A Gentleman For All Seasons Read online




  A GENTLEMAN FOR ALL SEASONS

  Copyright © 2015 by Shana Galen, Vanessa Kelly, Kate Noble and Theresa Romain

  A MADNESS IN SPRING

  Copyright © 2015 by Kate Noble

  THE SUMMER OF WINE AND SCANDAL

  Copyright © 2015 by Shana Galen

  THOSE AUTUMN NIGHTS

  Copyright © 2015 by Theresa Romain

  THE SEASON FOR LOVING

  Copyright © 2015 by Vanessa Kelly

  Cover Design by Carrie Divine/Seductive Designs

  Image copyright Couple © Period Images

  Image copyright landscape © Małgorzata Patrzyk/Depositphotos.com

  Image copyright © FlexDreams/Shutterstock.com

  All rights reserved. Except for use in any review, the reproduction or utilization of this work in whole or in part in any form by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including xerography, photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, is forbidden without the written permission of the author.

  All characters in this book have no existence outside the imagination of the author and have no relation whatsoever to anyone bearing the same name or names. They are not even distantly inspired by any individual known or unknown to the author, and all incidents are pure invention.

  Table of Contents

  A MADNESS IN SPRING A Madness in Spring

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  About Kate Noble

  Books by Kate Noble

  THE SUMMER OF WINE AND SCANDAL The Summer of Wine and Scandal

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  About Shana Galen

  Books by Shana Galen

  THOSE AUTUMN NIGHTS Those Autumn Nights

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  About Theresa Romain

  Books by Theresa Romain

  THE SEASON FOR LOVING The Season for Loving

  Acknowledgments

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Epilogue

  About Vanessa Kelly

  Books by Vanessa Kelly

  * * *

  A MADNESS IN SPRING

  KATE NOBLE

  * * *

  A Madness in Spring

  * * *

  The line between love and hate …

  Belinda Leonard prefers things done a certain way, and has her life – and the entire village of Hemshawe – arranged to her liking. The only thorn in her side is the maddening presence of Adam Sturridge, who has delighted in disrupting Belinda’s perfectly ordered existence ever since they were children. But even though they are long past the age of pulling pigtails, Belinda and Adam cannot help but spark against each other every chance they get.

  …is about to get blurry.

  But when those sparks get noticed by a would-be matchmaker, things get turned on their head for Belinda and Adam. A few well-placed words have the pair questioning how they truly feel… and how long they have felt that way. But can these two stop squabbling long enough to overcome a lifetime of animosity and misunderstandings, and find their way to love?

  Chapter One

  * * *

  Spring is a time of awakening.

  Sometimes it happens willfully, with green shoots peeking out regardless of the snow. Sometimes, it happens with bluster, endless days of rain and wind clearing the path for the sun. And sometimes it happens with warmth, dissolving the layers that protected through the cold, allowing things to become new again.

  In the village of Hemshawe, spring arrived with Bertram and Georgette Gage.

  And today, Belinda Leonard would welcome them to the neighborhood.

  “No need to escort me, Carlisle, I know the way,” Belinda said as she glided past the ancient butler at Sturridge Manor. She’d spent so much time here since Francesca married Lord Sturridge; it was practically her second home. Not to mention Belinda and Francesca (oh all right, mostly Belinda) had spent all day yesterday planning precisely how to greet the Gages.

  It wasn’t often that families from London came to their little village. The only thing that could possibly attract such individuals was the nearby spa town of Tunbridge Wells, and it was not nearly as popular as Bath or the seaside. Of course, Belinda hoped that the Hemshawe Fair and the Harvest Festival would become even greater attractions, and she worked tirelessly to that end. But until that time, people like the Gages would remain quite rare in their little corner of the world.

  Therefore Belinda and Francesca (oh all right, mostly Belinda) decided on the blue drawing room, which got the best light and had the largest fireplace, should lighting a fire be necessary. (Spring was taking its time in coming, and more than once Belinda had put away her thickest cloak only to take it out again.) And they decided on a savory tea, with sandwiches instead of cakes. And they also decided to not have Nanny bring in the baby, even though Francesca insisted the child’s adorability would endear anyone to them.

  Belinda was a little unsure about the adorability factor of little Johnny. The number of fluids that leaked out of the child was a decided drawback.

  So it was that Belinda swung open the doors to the blue drawing room, certain that she would find Francesca and the Gages in their places. She was also arriving at the absolute perfect time, seven minutes after the Gages were due – long enough for Francesca to establish herself as their gracious hostess, but not so long that the Gages will have to repeat themselves upon introductions, and three minutes before the tea tray and sandwiches would be brought out.

  Unfortunately, she was not greeted by the sight of Francesca, the Gages, or the tea tray. Instead she was assaulted by the sight of the blue drawing room in complete disarray. Papers everywhere. Books pulled from the shelves. And in the middle of it all, Adam Sturridge.

  “Bang bang! You’re dead! You have fallen victim to my superior battle strategy!”

  The carnage of the blue room aside, the fact that he was lying on his stomach playing with tin soldiers might have been forgiven if the younger brother of Lord Sturridge were seven… instead of seven-and-twenty.

  “What on earth…?” she said, her jaw dropping before she clamped it shut.

  “Hmm?” Adam looked up from what Belinda supposed to be an intricate battle scene in his immature mind. “Oh god,” he grumbled. “It’s you.”

  “Yes,” Belinda replied through gritted teeth. It was the only way to avoid unseemly screeching. “It’s me. And just what have you done to the drawing room? Where is Francesca? And the Gages?”

  “I was obviously using the drawing room,” Adam said as he climbed to his feet, languid as a cat. It was enough to make one hate cats, Belinda thought darkly. “So Francesca put the Gages in the morning room.”

  “The morning room?” Thi
s time there was little way to avoid screeching.

  “Yes,” Adam replied. “There’s nothing wrong with the morning room.”

  “There’s nothing wrong with the morning room in the morning,” she mocked. “But the light is absolutely horrid after three. They’ll practically be sitting in the dark!”

  “They’ll light a fire.”

  “The fireplace in that room is little more than a grate,” Belinda said, hands going to her hips. “Because it’s a close, small space that usually enjoys plenty of light and warmth when it’s used. In the morning.”

  “Yes, do tell me more about the house I grew up in,” Adam drawled.

  “I need no reminder that you grew up here. You are littered across my memory like horse manure on a path. However, you don’t live here now,” she continued. “You live in Scotland. And yet you kick the lady of the house and her guests out of her own drawing room! To play with your… toys. Thank you, Mr. Sturridge. Thank you oh so much.”

  And with that, she turned on her heel and stalked out of the room.

  “Now hold on!” She heard the scrambling as Adam scooted up behind her. She kept her head high as she marched through the halls toward the morning room – all the way on the other side of the house. “You know, for someone who delights in being right all the time, you are wrong on a number of counts.” He assumed the air of a lecturer and began ticking off the items on his fingers. “First, my home is not in Scotland. It’s perhaps in viewing distance of Scotland, but not technically in the country. And second – I was not playing with tin soldiers.”

  Belinda stopped in her tracks, and simply turned a raised eyebrow to him. Her most skeptical eyebrow.

  “I wasn’t,” he persisted. “I was using the tin soldiers as representations for my herds of sheep in Scot – er, I mean, at my estate which is not in Scotland, and deciphering the best grazing pattern for them this year.”

  “Really,” she said flatly.

  “Really.”

  “Do your sheep often go ‘bang bang’?”

  “Not at first,” he admitted. “But beasts of burden evolve with alarming speed into warmongers.”

  She rolled her eyes and continued her stalking towards the morning room. Meanwhile, Adam apparently decided that his point had not yet been made, and began to stroll alongside her.

  “Lastly, I did not ‘kick’ Francesca out of the drawing room. When she came in an hour ago to make ready for the Gages’ arrival, she saw I was using it. I offered to move, but she said she would take the Gages elsewhere.”

  “Of course she did, and if you had been a gentlemen, you would have insisted on moving.”

  “Oh hell, what does it matter?”

  “It matters because it was planned.”

  “And you do love a plan, don’t you?” he mumbled.

  “The drawing room was the only room to receive the Gages.”

  “You’ve never even met the Gages, so how would you know?”

  “I know perfectly! I know that Mr. Bertram Gage is a friend of your brother from Cambridge, so he’s an educated man who knows that a morning room is no place to receive guests. I know he was a solider after that, so likely he would welcome the comforts that come with having the drawing room at his disposal. I know they’ve rented the Friar’s House, so they are thankfully not superstitious –”

  “What does superstition have to do with the morning room?” he interrupted.

  “Nothing at all, but it speaks to a good mind. But the pièce de résistance is his sister.”

  “His sister,” Adam repeated, in that tone that he thought sounded amused but made Belinda’s teeth grate.

  “Yes, his sister, Miss Georgette Gage, who is recovering from an illness, hence their coming here, so she can take the waters at Tunbridge Wells. As such, she would be far more comfortable in the warmth of the drawing room, with the good light and the high fire, than in the pitiful cold of the dark morning room.”

  “Oh,” Adam said.

  “Yes, oh.”

  “Well, I do have to apologize to Francesca and Miss Gage then for my imposition. But it does make me wonder.”

  “Wonder?” Belinda pulled up short. “About what?”

  “About why –if you already know everything about the Gages, you’re invading our house to meet them at all.”

  Her eyes narrowed. “Because I have manners, Mr. Sturridge. Something you seemed to lack. Now, if you will excuse me, I will – with my excellent manners – bid you good day.”

  And with what she considered to be the final word, Belinda threw open the doors to the morning room, pasted a grand smile on her face, and entered to greet the assembled party.

  With Adam right behind her.

  “Good afternoon, Francesca!” Belinda said, coming forward with arms outstretched. “I’m so sorry I’m late, I was –”

  “Oh no, dearest,” Francesca, Lady Sturridge said, rising with everyone else in the room to meet her. “You are just in time for tea.”

  “Oh famous! Are those cook’s vegetable tarts?” Adam interrupted, pushing past Belinda toward the tea tray. He stopped just long enough in his pursuit of food to bow to the strangers in the room. “How’d you do? I’m Adam Sturridge. That’s Belinda Leonard, she doesn’t live here. You must be the Gages!”

  That afternoon with the Gages turned out to be full of enlightenments (even with the limitations of the dark and close morning room). They learned that the Gages, along with the sister’s companion Mrs. Clotworthy – a relative of some degrees removed who also seemed delightfully some degrees removed from reality – had taken the Friar’s House not just for the spring and summer, but for the entire year.

  “My brother is absolutely adamant that I recover completely before we go back to London,” Miss Gage said, shooting a wry smile towards her brother, who seemed far too masculine to be squeezed onto the settee next to his sister. “But he tends to forget that the doctors told me I was nearly good as new.”

  “Nearly is not perfectly,” Bertram replied, gruffly.

  “But I allow it, because I vexed myself silly while he was at war, and now he vexes himself for my sake. We are the only family we have left. Except for Mrs. Clotworthy, of course.”

  The lady in question, at the mention of her name, picked her spectacles out of her tea where they had fallen, and wiped them clean with the edge of her shawl before putting them on the end of her nose. “What’s that dear?”

  “Nothing, Mrs. Clotworthy,” Bertram sighed.

  “Yes, these tarts are very good. Lots of roughage,” she replied.

  They also learned that Bertram Gage had not only been a soldier, but one of great distinction.

  “You were in the war, I understand.” Adam asked between gulps of tea. “I was in the Foot Guards. You?”

  “The 13th Light Dragoons.” Bertram shifted in his seat, uncomfortable. Belinda wasn’t the only one to notice. Francesca and Georgie shared glances, but Adam was, as ever, clueless.

  “The 13th?” he asked, blinking. “Now that was an impressive outfit. Likely got commendations and honors heaped on your breast. I knew a chap who said he could barely walk under the weight of all that metal.”

  “No.” Bertram’s short answer had the desired effect of cutting short that line of conversation.

  “Well… you must enjoy shooting,” Adam tried, ignoring Belinda’s leftward glance. “No one comes to Hemshawe without enjoying shooting. Else they don’t stay very long. Not much else to do.”

  “I do not shoot.”

  “Oh.” For once, Adam actually seemed to feel the weight of the awkwardness. And Belinda felt sorry enough for him to step in.

  “Well, Mr. Gage you must enjoy fishing,” she said smoothly. “Lord Sturridge has the most beautiful trout stream in the county.”

  “I do,” Bertram replied, thankfully lightening the mood. “In fact, if your brother had not been required to go to Town this week, I would have already imposed for a tour.”

  “No need to wait,” Ad
am said, after shooting Belinda a look that she simply could not decipher. “I would be most pleased to show you.”

  And in particular, it was learned that Georgette Gage was very observant.

  For, when Adam Sturridge took her brother out to show him Lord Sturridge’s trout stream, and Belinda had found herself appointed with digging up cook’s tart recipe for Mrs. Clotworthy, Miss Gage turned to Francesca and asked, “So, Mr. Sturridge and Miss Leonard. How long have those two been in love?”

  Chapter Two

  * * *

  “In love? You cannot be serious. Belinda and Adam have always hated each other. Always.”

  It was two days after that auspicious first meeting before Francesca Sturridge was finally able to respond to Georgie Gage’s shocking question. Not because she was struck dumb by the statement – although she well could have been, Georgie didn’t know – but because there was simply no time before. No sooner had Mr. Sturridge and Bertram walked out the door than they came back, the latter having forgotten to reassure himself a second time that Georgie’s shawl was fitted well across her shoulders, and that she was positioned properly by the fire, and that if she wanted a second cup of tea she was welcome to it but more than that could cause stomach complaints. By the time those fears were assuaged, Belinda had returned with the recipe for Mrs. Clotworthy, and that good woman could only send Georgie a helpless shrug. Her ruse had been successful, but far too short in duration.

  Thus two days had passed before Georgie laid eyes on Lady Sturridge again. And this time they met not at Sturridge Manor, but in the belly of the beast. Croftburr – Belinda Leonard’s home.

  It was the weekly meeting of the Hemshawe Fair and Harvest Festival Committee, which consisted of Belinda and Francesca. However, they were happy to welcome Georgie Gage to their ranks, once she was told of it. And once she convinced her brother it was just the kind of society that would in no way overly task her.