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The Madness of Lord Westfall
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He thought he knew madness… until he met her.
Pierce Langdon, Viscount Westfall is mad. Everyone knows it. He fell from a tree when he was a boy and woke to hear strange voices. When the voices grow stronger as he grows older, his family commits him to Bedlam. But what he hears are the thoughts of those around him—a gift to be used in service to the Order of the M.U.S.E. Until he falls again…this time for a totally unsuitable woman.
Lady Nora Claremont hides her heartbreak behind the facade of a carefree courtesan. Viscount Westfall is the most confusing man she’s ever met. He seems to know exactly what she wants...and what she’s thinking.
Which is a dangerous thing, because what Nora wants is Pierce.
And what she’s thinking could expose her as a traitor to the crown...
The Madness of Lord Westfall
The Order of the M.U.S.E.
Book two
Mia Marlowe
This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Copyright © 2015 by Diana Groe. All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce, distribute, or transmit in any form or by any means. For information regarding subsidiary rights, please contact the Publisher.
Entangled Publishing, LLC
2614 South Timberline Road
Suite 109
Fort Collins, CO 80525
Visit our website at www.entangledpublishing.com.
Select Historical is an imprint of Entangled Publishing, LLC.
Edited by Erin Molta
Cover design by Louisa Maggio
Cover art by The Killion Group, Inc.
ISBN 978-1-63375-419-5
Manufactured in the United States of America
First Edition September 2015
Table of Contents
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
Chapter Twenty-Six
Epilogue
Author’s Notes
Acknowledgments
About the Author
Also by Mia Marlowe The Curse of Lord Stanstead
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The Thornless Rose
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To my dear husband, the love of my life and source of all my hero’s best impulses.
The wicked stuff is all me.
Welcome to the Order of the M.U.S.E.
His Grace, the Duke of Camden, has recruited (some say coerced) gifted individuals from all strata of society to join his Metaphysical Union of Sensory Extraordinaires. Their purpose is to protect the Crown from arcane weapons of a psychic bent. The duke fears that one such malicious object may have slipped by them and is responsible for King George III’s periodic descents into lunacy. There may be no help for His Majesty, but Camden intends to see that a similar fate doesn’t overcome “Prinny,” the Prince of Wales.
Meet the M.U.S.E.s
Pierce Langdon, Viscount Westfall—a telepath whose skills are the mirror image of Garret Sterling’s. If Sterling is the universal dispenser of unwanted thoughts, Westfall is the universal receiver of everything rattling around in the heads of others. Unfortunately, he hasn’t learned to filter anything out. Because of his propensity to “hear voices,” Westfall was only recently released from Bedlam on the condition that the Duke of Camden be responsible for him should his “voices” urge him to violence.
Edward St. James, Duke of Camden—Founder of the Order of the M.U.S.E., Camden is the protector and mentor of those who display unusual sensory and metaphysical gifts. In addition to safeguarding the Crown from psychic attack, he’s searching for a way to make contact with his deceased wife. He’s exhausted all natural means of investigating the mysterious deaths of Mercedes and his infant son. Now he has turned to the supernatural.
Vesta LaMotte—Top-tier courtesan who is also a fire mage. She’s called in to educate Cassandra in the ways of her gift…and the ways of men. She and the widowed Camden have had an on-again, off-again “arrangement” for years.
Cassandra Darkin, Lady Stanstead—Second daughter of Sir Henry Darkin who was an unwitting fire mage. Cassie risked losing her place in Society when she accidentally set Almack’s on fire. But since the horrific event brought Garret Sterling into her life, she blesses the accident now. She’s in full possession of both her psychic ability and Garret.
Garret Sterling, Lord Stanstead—Recently elevated to his new station after the death of his uncle. Garret is able to implant a thought in another’s mind with such seductive force, his suggestions are irresistible. Garret is a libertine who carouses to avoid sleep because his nightmares have the bad habit of becoming someone else’s waking reality. Usually. Cassandra Darkin seemed oblivious to his gift, which made the fact that the duke asked him to help her control her accidental fire-starting a difficult assignment.
Meg Anthony—a former ladies’ maid and a psychic “Finder.” Her ability to locate misplaced items and people is uncanny, but not without danger to her, a fact she tries to hide. She’s in awe of the Duke of Camden and fears disappointing him if she can’t learn to act the part of a proper lady instead of a domestic. She hides the truth of her parentage because she’s on the run from her uncle who used her abilities for profit and to ruin others.
The defining moment of my life occurred when I was eight years old and fell from the topmost limb of an oak tree. I remember naught about the incident. They tell me my head struck several branches on the way down. I was insensible for the better part of a sennight, which was a mercy because it allowed the doctor to set my broken arm without my being aware of the agony he inflicted. For the injury to my brain, he did nothing.
Perhaps that was another type of mercy.
I only know that when I finally opened my eyes, the voices were there. They have been with me ever since.
~from the private journal of Pierce Langdon, Viscount Westfall
Chapter One
It was said that an invitation to Lord Albemarle’s salon was second only to presentation at court as a means of sealing one’s reputation among the bon ton. His soirees were glittering assemblies of all the right people wearing all the right fashions, listening to all the right sopranos, or poets, or politicians. The music was always perfect, the food sublime, and everything was stamped with Lord Albemarle’s unquestioned good taste.
But this evening was not one of Albemarle’s salons.
Make no mistake. The music, décor, and refreshments were as exquisite as ever, though wine and spirits flowed more freely than usual. The main difference was the guest list. On this night, Albemarle’s Mayfair town house was filled to the rafters with the demimonde—disgraced lords and their mistresses, actresses and courtesans, anarchists and freethinkers.
Such company made Lord Stanstead feel very much at home. He liked nothing b
etter than thumbing his nose at the world in general and the ton in particular. However, nothing about this gathering made Pierce Langdon, Viscount Westfall, comfortable.
His sense of aloneness was rarely more intense than when he was in a crowd. He could not bring himself to count Stanstead his friend. Indeed, he had no friends. Their work together for the Order of the M.U.S.E. had made them colleagues of a sort, but they were very different men possessed of widely divergent abilities.
When the pair entered Albemarle’s grand parlor, the myriad minds in the room pressed up against Westfall’s consciousness. It was like a disturbed hive of bees seeking entrance through a hole in a beekeeper’s protective suit. He could hear them clamoring to break through, a determined buzzing trying to overpower him. Westfall drew a deep breath and fortified the mental shield his mentor, the Duke of Camden, had taught him to erect.
Steady on. Or they’ll find a way to send me back to Bedlam.
“Wipe that pained expression from your face,” Stanstead said. “Otherwise someone will suspect you’ve mastered the feat of standing on your own testicles.”
“Easy for you to say. No one is battering down your defenses.”
If anything, the reverse was true. Stanstead possessed the psychic gift of being able to broadcast his thoughts to others and in such a subtle way, the recipient usually couldn’t tell that the thought wasn’t his own. Like a cuckoo’s egg in a warbler’s nest, Stanstead’s idea pushed aside the ones that had every right to be there. As a result, his psychic target often behaved in other than expected ways.
The ton was still nattering on about Lady Waldgren’s impromptu soliloquy from Macbeth at the theater last Season. Since the old gossip was generally disliked and universally feared, when she had mounted the stage and begun reciting “Out, damn’d spot!”—and rather badly, it must be admitted—the aberration in her deportment was met with unabashed glee. But when the poor lady’s husband took an unexpected dip in a public fountain wearing naught but his birthday suit, Polite Society shook its collective heads and tut-tutted under its breath.
Living with such a wife as Lady Waldgren, his lordship was bound to break eventually. What else might one expect?
More unusual behavior, if Stanstead had his mischievous way with the couple who’d landed in his metaphysical sights.
In contrast, Westfall was Stanstead’s psychic opposite. Instead of projecting his thoughts to others, he was the unhappy receiver of whatever was tumbling about in the minds of those around him. Being in the company of others left Lord Westfall drained and more than a little cynical. After all, he knew what people were really thinking behind their false smiles.
“How’s your shield holding?” Stanstead asked, nodding a greeting to those he knew as they moved around the room.
“Better than expected,” Westfall said. It had taken several months of mental discipline to learn how to create the shield. The first time he had managed it, his relief when the voices finally stilled was like having a weight lifted from his chest.
Then, to his surprise, if he maintained the shield too long, he began to miss the voices. The world around him seemed flat and two-dimensional. It was as if he moved through chalk drawings, peopled with pale imitations of humans, instead of living, breathing ones. Still, that was better than being bombarded by their random thoughts. He had to protect himself from the disjointed scramble of ideas that careened toward him from all sides.
“Want to try a filter?” Stanstead asked.
“Perhaps later.” Westfall had experimented with lowering his shield enough to target a single mind for him to listen in on, but he hadn’t perfected the process yet. He also couldn’t admit to Stanstead that keeping up his shield was straining his last ounce of psychic energy.
“I’d fancy knowing what that tasty bit of muslin is thinking.” Stanstead nodded toward their left.
Westfall didn’t follow the direction of Stanstead’s gaze to see the example of feminine beauty who had captured the earl’s attention. He despised a lie of any stripe and breaking a wedding vow counted as two in his estimation—once to one’s spouse and another to the third party involved. “In case you’ve forgotten, you are a married man.”
“Make that a happily married man,” Stanstead corrected. “However, that does not make me dead. I’m blessed with a wife who knows what men are. Cassandra doesn’t care where I get my appetite so long as I eat at home. She knows I’d never stray. Besides the fact that I adore her too much to hurt her, she’d immolate me if I were to put so much as a toe out of line.”
It was no idle threat. Lord Stanstead’s wife was a fire mage, an elemental who also served alongside the gentlemen in the Order of the M.U.S.E. Westfall had no doubt the countess would singe more than her husband’s eyebrows if his eyes wandered and the rest of him followed.
A full-blown thought crashed through Westfall’s mental shield. The idea carried far more power than the others trying to gain entrance. It shredded his defenses and plastered itself at the forefront of his consciousness.
Here’s what you’re missing, you sanctimonious prig.
Stanstead had Sent him one of his directed thoughts, devil take the man. A mental image accompanied Stanstead’s Sending.
It was of a young woman.
No, that didn’t begin to be adequate. She was a goddess.
Languid eyes, black as the Stygian depths, invited him to plunge into her. The woman’s abundant dark hair was drawn up to bare her nape and tease her delicate neck with loose curls. Westfall ached to kiss the tender skin just there, beneath her jaw. Full and plum-colored, her lips beckoned. The apples of her cheeks were dusted with just enough pink to appear virginal, but the seductive hollow beneath them suggested a smoldering sensuality that was anything but chaste.
If Westfall could assemble perfection, taking the best feature from each woman present—graceful arms here, a high, full bosom there, a willowy waist and long legs from another—the result would have been this paragon.
He prided himself on his extreme degree of self-control, but this woman had him rock hard and aching merely from the mental sight of her. He couldn’t stop himself from turning toward the real woman.
“You’re welcome.” Stanstead chuckled. “But you’d best close your mouth, friend. You’re in danger of being mistaken for a codfish.”
Westfall clamped his jaw shut, chagrined at having been caught gaping but, in all honesty, this woman’s beauty stopped him cold. Like the night sky in splendor, her very existence was evidence of a creative God. She was why lovesick poets wrote bad verse.
She tempted him to lower his shield.
“Well, what are you waiting for? Go talk to her.”
“I can’t,” Westfall said, grateful not to have stammered. “We haven’t been properly introduced.”
“Regular rules of etiquette don’t signify at these sorts of events. Start by giving her your name, if you must. Then find a way to give her a compliment. By Jove, it shouldn’t be hard.” Stanstead clapped a hand on his shoulder. “I’ll even Send her a suggestion that she finds your ugly mug fine to look upon.”
“No. No Sending.” He didn’t need Stanstead’s help. Besides, he’d been told that he was not without a certain rugged appeal, if a woman fancied a man who had unfashionably large hands and feet to match his breadth of shoulder. Westfall’s facial features were considered raw-boned rather than refined, but he didn’t care. If someone didn’t like his looks, they were welcome to look the other way. “If you Sent that she should like me, I’d never know for sure if she did. It would be cheating.”
“What a bore you are sometimes.”
“What a bounder you are, all the time.”
“Look,” Stanstead said, suddenly all business, “we can swap insults or we can do what we came here to do. The Duke of Camden has sensed the presence of a psychic relic somewhere in this town house. It may be in Lord Albemarle’s possession. It may belong to one of his guests. All we know for certain is that the intention behin
d it is not conducive to the welfare of our future king.”
That steadied him. Becoming part of the Duke of Camden’s Order of the M.U.S.E. had given Westfall new purpose and new hope that his debility—he couldn’t think of his psychic powers as a gift quite yet—might be put to good use. M.U.S.E. stood for Metaphysical Union of Sensory Extraordinaires. That seemed a little grandiose to Westfall, and he felt nothing like an “Extraordinaire,” but the Order had proved its worth a dozen times over.
With France’s military defeat, England’s enemies had turned to more subtle means to harm the British royal family. Someone with resources and intelligence was intent on infiltrating the Crown’s collection of art and oddities with psychically debilitating relics. The Duke of Camden was convinced that at least one object of malicious intent had slipped through his gauntlet and was responsible for the king’s periodic descents into madness.
But Camden and his Order had stopped plenty of other items from reaching the royals. Often, they worked with only the sketchiest of information about the relics—a rumor, a string of unusual events or, as in this case, because the duke had experienced one of his visions about an object of power.
So now, Westfall and Stanstead were dispatched to Lord Albemarle’s rout to try to ferret out the elusive item, discover who held it, and what its special properties might be. Then the Order could decide how to deal with the threat.
“So are we going to work?” Stanstead asked. “Or are you going to stand there like you’ve got a broom handle shoved up your arse?”
“Elegant as always, Stanstead.”
“One does one’s best.”
“One could hardly do worse,” Westfall said sourly. “Very well, I’ll take the left side of the room. You circulate on the right. We’ll compare notes when we reach the other side.”
“Good. I’m highly gratified to learn you aren’t dead. You chose the side she is on.” Stanstead waggled his eyebrows meaningfully. “Bon chance, old chap.”