
Forbidden to the Duke
Author
Liz Tyner
Reads
18.7K
Chapters
22
Chapter One
The pudgy-eyed gamekeeper pointed a flintlock straight at Bellonaâs chest. His eyebrows spiked into angry points. âDrop the longbow.â His gun barrel emphasised his words and even without the weapon his size would have daunted her. Heâd not looked so large or his stare so bloodless from a distance.
Noise crashed into her earsâthe sound of her heartâand the beats tried to take over every part of her. She forced the blackness away and locked her stare with his. Charred hatred, roughened by the unshaven chin, slammed out from his face.
She nodded and tossed the bow into the twining berry thorns at the side of the path. The canopy of sycamore leaves covered him in green-hued shadows.
He put one hand to his mouth, thrust his fingers to his lips and whistled loud enough to be heard in Greece. The shrill sound jabbed her, alerting her that he wasnât alone. Sheâd never seen anyone else in the forest but this devil. She would be fighting two men and at least one weapon.
â...shoot at me...â He spoke again and the words snapped her back into understanding.
She cursed herself for not taking more care. Sheâd not heard him behind herâbut she should have smelled his boiled-cabbage stench.
âI be bringing his lordship,â he said. âYour toes be dangling and the tide be washing your face before they cut you down. You wonât be shooting at me no more. Youâre nothing moreân a common wench and people in lofty places be wantinâ you to hang.â
Her fingers stiffened, her mind unable to send them commands. She held her chin high. Sheâd thought she was in a safe land. Sheâd thought sheâd escaped men who wanted to hurt her. Showing fear would be dangerous. âYouââ She couldnât have taken her eyes from his. âIâm a guest of the Earl of Warrington and I have misplaced myself.â
The manâs nose bunched up as he talked. âBut you ainât on the earlâs land now, Miss Lady Nobody. Youâre no betterân me.â He waved the gun. âYouâre a poacher and Iâve seen you here aplenty times before. I just niver could catch you.â
âThe earl will be thymomenos, angered.â
He snorted. âBut this is the dukeâs land. His Grace donât lose no sleep over what an earl would think.â
She forced her fingers alert. âYou are the one who should think. You must know I live near.â
âBut you ainât no real lady. I already told the duke all about you and how you been scattering my traps and he thinks Iâm imagininâ. Your eyes is even uncommon dark like some witch borne you. I told him youâre half-spirit. They hanged Mary Bateman. If they donât be hanginâ you, youâll end up lyinâ with vermin in gaol. Good ânuff for you.â
He indicated the trail behind himself by swinging the barrel of the gun towards it. âDonât move a feather.â The gamekeeper swaggered. âHis Grace be right behind me. I told him I set my traps near and this time I be catchinâ somethinâ big. Youâve ruined your last snare.â
Footsteps in the leaves signalled the approach of another. Bellona rested her left hand on the top of arrows tucked into the quiver strapped around her waist. âYou can go to the devil.â
The shoulders of another man came into view, and Bellona swallowed. She needed all of her strength. Two men to fight.
The gamekeeper stepped off the path so the other one could see her.
The duke stopped beside the gamekeeper and the scent of the air became clean. The newcomer examined her, not scowling or smiling.
She would not have thought this man a peer had she seen him without introduction, but she would have known him for a gentleman. His neckcloth looped in a simple, soft knot. His boots reached his knees and his dark riding coat had plain buttons. He wore every thread as if it had been woven to his own order. Sunlight dappled over lean cheeks. His eyes were the same colour as her own.
Her stomach clenched, but not with fear. Sheâd made a mistake. Sheâd looked into his eyes. For the first time in her life, she was afraid of something inside herself.
She stepped back.
âYour Grace, I caught the murderous culprit whatâs been stealing the hares from my traps and wishinâ curses on us all. She be a common thief, a murderous woman and full of meanness, just like I said.â The gamekeeperâs words spewed out, leaving even less air for Bellona to breathe. âYou want I should send the stable boy for the magistrate?â
The duke gave the slightest shake of his head. âYou are mistaken, Wicks. I will see her back to my estate safely and ensure that she is escorted on her way.â
âShe be a thief, Your Grace, and a bewitched woman. Why, see how her eyes be puttinâ evil my direction now. She be tryinâ to burn me into ash right where I stand.â
âMissââ the newcomer directed his words to Bellona and he leaned forward as he peered at her ââhave you been poaching on my land?â
She sensed somehow that he jested with her. âNo. Never,â Bellona said, shaking her head. The knife was in her boot. But she didnât want to attack. She only wanted to flee.
The dukeâs lips firmed and he took in a small breath on his next words. âWicks...â
The gamekeeperâs stance tightened and he rushed his words. âShe tossed her bow into the briars. Sheâd kill a man herself for blood sport. Sheâd cut out his heart and cook it.â
The dukeâs lips tightened at one side and his eyes dismissed the other manâs words.
âI donât eat hearts,â Bellona inserted, directing a look straight into the vile man. âOnly brains. You are safe.â
âYour Grace,â the gamekeeper sputtered, outrage and fury mixed. âSheâsââ
âQuiet.â The dukeâs words thrust into the air with the seriousness of a sword point held to the throat.
He stepped towards her, moving over the fallen log in the path, his hand out. âThe lady and I have not been introduced, but as this isnât a soirĂ©e, I thinkââ
Instinctively, she pulled an arrow from the quiver and held the tip against the dukeâs grey silk waistcoatâpressing.
His arm halted, frozen.
âDo not touch me.â Her words copied his in command.
His eyes widened and he straightened. âI was going to take your arm. My pardon. Itâs usually received well, I assure you.â
She kept the arrow at his stomach, trying to keep the spirit around him from overtaking her.
The gamekeeper moved so the weapon again pointed at her. âJust give me the word, Your Grace, Iâll save you. She be tryinâ to kill a peer. No sense wasting good rope round that boney neck.â
âPut the flintlock away, Wicks. Now.â The duke didnât take his eyes from Bellona. âThis woman and I have not finished introductions yet and, by my calculation, the arrow tip isnât exceedingly sharp.â
âItâs sharp enough,â she said.
âMiss...â He blinked. He smiled. But they were just outward movements. âMost people get to know me a little better before they think of weapons. Perhaps you should consider that. It might make an attempt on my life more enjoyable for you if there were some justification.â
She never saw his movement, but his hand clamped around her wrist, securing her, not tight, but shackle-strong.
âMy property.â He stepped back from the arrow. Then he extricated it from her fingers, the warm touch of his hand capturing her in yet another way before he released her. âMy rules, Huntress.â He studied her face. âOr if my observation is correct, should I refer to you as goddess?â
As he examined the arrow, she took another step back. She gave the merest head toss of dismissal and readied her hand to the single arrow left in the quiver.
His eyes flickered to the sharpened tip of the projectile he held, but he wasnât truly examining it. He twirled it around, tipped his head to her and held the feathered end to her. âI have met the lovely Countess of Warrington and although you resemble her, I would remember if Iâd met you. That means youâre the sister named for the goddess of war. The woman hardly ever seen.â
âYou may call me Miss Cherroll.â The rules sheâd studied fled from her, except the one about the curtsy and she could not force herself to do it. She took the arrow.
She only wanted to leave, but her limbs hadnât yet recovered their strength. She controlled her voice, putting all the command in it she could muster. âYouâre not what I expected.â
âIf youâve been talking to Warrington, I suppose not.â He tilted his head forward, as if he secluded them from the rest of the world. âWhat is he fed for breakfast? I fear it curdles his stomachâdaily.â
âOnly when mixed with entertainments not to his liking.â
âWell, that explains it. I can be quite entertaining.â
âHe claims you can be quite...â She paused. His eyes waited for her to continue, but she didnât think it prudent, either to Warrington or the duke.
The duke continued, taking in the words she didnât say. âNot many are above him, and, well, I might give him the tiniest reminder of my status, when it is needed.â He shrugged. âOur fathers were like brothers. He thinks he has become the old earl and I have not attained the grandness of my sire. My father did limpâand that knee was the only thing that kept him from perfection. The injured leg was the price he paid for doing the right thing. He once thrust himself between someone and the hooves of an angry horse.â
âI would not be so certain of the earlâs opinion.â She paused, softening her words. âHe says you are quite the perfect duke. A duke from heel to head.â Warrington had stared at the ceiling and grimaced when he spoke.
âA compliment. Iâm certain. From Warrington.â He shrugged. âToo many things distract me from perfection. I just trudge along, doing what I can. Hoping to honour the legacy my father left behind.â
He turned to the other man, sending him along. âIâll see Miss Cherroll home.â Taking a step towards her, he paused when she moved the pointed tip the slightest bit in his direction. âAssuming she doesnât do Warrington a boon and impale his favourite neighbour.â
When he stopped moving, she relaxed her hand.
âI will manage well enough on my own.â She turned, pulling the skirtâs hem from a bramble, and moved closer to the bow. âI know the way.â She heard her own words and turned back to the duke and leaned her head to the side. âI have been lost here before.â She pulled the bow into her hand, freeing it from the thorny brambles clasping it.
âI would imagine so. Wicks claims you are here more than he is. I might call on you,â he said, âlater today to assure myself you arrived safely home.â
She shook her head. âPlease donât. Warrington is always claiming I bring home strange things from my walks.â
âMy dear, Iâm a duke. He wonât be able to say a word. Itâs a rule of sorts.â
âYou truly donât know him well, do you?â
âWell, perhaps he might grumble, but his good breeding would insist he appear welcoming. At least in your presence.â
She held the nock end of the arrow as if she were going to seat it against the bowstring. âYouâre right in that my English father named me for the Roman goddess of war. And, itâs said Iâm completely lacking in the ways of a proper Englishwoman. But I do remember one phrase. âI am not at home.ââ
âMiss Cherroll. I would think youâd not mind sharing tea with me seeing as you have already shared my property.â
She shook her head. âI have been called on before. I have not been at home.â
âEver?â
She firmed her lips and shook her head.
âWhy not?â
She didnât answer his question. She could not speak of her memories aloud. Putting them into words brought the feel of the rough fingertips to her neck.
His brows furrowed. Even though she knew a proper lady didnât scurry along the trail, she did, leaving the duke standing behind her.
* * *
Rhys Harling, Duke of Rolleston, sat at his desk, completely unmoving. Wicks stood in front of Rhys, repeating the same words heâd said two days ago and the two days before that. Rhys hoped the air would clear of the manâs dank scent when he left.
Wicks waved the arrow like a sceptre. His lips didnât stop moving even when he paused to find new words.
Wicks rambled on, falling more in love with his discourse as he continued. If the gamekeeper were to be believed, the woman created more mischief than any demon.
It had been five days since Wicks had caught the woman. The gamekeeper had approached him twice to discuss the lands and could not keep from mentioning her.
Rhys interrupted, his voice direct. âShe did not try to impale me. Neither her teeth nor her eyesâwhich are not rimmed by devilâs sootâshow brighter than any otherâs in the dusk and she is not as tall as I am. You cannot claim her to be something she is not. I forbid it.â
âYou canât be faultinâ me for lookinâ out for your lands, Your Grace.â
âI donât. But sheâs the earlâs guest. You must cease talking at the tavern about the woman.â
âWho told you?â His chin dropped and he looked at the floor.
âWho didnât tell me?â Rhys fixed a stare at the man. âWicks, you should know that words travel from one set of ears to the next and the next and before long every person who has shared a meal with someone else has heard.â
âShe does stick in my craw, Your Grace.â
He didnât blame the gamekeeper. Rhys couldnât remove her from his mind either. The quiver cinched her trim waist. A twig had poked from her mussed hair. The magical thing heâd noticed about her was the way her hair could stay in a knot on her head when most of it had escaped.
Rhys had known when the gamekeeper first mentioned the trespasser who it would most likely be. Heâd wanted to see her for himself.
Wicks wasnât the first person to discuss her. Even the duchess, who talked only of family members whoâd passed on, had varied from her melancholia once and spoke of the earlâs sister-by-law Miss Cherroll. The foreign-born woman rarely let herself be seen by anyone outside the earlâs household and that caused more talk than if sheâd danced three dances with the same partner.
âForget her,â the duke said. âSheâs just an ordinary woman who likes to traipse the trails. I canât fault her for that.â
He couldnât. Heâd travelled over those same trails countless times, trying to keep up with his brother, Geoff.
Looking for the woman had been the first time heâd been in the woods since Geoffâs death. The gnashing ache grinded inside him again, but the womanâs face reminded him of unspoiled times.
But she was...a poacher of sorts. Nothing like her sisterâa true countess if tales were to be believed. He wouldnât put it past Warrington to keep this bow-carrying family member in the shadows, afraid what would happen if the woman met with members of the ton.
âYou didnât feel she could near strangle a man with one look from her eyes?â Wicks asked. âI could feel that devil in her just trying to take my vicarâs words right from mind. She still be trespassinâ everâ day. Taunting me, like. She tears up my traps and she lurks out in the wood, waiting until I check them and then she tries to kill me.â
âIâm sure sheâs not trying to kill you.â
âThis arrow werenât whipping by your head.â He pulled every muscle of his body into an indignant shudder. âAnd since I caught her last time, she stays too far back for me to snatch her again.â
âYou will not touch her.â Rhys met Wicksâs stare. Rhys stood.
Wicksâs lips pressed together.
âYou will not touch her,â Rhys said again and waited.
âI donât want no part of that evil witch,â Wicks said finally. âI looked at her and I saw the Jezebel spirit in her. I be sleepinâ on the floor and not in my bed so she canât visit me in my night hours and have her way with me.â
Rhys put both palms flat on the desk and leaned forward. âThat is a good plan. However, if you sleep with your nightcap over your ears it will do the same.â
âYouâre sure?â
âYes.â Rhys nodded.
Wicksâs lips moved almost for a full minute before he spoke and his shoulders were pulled tight and he watched the arrow in his hand. âWell, Iâll be considerinâ it. Floorâs cold.â
âDo you think perhaps she is a normal kind-hearted woman, Wicks, and merely doesnât want little creatures harmed?â
âI wondered. But that seems odd to me. When I gave her my smileââ He bared perfect teeth except for one missing at the bottom. âShe didnât even note. Just raised her bow right towards me and let this arrow loose.â
Rhys rose, walked around the desk and held out his hand. Wicks slowly placed the arrow across Rhysâs palm.
âIf you see her again,â Rhys commanded, âat any time at any place, you are not to give her one moment of anything but respect. You are not to smile at her or approach her, or you will answer to me in a way you will not like.â
âNot right,â Wicks said, his nose going up. âBeing shot at while doinâ my work.â
âI will handle this. Do not forget my words. Leave her be.â
âI will,â Wicks said. âI pity her. Has too many airs to settle into things right for a womanâs place.â
Rhys glared.
âBut I be keepinâ it a secret.â He nodded. âI ainât givinâ her another one of my smiles. She missed her chance. And if she tries to have her way with me, I be turninâ my head and keepinâ my nightcap tight.â
He used both hands to clamp his hat on his head as he shuffled out, grumbling.
Rhys studied the arrow and thought of his motherâs melancholia. How she hardly left her room, even for meals. How she talked more of people whoâd passed than of her own friends, and how she claimed illness rather than go to Sunday Services. His brotherâs death had taken the life from her as well. The one moment the duchessâs thoughts had wavered into the present had been when she asked Rhys if heâd heard of the earlâs guest, but by the time heâd answered, his motherâs thoughts had wavered back into the shadows of the past.
He brushed his hand over the arrow fletching. Window light bounced over the feathers, almost startling him. Raising his eyes, he saw the sunâs rays warming the room. He stood, walking to the sunlight, pausing to feel the heat on his face. He lifted the feathery end of the weapon, twirling it in the brightness.
Winterâs chill had left the air, but heâd not noticed the green outside the window until now. The woman had also worn the colours of the forest, he remembered. Sheâd not looked like a warrior goddess, but a woodland nymph, bringing life into morning.
He snorted, amazed at the folly of his imagination. Heâd not had such foolish thoughts in a long time. Nor had he longed for a womanâs comfort overmuch in the past year. Now, he imagined the huntress and his body responded, sending reminders of pleasure throughout his being.
Leaning into the window frame, holding the arrow like a talisman, he tried to remember every single aspect of her. What sheâd said and how sheâd looked. Each word and moment that had transpired between them.
He pulled the soft end of the arrow up, looking at the feathers one last time before tapping the nock against the sill, staring at the reflections of sunlight.
This woman at the earlâs estate, who was willing to fight for rabbits, but could keep the servants whispering about her, might be just the woman who could bring his mother back to life. Sheâd already reminded Rhys that he was still alive.
* * *
Within the hour, Rhys was in the Earl of Warringtonâs sitting room. The duke clasped an arrow at his side and waited as he expected he might. He moved to the window again, wanting to feel the heat from the sun streaming through the panes. Trees budded back to life. A heathen spirit might do the same for his own home.
The mantel sported a painting of three young girls playing while their mother watched. He wagered the painting was of Greece and one of the girls could have been the one on his property. Except for the single painting, the room seemed little different than Rhysâs own library.
Rhys looked out over Warringtonâs snipped and clipped and trimmed and polished world, almost able to hear the laughter from years before.
Only, the laughter was not his, but directed at him.
Of course, both he and Warrington had matured now. They had left foolish prattle and childish games behind.
Warrington strode in. Rhys could still taste the medicinal the others had found in the apothecary jar and forced into Rhysâs mouth when they were children. That had to be his earliest memory.
âYour Grace,â Warrington greeted. The earl moved to stand at the mantel. He glanced once at the painting above it before he asked, âSo what is the honour that brings you to Whitegate?â
Rhys held out the arrow. âI found this on my property and heard that you have a guest who practises archery. Iâd like to return it to her.â
Rhys had never seen Warringtonâs face twitch until that moment. He studied Rhys as if theyâd just started a boxing match. âYou are interested in talking with Bellona?â
Warringtonâs eyes flickered. âIâm sure whatever she didââ Warrington spoke quickly. âShe just doesnât understand our ways.â He paused and then sighed. âWhat did she do now?â
âI just wish to meet with her,â Rhys said, âand request that she refrain from shooting arrows on to my propertyâparticularly near others.â
Warrington grimaced and then turned it into a smile. âShe does... Well...you know...â He held out a palm. âSome women like jewellery. Flowers. Sharp things. She likes them.â
âSharp things?â
Warrington shook his head. âNever a dull moment around her.â
âTruly?â
âBeautiful voiceâwhen sheâs not talking. Her sister forced her to attend the soirĂ©e at Rivertonâs, hoping Bellona would find something about society that suited her. Pottsworth wanted to be introduced. Sheâd not danced with anyone. I thought it a good idea even though he isâwell, you know Potts. She smiled and answered him in Greek. Thankfully none of the ladies near her had our tutors. Riverton overheard and choked on his snuff. We left before he stopped sputtering. He still asks after her every time he sees me. âHow is that retiring Miss Cherroll?ââ
âCanât say as I blame her. You introduced Pottsworth to her?â Rhys asked drily.
âIâm sure she might wander too far afield from time to time,â Warrington murmured it away, âbut your land has joined mine since before our grandparentsâ time and weâve shared it as one.â Warrington gave an encompassing gesture, then he toyed with what could have been a speck on the mantel. âWeâre all like family. We grew up together. I know you and I donât have the very close bond of our fathers, but still, I count you much the same as a brother of my own.â
âMuch like Cain and Abel?â
Warrington grinned. He waved the remark away. âYouâve never taken a jest well.â
âThe bull,â Rhys said, remembering the very incensed animal charging towards him, bellowing. Rhys was on the wrong side of the fence, his hands on the rails, and the older boys pushed at him, keeping him from climbing to safety. Heâd felt the heat from the bullâs nostrils when theyâd finally hefted him through to the other side. Laughing.
He couldnât have been much more than five years old.
Warrington had instigated many of the unpleasant moments of Rhysâs childhood. Actually, almost every disastrous circumstance could be traced back to War. Rhys had been lured into a carriage and then trapped when they wedged the door shut from the outside, and then heâd spent hours in the barn loft when they had removed the ladder. When theyâd held him down and stained his cheeks with berries, heâd waited almost two years to return fresh manure to everyone involved. It had taken special planning and the assistance of the stable masterâs son to get manure put into Warringtonâs boots.
Rhysâs mother and father had not been happy. The one time he had not minded disappointing his father.
Warâs face held camaraderie nowâjust like when the new puppy had been left in the carriage, supposedly.
âI must speak with your wifeâs sister,â Rhys said. âI might have an idea which could help us both.â
âWhat?â The word darted from Warringtonâs lips.
âI thought Miss Cherroll might spend some time with the duchess. Perhaps speak of Greece or...â He shrugged. âWhatever tales she might have learned.â
âI forbidââ Warringtonâs head snapped sideways. âNo. She is my family and she must stay with us.â
Rhys lips quirked up. âBut, War, weâre like brothers. Your family is my family.â
Warrington grunted. âYou didnât believe that flop when I said it. Donât try to push it back in my direction.â
Rhys smiled. âI suppose it is your decision to make, War. But remember. I am serious and I will not back down.â
âI assure you, Rhys, Miss Cherroll is not the gentle sort that the duchess is used to having tea with.â
Rhys gave a slight twitch of his shoulder in acknowledgement. Warrington had no idea his mother was only having tea with memories of death. Sheâd lost her will to live. With her gone, he would have no one. No one of his true family left. And he was not ready to lose the last one. âCall Miss Cherroll. Let me decide.â
With a small cough of disagreement, Warrington shrugged. âSpeak with her and youâll see what I mean.â He reached for the pull. A childâs laughing screech interrupted him. A blonde blur of a chit, hardly big enough to manage the stairs, hurtled into the room and crashed into Warringtonâs legs, hugging for dear life, and whirling so he stood between her and the door.
Bellona, brandishing a broom, charged in behind the little one and halted instantly at the sight of Warrington.
Rhys took in a breath and instantly understood Wicksâs fascination with the woman. Her face, relaxed in laughter, caught his eyes. He couldnât look awayâno man would consider it.
âJust sweeping the dust out of the nursery,â she said to Warrington, lowering the broom while she gingerly moved around him. The child used him as a shield.
Warringtonâs hand shot down on to the little girlâs head, hair shining golden in the sunlight, stilling her.
Bellonaâs attention centred on the waif. âWilla, we do not run in the house. We swim like fishes.â
The child laughed, pulled away from the silent admonishment of her fatherâs hand on her head, puffed her cheeks out and left the room quickly, making motions of gliding through water.
Warrington cleared his throat before the chase began again. âWe have a guest, Bellona.â
Rhys saw the moment Bellona became aware of his presence. The broom tensed and for half a second he wondered if she would drop it or turn it into a weapon. Warrington was closer, and Rhys was completely willing to let her pummel him.
She lowered the bristles to the floor, but managed a faint curtsy and said, âI did not know we had a visitor.â Her face became as stiff as the broom handle.
Warrington turned to Rhys.
âBellona is... She gets on quite well with the children as you can tell.â His eyes glanced over to her. âBut she is not as entranced with tranquillity as her sister is.â
âI do like the English ways,â she said, shrugging. âI just think my ways are also good.â
âBut my children need to be well mannered at all times.â Warrington frowned after he spoke.
âI do adore the paidi. They are gold,â she said, voice prim and proper. âBut no little one is well mannered at all times. They have life. It is their treasure. They should spend it well.â
âThey should also know the way to be proper and comport themselves in a lofty manner when they meet such a person as we are privileged to have in our presence.â He glanced at Rhys. âHis Grace, Duke of Rolleston. Rescuer of lost puppies, everywhere.â He turned to Bellona to complete the introduction. âMiss Cherroll, my wifeâs kind and gentle-spirited youngest sisterââ his brows bumped up as he looked back at Rhys ââwho has called me a few endearments in her native language that our tutor neglected to teach us, and when her sister translates I fear something is lost in the meaning.â
Her eyes blinked with innocence at Warrington for a moment before she acknowledged the introduction with a slight nod.
âI believe the duke wanted to speak with you.â Warrington walked to her, took the broom and looked at it as if might bite. âAnd I should see about Willa.â
The earl took two long strides to the door. âI wonât send a chaperon.â He smiled at Rhys as he left. âYouâre on your own.â




































