to anything in order to have that sweet young body in his bed.
    He’d had his wish, and it had killed him. George cut savagely at his horse’s flanks. Juliana had disappeared, leaving her former guardian in possession of her jointure. And George was left with only half of his rightful inheritance.
    But if he could find her, then her crime would disqualify her from her inheritance. Unless she was with child. If she pleaded her belly, they wouldn’t sentence her to death. And her child would inherit the jointure. On the other hand, if she was to be married to Sir George Ridge—the grieving young widow wedded so appropriately to her late husband’s son—then it wouldn’t matter if she was with child or not. Everything would return to the Ridge family, and he, George, would have Juliana in his own bed.
    Would she agree? He put spur to his horse, setting him at a high bramble hedge. The horse soared over, teeth bared in a yellow grimace, eyes rolling, and landed with a jolt on the far side.
    George cursed the animal’s clumsiness and jerked back on the curb rein. Juliana would agree because she would have no choice. In exchange he would swear that his father’sdeath was accidental. No one would question George Ridge’s interpretation of such an embarrassing incident. The story would be the joke of the county for months, and everyone would understand that a fat old man, drunk after his wedding, couldn’t keep pace on his wedding night with a fresh filly of barely seventeen.
    Juliana would agree. But first he had to find her.
    He swung his mount to the right and headed for Winchester. She had to have left the area. And the only way to do that was by carriage or on horseback. No horses had been taken from the stables at Ridge Hall. But the stagecoaches departed from Winchester in the very early morning. He would inquire at the Rose and Crown, and he would post notices around the city just in case a wagoner or carter had taken up a lone woman in the middle of the night.
    Juliana spent her next three days in the house on Russell Street in relative isolation, talking only to Bella, the maid who attended her and brought her meals. Her memory of the moments in the salon immediately after the duke’s infamous proposition was vague. She had been devastated by outrage, rendered speechless; not trusting herself to remain in his company, she’d fled the room. No one had come after her, and no one had mentioned the matter to her again. Her chamber door was no

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