Lord of the Manor
When the owner of ramshackle Blackcliff Hall arrives, the locals have high hopes that Sir Trevor Fitzwilliam will set things to rights. Especially Gwen Allbridge, the estate managerâs daughter who has single-handedly kept Blackcliff Hall going. Now she must convince Trevor to stay and make the hallâand the village depending on itâprosperous again.
The decaying estate is just another reminder to Trevor of his noble fatherâs rejection. Abandoning it for London could restore his cheerâ¦but how can he disappoint Gwen? Her faith in him makes him yearn to live up to the ideals she holds dear. As disturbing, unexplained events encroach on the pair, Gwenâs steadfast courage will rise to meet Trevorâs newfound honor as they learn that thereâs no dream like home.
âJust how badly,â Trevor said, âdo you wish me to stay?â
âIâve told you how important Blackcliff is to the village, sir.â
âIndeed. The last lifeblood it seems. Youâve gone to great lengths to prove to me how well Iâll like it here. Are you setting me a mystery to sweeten the pie?â
A mystery? Gwen had been rightâsome part of him relished this challenge with the statue.
âI have no part in this, Trevor. Or do you think Iâm the one moving the statue?â
âThe idea had crossed my mind.â
For some reason, the accusation hurt. âDo you truly think me so devious?â
âNot devious,â he replied. âBut determined. You admit youâd do anything to make me stay,â he said.
âI admit I wanted you to stay,â Gwen replied, âbut this presumptuous attitude is not endearing you to me, sir.â
âForgive me, Gwen. I should know thereâs no guile in you. You have been nothing but kindness itself to me since the day I arrived.â
Well, that was better. She could only hope that he truly had decided she was innocent. And that maybe, maybe, this puzzle would give him a reason to stay for a while longer.
REGINA SCOTT
started writing novels in the third grade. Thankfully for literature as we know it, she didnât actually sell her first novel until she had learned a bit more about writing. Since her first book was published in 1998, her stories have traveled the globe, with translations in many languages including Dutch, German, Italian and Portuguese.
She and her husband of more than twenty years reside in southeast Washington state. Regina Scott is a decent fencer, owns a historical costume collection that takes up over a third of her large closet and she is an active member of the Church of the Nazarene. Her friends and church family know that if you want something organized, you call Regina. You can find her online blogging at www.nineteenteen.blogspot.com. Learn more about her at www.reginascott.com.
For I know the plans I have for you, declares the Lord. Plans to prosper you and not to harm you. Plans to give you hope and a future.
âJeremiah 29:11
To Nonie, who never fails to encourage me; to Linda, who never fails to enlighten; and most of all to my heavenly Father, who never fails to inspire.
Chapter One
Blackcliff Hall, Cumberland, England, 1811
Someone else was in the house.
Sir Trevor Fitzwilliam stopped in the center of the bedchamber he had been considering making his own and listened, head cocked. Blackcliff Hall muttered the usual creaks and groans of a house built nearly two hundred years ago and left for the past two months to itself. Heâd already determined the cavernous place to be empty of servants save for an elderly fellow whoâd taken his horse at the stables. And servants were generally silent in any regard.
From downstairs came the sound of a door closing. Trevorâs head snapped up. He slipped across the Oriental carpet and flattened himself against the heavy oak paneling of the wall. Over the past few years heâd made enemies helping his father and aristocratic friends solve personal problems like blackmail and bribery. Any one of a number of vengeful men could have followed him as he made his way north and east into Cumberland. Any one of them could be searching for him even now.
But if it was a choice of hunt or be hunted, heâd far prefer to hunt.
He glanced out the door, but nothing moved along the wide, oak-paneled corridor that crossed the chamber floor of the gray stone manor house. He knew the main stairs squeaked; heâd frowned at the noise on the way up. From the dust-covered furniture to the cobwebs dulling the brass chandeliers, the place reeked of neglect. The only lamp that was lit was the one heâd set on the bedside table.
How kind of his father to hand the godforsaken place over to him.