Bourne
London
Winter 1821
The eight of
diamonds ruined him.
If it had been
the six, he might have saved himself. If it had been the seven, he would have
walked away with triple his holdings.
But it was the
eight.
The young
Marquess of Bourne watched the card fly across the lush green baize and slide
into place next to the seven of clubs that lay face up on the table, teasing
him. His eyes were already closing, the air was already leaving the room in a
single, unbearable rush.
Vingt et
deux.
One more than
the vingt et un on which he had wagered.
On which he
had wagered everything.
There was a
collective gasp in the room as he stayed the movement of the card with the tip
of one finger—as bystanders watched the horror unfold with the keen pleasure of
those who had narrowly escaped their own demise.
The chatter
started then.
“He wagered it
all?”
“Everything
that wasn’t entailed.”
“Too young to
know better.”
“Old enough
now; nothing makes a man faster than this.”
“He’s really
lost all of it?”
“Everything.”
His eyes
opened, focusing on the man across the table, meeting the cold grey gaze he had
known his whole life. Viscount Langford had been a friend and neighbor to his
father, handpicked by the former Marquess of Bourne as guardian to his only son
and heir. After Bourne’s parents’ death, it had been Langford who had protected
the Marquessate of Bourne, who had increased its holdings tenfold, ensured its
prosperity.
And then taken
it.
Neighbor,
perhaps. Never friend.
Betrayal
scorched through the young marquess. “You did this on purpose.” For the first
time in his twenty-one years, he heard the youth in his voice. Hated it.
There was no
emotion on his opponent’s face as he lifted the mark from the center of the
table. Bourne resisted the urge to wince at the arrogant scrawl of his
signature across the white page—proof that he’d lost everything.
“It was your
choice. Your choice to wager more than you were willing to lose.”
He’d been
fleeced. Langford had pressed him again and again, pushing him farther and
farther, letting him win until he couldn’t imagine losing. It was an age-old
ploy, and Bourne had been too young to see it. Too eager. Bourne lifted his
gaze, anger and frustration choking the words. “And your choice to win it.”
“Without me,
there would have been nothing to win,” the older man said.
“Father.”
Thomas Alles, the viscount’s son and Bourne’s closest friend, stepped forward,
his voice shaking. “Don’t do this.”
Langford took
his time folding the mark and rising from the table, ignoring his son. Instead,
he leveled Bourne with a cool look. “You should thank me for teaching you such
a valuable lesson at such a young age. Unfortunately, now you’ve nothing but
the clothes on your back and a manor house empty of its contents.”
The viscount
cast a glance at the pile of coins on the table—the remainder of his winnings
from the evening. “I shall leave you the money, how’s that? A parting gift, if
you will. After all, what would your father say if I left you with nothing?”
Bourne shot up
from his chair, knocking it back from the table. “You aren’t fit to speak of my
father.”
Langford
raised an eyebrow at the uncontrolled display, and he let silence reign for a
long moment. “You know, I believe I shall take the money after all. And your
membership to this club. It is time for you to leave.”
Bourne’s
cheeks flamed as the words washed over him. His club membership. His land,
servants, horses, clothes, everything. Everything but a house, a few acres of
land, and a title.
A title now in
disgrace.
The viscount
lifted one side of his mouth in a mocking smile and flipped a guinea through
the air toward Bourne who instinctively reached out, catching the gold coin as
it glinted in the bright lights of White’s card room. “Spend it wisely, boy.
It’s the last you’ll have from me.”
“Father,”
Tommy tried again.
Langford
turned on him. “Not another word. I won’t have you begging for him.”
Bourne’s
oldest friend turned sad eyes on him, lifting his hands in a sign of
helplessness. Tommy needed his father. Needed his money. His support.
Things
Bourne no longer had himself.
Hatred flared
hot and bright for the briefest of moments, before it was gone, extinguished by
cold resolve, and Bourne placed the coin in his pocket and turned his back on
his peers, his club, his world, and the life he had always known.
Vowing
revenge.
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