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No Decent Gentleman
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No Decent Gentleman
Patricia Grasso
For Sharon Winn, my "best-only" friend.
Keep chanting.
Chapter 1
England, 1815
"Holy hemlock," eighteen-year-old Sabrina Savage muttered in a barely audible voice.
She brushed a few recalcitrant wisps of copper hair away from her face and lowered herself wearily onto the Grecian chaise in the corridor outside Abingdon Manor's second-floor drawing room. After folding her hands in her lap, she lifted her green-eyed gaze from the hallway's blue and gold carpet runner to stare at the closed drawing room door. Anger and sorrow warred within her at the thought of what Vicar Dingle and his six cohorts were doing over her late father's body as they chanted prayers to drive the devil from his soul.
"This is unnecessary," Sabrina complained, turning to her companion. "Burying my father in the dark at a crossroads defies logical reason."
The twenty-five-year-old baron, Edgar Briggs, shifted his gaze to her. "Vicar Dingle is merely performing one of his duties," he said, sitting down beside her. "The law demands a night burial for suicides."
"My father did not commit suicide," Sabrina insisted, her emerald gaze glittering with her anger. "The law is as stupid as Vicar Dingle."
"The law is the law," Edgar replied, but softened his words by taking her hand in an obvious attempt to offer solace.
"The law is an arse," Sabrina snapped, yanking her hand from his. Giving him a look filled with accusation, she added, "If you really cared about our friendship, you wouldn't allow the vicar to insult my father like this. Apparently, my father's judgment in refusing your marriage proposal was correct. I would never wish to marry a man who wasn't loyal to me."
"Sabrina, I cannot prevent the vicar from obeying the law," the baron said in a weary voice. "Besides, your father would have agreed to my suit if you had told him you loved me instead of harboring a fondness for me."
"Love has nothing to do with offers of marriage or dowries," Sabrina told him. With a badly shaking hand, she smoothed the skirt of her black bombazine mourning gown and added, "Or meaningless declarations of one's feelings."
"I do love you, but even I cannot change the law to suit you," Edgar said, a frustrated edge creeping into his voice.
Ignoring his profession of love, Sabrina stared at the closed door again, but tried to keep her mind a blank. Her father's untimely passing was difficult to endure, and she needed to remain strong for the sake of her sister and her aunt. Trying to retain control of her rioting emotions, she concentrated on the various portraits lining the walls of the hallway.
"As an earl, my father enjoyed friendships with great peers of the realm," Sabrina said, her gaze fixed on the portrait of Prince Adolphus, the seventh son of King George III. "Vicar Dingle will rue the day he insulted the Savage family with such barbaric actions."
"None of those illustrious peers have ridden to Abingdon to champion your father's cause," the baron reminded her.
Surprised by his harshness, Sabrina rounded on him, but the drawing room door opened unexpectedly and drew her attention. Vicar Dingle stood there; behind him six parishoners were preparing to act as pallbearers.
"We are ready," Vicar Dingle said.
Sabrina stared at him for a long moment and tried to find a small sign of sympathy in his solemn expression. There was none. Finally, she nodded and turned to walk down the stairs to the reception foyer, where her younger sister and aunt were waiting. The baron followed behind her.
"The vicar is ready," Sabrina told them, reaching for her black cloak.
Seventeen-year-old Courtney Savage burst into tears. Aunt Tess put her arm around her younger niece and drew her close in an effort to console her.
Sabrina turned her gaze away from her weeping sister lest she, too, begin weeping. She watched the vicar descending the stairs, followed by the six pallbearers carrying her father's coffin.
"Please, don't hurt him," Sabrina said in an aching voice.
"Don't hurt him?" Vicar Dingle echoed in an indignant tone of voice. "For his suicide, the Earl of Abingdon's soul faces eternal damnation."
"May consumption catch you," Sabrina cursed the clergyman.
"Sabrina is grief-stricken," Edgar intervened, stepping between her and the vicar. "She doesn't know what she's saying."
Vicar Dingle nodded, then said, "I understand her sorrow, but breeding does tell."
Sabrina stepped back a pace as if she'd been struck. Would she and her sister never be able to escape the fact that they were the illegitimate issue of— Of whom, she had no idea.
"Sabrina is a well-bred young lady and does not deserve your insults," Sabrina heard her aunt Tess saying. "Apologize at once, Vicar Dingle."
"Lady Burke, lest you forget, I was here when—"
"My father legally adopted Sabrina and me," Courtney Savage interrupted with uncharacteristic assertiveness. "Now, get on with the funeral."
Turning to her younger sister, Sabrina smiled for the first time since their father's death the preceding day. "Are we going to bury my father tonight?" she asked the vicar. "Or shall we stand here and debate the possibilities of who my natural parents were?"
"Extreme grief rules your tongue," Vicar Dingle stated disapprovingly and then marched out of the mansion. Lifting the casket again, the six pallbearers followed him outside.
"Your rudeness to a man of the cloth surprises me," the baron said in a loud whisper. "And you, Courtney. I never would have—"
"Oh, Edgar, do be quiet," Sabrina cut his words off. At times, her lifelong neighbor and friend annoyed her more than a toothache.
Pulling the hood of her black cloak up to cover her head, Sabrina followed the pallbearers outside. Behind her walked Courtney, Aunt Tess, and Edgar Briggs.
Sabrina stepped into an unusually warm mid-December night and breathed deeply. The air was hushed as if nature itself mourned the loss of her father. No moon shone overhead. The sky was a black velvet blanket dotted with tiny stars.
In silence, the pallbearers set the late earl's coffin on a cart pulled by one horse. Each of them held a lantern to light his way.
The funeral procession walked down the estate's private lane, which led to the public road, and then turned right. The nearest crossroads lay a half-mile away where the road branched into two, one road leading to the village of Abingdon and the other to the neighboring Briggs estate.
Their small entourage had just reached this traditional burial site for suicides when the unmistakable sound of galloping horses drew their attention. Everyone whirled toward the village road to see four men on horseback advancing on them. The riders reined their mounts to an abrupt halt when they reached the funeral party.
"Who are you?" Edgar Briggs demanded. "State your business."
"We are friends of the late Earl of Abingdon," one of the strangers answered as he dismounted.
Sabrina stared at the tall, dark-haired man who appeared to be in his mid-twenties. She'd never seen him before, but men she and her sister hadn't traveled to London since they were children. She hoped these men were the illustrious peers of the realm who would champion her father's cause.
"Charles, thank God you're here," Aunt Tess cried suddenly. "Vicar Dingle is giving poor Henry a suicide's burial."
Much to everyone's surprise, an older gentleman stepped forward. First he lifted her aunt's hand to his lips, and men he placed a comforting arm around her shoulder. Turning to the others, he introduced himself, saying, "I am Charles St. Aubyn, the Duke of Kingston. This is my nephew, Adam St. Aubyn, the Marquess of Stonehurst, and the others are my nephew's retainers."
Sabrina looked at each of the newcomers in turn. The Duke of Kingston seemed a kindly gentleman,
but his nephew appeared darkly dangerous. The marquess's retainers were two of the biggest men she'd ever seen.
"Though the circumstances are sad," Sabrina said, stepping forward to greet the duke, "I am pleased to make your acquaintance, Your Grace. How did you learn of my father's death?"
"Several days ago I received a message from your father, asking me to come to Abingdon," the duke told her. "Then, last night, Tess's message that your father had died arrived. We left London this morning and rode as fast as we could. You are which daughter?"
"I am Sabrina, the elder," she said with a wan smile. "This is my sister, Courtney."
"May we complete the burial?" Vicar Dingle asked in an irritated voice. "The law requires we bury suicides between nine and midnight. At this rate—"
"My father did not commit suicide," Sabrina interrupted, rounding on the vicar.
"No one hangs himself by accident," one of the pallbearers muttered.
Sabrina gave the man a murderous glare but refrained from speaking. Nobody would ever convince her that her wonderful father had taken his own life, and she intended to prove he hadn't. She'd make the lot of them eat their words, especially the vicar.
"Lower the casket," Vicar Dingle instructed the pallbearers.
"What about the prayers?" Sabrina cried.
"Praying for suicides is forbidden," the vicar told her.
"A plague take you," Sabrina said, cursing him for the second time that night.
Everyone stared at her in shock. She heard her aunt gasp, and one of the newcomers chuckled.
"Sabrina, how dare you speak disrespectfully to the vicar," Edgar exclaimed, placing his hand on her shoulder. "Apologize at once."
Ignoring him, Sabrina shrugged his hand off and asked the vicar, "Where is the death knell I purchased?"
"Tolling a death knell for suicides is forbidden," Vicar Dingle told her.
"My father will have a death knell even if I must ring it myself," Sabrina insisted. She turned away abruptly and bumped into the marquess, who grabbed her upper arms to keep her from falling. Looking up at him in surprise, she had the sudden wish that she could see his eyes in the darkness.
"Mistress Savage, I will escort you into the village lest someone try to stop you," the marquess said.
Sabrina nodded and gave him a grateful smile.
"Stop them," she heard the vicar order the pallbearers.
With a flick of his hand, the marquess gestured to his gigantic retainers, who blocked the path. The vicar and his pallbearers remained rooted where they stood while the marquess lifted her onto one of the horses.
The Marquess of Stonehurst scooped up one of the lanterns and then mounted his own horse. "Uncle, escort the other ladies to Abingdon Manor," he said. "Mistress Savage and I will meet you there later."
"Very good," the duke said.
"Sabrina, think of what you are doing," the baron called after her.
"Edgar, think of what you are not doing," she replied.
Sabrina turned her horse and started down the village road. Beside her galloped the marquess's horse. They rode in silence into Abingdon and halted their horses in front of the church.
Still holding the lantern in one hand, the marquess opened the church's door. Sabrina stepped inside and the door clicked shut behind them.
"This way, my lord," she said.
Turning to the right, Sabrina crossed the nave and climbed the narrow spiral staircase until she reached the top, the bell cote. She grabbed the bell clapper and tugged on it nine times, the customary way of signaling the passing of a man. Summoning her strength, she reached for the bell clapper again.
The Marquess of Stonehurst touched her arm and asked, "How old was the earl?"
"Forty-one."
"Take this," he said, passing her the lantern.
Sabrina knew what he was offering to do. "Thank you, my lord," she said, lifting the lantern out of his hand.
With both hands, the Marquess of Stonehurst rang the death knell forty-one times, once for each year of her father's life as was the custom. Sabrina closed her eyes and prayed for her father's departed soul.
Finished with his task, the marquess took the lantern from her and led the way down the narrow staircase again. Outside, he set the lantern down and helped Sabrina onto her horse.
Sabrina watched him retrieve the lantern and mount his own horse. Apparently, her father did have great friends who were willing to champion his cause. How would she ever be able to thank this man for what he'd done for her this night? What he had given her could never be repaid.
Turning their horses in unison, they retraced their path down the village road toward Abingdon Manor. Without saying a word to each other, they stopped when they reached the crossroads. The two burly bodyguards still kept the vicar and his pallbearers at bay.
"Let them leave," the marquess called to his men, who stepped aside instantly.
"I forgive you," the vicar said, his gaze fixed on Sabrina. "In a few days you will regret your actions tonight."
"No, Vicar Dingle, you will regret your actions," Sabrina replied. "Your church will never again receive one shilling from the Savage family."
Vicar Dingle shook his head sadly as if he couldn't credit what he was hearing. "Because of your father's suicide, the Savage estates are forfeit to the Crown." With those parting words, the vicar and his six pallbearers started walking down the road to the village.
"Is that true, my lord?" Sabrina asked, beginning to panic, turning to the marquess. How would Courtney and she live if they lost everything? How could she prove that her father's death had been an accident?
"Please, call me Adam," the marquess said.
"Then you must call me Sabrina."
"Very well, Sabrina."
"You haven't answered my question," she said.
"By law a suicide's assets are forfeit to the Crown, but we may be able to get around that," the marquess told her. "My uncle has friends at court who have the power to certify your father's death an accident."
"My father's death was no suicide," Sabrina said. "How should I go about proving that?"
For a moment Adam was silent. Then he replied, "Do you believe your father was murdered?"
"My father had no enemies."
"Every man has enemies," the marquess said grimly. "We will discover who your father's are." Then he called to his men, "Sagi and Abdul, remain here on guard until the dawn."
"Why should they guard my father's grave?" Sabrina asked, surprised by his command.
Now it was the marquess's turn to look surprised. "Sabrina, have you never heard of Resurrection men?" he asked.
"You don't think someone would steal my father's body?" she asked, shocked. "He was an earl."
"Most Resurrection men prefer to work near London where there are more donors," he replied. "We'll be certain that no one disturbs your father's grave if my men stand guard for a week."
"I'll send my servants with blankets, food, and a lantern," Sabrina called to the two men.
Both men nodded, acknowledging her words, but said nothing.
"What strange names your servants have," Sabrina remarked as they started down the road toward Abingdon Manor. "Are they foreigners?"
The marquess nodded.
Sabrina glanced sidelong at him but couldn't see his face very clearly in the darkness in spite of the lantern he carried. "Where do they come from?"
"The East," he said simply.
"I see."
The Marquess of Stonehurst turned his head to look at her. "No, Princess, you do not see, but you will understand one day soon."
Sabrina remained silent. She had no idea what he meant and wasn't certain she wanted to know.
Sabrina and Adam passed through the open gate onto the Savage estate and rode at a more leisurely pace toward Abingdon Manor. In the distance, beeswax candles and paraffin lamps glowed like fireflies from the mansion's windows and grew brighter as they neared the house.
Sabrina halted her ho
rse in the circular drive in front of the mansion and dismounted without waiting for assistance. Two stableboys appeared to take charge of their horses.
The front door opened just as they reached it. The Savage majordomo stepped aside to allow them entrance.
"The others are waiting in the drawing room." He reached to help Sabrina remove her cloak.
"Don't bother with me, Forbes," she said. "Send a footman with food, blankets, and lanterns to the crossroads. Then prepare the dining room for our guests."
The majordomo looked surprised. "You want to send a footman to the crossroads with—?"
"The Marquess of Stonehurst was kind enough to leave his men guarding Papa's grave," Sabrina explained.
"Very good, my lady," Forbes replied. He started to turn away to do his mistress's bidding, but paused and said, "Lady Sabrina, I heard the death knell. My compliments on a job well done."
"Thank you."
"I never did like Vicar Dingle," Forbes muttered as he walked away. "Self-righteous men are the devil's spawn."
The majordomo's sentiment matched hers. Sabrina laughed, a sweetly melodious sound, so at odds with her behavior that night. Flicking the hood of her cloak off her head, she turned to properly greet the man who'd saved her father from a final indignity.
Surprised by his dark handsomeness, Sabrina could only stare at him. She suffered the absurd notion that seeing him by lantern light did him no justice.
A couple of inches over six feet, Adam St. Aubyn stood a good foot taller than herself, and Sabrina had to tilt her head back to look up at his face. Marring his handsome features, a thin scar ran from the corner of his mouth to his right cheekbone. He wore his midnight-black hair long on his neck as if he hadn't the time to cut it properly. Its ebony color contrasted sharply with blue eyes so distinctively piercing that Sabrina felt he could see to the very depths of her soul. His smile on her was warm and—
Sabrina realized the marquess was watching her study his appearance. Embarrassment flushed her cheeks a rosy hue, which made his smile widen into a grin.
"Let me help you with that," he said in a husky voice, reaching for her cloak.