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Hunter Of My Heart
Hunter Of My Heart

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“If you point a gun, you had better be prepared to use it.” Letter to Reader Title Page About the Author Dedication ACKNOWLEDGMENTS Prologue Chapter One Chapter Two Chapter Three Chapter Four Chapter Five Chapter Six Chapter Seven Chapter Eight Chapter Nine Chapter Ten Chapter Eleven Chapter Twelve Chapter Thirteen Chapter Fourteen Chapter Fifteen Chapter Sixteen Chapter Seventeen Chapter Eighteen Chapter Nineteen Chapter Twenty Chapter Twenty-One Chapter Twenty-Two Chapter Twenty-Three Chapter Twenty-Four Chapter Twenty-Five Copyright

“If you point a gun, you had better be prepared to use it.”

With unblinking eyes, he stood erect. Hands on his hips. Legs apart.

Sabrina held his gaze and knew his rigid stance was a dare.

Aiming the pistol to the right of Kenilworth, she pointed at a lone birch. “Don’t move, milord.” As she lowered the hammer, his body stiffened. “Now, look to your left. Should I try for the left or the right branch?”

“To your right. It’s farthest from me.”

Gritting her teeth, she focused and fired. Wood crackled and snapped. Birds squawked. She smiled, feeling an odd satisfaction. Somehow, the act replaced the dignity Kenilworth had stolen.

“Luck,” Kenilworth murmured, eyeing the severed branch.

Feeling the challenge in his single word, her blood started to hum. She shifted her gaze to just below his waist and adjusted her aim.

“If that’s where you want to shoot me, go ahead...!”

Dear Reader,

Entertainment. Escape. Fantasy. These three words describe the heart of Harlequin Historical novels. If you want compelling, emotional stories by some of the best writers in the field, look no further.

We think Janet Kendall is one of the best new writers in the field. Her debut book, Hunter of My Heart, is a captivating tale set in Regency England. Here, the heroine’s powerful and dangerous grandfather is so desperate for an heir that he’ll stop at nothing to get one, namely forcing a marriage between his granddaughter and the mysterious duke of Kenilworth. But when their unexpected passion turns to love and trust, they triumph in the end!

Maggie and the Maverick is a heartwarming new Western by Laurie Grant. With the help of newswoman Maggie Harper, Garrick Devlin, wounded in the Civil War, finally learns to love again. And don’t miss Cassandra Austin’s The Unlikely Wife, the story of a handsome officer who falls for his commander’s flirty daughter during a journey to an army fort

Rounding out the month is The Welshman’s Bride by award-winning author Margaret Moore. Forced to marry after being caught in a compromising position, a roguish Welsh nobleman and a demure chatelaine learn to appreciate their differences and fall in love.

Whatever your tastes in reading, you’ll be sure to find a romantic journey back to the past between the covers of a Harlequin Historical® novel.

Sincerely,

Tracy Farrell

Senior Editor

Please address questions and book requests to:

Harlequin Reader Service

U.S.: 3010 Walden Ave., P.O. Box 1325, Buffalo, NY 14269

Canadian: P.O. Box 609, Fort Erie, Ont., L2A 5X3

Hunter of my Heart

Janet Kendall


www.millsandboon.co.uk

JANET KENDALL graduated with a bachelor’s degree in sociology from the University of Colorado and worked there as a personnel counselor.

She was born and raised in Durango, Colorado. With not a lot to do in a small mining and tourist town, cowboys, eastern gents and Native Americans stirred her imagination. They became heroes. This, coupled with a Texan husband and a mother-in-law whose family is from England, fueled her love of history more. So she began to write in her favorite genre. Romance. When she’s not writing, reading romances, or doing research, she tends her other passion, her flower garden and rare orchid collection.

She and her husband live in the Chicago suburbs. Janet would love to hear from her readers. Please write to her at: P.O. Box 3003, Naperville, Illinois 60565.

To my loving husband, who believed in me and

supported my writing from the first day. To my mom and dad, the best parents a child could have.

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

To Jean Newlin and Laura Renken for their thoughtful

critiques as I was writing the final version of this book.

To the best den mothers in the world:

Susan Elizabeth Phillips, whose advice challenges me as

a writer, Cathie Linz, who taught me to persevere and the

real meaning of “creative,” and to Jimmie Morel writing

as Lindsay Longford, whose keen sense of direction

kept me on the right path.

Finally to my editor, Margaret O’Neill Marbury,

who took the chance.

I thank you all.

Prologue

London, March 1825

The unmistakable smell of sweat and passion greeted Hunter Sinclair as he opened the door.

The butler had been right. Hunter’s father wasn’t alone and thus had broken his word. To witness the infidelity would give Hunter proof and another reason to sever their bargain.

Silently he entered the bedchamber and picked up a robe, his hands crushing the velvet fibers. Groans, muted by the satin hangings surrounding the bed, made his stomach turn. Drawing a quiet breath, Hunter parted the drapes and dropped the robe onto the lovers. “The study in two minutes,” he said flatly.

The young woman gasped.

As his father rolled off the lithe body, he pulled a sheet over the woman’s naked form. He gave Hunter an unrepentant smile. “You show yourself at the most untimely moments.”

“No. I believe I arrived just in time,” he said, and left.

A few moments later, Hunter entered the study his mother had lovingly decorated years ago. From the ebony cellaret, he poured himself a drink. He settled in a chair and propped his feet on a gilded table, then lifted the crystal goblet to his mouth. Before he took a sip, the heady bouquet told Hunter the pale amber liquid was cognac—but then his father always demanded the best.

As Hunter took a huge swallow, the smooth liquid scorched a trail down to his stomach and settled in a hot pool. Since his mother’s death last week, nothing had erased the pain curled around his chest. Hunter downed the cognac to seek warmth, but the burning quickly died. When he started to fetch another drink, he stopped. No. He wanted to feel cold and without heart when he confronted his father, Randall Sinclair, Baron of Wick. That’s exactly how the baron had treated his wife during their years of marriage. Randall had merely coveted the luxury her family’s wealth provided. Long ago, he had emptied his own coffer on extravagant comforts and mistresses.

In exchange for keeping his affairs discreet, Randall had demanded a huge allowance from Hunter, who had agreed in hopes of protecting his mother from more shame. But now the time had come to end his father’s unscrupulous life-style. By seducing a lady in their family home, his father had gone too far—he had severed the agreement. Furthermore, Hunter no longer had to shield his mother in life, only preserve her honor in death.

Leather slippers brushed the study’s Oriental carpet and Hunter met his father’s arrogant green gaze. An ageless panther, Randall looked ten years younger than his forty-eight years. Women found him irresistibly attractive. Of course the “Sinner,” as the ton called him, took every advantage of his good looks.

“Stalked another one?” Hunter’s tone was very dry.

“Are you referring to the talented lady upstairs? I have a voracious appetite.” Smiling arrogantly, Randall sat and smoothed his robe’s velvet collar.

Hunter steeled himself. “Aren’t you curious about my arrival?”

“I thought you were out of the country managing one of your business enterprises. So why are you here?”

“Your wife, sir, is dead.” He managed an even voice but his throat tightened. Rising, he removed his greatcoat and unveiled the mourning band tied around his arm. He waited for his father’s reaction.

Randall stared at him. “I do not believe you. Your mother is as strong as a man.”

“She died five days’ past.”

Would his father ask for details about the quick funeral? Did he feel a shadow of remorse? Did he care how she died?

“I am a widower?” A trace of concern crossed his face.

Suddenly Hunter realized Randall’s problem. “Marriage no longer protects you. Worried about an angry father marching you off to the preacher?”

“I will manage. Mourning serves as an excuse not to remarry for at least a year.”

He gave his father a lean smile. “Still, I’ve decided to cut your allowance. Paying for the upkeep of this house, food and a reasonable amount of clothing is all you’ll see of my money. With Mother’s death, our agreement ends.”

Randall gripped the chair’s arms. “The devil you will. I haven’t an income, while you’re wealthy as Croesus!”

“You’re in mourning. What good is money? Attending quiet affairs is all society will permit you.” Hunter untied the silk strip. As he dropped it onto his father’s lap, he felt a sense of morbid satisfaction that he could finally give Randall his due.

His father gave the mourning band a fleeting glance. “You will continue to pay the sum upon which we agreed,” he demanded. Pausing, he gave Hunter a nefarious look. “You look like me. Tall. Well muscled. Handsome. Undoubtedly virile. You have my green eyes and black hair...remember Diana?”

Every muscle in Hunter’s body tensed, rejecting the foul memories of that tragedy, but he managed a look of indifference. From experience, he knew his father had some scheme in mind. “What about Diana? You left her carrying your child. I should have let her father call you out”

“Like a good son, you did not reveal the truth. Once I announced your engagement to her, I thought you would honor it. Diana and I thought the idea brilliant. Ah—but you could not summon the chivalry to marry her. You surprised me by preferring a scandal to marriage. In the end, she took her life. I did not have to fight a duel and you are still a bachelor. Does your conscience have room to carry more guilt?”

Hunter clenched his jaw. He had refused to comply with his father’s scheme and offered Diana some money—but not his name. When she ended her life and that of her unborn child, Hunter held himself accountable for the deaths.

He eyed his father warily. “What have you done now? Have you ruined another lady’s life?”

“Nothing. I have satisfied the hunger of a few ladies, but no woman is bearing my child.”

“Then why bring up the past?”

“Well, you may have refused to marry Diana...but unless you continue the payments, you will be married within the month. After all, you are twenty-seven and should have a bride.”

“Married?” Hunter repeated in a low voice. “I don’t plan to marry.” After witnessing the faithless wives and brainless innocents who had succumbed to his father’s seductions, Hunter never wanted to marry. His fingers tightened around his glass as he walked to the cellaret and poured himself another drink.

“Would you like me to pass myself off as you? A little silver nitrate in my hair would hide the gray. In dim light, a lady would easily mistake me for you. I might even allow you to pick your bride. Bedding an innocent is a delicious thought, and afterward, you would have to offer the lady your name. She would believe that you seduced her. I would make sure of it.”

Simmering blood tangled with his grief, but he presented an unaffected facade. “Is that a threat?”

“Would you care to put it to the test?” Randall gave him a smug smile.

Hunter knew the baron’s heart proved as empty as his coffers and would do anything to continue his lavish and decadent existence. A thread of control drew Hunter’s emotions taut and he sipped the cognac that numbed his conscience. His father’s threat was nothing short of blackmail.

No more blackmail, Hunter decided, no more payments. Could he allow Randall to ruin other lives and not stop him? With bleak choices, Hunter settled on a plan. Moral justice counted for something.

“You win. I have money on my ship so come with me now. Tell the lady my coachman will drive her home.”

Randall inclined his head in acquiescence.

As they neared London Docks, the stench of the Thames grew, smelling of human waste and rotting fish. Hunter peered out the window of the hackney toward the warehouses. Beyond them, hundreds of masts and fluttering sails rose above the roofs. Fading slashes of violet and orange on the horizon signaled fair sailing weather. On the poop rail of his ship Priscilla, four lanterns created oblique shadows that moved with the water and changed with the wind.

Sailors waiting the next watch rose from their hammocks while others were busy at their duties. Hunter spoke with the ship captain, then returned to his father.

“The money is in my cabin below. Shall we?”

Hunter showed Randall to a small cabin with two narrow bunks, one above the other. A sea chest filled the opposite corner. Atop a small table sat a ditty box, a copper bowl and an oil lamp. Tucked underneath was a chamber pot and stool After Randall entered, Hunter leaned against the doorway.

“This is your cabin?” Randall asked. “I imagined it to be bigger, given the ship’s size.”

“Oh, it is. My cabin’s much larger. This one’s yours.” Hunter felt the ship sway.

Randall swung around. “What the devil are you saying?”

The sails unfurled like the sound of dull drumbeats. “I promised you a home, food and clothes. You will get all three—in Australia.” As Hunter stepped back into the hall, he pulled the door closed and locked it.

“Damn you!” Randall pounded on the door. “I’m your father!”

Father, hell...only by the misfortune of the same blood.

The rhythmic sound of the waves slapping against the hull drowned the voice.

No more scandals. Hunter promised himself that no one would ever blackmail him again.

Chapter One

Scotland, September 1830

“Shabby reporting! The Times said you’d be here! Why aren’t you?” As Sabrina’s words faded into the wind, she looked up and saw no lights in the second-story windows, or the third, either.

Keir Castle’s four towers rose above the mist, a billowing white gauze that occasionally dipped and caressed the ground. Moss and shadows painted the stone structure. A seagull flew overhead. Slowly Sabrina “Beaumont” dropped her gaze. Interrupting this solitude was the light coming from the kitchen windows, the only evidence of life stirring on the massive estate.

The kind housekeeper, a lone servant, had answered the door but didn’t know when her master would arrive. Slapping the stone wall, Sabrina willed Lord Kenilworth to appear.

“Everyone is speaking about his return from Barbados. Rumor says he distrusts strangers,” Marga Beaumont said.

Turning to her aunt, Sabrina made a face.

“Do you think we have committed a faux pas by not sending word? Maybe he instructed the housekeeper to turn away visitors.”

“She looked honest. Faux pas or not, we’ve waited months to collect the debt. The Times portrayed him as fair and honest. Surely he’ll understand our lack of propriety. The man the newspapers described wouldn’t allow us to go to the poorhouse.” Despite her hopeful words, his absence weighted her heart. The Times was quickly losing credibility.

“Possibly he is with a paramour, non?”

“Paramours.” Sabrina scowled to hide her emotions from Marga, a petite lady of thirty-eight years who still managed to look fashionable despite their dire financial circumstances. Her moss-green traveling gown accented her hazel eyes and chestnut hair, coifed in artful curls above her ears. Marga always took pride in her grooming. Her fashion sense and creativity had made the partnership in their dress shop possible.

Marga cleared her throat. “The on dit on him varies. Some say he is unlike his father. The newspaper says he’s been in Barbados. At least monseigneur supported the paramours during his absence. I feel certain he will pay us.”

Caring little for gossip, Sabrina jabbed a finger to her chest. “We supported his mistresses! He owes us money for their gowns!”

Marga sighed. “Quaintly put, but true.”

With her emotions running rampant, Sabrina leaned against the structure and ignored the stones pressing into her back. “I apologize for raising my voice. Yes, I do believe he’ll pay us once he realizes a debt exists. I’m just worried about the twins.” She paused, thinking about her four-year-old siblings. “Do you think they’re all right?”

“Ha! Christine never lets her brother out of sight, and you know how mad Alec gets when we pamper him. He is weak in body but strong in spirit. They will be fine with Thomas for another few days.” Marga squeezed Sabrina’s hand.

She managed a smile. “Father was lucky to have Thomas as a friend. He’s gone beyond friendship to watch them. But we’ve never left them alone for so long. What if...”

“Ah! You are thinking about more than just the little one’s health. Oui? That wretched man, your grandpapa, worries you. Rest assured, Sabrina, no one will discover our secret.”

“I can’t help it. He’s probably furious that I didn’t meet with him three days ago.” Instead, she’d burned his missive and fled to Scotland.

“Oui. He is probably searching for you all over London.”

“There! You see? What if he followed us? And, you’re not the one he wants for a brooding mare.” She groaned, knowing she was his last chance for a male heir. With political reform stirring, he loathed the idea that upon his death, the Crown would sell his title. God forbid that a wealthy commoner might buy it. Her only solution was to reveal Alec.

She refused to do that for fear he would separate the twins. Christine would be of no use to him. By alienating Alec from the only family he knew, the duke would harm him emotionally. Christina, too. Her sister was healthy though, whereas Alec, in a fit of anger or tears, could easily provoke an asthma attack. He could die.

After giving Sabrina a thoughtful look, Marga wandered to the nearby herb garden. “The world believes Alec and Christine are mine. Our purpose is to shield them. You are old enough to give your grandpapa a good fight. The twins are not.”

Guilt accompanied Marga’s mild scolding. Her aunt had agreed to the deceit when Sabrina conceived the idea. “My apologies. Yes, you’re right. In a few months, I’ll reach my majority. He’ll have no control over me. Won’t that be a joy?”

The thought brought a measure of relief, but fear lay coiled in her stomach. Sabrina had lived in dread that her grandfather would discover her whereabouts. Now he had.

“If we do not meet again, you must do everything possible to insure the twins’ safety,” her mother had pleaded.

Sabrina’s throat thickened at the recollection and of her vow. After learning from her parents what her grandfather had done to them, she never wanted to meet or claim him as kin.

“Marga? Aren’t you afraid he’ll discover you worked for Queen Josephine, too? What would I do without you if he...”

“Accused me of being a French spy like he did your mother?” Marga let out a wry chuckle. “The war was fresh in people’s minds then. Too much time has passed. I was just the queen’s couturiere, an assistant. What can the authorities do now? Browbeat me until I reveal the queen’s measurements?”

“How can you jest? He could accuse you of instigating the deception. Of kidnapping his heir! I can’t bear the thought of you in jail, or God forbid, hung. Or the nightmares the children will suffer if he rips them from the only mother they know.”

Marga’s olive skin paled but she raised her chin. “I considered all those things before I agreed, but I had to take the chance. ff we remain mum, he will not learn anything.”

“Mother was innocent, too. Yet he caused enough ruckus to make the authorities believe she was a spy.” Sabrina breathed deeply. “We’ll get our money and then take the twins someplace safe.”

The duke had somehow found her, and that brought him one step closer to Alec. Lord. She wished her brother’s health was better. Living in the shadows had left her stomach permanently knotted.

Every Sunday for the past four years, the Times last page had contained a small paragraph, one with nothing to identify the advertisement’s owner. Three facts identified her and she had discounted coincidence long ago. Still searching for Derek’s daughter Sabrina, now twenty. She guessed the notice would no longer appear now that he’d found her.

Drawing a cleansing breath, Sabrina smelled the ripeness of the herbs intensified by the sea air. Tears threatened and she summoned the same courage she had relied on since her parents’ death four years earlier. She buried the dark thoughts and focused on the immediate problem. Opening her reticule, she pulled out her father’s pocket watch. Four-thirty.

“It looks like rain. We’ll wait several more minutes to see if Kenilworth arrives.”

Marga smiled, kindness warming her eyes. “Patience, ma chérie. In a few days, we will return to the little ones. This business, fini! Thomas will give us shelter until we make other plans. He need not know the truth about the debt or why we closed the shop.”

Sabrina latched onto Marga’s optimistic words. For months, Kenilworth was just a name, but a week past, the Times featured an article on him. The newspaper described him as a man intent on helping the populace and reforming the government. Surely, the Times couldn’t be wrong about everything.

A neighing horse and rumbling of a wagon jarred her thoughts. She spun toward the sound. In the distance, the Scottish mist obstructed her view as it meandered over a browning heather field. A breeze divided the fog and revealed a rider beside the loaded wagon. “That must be Lord Kenilworth!” Her heart drummed with expectation.

From atop his black stallion, the man spoke to the wagon’s driver and then sang a Scottish ballad of a lad marrying a lass. Laughing, the driver turned the conveyance toward the castle. The man and horse disappeared inside the stable.

Sabrina glanced at the horizon, now frosted with thunderclouds, and back to the stable. Turning, she handed Marga a small valise. “Watch for the mail coach. Ask the driver if he’ll wait for us. I must learn if that man who just arrived is Lord Kenilworth.”

Marga fumbled with their baggage. “Mon Dieu! Alone? How do you know if either is his lordship?”

“I don’t, but he looked aristocratic by the way he sat in the saddle. He looked confident! In good humor!”

Her aunt frowned. “I should accompany you.”

“I’ll be cautious. We can’t be in two places at once.”

Without waiting for a reply, Sabrina lifted the skirt of her gray wool gown and ran down the garden path. The pebbles jabbed her feet through the soles of her half boots. As the wind parted Sabrina’s cloak, the clasp dug into her throat and the brisk air stung her cheeks—but those little irritants paled to her rising hope.

After bursting into the stable, Sabrina took a steadying breath and smelled the pungent odor of moldy hay. The man’s tune drowned out her entry, and though she couldn’t see him, she followed the rich, baritone voice. Suddenly the tune stopped.

“What the devil?” Surprise laced his words.

Taking small steps, she edged closer to a stall. A pair of black-gloved hands broke her line of vision as they helped a filly stand. Sabrina craned her neck. He sat on the straw-hewn floor and stroked the black animal still wet from birth. When the foal’s hind legs wobbled, he steadied and guided her to the mare.

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