Under An English Moon Read online




  Under An English Moon

  Moonlight Wishes In Time [2]

  Bess McBride

  Bess McBride (2012)

  * * *

  Rating: ****

  Tags: Literature & Fiction, Romance, Time Travel, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Fantasy, Historical

  Lord Reginald Hamilton pines for a love of his own. The woman he fancied himself in love with has married another, and Reggie finds himself restless, at loose ends, and wondering where he will find his destiny. America? It seems as if everyone he knows has emigrated to America.

  Phoebe Warner lives in New York City and works as a copy editor for Sinclair Publishing. A lover of the Georgian-era romance novels of I.C. Moon, she wishes for a Georgian man of her own.

  Reggie and Phoebe wish for their hearts’ desire on a full moon... almost two hundred years apart. They find their way to each other, but can Reggie and Phoebe find their destiny under an English moon?

  UNDER AN ENGLISH MOON

  By

  Bess McBride

  Under an English Moon

  Copyright 2013 Bess McBride

  Kindle Edition

  All rights reserved. Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise) without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, brands, media, and incidents are either the product of the author's imagination or are used fictitiously. The author acknowledges the trademarked status and trademark owners of various products referenced in this work of fiction, which have been used without permission. The publication/use of these trademarks is not authorized, associated with, or sponsored by the trademark owners.

  This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you are reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to Amazon.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the author's work.

  Cover Art by Tamra Westberry

  Formatted by IRONHORSE Formatting

  Contact information: [email protected]

  Published in the United States of America

  Dear Reader,

  Thank you for purchasing Under an English Moon. Under an English Moon is Book Two of the Moonlight Wishes in Time series, a series of Georgian-era time travel romances featuring time travel by moonlight.

  In Under an English Moon, we find Lord Reggie Hamilton from Moonlight Wishes in Time, all grown up in 1827, and looking for love. Mattie Crockwell has married William Sinclair, and Reggie is all alone with no one of his own to love. But where to find his destiny? Under an English Moon continues the story of Mattie and William and introduces Phoebe Warner, a young woman living in New York City who loves Georgian-era romance novels and wishes she had a Georgian man of her own.

  Although I am American, I am an anglophile in that I love all things British and Irish. I love the lyrical language of Georgette Heyer’s and Jane Austen’s dialogue, and I enjoyed trying to incorporate some of the dialogue into my own story while keeping the book a little more “readable” for modern-day romance enthusiasts. My advance apologies to my British reader friends who will note that the majority of the story is written and spelled in “American English” though many of the characters are English.

  I know that I, like some of my fellow time travel romance readers, have wondered: How can I find one of Jane Austen’s heroes for my own—a Georgian-era man complete with a firm moral code and impeccable manners with just a teeny bit of arrogance. If I did, could I really live with him?

  Thank you for your support over the years, friends and readers. Because of your favorable comments, I continue to strive to write the best stories I can. More romances are on the way!

  You know I always enjoy hearing from you, so please feel free to contact me at [email protected], through my website at www.BessMcBride.com, or my blog Will Travel for Romance.

  Thanks for reading!

  Bess

  Table of Contents

  Prologue

  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

  Epilogue

  Books by Bess McBride

  About the Author

  Prologue

  “Do not think to see me for some time,” Lord Reginald Hamilton threw over his shoulder as he stormed out the front door. He jumped astride his horse, startling it into a whinny, and he grabbed the reins from the groom’s hands.

  “Have a care, Master Reggie. The moon is bright this night, but it is still dangerous to ride too hastily on these darkened roads.” The small, wiry groom spoke with the familiarity of a long-time servant, and Reggie took no offense.

  Reggie nodded. “Thank you, Gerry. I will,” he ground out before turning his horse’s head toward the gates and urging him on. He jammed his top hat securely down on his head and leaned into Sebastian’s easy stride as they flew down the long drive of Hamilton Place. They reached the iron gates in ten minutes, and Reggie slowed his horse to a trot.

  Gerry spoke true. It was too dangerous to rush the horse recklessly at night, especially onto the poorly maintained country roads. Even by the light of the moon, Reggie could see the deep ruts left by the spring rains several weeks before.

  He looked up at the full moon—a luminescent white orb in the dark sky—and he felt the anger ebb from his body. It was as if the moon cast a soothing spell upon him. Reggie allowed Sebastian to slow even further, settling into a walk. His horse knew the road to the village well, having grown up on the estate and accompanying his master to the village on daily outings for exercise.

  Reggie replayed the conversation in the library with his father.

  “You cannot simply migrate to America, Reggie. It is unthinkable. I forbid it!”

  “You forbid it? What right do you have to forbid me to do anything, sir? I am of age and means. I do not need your permission.” Reggie stood head to head with his tall father, irrelevantly surprised that he had at long last matched the large man in height.

  His father blinked, seeming to realize the same thing.

  “I forbid it because I am your father. If you leave, there will be no one to care for the estate.”

  “You do not need anyone to help with the estate, Father. You have many years ahead of you. And in the event something untoward should happen in my absence, though I hope it will not, Samuel will manage.”

  Lord Jonathan Hamilton shook his head and waved a dismissive hand.

  “Bah! Your brother is interested only in books of late. He will not be equal to the task of caring for our holdings.”

  Reggie thought it more apt to say that Samuel might not wish to undertake the task of handling the estate. He had been buried in books for the past year, even to the point of declining to attend dinners and routs. Reggie and he had once been very close, almost inseparable, but of late th
ey had seen little of each other.

  “I am not going away forever, Father, but I am leaving.”

  “Reggie, my son, what has come over you? Only last year, I boasted to Lady Hamilton that you were an accommodating young man of a pleasant disposition. Now I find you willful, intractable, and dogged. Has this change come about because you fancied yourself in love with Miss Matilda Crockwell? Are you leaving England because your sensibilities were hurt by a woman?”

  Reggie stiffened and his cheeks heated. His father exaggerated the matter but had not fallen very far short of the mark.

  “As you well know, Father, her name is Mrs. William Sinclair now. And no, of course I am not leaving England because she married.” Reggie narrowed his eyes and stared his father down. There was some truth to his father’s words, but Reggie had no intention of acknowledging it. Even to his mind, the idea of migrating to another country for unrequited love of a now-married woman seemed excessive. But he felt restless, and he needed to explore. Miss Crockwell, a mysterious beauty from America, had incited in him a heretofore unknown curiosity about the world outside of England.

  Before meeting Miss Crockwell, he had never thought of himself as other than Lord Reginald Hamilton, not yet five and twenty, the eldest son of an earl, Lord Jonathan Hamilton. He assumed he would marry a local girl from a good family at the appropriate time, settle onto his family’s country estate with occasional visits to London, and take over management of the estate when his father passed away. He had wanted for nothing more, had expected nothing else.

  And yet when copper-haired Matilda Crockwell, a distant cousin of the Sinclair’s, had arrived unexpectedly from America, he had fallen under her spell and found himself wondering about America. What other delights did it hold? Miss Crockwell’s mannerisms, speech, and habits had been somewhat different from that to which he was accustomed, albeit in a most engaging way, and he wanted to know if there were other women like her.

  Reggie had not lied. His father promised to live a long life, and there was little for Reggie to do at the moment, certainly as far as the estate was concerned. Samuel was indeed immersed in his books, and his father had recently remarried a woman he had courted for years, Mrs. Lucinda Sinclair, now Lady Hamilton. With everyone in his family happily settled about their affairs, Reggie felt as if he had awakened from a long sleep to find himself without direction, without purpose.

  Neighbors had recently migrated to America—Thomas Ringwood and his bride, Sylvie, and Louisa Covington, now Mrs. Stephen Carver. It seemed as if everyone had removed to America in the past year. He wanted to join the exodus—if only for a while—to discover for himself what lay across the sea.

  “Impossible,” his father roared. “You may have the money from your mother’s inheritance, which I cannot withhold, but I will cut you off without an allowance if you leave.”

  “As you say, sir, I have my own money. Cut me off. It matters not to me.” Reggie turned away and paused at the door of the library. He looked over his shoulder. “We do not have to part in anger, Father. I will return someday...perhaps in the near future.”

  “I am vehemently opposed to this, Reginald. I have nothing else to say to you.” His father turned his back to him.

  “As you wish,” Reggie said. He crossed the foyer, ignoring his stepmother’s murmurs of protest as she paused on descending the stairway. “Lady Hamilton,” Reggie said as he reached the front door. “Do not think to see me for some time.”

  Now, Reggie rode on through the night aimlessly, uncertain of his immediate destination. He supposed he ought to take a room at the Village Inn for the night. It would not do to fly out of his father’s house in righteous indignation, only to return as an abject child in search of his porridge and his bed.

  Sebastian stumbled but quickly recovered his step. However, Reggie felt a dip in the horse’s gait, as if he had injured his leg.

  “Hold there, fellow,” he said as he slid off the horse’s back. He ran a hand down Sebastian’s leg, and the horse shied away at his touch.

  “Have a care there, old boy,” Reggie soothed. “It seems you have sprained your leg, Sebastian. It is my fault. I should have taken more care.” He patted the horse’s neck and looked around. What Sebastian needed was a proper poultice on his leg, a task Reggie could entrust only to Gerry.

  With a sigh, he turned the horse around. “Let us return home then, Sebastian. Gerry will tend to your leg, and I will attempt to tend to my father—though I may well be sleeping in the stable with you this night if Father has anything to say in the matter.”

  As Reggie led the horse back down the road toward home, he looked up at the moon once more.

  “I am going to America, Lady Moon. Nothing will stop me. I feel my destiny awaits me there...whoever she may be.”

  As if in answer, the moon shimmered overhead, casting a radiant glow around him. Reggie, staring at the brilliant sight, mistepped and tripped in one of the ruts. He felt himself falling.

  Chapter One

  Phoebe Warner left the large office building on East 53rd Street which housed her employer, Sinclair Publishing, and strolled down the street toward her apartment only a few blocks away. She had worked late that night, and the moon was high in the sky, surprisingly visible between the tall skyscrapers of downtown Manhattan. She eyed it with appreciation—bright, white, the perfect sphere of a full moon. The apartment she rented at an outrageously low price from her wealthy, jet-setting cousin, Annie, didn’t have a balcony, and she wasn’t sure she would be able to see it from the apartment. It seemed too perfect to waste. She wondered if she should snag a cup of something warm at a local sidewalk cafe just so she could enjoy the rare sight of the moon.

  Phoebe thought not. It was late. All she wanted at the end of a long hectic day at work was to take a warm bath, turn the television onto the twenty-four-hour Romantic Movies Channel, and savor a soothing glass of wine. If one of the movies was based on the novels of her favorite author, I.C. Moon, so much the better, she thought with a grin.

  Sadly, Hollywood didn’t use I.C. Moon’s books for films anymore. The five books that had been turned into movies were done in the early sixties in black and white, and the Romantic Movies Channel showed them sporadically. She heartily wished someone would do a remake of any of the movies, just to see how they might look in color, or what current actors they might choose for the parts. Which up and coming British actors would they choose for the dashing heroes and heroines? She recalled that some of I.C. Moon’s heroines were American though.

  Phoebe had fallen in love with I.C. Moon’s work a year ago when she’d landed a dream job at a publishing house in New York. Her job as copy editor at Sinclair Publishing was often exciting and demanding, occasionally tedious, but always rewarding, and she had worked on the re-release of several of I.C. Moon’s books over the past year for the current market of readers of classic romances. At some point along the way, she’d fallen in love with the idea of England, of the Georgian and Regency eras, of old-fashioned courtship and romance. She hoped to visit England one day—to see I.C. Moon’s English countryside. Someday...when she had enough money saved.

  Phoebe reached the door of her building in fifteen minutes and greeted the doorman. Oh, to be rich like Cousin Annie! Nothing in her hometown of Lincoln, Nebraska, had ever prepared her for a doorman.

  “How was your day, Tim?” she asked the short, stocky man dressed in a gray suit who faithfully manned the door five days of the week. In the year that she’d been living in her cousin’s apartment, she’d only seen him take Christmas Day off and the weekends. The night doormen alternated, but Tim was always there.

  “Good, Miss Warner. How about yours?” He held the door open for her.

  “Long, but good.” Phoebe smiled and moved toward the mailboxes.

  “Have a nice evening, Miss Warner,” Tim called out as he let the door close.

  “Thanks, Tim,” she said over her shoulder. She opened her mailbox to find it empty. Nothing new
there. The mail consisted of either bills or nothing.

  The elevator around the corner from the mailboxes took its sweet time arriving as usual, and Phoebe climbed aboard and pushed the button for the fifteenth floor. The image of the moon still lingered with her, and she wondered again if she would be able to see it from Annie’s living room window. Maybe.

  The elevator was no quicker going up than it had been coming down, and Phoebe rolled her eyes impatiently as the numbers above the door showed the elevator’s slow progress. She finally reached her floor and headed down the ruby red-carpeted hallway to the end unit.

  Inside, she dropped her oversize bag holding her gym clothes down onto the console table just inside the doorway, and she crossed the large living room to pull back the curtains and look out.

  There it was! The moon—round, glowing, proudly preening high in the sky. Phoebe wasn’t sure why, but she hadn’t remembered having a view of a full moon from the window before now. Of course, the taller buildings across the street blocked much of the sky. Was the moon in a particularly unusual position that night?

  What she wouldn’t give for a telescope. Binoculars! Phoebe trotted across the dark living room to her bedroom, stubbing her foot on the coffee table along the way. Cursing and flipping on the lights, she limped to her closet and rummaged around on the top shelf for her small binoculars, used only two times for Broadway shows.

  She returned to the living room, switching the lights off along the way so she could see the moon better. The binoculars, though not strong, magnified some of the moon’s craters, and she perched on the windowsill and studied them for a while. Hardly an astronomer, she had no idea which shapes were the “seas” one heard of, but that didn’t matter. She considered herself fortunate to be able to see anything on the moon beyond the naked eye. Surely I.C. Moon had never had the privilege of seeing the moon so close for all that she wrote so many books featuring moons...and charming Georgian men. Phoebe sighed. What she wouldn’t give to find a Georgian-era man of her own.