Title: To Tempt a Troubled Earl
Series: Regency Rossingley, Book One
Author: Fearne Hill
Publisher: NineStar Press
Release Date: 03/04/2025
Heat Level: 3 – Some Sex
Pairing: Male/Male
Length: 77200
Genre: Historical, historical romance, gay, UK, aristocracy, rich man/poor man, enemies to lovers, hurt-comfort, humorous, slow burn, opposites attract, scoundrels
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Description
A chancer and a rogue, Kit Angel is down on his luck. Presenting himself at Rossingley Hall in the dead of night, he begs an audience with the eleventh earl, the most enigmatic nobleman in Regency England. The visit has purpose. Kit, hungry to ruin the baronet who ruined his sister, believes Rossingley is the only man who can help him. Lando Duchamps-Avery, Eleventh Earl of Rossingley, doesnβt trust the sinfully handsome stranger one bit. He does not care for the tales he spins, his hot temper, or his thick, ebony curls. And, most definitely, he is not in thrall to the delicious golden hoop dangling from Kit Angelβs left ear. Lando has his own motivations to ruin the same lord, and the two men form an uneasy alliance. As the dangerous plot they hatch unfurls, the suspicious earl and the shady scoundrel are increasingly thrown together. Whilst the wily earl gradually surrenders to his growing attraction, Kit canβt make up his mind if he wants to swive him, declare undying love for him, or throttle him. Bit by bit, as mutual desire swells between them, Kit wins over the earlβs body, his passion, and his trust. But in order to win the earlβs elusive heart? The scoundrel must risk losing everything. This first book in the new Rossingley Regency romance series introduces Lando Duchamps-Avery, nineteenth-century predecessor to Dr Lucian Avery of the contemporary Rossingley romance series. With Landoβs story, we return to southern England and the Rossingley estate. This book can be read as a standalone.Excerpt
To Tempt a Troubled Earl Fearne Hill Β© 2025 All Rights Reserved Rossingley Estate Summer, 1821 βYou have visitors, my lord.β Inglis floated across the eleventh Earl of Rossingleyβs sleepy eyeline, looking peevish. Lando swore the man had silken castors in place of feet. With white-gloved hands clasped together in front of his vexed frame, his head butler awaited his response. βAnd you have chosen to disturb me about this becauseβ¦β Lando tilted his balloon of brandy this way and that, playing the flickering candlelight against the delicately engraved crystal. That the evening was late was an irrelevance. He and his butler were of the same accord; visitors at any time of day were unusual, unwarranted, and unwelcome. βA Mr Christopher Angel, my lord. And his sister, Miss Anne. The young man says itβs important.β One of a pair, the balloon glass had been a gift from dear Charles. βI know of no one named Angel. Begging the question βimportant for whomβ?β βHe didnβt make that distinction, my lord,β admitted Inglis. βBut he gave the impression the matter is somewhat urgent.β Lando took a warming sip of brandy. The drink of the damned. He didnβt especially care for it, but he fancied it lent him a louche, philosophic air. βWhat is urgent is seldom important, Inglis,β he deemed, pleased with his wisdom. Rousseau himself might make a similar pronouncement. βIf itβs alms heβs after, toss him a half-crown, some cold meats, and send him on his way.β The gloved hands wrung together. βI did try that, my lord. But heβsβ¦ahβ¦more insistent than our usual callers, and neither is he a pauper. Andβ¦β Inglis paused. Never let it be said the butler couldnβt milk a drama. βHeβ¦he mentioned one of his close relations. His uncle. Oneβ¦ahβ¦a former cavalry officer sadly no longer with us, God rest his soul.β As Inglis made the sign of the cross, Lando took another, more contemplative sip. So many good men had fallen during the wars in France, and a chap struggled to keep up. βOh, yes?β Inglis cleared his throat. βYes. Aβ¦ahβ¦Captain Charles Prosser, my lord.β Like rancid vinegar, the fine liquor soured on the earlβs tongue. He fought to swallow it down. Perhaps he should have stuck to port after dinner. Maybe it would have better softened the dull ache now swelling behind his rib cage. Captain Prosser. His dearest Charles, his lover. His heart. Lando didnβt make his older loverβs acquaintance until after the wars, from which Charles returned hale and hearty. But where French bayonets and the battlefields of Trafalgar had failed, the insidious wasting disease prevailed. An annoying tickle became a cough, a cough tinged with blood. Slowly, inexorably, his lover faded away, their time together, in all of its perfection, too brief. A life only half lived; a conversation forever unfinished. Lando, not daring to be at Charlesβs bedside at the end, heard the news of his passing from a mutual friend some two weeks after his lover had been buried beneath Kentish loamy earth. Three long years ago. Yet even now, at unprepared moments such as thisβand was there ever such a thing as a prepared one?βthat name still had a powerful hold upon the eleventh earl. If Inglis hadnβt broken the crushing silence, it might have persisted well into the night. βI have taken the liberty of passing the young manβs sister over to Mrs Sugden, my lord. The girl is in a state of great distress. And I have shown her brother to the small parlour. Heβsβ¦ahβ¦not fit for the library.β Inglisβs waspish voice sounded as if coming from an awfully long way away. βMy lord might wish to be more suitably attired before receiving him?β Tipping back his fair head, Lando forced another swallow of fiery amber liquid. For a second or two, it threatened to reappear, then he pulled himself together. Ridiculous. Three years gone and one mention of Charles turned him into a limp dishrag. Well, it was high time it didnβt. Time to make a clean breast of things. Time to stop bloody moping. Charles would have hated him squandering his salad days drinking alone and brooding in front of a dying fire. He cast his gaze down his spare frame. Fussy Inglis might wish him more suitably attired, but Lando gave not a fig. As purportedly one of the richest men in England, Lando could host a ball clad in only his underclothes, and the ton would declare it the latest fashion in Paris. He pinned Inglis to the spot with his pale eyes. βIβm decent. Uninvited callers find me as I am, or not at all. As you damned well know.βPurchase
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Meet the Author
Fearne Hill lives deep in the southern British countryside with three untamed sons, varying numbers of hens, a few tortoises, and a beautiful cocker spaniel. When she is not overseeing her small menagerie, she enjoys writing contemporary romantic fiction. And when she is not doing either of those things, she works as an anaesthesiologist.Website | Facebook | Twitter | Instagram
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