A PERFECT WAY TO
HEAVEN
Copyright © 2008 by Cartland Promotions
First published on the internet in March 2008
by
Barbaracartland.com
The characters and situations in this book are entirely imaginary and bear no relation to any real person or actual happening.
This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent.
No part of this publication may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronically or mechanically, including photocopying, recording or any information storage or retrieval, without the prior permission in writing from the publisher.
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A PERFECT WAY TO
HEAVEN
Prince Charles de Courel was lavishly dressed from top to toe in a red jacket and epaulettes. A black cape was thrown aside over one shoulder and he had removed his white gloves and tucked them under his arm.
Diamond rings winked on his fingers and even the buttons of his cuffs seemed to flash showing that they too were of precious stones.
His hair was gold and his eyes were grey.
‘Grey as goose-down,’ thought Elvira dreamily.
He was her every idea of a real Prince and for the first time in her life she longed to possess what was not in her power to possess. How she would love to be courted by just such a lofty personage.
‘If he would only look my way once,’ she prayed fervently, quite forgetting her sombre dress and appearance.
THE BARBARA CARTLAND PINK COLLECTION
Barbara Cartland was the most prolific bestselling author in the history of the world. She was frequently in the Guinness Book of Records for writing more books in a year than any other living author. In fact her most amazing literary feat was when her publishers asked for more Barbara Cartland romances, she doubled her output from 10 books a year to over 20 books a year, when she was 77.
She went on writing continuously at this rate for 20 years and wrote her last book at the age of 97, thus completing 400 books between the ages of 77 and 97.
Her publishers finally could not keep up with this phenomenal output, so at her death she left 160 unpublished manuscripts, something again that no other author has ever achieved.
Now the exciting news is that these 160 original unpublished Barbara Cartland books are ready for publication and they will be published by Barbaracartland.com exclusively on the internet, as the web is the best possible way to reach so many Barbara Cartland readers around the world.
The 160 books will be published monthly and will be numbered in sequence.
The series is called the Pink Collection as a tribute to Barbara Cartland whose favourite colour was pink and it became very much her trademark over the years.
The Barbara Cartland Pink Collection is published only on the internet. Log on to www.barbaracartland.com to find out how you can purchase the books monthly as they are published, and take out a subscription that will ensure that all subsequent editions are delivered to you by mail order to your home.
If you do not have access to a computer you can write for information about the Pink Collection to the following address :
Barbara Cartland.com Ltd.
240 High Road,
Harrow Weald,
Harrow
HA3 7BB
United Kingdom.
Telephone & fax: +44 (0)20 8863 2520
Titles in this series
1. The Cross of Love
2. Love in the Highlands
3. Love Finds the Way
4. The Castle of Love
5. Love is Triumphant
6. Stars in the Sky
7. The Ship of Love
8. A Dangerous Disguise
9. Love Became Theirs
10. Love Drives In
11. Sailing to Love
12. The Star of Love
13. Music is the Soul of Love
14. Love in the East
15. Theirs to Eternity
16. A Paradise on Earth
17. Love Wins in Berlin
18. In Search of Love
19. Love Rescues Rosanna
20. A Heart in Heaven
21. The House of Happiness
22. Royalty Defeated by Love
23. The White Witch
24. They Sought Love
25. Love is the Reason for Living
26. They Found Their Way to Heaven
27. Learning to Love
28. Journey to Happiness
29. A Kiss in the Desert
30. The Heart of Love
31. The Richness of Love
32. For Ever and Ever
33. An Unexpected Love
34. Saved by an Angel
35. Touching the Stars
36. Seeking Love
37. Journey to Love
38. The Importance of Love
39. Love by the Lake
40. A Dream Come True
41. The King without a Heart
42. The Waters of Love
43. Danger to the Duke
44. A Perfect way to Heaven
THE LATE DAME BARBARA CARTLAND
Barbara Cartland, who sadly died in May 2000 at the grand age of ninety eight, remains one of the world’s most famous romantic novelists. With worldwide sales of over one billion, her outstanding 723 books have been translated into thirty six different languages, to be enjoyed by readers of romance globally.
Writing her first book ‘Jigsaw’ at the age of 21, Barbara became an immediate bestseller. Building upon this initial success, she wrote continuously throughout her life, producing bestsellers for an astonishing 76 years. In addition to Barbara Cartland’s legion of fans in the UK and across Europe, her books have always been immensely popular in the USA. In 1976 she achieved the unprecedented feat of having books at numbers 1 & 2 in the prestigious B. Dalton Bookseller bestsellers list.
Although she is often referred to as the ‘Queen of Romance’, Barbara Cartland also wrote several historical biographies, six autobiographies and numerous theatrical plays as well as books on life, love, health and cookery. Becoming one of Britain's most popular media personalities and dressed in her trademark pink, Barbara spoke on radio and television about social and political issues, as well as making many public appearances.
In 1991 she became a Dame of the Order of the British Empire for her contribution to literature and her work for humanitarian and charitable causes.
Known for her glamour, style, and vitality Barbara Cartland became a legend in her own lifetime. Best remembered for her wonderful romantic novels and loved by millions of readers worldwide, her books remain treasured for their heroic heroes, plucky heroines and traditional values. But above all, it was Barbara Cartland’s overriding belief in the positive power of love to help, heal and improve the quality of life for everyone that made her truly unique.
“Life without love is no life at all.”
Barbara Cartland
CHAPTER ONE
-
1849
Elvira Carrisford repressed a yawn.
She had been travelling since early morning and the air in the coach was stale. The plump lady opposite had insisted that the windows be kept closed all the way for fear of catching a chill in the November air.
Besides the plump lady there was a cleric, who licked his finger every time he turned a page in his missal, a farmer’s wife who shared out her loaf of bread and cheese when everyone started to get hungry, two spinster sisters with yellow mittens and a young man and a young lady in whom Elvira felt a particular interest.<
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These two looked at each other so often and with such devotion that she was certain they were eloping.
The young man’s shirt cuffs were ragged and his boots were scuffed. He was obviously poor and the young lady looked as if she came from a more significant background.
She wore calf leather shoes and her hands were thrust deep into a white fur muff. Elvira decided that the young lady’s parents had objected to her interest in the lowly clerk and so she had agreed to run away with him.
Elvira watched intently as the young man gently rearranged the young lady’s cloak about her shoulders.
With a pang she wondered if anyone would ever look at her in such an adoring manner.
She turned her head and stared out of the grimy window. The reason she found the young couple so fascinating was that they made her think of her own parents. They too had eloped. Her father had been poor – a musician, not a clerk and her mother had come from a well-to-do and disapproving family.
Elvira wondered if her mother had worn calf leather shoes on her flight and if her father’s boots had been scuffed and his cuffs ragged.
She sighed and leaned her head against the window.
She had never known her father. He had died before she was born. Her mother had died two years later and Elvira had been brought up by her mother’s elder sister, Aunt Willis.
Aunt Willis had never married. She disliked men almost as much as she disliked children and she had not been particularly pleased to be entrusted with little Elvira, but she was a religious woman and considered it her duty. It was also her duty to ensure that Elvira was brought up in such a way that she would never make the same mistake as her mother, Winona.
“If one has to marry,” said Aunt Willis – and she supposed that most girls, being of a weak disposition, could think of nothing else in life – “if one has to marry, then let it be to a gentleman, such as my elder sister Wilhelmina married.”
She had married Lord Baseheart, a rich and powerful grandee with a handsome castle and vast lands in the County of Herefordshire, not an impecunious, sickly musician like Elvira’s father, who could not even live long enough to see his daughter brought into the world!
“My poor, silly sister Winona!” Aunt Willis would often lament to Elvira. “I am sure she would be alive now if it was not for you and your father. His death broke her spirit and your birth weakened her body. Nobody could save her!”
Here Aunt Willis would pause and blow her long bony nose.
“But – but at least they both knew what it was to love,” Elvira once unwisely ventured.
“Love!” exploded Aunt Willis. “Pah! An over-rated emotion. Be sure you never succumb.”
Elvira thought it unlikely she ever would succumb, since it was Aunt Willis’s habit never to invite anyone under sixty to visit.
Moreover, Aunt Willis so disapproved of love and romance that she went out of her way to ensure that Elvira never thought of herself as a candidate for such nonsense. She kept only one mirror in the house and that was so cracked and mottled with age that it was almost impossible to determine one’s own features in its depths.
Since no young person came to the house there was never anyone to quarrel with Aunt Willis’s assessment of Elvira’s beauty, or lack of it, or proffer the temptation of a pocket mirror.
The only time Elvira ever met anyone her own age was the one occasion when Aunt Willis decided to make the long journey west to Baseheart Castle to visit her remaining sister, Wilhelmina. Elvira went too and met her cousin Delphine, the daughter of Aunt Wilhelmina and Lord Baseheart.
Baseheart!
With a finger, Elvira idly traced the name on the steamy carriage window.
She remembered spires and turrets and long corridors silent as the tomb along which she and Delphine had chased each other like puppies. She remembered silk sheets and hot chocolate and her Aunt Wilhelmina coming to tuck her in at night. She had kissed the tip of her nose and whispered that she was going to grow up a beauty like her mother.
“Oh, I don’t think so,” responded the four year old Elvira with great solemnity. “My nose is too snub and my hair too red. Aunt Willis said so.”
A frown had crossed Aunt Wilhelmina’s features.
“Perhaps you need to spend more time here at Baseheart with us. You will soon have a better opinion of yourself. I will make sure that Lord Baseheart invites you next summer.”
Alas that invitation never came. Aunt Wilhelmina became ill and had to spend most of her time abroad. Delphine remained at Baseheart with her indulgent father.
Then news came that Aunt Wilhelmina had died. Aunt Willis attended the funeral, but after that there was little correspondence between herself and her wealthy brother-in-law.
Elvira rather suspected that Lord Baseheart found Aunt Willis too disapproving. She remembered Aunt Willis coughing loudly whenever Lord Baseheart took out a cigar, and tut-tutting even more loudly when he reached for the sherry.
At all events, Elvira had never been back to Baseheart Castle again. Until now!
Five days ago a letter had arrived for Aunt Willis from Lord Baseheart. She had turned it over and over in her hand in astonishment.
“Wonders will never cease!” she sighed.
At last she opened it, adjusted her lorgnette and read aloud over the teacups.
“My dear sister-in-law,
My daughter Delphine is now of an age to marry. I have sought high and low for someone I consider worthy of her hand and at last I have found him. His name is Charles Rowland, a distant Baseheart relation. He also happens to be, through his mother’s side of the family, nephew and sole heir to Prince Louis de Courel.
The inheritance depends entirely on Charles marrying whomsoever the Prince decrees and out of fond friendship with myself, he decrees that his nephew should marry my daughter. I have no doubt that when the young man in question sets eyes on my daughter, a great beauty, madam, and of uncommon intelligence, as I am sure you will recall – he will feel the alliance to be more of a pleasure than a duty.”
Here Aunt Willis lowered her lorgnette with a grunt.
“From what I have heard of that young creature, Delphine, he will be more likely to want to run a mile. Lord Baseheart has indulged her every whim since her mother died. She has only to click her fingers and she has her heart’s desire. On top of that, her eyes are too close together.”
“Are they, aunt? I don’t remember,” said Elvira politely.
“Well, take it from me, they are!” sniffed Aunt Willis. “Believe you me, the draw here is not the charms of Delphine Baseheart, but rather the chink of her father’s money. The French aristocracy lost more than some of their heads in the Revolution, you know.”
“But the Revolution was over half a century ago, aunt,” commented Elvira as she reached for the sugar bowl.
“That may be!” retorted Aunt Willis. “But they never managed to recover all their wealth. Still it would be something of a coup to have a Prince in the family.”
“What else does the letter say, aunt?”
Aunt Willis raised her lorgnette again and read on,
“Charles Rowland is coming to Baseheart next week to meet his intended. My widowed sister, Lady Cruddock, is now in constant residence at Baseheart and has hitherto proved an admirable chaperone for Delphine.
Nevertheless, my daughter has now taken it into her head that she wants a companion of her own age when the Prince is here. It is with this in mind that I have taken up my pen to write to you.
Elvira is only a year younger than my daughter and would, I believe, be a suitable companion. Should the post suit Elvira, I would ask her to join us at Baseheart before the week is out. I believe the opportunity is too great for her to refuse.
Yours etc.
Rupert Baseheart.”
Elvira’s eyes widened as her aunt read out this last part of the letter.
“But I do refuse! I don’t want to leave here and I don’t want to leave you.”
&
nbsp; Aunt Willis regarded her sternly.
“Elvira, you are now eighteen years of age. God knows that I have done my duty, but I want a life unencumbered with the worries of rearing a young girl of no means and little personal attractions. It may be that at Baseheart Castle you will encounter some young man, a secretary in his Lordship’s employ perhaps – who will see more in you than meets the eye. You cannot expect a Prince, after all!”
Elvira had listened bleakly.
“Don’t you – care for me at all, aunt?”
Aunt Willis set her lips firmly.
“I daresay I shall find the house rather quiet after you go, but I’ll get used to it.”
“G-go?” repeated Elvira. “I am truly to go, then?”
“Yes,” insisted Aunt Willis impatiently. “Haven’t I indicated that? We must sort through your wardrobe this morning. This afternoon I shall write a reply to Lord Baseheart and tell him to expect you on Wednesday.”
In fact it had taken a day or two longer than expected to organise the journey.
Elvira was to take the coach to Gloucester, but was to stop at the White Doe Inn on the road to the Forest of Dean. There the Baseheart carriage would meet her and convey her on the last three hour lap to the castle.
Aunt Willis had purchased a second-hand trunk and a couple of carpet bags for Elvira’s belongings, which did not amount to much. Along with the usual camisoles and cotton under-bodices there were three dresses. These were all blue, which Aunt Willis deemed a perfectly reliable colour.
Besides, she added somewhat grudgingly, they matched Elvira’s sapphire eyes, her only redeeming feature!
It had been a shock to Elvira to find that Aunt Willis had been only too happy to part with her. She had never been demonstrative and often made sharp remarks, but nevertheless she and Elvira had managed to muddle along with little actual friction.
It had been a lonely life for Elvira, but she was aware that many young girls were far less lucky. At least Aunt Willis had provided her with a governess – the elderly, short-sighted but kindly Miss Hoot, who had taught Elvira reading, writing and arithmetic.
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