Enchanting the Earl (Townsend Series #1)

Enchanting the Earl (Townsend Series #1)

by Lily Maxton
Enchanting the Earl (Townsend Series #1)

Enchanting the Earl (Townsend Series #1)

by Lily Maxton

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Overview

Llynmore Castle is the only place Annabel Lockhart has ever considered home. For years, she’s been able to live as she wished, freely roaming the wild moors. Now there’s a new earl, as arrogant as he is handsome, and he wants her out. But if he thinks she’ll go quietly, he’s in for a surprise.

Theo Townsend returned from war a changed man. After unexpectedly inheriting an earldom and a secluded castle in the Scottish Highlands to go with it, he thinks he’s found the perfect place to hide from the world—until he arrives to find a spirited, beautiful woman already in residence. He can’t just throw her out, but surely there's a way to get her to leave on her own. The sooner she's gone, the better, especially when he realizes there’s more than just mutual dislike between them.

Each book in the Townsends series is STANDALONE:
* Enchanting the Earl
* The Rogue's Conquest
* A Scot's Surrender
* Claiming the Highlander's Heart


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781633759466
Publisher: Entangled Publishing, LLC
Publication date: 04/17/2017
Series: Townsend Series , #1
Sold by: Macmillan
Format: eBook
Pages: 150
Sales rank: 281,866
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Lily Maxton grew up in the Midwest, reading, writing, and daydreaming amidst corn fields. After graduating with a degree in English, she decided to put her natural inclinations to good use and embark on a career as a writer.

When she’s not working on a new story, she likes to tour old houses, add to her tea stash, and think of reasons to avoid housework.

Read an Excerpt

Enchanting the Earl

A Townsend Novel


By Lily Maxton, Alycia Tornetta

Entangled Publishing, LLC

Copyright © 2017 Lily Maxton
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-1-63375-946-6


CHAPTER 1

Theo Townsend blinked as though his inheritance were a mirage that might disappear at any second — but no, when he opened his eyes, the castle was still there on the gray horizon, looming like a specter.

When his solicitor had told him there was a castle on the Highland property, he'd been skeptical, but the medieval stone structure — which came complete with a curtain wall and a tower house for enemies who'd long since vanished — couldn't be called anything but. It didn't look like there'd been any renovations to it in, oh, three hundred years or so. He felt like he'd somehow been dropped into another time during the last leg of the journey, into another life entirely.

"It's wonderful," his sister Georgina said.

"It needs work," he muttered, eyeing a turret in the back that was crumbling. "It will be expensive."

His other sister, Eleanor, smiled softly as she stared over Georgina's head.

He sank back in the cart seat, but not before catching a glimpse of his brother on horseback.

He was surrounded.

He'd imagined doing this on his own. He'd imagined being alone — blissful, peaceful loneliness, the kind where no one asked you anything you didn't want to answer, and no one expected anything from you, either. But his meddlesome siblings had had other ideas, and he'd barely heard the news from the solicitor before they were making plans to accompany him.

His refusals had been met with defiance — a quieter stubbornness from Eleanor and a more outspoken one from Georgina and Robert.

And in the end, he couldn't deny that his siblings deserved their own home, and it was his duty to provide it for them.

He just wished he'd had more time to ... he didn't know what, exactly. He just wished he'd had more time.

At least their new home was big enough that he could keep to himself.

The cart bumped over a dirt road that was in desperate need of repair — they'd been told to drive a vehicle that could take bumps and bruises in this part of the Highlands — before coming to a halt as close to the castle as it could get.

Theo was forced to navigate a rocky pathway, leaning heavily on his cane so he didn't lose his balance. In front of him, the castle both sprawled outward and jabbed upward, dominating the landscape with a face of gray stone, high turrets, and deep crenellations. It was, in spite of a few derelict spots, a structure that was made both to house and fortify. A place that would scoff at the frilly "castles" modern day aristocrats designed for themselves.

It was a place built to last. A place built to keep others out.

He felt a surge of something almost like fondness for the ancient pile of rocks.

Yes, this would do.

This would do nicely.

As the others looked at the outside of the castle, he moved into an interior courtyard through an open gate. A tree stood at the center, a gnarled, twisted form that shot up from the ground and cast shadows over the grass.

And attached to the tree was ... a woman?

He blinked, trying to clear his vision. But there she was, stretched up on her tiptoes, her arms raised high overhead. She was muttering something under her breath, but Theo couldn't make out the words.

She was tall, and a little gangly, and she had one of the most unique faces he'd ever seen — a long nose, a stubborn chin, wide eyes, and a high forehead. She would've looked sharp to the point of severity, but her blond hair was tumbling out of its pins and feathering her face with loving tendrils. The hem of her dress was muddy, and underneath it, stockinged feet peeked out, just as mud-soaked as her dress. She looked like she'd been caught in a storm.

Or maybe she was the storm.

He must have made a noise, because her head jerked toward him suddenly, and he was caught. Caught in a depth of green that surrounded him like the lushest, quietest forest, that cradled him like the softest meadow grass.

"Good God," he breathed. "What are you?"

But she was not, as his weary, confused mind supplied in that instant, a witch of some sort — he blamed this incredibly stupid thought on his fatigue from the long, arduous journey, and the ancient superstitions of an ancient land, and all he'd seen so far of this wild, sea-swept place.

The look she shot him, which shifted with mercurial speed from shock to affront, was incredibly, painfully human.

She brushed her hair from her face impatiently and then lowered her arms. "Who are you?" she asked shrilly. Her Scottish accent wasn't as thick as the Highlanders'; it was a subtler, softer thing, which made him think she'd been raised closer to the border. "What makes you assume you have the right to come in here? You, sir, are trespassing."

Trespassing? A sliver of annoyance worked its way into his chest. She was the one who was trespassing. He opened his mouth to tell her so, but Robert chose that moment to step into the courtyard. At the sight of the woman, a delighted smile curved his mouth — Robert loved meeting new people; he loved plying his never-lacking charm. He was about as different from Theo as a man could be.

Theo sometimes wondered if one of them had been switched at birth.

"I thought I heard voices," he said. "Introduce us, Theo."

"I don't know who she is," Theo responded flatly.

The woman took the matter into her own hands and gave Robert a curtsy — which looked more awkward than elegant in her muddy dress and stockinged feet. "Annabel Lockhart."

"Good lady," Robert said. "Dost thou appear by magic? No earthly mortal could present such a vision of loveliness."

Miss Lockhart blushed a little at that. Even though she looked skeptical, her mouth twitched, and to Theo's increasing annoyance, she played along. "You didn't give me a name, good sir. Dost thou be a warrior? A knight, perhaps?"

"Robert Townsend. Sometimes I fancy myself a knight," he said with a friendly grin.

"Hmmm ..." Miss Lockhart tapped her finger to her chin — gloveless, Theo noted with another twinge of irritation. Her fingers were slender and long and pale. "Do knights ever rescue cats?"

"Is there a cat that needs saving?" Robert asked.

Miss Lockhart pointed, and sure enough, a black cat stared down at them through the tree branches. Robert, without further ado, heaved himself onto the lowest, sturdiest branch and began climbing the tree with wily grace.

Theo realized he was alone with Miss Lockhart once more. His brother might exasperate him sometimes, but at least his affability acted as a buffer in situations like these, when Theo felt the strain of his failure to perform the normal social niceties.

He glanced at the woman next to him. A little shock went through him when he met her eyes again. He'd never seen such a deep green. It was almost unearthly. And she did own a black cat — he didn't think he could really be blamed for his assumption, ludicrous though it was. She looked away from him without saying a word, tilting her chin in a pointed snub.

Which was perfectly fine ... did he truly want to converse with a trespassing woman who dashed about shoeless in the mud? She obviously had no respect for propriety.

A few moments of tense silence passed before Robert dropped to the ground with the cat in his arms.

"Oh, thank you," she said, a wide smile breaking across her face as she took the overweight beast from him.

"Your wish is my command," Robert answered.

Theo barely refrained from rolling his eyes.

Georgina and Eleanor strolled into the courtyard, arm in arm, stopping at the sight of Annabel Lockhart. And then Georgina pulled forward eagerly to meet the woman. Eleanor, who was more reserved than her sister, followed behind cautiously.

Introductions were made, and before long, Georgina was asking Miss Lockhart about the cat — what its name was (Willoughby, from a character in a book — ridiculous), how old it was (unknown) — and Eleanor even took part in the conversation, smiling tentatively.

Theo felt the situation spiraling out of his control. This woman was a stranger, not a family friend, and no one was supposed to be here in the first place.

"What exactly is going on?" he asked, bringing their happy chatter to a halt. "I thought Llynmore Castle was currently uninhabited. Are you a servant?"

Miss Lockhart quickly shuttered the friendliness she exuded toward the others as she faced him. "I live here."

"That's not possible," he said. He didn't want it to be possible. He felt the first thread of the future he'd envisioned for himself starting to unravel — he couldn't very well isolate himself in a deserted castle if the castle wasn't actually deserted.

"I assure you, it is," she responded, with all the haughtiness of a duchess. "My aunt and I reside at Llynmore Castle, thanks to the charity of the Earl of Arden. I'd like to know why you think you have a right to arrive unannounced."

Theo found himself straightening under the weight of her condescension, pushing up from his walking stick, simply so he'd be taller than her. And then it was by a mere inch or so. An annoyance, that.

"I'm the Earl of Arden."

CHAPTER 2

Annabel had never seen the Earl of Arden herself, but she knew he was a contemporary of her aunt, who was almost seventy. This dour man couldn't be past thirty. He wasn't handsome in the typical sense — his features were too blunt for that — but there was something about his dark, intense eyes and commanding presence that drew her gaze to him more than once.

"The earl died?" She tried to keep her face calm, even though turmoil roiled inside.

The new Lord Arden nodded curtly. "Three months ago. I'm surprised you didn't know, if you were close enough to him to receive the charity of an entire castle. It's also odd that he didn't think to include you in his will, if he was so concerned for your wellbeing."

"I didn't know the old earl had an heir," she said. She must have been squeezing Willoughby too tightly, for he wriggled out of her grasp, landed on his feet, and darted into the castle through the cracked front door.

"I didn't know, either, until his solicitor contacted me. Apparently, he was my grandfather on my mother's side ... something that isn't done with English titles. They were estranged, though, and none of us had ever met him. I notice you didn't answer my question," he said, as tenacious and frustrating as a bulldog.

"Did you ask a question?" she returned. "It sounded more like a statement to me."

The man needed to work on his social skills. His initial words to her still stung — what are you? — as though she was so backward and unusual she might not even be human. She was well aware that she was a little eccentric, but that didn't mean he had the right to show up unannounced and ridicule her for it.

And yet, she found herself taking note of the hard angle of a jaw that was tensed in irritation, the lines of a body that contained a wiry strength. It was a pity that such an unpleasant man could have an almost magnetic physicality. Not that she was in danger of succumbing to it. She might be eccentric, but she was no fool.

"Why didn't you know of the earl's death?"

"We were not close."

"Even though he let you live here?" Lord Arden asked skeptically.

She laughed humorlessly. "The earl had no use for this property. My aunt was married to the earl's brother. After her husband died, she fell on hard times and the earl let her live here, since he never visited. It was familial duty, nothing more."

Annabel had also suspected the earl was ashamed of the woman his brother had married — an actress — and preferred to keep her out of sight. She didn't speak this thought out loud.

"Well, I have use for it," he said.

She stared at him blankly. A growing unease filled her chest. "Pardon me?"

"My siblings and I will be residing here for some time. We'll have to find another place for you."

No. This was her home. She couldn't imagine not feeling the mist against her face and tasting the sea on her tongue. She couldn't imagine not being able to roam the wild moors.

And more important than anything, she couldn't think of a better place to hide Fiona. There were no neighbors for miles. No pesky calls or intrusions, except for the occasional touring Englishmen and women who wanted a taste of the rugged beauty of the Highlands. And Fiona had been positive that no one else knew Annabel lived here, with an aunt who'd been shunned by their family years ago for her choice of profession.

Robert, whom she was starting to call the pleasant one, stepped in.

"Surely all of this can wait. We just arrived. Perhaps Miss Lockhart would like to give us a tour of the castle?"

Georgina practically jumped in excitement. "That sounds splendid. Are there any spy holes?" she asked.

Annabel nodded, charmed by the girl's enthusiasm. "There's one that overlooks the great hall," she said. "It played a part in a tale of passion and betrayal about two hundred years ago, or so I'm told." She lifted her eyebrows dramatically.

The look Lord Arden shot her could have cut glass. "She's only sixteen. I don't think she needs to hear tales about passion and betrayal."

"Some girls are married at sixteen," Annabel pointed out. "And it's only a story."

Lord Arden scowled. "She's delicate."

Annabel glanced at Georgina. Her brown eyes glowed with interest, and her cheeks flushed a healthy rose. She bore pockmark scars on her face — the sign of a smallpox survivor — but the disease didn't seem to have affected her in any other way. She didn't look delicate in the slightest.

When the earl wasn't looking, Annabel cupped her hand over her mouth and whispered, "Later," to the girl.

"Why don't we meet in an hour for the tour?" Annabel suggested. "I'm sure you'll want to unpack your things and rest for a while?"

"That sounds splendid," Robert said.

"I'll have our maid show you to the spare rooms," she said. "I need to check on Willoughby and tell my aunt we have guests."

The earl opened his mouth — probably to protest her choice of phrasing — but Annabel spun quickly toward the door before he could make a sound.

After she'd told Catriona to start making up the extra bedrooms, she sprinted toward the kitchens, where she'd last seen Fiona and her niece. She sagged in relief when she saw that they were still there. Mary was sitting on a stool, kicking her small legs back and forth. Her mouth was lined with milk from the mug in front of her. In the background, a fire blazed in the hearth. Fiona, who'd been staring into the flame, looked up when Annabel rushed in, her brows knitting together.

"What is it?"

"Lord Arden is dead," she said without preamble. "The new earl just arrived to take residence."

Fiona blanched. "Here? Why would he want to?"

Annabel tried not to be insulted. She loved this castle with every piece of her heart, but she knew what her sister meant — it was about two hundred years out of style, and if one grew bored without the pleasures of society ... well, they'd be bored almost all of the time.

"Why do aristocratic men do anything? Ennui?"

But then, was Lord Arden a jaded aristocrat? He'd only just inherited the title. For all Annabel knew, he might have been a humble gentleman farmer before his inheritance. Except humble wasn't a word she'd ever use to describe him.

Unpleasant, yes. Dour, maybe. Condescending, certainly.

Not humble.

"Do we —" Fiona licked her lips as her voice went hoarse. "Do we have to leave?"

When Fiona had shown up at Llynmore Castle a week before, she'd been frightened and shaking and barely able to speak. She was slowly getting better, but she still jumped whenever Annabel approached too quickly or too quietly. She still looked lost when she stared out the window, as if she couldn't remember where she was.

Even if Annabel had somewhere safe to take her, which she didn't, Fiona needed more time to heal from ... from whatever it was that had happened. Fiona hadn't told her the specifics yet, only that it was imperative they weren't found, and Annabel didn't want to push. But she had the horrible suspicion that her brother-in-law had abused Fiona. She wouldn't even speak her husband's name. She'd visibly flinched when Annabel had said it.

Seeing that reaction in her sister, who'd once been so vital and so innocent, had brought a rush of guilt that nearly forced her to her knees.

Annabel was older. Annabel should have protected her. Annabel hadn't even had any inkling that something was wrong.

She'd been a fool.

But she'd do everything in her power to protect her now.

She impulsively dropped a kiss to Mary's head and the little girl looked up. "Aunt Bel!" she said in a tone that was a cross between a protest and a giggle. But she had a short attention span where food or drink were involved. The next second she was back to sipping from the mug, clasping it between her hands in a selfish grasp.


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Enchanting the Earl by Lily Maxton, Alycia Tornetta. Copyright © 2017 Lily Maxton. Excerpted by permission of Entangled Publishing, LLC.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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