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For a limited time, Avon Books
has made the first Bridgerton novel available in its entirety online. Get
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When He Was Wicked takes place at the same time as both Romancing Mr. Bridgerton and To Sir Phillip, With Love. This turned out to be a major pain, but I’d mentioned Francesca just enough in both of those books that I had to set the book then. (Note to self: plan things out better next time you write a series!) This is why neither Colin nor Eloise is married at the beginning of Part 2. (Part 1 takes place four years earlier.)
Did you notice that one of the major scenes is set at Violet Bridgerton’s birthday party? Those of you who have read Romancing Mr. Bridgerton know what Lady Danbury is going to do next when she says, “This party needs livening up.”
One of my favorite scenes in this book is when Violet and Francesca talk about widowhood. Readers have long asked to learn more about Violet, and I realized that I wanted to learn more, too.
There was no working title for this book. Even my computer files still just say, “Francesca Folder.”
When He Was Wicked is the sixth book in the Bridgerton series. The rest are as follows: 
#1: The Duke and I
#2: The Viscount Who Loved Me
#3: An Offer from a Gentleman
#4: Romancing Mr. Bridgerton
#5: To Sir Phillip, With Love
#7: It's In His Kiss
#8: On the Way to the Wedding
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When He Was Wicked spent four weeks on the New York Times bestseller list, making its debut at #5.
Five weeks on the USA Today bestseller list, peaking at #9.
Four weeks as a Publishers Weekly bestseller, two of them at #7.
Selected by Amazon.com as one of the ten best romance novels of 2004.
#1 on the Waldenbooks Mass Market bestseller list.
A Main Selection of the Rhapsody Book Club, and a Featured Alternate Selection of the Doubleday Book Club.
Available in large print and as an e-book.
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Part
One : Chapter
One
 |

March,
1820
London,
England
...I wouldn't
call it a jolly good time, but it's not as bad as that.
There are women, after all, and where there are women,
I'm bound to make merry.
--from
Michael Stirling to his cousin John, the Earl of Kilmartin, posted
from the 52nd Foot Guards during the Napoleonic
Wars  |
In every life there is a turning
point. A moment so tremendous, so sharp and clear that one
feels as if one's been hit in the chest, all the breath knocked
out, and one knows, absolutely knows without the merest hint of a shadow of a doubt that
one's life will never be the same.
For Michael Stirling, that moment came the first time he laid
eyes on Francesca Bridgerton.
After a lifetime of chasing women, of smiling slyly as they
chased him, of allowing himself to be caught and then turning
the tables until he was the victor, of caressing and kissing
and making love to them but never actually allowing his heart
to become engaged, he took one look at Francesca Bridgerton
and fell so fast and so hard into love it was a wonder he managed
to remain standing.
Unfortunately for Michael, however, Francesca's surname was
to remain Bridgerton a mere thirty-six hours longer; the occasion
of their meeting was, lamentably, a supper celebrating her
imminent wedding to his cousin.
Life was ironic that way, Michael liked to think in his more
polite moods.
In his less polite moods, he used a different adjective entirely.
And his moods, since falling in love with his first cousin's
wife, were not often polite.
Oh, he hid it well. It wouldn't do to be visibly out of sorts.
Then some annoyingly perceptive soul might actually take notice,
and --God forbid-- inquire as
to his welfare. And while Michael Stirling held a not unsubstantiated
pride in his ability to dissemble and deceive (he had, after
all, seduced more women than anyone cared to count, and had
somehow managed to do it all without ever once being challenged
to a duel)-- Well, the sodding truth of it was that he'd never
been in love before, and if ever there was a time that a man
might lose his ability to maintain a façade under direct
questioning, this was probably it.
And so he laughed, and was very merry, and he continued to
seduce women, trying not to notice that he tended to close
his eyes when he had them in bed, and he stopped going to church
entirely, because there seemed no point now in even contemplating
prayer for his soul. Besides, the parish church near Kilmartin
dated to 1432, and the crumbling stones certainly couldn't
take a direct strike of lightning.
And if God ever wanted to smite a sinner, he couldn't do better
than Michael Stirling.
Michael Stirling, Sinner.
He could see it on a calling card. He'd have had it printed
up, even --his was just that sort of black sense of humor--
if he weren't convinced it would kill his mother on the spot.
Rake he might be, but there was no need to torture the woman
who'd borne him.
Funny how he'd never seen all those other women as a sin.
He still didn't. They'd all been willing, of course; you couldn't
seduce an unwilling woman, at least not if you took seduction
at the true sense of the word and took care not to confuse
it with rape. They had to actually want it, and if they didn't--
if Michael sensed even a hint of unease, he turned and walked
away. His passions were never so out of control that he couldn't
manage a quick and decisive departure.
And besides, he'd never seduced a virgin, and he'd never slept
with a married woman. Oh very well, one ought to remain true
to oneself, even while living a lie-- he'd slept with married
women, plenty of them, but only the ones whose husbands were
rotters, and even then, not unless she'd already produced two
male offspring; three, if one of the boys seemed a little sickly.
A man had to have rules of conduct, after all.
But this... This was beyond the pale. Entirely unacceptable.
This was the one transgression (and he'd had many) that was
finally going to blacken his soul, or at the very least --and
this was assuming he maintained the strength never to act upon
his desires-- make it a rather deep shade of charcoal. Because
this... This--
He coveted his cousin's wife.
He coveted John's wife.
John.
John, who, damn it all, was like a brother to him, had been
more of a brother to him than his own had been. John, whose
family had taken him in when his father had died. John, whose
father had raised him and taught him to be a man. John, with
whom--
Ah, bloody hell. Did he really need to do this to himself?
He could spend a sennight cataloguing all the reasons why he
was going straight to hell for having chosen John's wife with
whom to fall in love. And none of it was ever going to change
one simple fact.
He couldn't have her.
He could never have Francesca Bridgerton Stirling.
But, he thought with a snort as he slouched into the sofa
and propped his ankle over his knee, watching them across the
drawing room, laughing and smiling, and making nauseating eyes
at one another, he could have another drink.
"I think I will," he
announced, downing it in one gulp.
"What was that, Michael?" John
asked, hearing superb as always, damn it.
Michael produced an excellent
forgery of a smile and lifted his glass aloft. "Just thirsty," he
said, maintaining the perfect picture of a bon vivant.
They were at Kilmartin House, in London, as opposed Kilmartin
(no House, no Castle, just Kilmartin), up in Scotland, where
the boys had grown up, or the other Kilmartin House, in Edinburgh--not
a creative soul among his forbearers, Michael had often reflected;
there was also a Kilmartin Cottage (if one could call twenty-two
rooms a cottage), Kilmartin Abbey, and, of course, Kilmartin
Hall. Michael had no idea why no one had thought to offer their
surname to one of the residences; Stirling House had a perfectly
respectful ring to it, in his opinion. He supposed that the
ambitious --and unimaginative-- Stirlings of old had been so
damned besotted with their newfound earldom that they couldn't
think to put any other name on anything.
He snorted into his glass of whisky. It was a wonder he didn't
drink Kilmartin Tea and sit on a Kilmartin-style chair. In
fact, he probably would be doing just that if his grandmother
had found a way to manage it without actually taking the family
into trade. The old martinet had been so proud one would have
thought she'd been born a Stirling, rather than simply married
into the name. As far as she'd been concerned, the Countess
of Kilmartin (herself) was just as important as any loftier
title, and she'd more than once sniffed her displeasure when
being led into supper after an upstart marchioness or duchess.
The Queen, Michael thought dispassionately. He supposed his
grandmother had knelt before the Queen, but he certainly couldn't
imagine her offering deference to any other female.
She would have approved of Francesca Bridgerton. Grandmother
Stirling would surely have turned her nose up upon learning
that Francesca's father was a mere viscount, but the Bridgertons
were an old and immensely popular --and, when the fancy took
them, powerful-- family. Plus, Francesca's spine was straight
and her manner was proud, and her sense of humor was sly and
subversive. If she'd been fifty years older and not nearly
so attractive, she would have made quite a fine companion for
Grandmother Stirling.
And now Francesca was the Countess of Kilmartin, married to
his cousin John, who was one year his junior, but in the Stirling
household always treated with the deference due the elder;
he was the heir, after all. Their fathers were twins, but John's
had entered the world seven minutes before Michael's.
The most critical seven minutes in Michael Stirling's life,
and he hadn't even been alive for them.
"What shall we do for our anniversary?" Francesca
asked as she crossed the room and seated herself at the pianoforte.
"Whatever you want," John
answered.
Francesca turned to Michael, her eyes startlingly blue, even
in the candlelight. Or maybe it was just that he knew how blue
they were. He seemed to dream in blue these days. Francesca
blue, the color ought to be called.
"Michael?" she
said, her tone indicating that the word was a repetition.
"Sorry," he said, offering her the lopsided smile
he so frequently affixed to his face. No one ever took him
seriously when he smiled like that, which was, of course, the
point. "Wasn't listening."
"Do you have any ideas?" she
asked.
"For what?"
"For our anniversary."
If she'd had an arrow,
she couldn't have jammed it into his heart any harder. But
he just shrugged, since he was appallingly good at faking
it. "It's not my anniversary," he
reminded her.
"I know," she
said. He wasn't looking at her, but she sounded like she
rolled her eyes.
But she didn't. Michael
was certain of that. He'd come to know Francesca agonizingly
well in the past two years, and he knew she didn't roll her
eyes. When she was feeling sarcastic, or ironic, or sly,
it was all there in her voice and the curious tip of her
mouth. She didn't need to roll her eyes. She just looked
at you with that direct stare, her lips curving ever-so-slightly,
and–
Michael swallowed reflexively, then covered it with a sip
of his drink. It didn't really speak well of him that he'd
spent so much time analyzing the curve of his cousin's wife's
lips.
"I assure you," Francesca continued, idly
trailing the pads of her fingertips along the surface of the
piano keys without actually pressing any into sound, "I'm
well aware of whom I married."
"I'm sure you are," he
muttered.
"Beg pardon?"
"Continue," he
said.
Her lips pursed in a peevish
crease. He'd seen her with that expression quite frequently,
usually in her dealings with her brothers. "I was asking your advice," she said, "because
you are so often merry."
"I'm so often merry?" he
repeated, knowing that was how the world saw him --they called
him the Merry Rake, after all-- but hating the word on her
lips. It made him feel frivolous, without substance.
And then he felt even worse, because it was probably true.
"You disagree?" she
inquired.
"Of course not," he murmured. "I'm
simply unused to being asked for advice regarding anniversary
celebrations, as it is clear I have no talent for marriage."
"That's not clear at all," she
said.
"You
have never tried marriage," Francesca pointed out. "How
could you possibly know you have no talent for it?"
Michael managed a smirk. "I
think it's fairly clear to all who know me. Besides, what
need have I? I have no title, no property--"
"You have property," John
interjected, demonstrating that he was still listening from
behind his newspaper.
"Only a small bit of property," Michael corrected, "which
I am more than happy to leave for your children, since it was
given to me by John, anyway."
Francesca looked at her husband, and Michael knew exactly
what she was thinking-- that John had given him the property
because John wanted him to feel he had something, a purpose,
really. Michael had been at loose ends since decommissioning
from the army several years back. And although John had never
said so, Michael knew that he felt guilty for having not fought
for England on the Continent, for remaining behind while Michael
faced danger alone.
But John had been heir to an earldom. He had a duty to marry,
be fruitful and multiply. No one had expected him to go to
war.
Michael had often wondered if the property --a rather lovely
and comfortable manor house with twenty acres-- was John's
form of penance. And he rather suspected that Francesca wondered
the same.
But she would never ask. Francesca understood men with remarkable
clarity -- probably from growing up with all of those brothers.
Francesca knew exactly what not to ask a man.
Which always left Michael a little worried. He thought he
hid his feelings well, but what if she knew?
She would never speak of it, of course, never even allude to
it. He rather suspected they were ironically alike that way;
if Francesca suspected he was in love with her, she would never alter
her manner in any way.
"I think you should go to Kilmartin," Michael
said abruptly.
"To Scotland?" Francesca asked, pressing gently
against B-flat on the pianoforte. "With the season so
close?"
Michael stood, suddenly
rather eager to depart. He shouldn't have come over in any
case. "Why not?" he asked,
his tone careless. "You love it there. John loves it there.
It's not such a long journey if your carriage is well-sprung."
"Will you come?" John
asked.
"I think not," Michael
said sharply. As if he cared to witness their anniversary
celebration. Truly, all it would do was remind him of what
he could never have. Which would then remind him the guilt.
Or amplify it. Reminders were rather unnecessary; he lived
with it every day.
Thou Shalt Not Covet Thy Cousin's Wife.
Moses must have forgotten to write that one down.
"I have much to do here," Michael
said.
"You do?" Francesca asked, her eyes lighting with
interest. "What?"
"Oh, you know," he said wryly, "all
those things I have to do to prepare for a life of dissolution
and aimlessness."
Francesca stood.
Oh God, she stood, and she was walking to him. This was the
worst--when she actually touched him.
She laid her hand on his upper arm. Michael did his best not
to flinch.
"I wish you wouldn't speak that way," she
said.
Michael looked past her shoulder to John, who had raised his
newspaper just high enough so that he could pretend he wasn't
listening.
"Am I to become your project, then?" Michael
asked, a bit unkindly.
She drew back. "We
care about you."
We. We. Not I, not
John. We. A subtle reminder that they were a unit. John and
Francesca. Lord and Lady Kilmartin. She hadn't meant it that
way, of course, but it was how he heard it all the same.
"And I care for you," Michael
said, waiting for a plague of locusts to stream through the
room.
"I know," she said, oblivious to his distress. "I
could never ask for better cousin. But I want you to be happy."
Michael glanced over at John, giving him a look that clearly
said: Save me.
John gave up his pretense
of reading and set the paper down. "Francesca,
darling, Michael is a grown man. He'll find his happiness as
he sees fit. When he
sees fit."
Francesca's lips pursed, and Michael could tell she was irritated.
She didn't like to be thwarted, and she certainly did not enjoy
admitting that she might not be able to arrange her world --and
the people inhabiting it-- to her satisfaction.
"I should introduce you to my sister," she
said.
Good God. "I've met your sister," Michael said quickly. "All
of them. Even the one still in leading strings."
"She's not in--" She cut herself off, grinding her
teeth together. "I grant you that Hyacinth is not suitable,
but Eloise is--"
"I'm not marrying Eloise," Michael
said sharply.
"I didn't say you had to marry her," Francesca said. "Just
dance with her once or twice."
"I've done so," he reminded her. "And
that is all I am going to do."
"But--"
"Francesca," John
said. His voice was gentle, but his meaning was clear. Stop.
Michael could have kissed him for his interference. John of
course just thought that he was saving his cousin from needless
feminine nagging; there was no way he could know the truth--
that Michael was trying to compute the level of guilt one might
feel for being in love with one's cousin's wife and one's
wife's sister.
Good God, married to Eloise Bridgerton. Was Francesca trying
to kill him?
"We should all go for a walk," Francesca
said suddenly.
Michael glanced out the
window. All vestiges of daylight had left the sky. "Isn't it a bit late for that?" he
asked.
"Not with two strong men as escorts," she said, "and
besides, the streets in Mayfair are well lit. We shall be perfectly
safe." She turned to her husband. "What do you say,
darling?"
"I have an appointment in an hour," John said, consulting
his pocket watch, "but you should go with Michael."
More proof that John had no idea of Michael's feelings.
"The two of you always have such a fine time together," John
added.
Francesca turned to Michael
and smiled, worming her way another inch into his heart. "Will you?" she asked. "I'm
desperate for a spot of fresh air now that the rain has stopped.
And I've been feeling rather odd all day, I must say."
"Of course," Michael
replied, since they all knew that he had no appointments.
His was a life of carefully cultivated dissolution.
Besides, he couldn't resist her. He knew he should stay away,
knew he should never allow himself to be alone in her company.
He would never act upon his desires, but truly, did he really
need to subject himself to this sort of agony? He'd just end
the day alone in bed, wracked by guilt and desire, in almost
equal measures.
But when she smiled at him he couldn't say no. And he certainly
wasn't strong enough to deny himself an hour in her presence.
Because her presence was all he was ever going to get. There
would never be a kiss, never a meaningful glance or touch.
There would be no whispered words of love, no moans of passion.
All he could have was her smile and her company, and pathetic
idiot that he was, he was willing to take it.
"Just give me a moment," she said, pausing in the
doorway. "I need to get my coat."
"Be quick about it," John said. "It's
already after seven."
"I'll be safe enough with Michael to protect me," she
said with a jaunty smile, "but don't worry, I'll be quick." And
then she offered her husband a wicked smile. "I'm always
quick."
Michael averted his eyes as his cousin actually blushed. Lord
above, but he truly did
not want to know the meaning behind I'll be quick.
Unfortunately, it could have been any number of things, all
of them deliciously sexual. And he was likely to spend the
next hour cataloguing them all in his mind, imagining them
being done to him.
He tugged at his cravat. Maybe he could get out of this jaunt
with Francesca. Maybe he could go home and draw a cold bath.
Or better yet, find himself a willing woman with long chestnut
hair. And if he was lucky, blue eyes as well.
"I'm sorry about that," John
said, once Francesca had left.
Michael's eyes flew to his face. Surely John would never mention
Francesca's innuendo.
"Her nagging," John added. "You're
young enough. You don't need to be married yet."
"You're younger than I," Michael
said, mostly to be contrary.
"Yes, but I met Francesca." John
shrugged helplessly, as if that ought to be explanation enough.
And of course it was.
"I don't mind her nagging," Michael
said.
"Of course you do.
I can see it in your eyes."
And that was the problem. John could see it in his eyes. There was no one in the world
who knew him better. If something was bothering him, John
would always be able to tell. The miracle was that John didn't
realize why Michael was distressed.
"I will tell her to leave you alone," John said, "although
you should know that she only nags because she loves you."
Michael managed a tight smile. He certainly couldn't manage
words.
"Thank you for taking her for a walk," John said,
standing up. "She's been a bit peckish all day, with the
rain. Said she's been feeling uncommonly closed-in."
"When is your appointment?" Michael
asked.
"Nine o'clock," John replied as they walked out
into the hall. "I'm meeting Lord Liverpool at White's."
"Parliamentary business?"
John nodded. He took his position in the House of Lords very
seriously. Michael had often wondered if he'd have approached
the duty with as much gravity, had he been born a lord.
Probably not. But then again, it didn't much matter, did it?
Michael watched as John
rubbed his left temple. "Are
you all right?" he asked. "You look a little..." He
didn't finish the sentence, since he wasn't quite certain how
John looked. Not right. That was all he knew.
And he knew John. Inside and out. Probably better than Francesca
did.
"Devil of a headache," John muttered. "I've
had it all day."
"Do you want me to
call for some laudanum?"
John shook his head. "Hate
the stuff. It makes my mind fuzzy, and I need my wits about
me for the meeting with Liverpool."
Michael nodded. "You look pale," he
said, why, he didn't know. It wasn't as if it was going to
change John's mind about the laudanum.
"Do I?" John asked, wincing as he pressed his fingers
harder into the skin of his temple. "I think I'll lie
down, if you don't mind. I don't need to leave for an hour."
"Right," Michael murmured. "Do
you want me to have someone wake you?"
John shook his head. "I'll
ask my valet myself."
Just then, Francesca descended
the stairs, wrapped in a long velvet cloak of midnight blue. "Good evening, gentlemen," she
said, clearly basking in her undivided male attention. But
as she reached the bottom, she frowned. "Is something
wrong, darling?" she asked John.
"Just a headache," John said. "It's
nothing."
"You should lie down," she
said.
John managed a smile. "I'd
just finished telling Michael that I was planning to do just
that. I'll have Simons wake me in time for my meeting."
"With Lord Liverpool?" Francesca
queried.
"Yes. At nine."
"Is it about the
Six Acts?"
John nodded. "Yes,
and the return to the gold standard. I told you about at
breakfast, if you recall."
"Make sure you--" She stopped, smiling as she shook
her head. "Well, you know how I feel."
John smiled, then leaned
down and dropped a tender kiss on her lips. "I always
know how you feel, darling."
Michael pretended to look the other way.
"Not always," she
said, her voice warm and teasing.
"Always when it matters," John
said.
"Well, that is
true," she admitted. "So much for my attempts to
be a lady of mystery."
He kissed her again. "I
prefer you as an open book, myself."
Michael cleared his throat. This shouldn't be so difficult;
it wasn't as if John and Francesca were acting any differently
than was normal. They were, as so much of society had commented,
like two peas in a pod, marvelously in accord, and splendidly
in love.
"It's growing late," Francesca said. "I
should go if I want that spot of fresh air."
John nodded, closing his eyes for a moment.
"Are you sure you're
well?"
"I'm fine," he said. "Just
a headache."
Francesca looped her hand
into the crook of Michael's elbow. "Be
sure to take some laudanum when you return from your meeting," she
said over her shoulder, once they'd reached the door, "since
I know you won't do it now."
John nodded, his expression weary, then headed up the stairs.
"Poor John," Francesca said, stepping outside into
the brisk night air. She took a deep inhale, then let out a
sigh. "I detest headaches myself. They always seem to
lay me especially low."
"Never get them myself," Michael
admitted, leading her down the steps to the pavement.
"Really?" She looked up at him, one corner of her
mouth quirking in that achingly familiar way. "Lucky you."
It almost made Michael laugh. Here he was, strolling through
the night with the woman he loved.
Lucky him.