“I would be hopelessly bored.”
“I can find ways to keep you occupied.” He gave her an evil grin.
“You’ll need to let me out of bed sometime, and it would be a shame to have had a good idea that never comes to fruition.”
He touched her face with the pads of his fingers. “I suspect you’ll end up training many women to style hair and to dress as well as you do, if only by example.”
“What if that’s not enough?”
“Perhaps a school, a training place for women who need a trade. We could sponsor some sort of facility like that. Now, go to sleep.”
“Devon?”
“What?”
She relaxed in his arms. “I love you.” Her eyes closed. He accepted her ideas; he saw her as his equal. She was his wife, not a servant. He was her husband, not an aristocrat.
“I love you.”
She didn’t need to be as good as a man. Like a man, she only needed to be the best she could be.
EPILOGUE
1866
(Two years later)
Balancing her six-month-old son, Edris, on her hip, Wenna leaned against the ship’s railing, gazing at the Adelaide Hills. “As they say, the view is green as far as the eye can see.”
Devon smiled. “You were born in the most beautiful country in the world.”
She watched the first load of passengers disembarking from the rowboats onto the fine white sands of Glenelg. Later, the ship would unload goods at Port Adelaide, but most people who reached this perfect spot didn’t want to wait. “I know that, now I have a comparison. Cornwall was certainly picturesque, though.”
“My brother was astonished to hear you say that. He has quite a parochial view of the place, despite living in India for a few years.”
“All his views are parochial. Imagine him telling one of the farmers how to repair his wagon? The poor man actually promised to do so. What would an earl know about repairing a wagon? I’ll bet he’s never held a hammer in his life.”
“The farmer might listen to my brother, but he’d go his own way as soon as my brother was out of sight.”
“Which he should have said. I’d hate to think myself better than someone because I was an earl. I’d only want to be better because I was better.”
He turned to her. “I agree that you should earn your way in the world. It’s your worth that counts, not the worth of your parents, not the fact that your mother was a washer woman.”
“Nor the fact that your father was an earl. I’ve come as far as you.”
“Did I ever take advantage of the fact that my father was an earl?”
“The advantage is inbuilt.”
“And now shared with you, too.”
“Next you’ll have me patronizing the poor backward colonials.” She laughed.
He gave an exaggerated shiver. “Your two years away have taught you much. I fear for the colonial society when you start organizing your tea parties.”
Wenna laughed. “That was fun, though. Now we’re here, it’s back to work as usual. I can’t wait to see your vines. Producing already, Finn says. And Maisie has a staff of four. I won’t know where to begin.”
Devon sighed. “Could we unpack first, my precious love?”
See where the South Landers series began…
Charlotte
A marriage most inconvenient…
After losing his first love in childbirth, Nicholas Alden knows with a great certainty that he must never be a father. But to be a husband is a very different matter—mandated by South Australian society, necessary for his family name. So when he meets beautiful social climber Charlotte, he believes he has found a wife he can keep at arm’s length. He is terribly wrong.
Born on the wrong side of the sheets, Charlotte hopes Nick can prop up her reputation long enough to secure a suitable match for her beloved cousin. She assumes that is all she can ask of her new husband—until they succumb to a night of uninhibited passion. Her heart is won in his embrace, but he doesn’t know the truth of her scandalous parentage. If he did, all would be lost.
Still, somehow, Charlotte dares to hope that her match of convenience could become something more. It is a reckless gamble, but the prize—a marriage of blazing lifelong desire—is one worth any risk…
Visit Virginia Taylor at
http://www.kensingtonbooks.com/author.aspx/31648
Prologue
Adelaide, South Australia, 1865
Nicholas Alden wandered down the torch-lit path to the middle of the garden, a stone paved area surrounded by clipped hedges. Glancing around, he chose the only available seat, an uncomfortable looking bench. A piano tinkled in the distance, competing with the overriding voices in the ballroom and a screeching violin or two.
He took a long draught from his wine glass, glancing briefly at the flickering stars before trying to shut out the world. The light clip of footsteps caused him to open his eyes. A hazy shape dressed in white stood in front of him—ah, yes, the beautiful, well-behaved debutante who’d sat beside him during the pre-ball dinner. He lifted his eyebrows in query, again appreciating her lovely figure, her porcelain skin, her huge eyes—and the slender fingers that moved to either side of her neckline grasped her exquisite gown and ripped.
He brought his glass to his lips and quaffed while she stood, her gown asunder and her face expressionless.
“You have my attention,” he said, hoping she would pull aside her chemise. A view of her pretty white breasts would likely be enjoyable.
She stared straight at him, opened her lovely mouth, and screamed, almost hitting a high C.
He massaged his forehead. “Was that really necessary?”
Her perfect face softened momentarily. “You know it was. It had to be done, and I’m sorry, but I’m in trouble.” She sat beside him, her hands neatly clasped in her lap. “But if you help me, I’ll help you. I know about you, you see.”
“The whole world knows about me.” Giving a long, deep sigh, he stretched out his legs and crossed his ankles. He didn’t have a reputation to lose. Her attempt to compromise him would do her no good at all.
“If someone doesn’t marry me soon, I’ll be in dire straits.”
He covered a yawn. “I’m afraid you’ll have to find someone else. I’m not a marrying man.” The next act of her tired scenario would now play out, but not her way.
“I know, but you’re just right for me. If only… Oh, I could bear a disgraced life for myself, but not for two of us. Mr. Hawthorn is a cad to have ruined....”
His hazy mind latched on to the name Hawthorn. Footsteps pounded along the slate path. She kept talking, talking, talking, while he concentrated on Tony Hawthorn and his wife. The man had seemed perfectly matched. Who would have guessed?
Nicholas had barely lifted his chin from his chest before the beauty’s plain companion, Miss Someone, appeared, making far more noise than the beauty. She grabbed the foolish creature into her arms.
“Your gown, your gown,” she wailed, as if more worried about the cost than the reveal.
Her recriminations continued while Nicholas polished off every last drop in his glass. Predictably, others arrived, among them his friend, Luke. Nick’s head ached even more. He wanted them all to go away.
Strangely, the beauty didn’t make any more fuss, and she kept saying the whole thing had been an accident—not his fault. Before he knew where he was, he was grabbed by the arm and told by Luke he would marry her. Annoyed, he swatted Luke away.
He needed another drink, and he’d already decided the beauty’s offer would suit him.
Chapter 1
Charlotte Alden bounded off the central stairway. The morning sun glittered red through the leadlight panels surrounding the main entrance. Bursting with her news, she sped across the hall to the library. Sarah, her only relative, sat sprawled on the lush carpet. Tumbled books surrounded her, and she rubbed her head.
Charlotte stopped. “What happened?”
“Nothing.” Sarah glanced up with a frown.
Charlotte breathed out. “I thought the books had toppled off the shelves and hit you.”
“I’ve been moving them around.” Sarah pulled a pencil from the knot of her apricot hair and chewed the end. “I was wondering how I ought to sort them.”
“You normally do your wondering on a chair.”
“The floor’s larger than the book table. What do you think? Should I file these by author or subject? I’ve tried each, and I still don’t know which is best.”
Charlotte picked up the nearest book and examined the cover. “Don’t tell me you’re going to read each one first.”
“I couldn’t possibly. If you wanted to read a story, how would you choose one? Yes, I know. You don’t want to read a story.”
Charlotte laughed. “When would I find the time?” She watched her cousin pick up a book and scan the contents. “Our visiting cards have been printed,” she said, trying to sound casual. Now married into a wealthy family, she could give Sarah her chance to find a husband, one who would love her and give her adorable children for Charlotte to dote upon. “We will be expected to make morning calls soon.”
Sarah moved two books to a pile of five. Outside, three squawking rainbow lorikeets fluttered past the window.
Charlotte waited, hoping for interest. “Perhaps in the next few weeks?”
“Perhaps,” Sarah said, holding up a book covered with pale orange watered silk and marked with exquisite oriental writing. “Look at this one. I’m keeping it aside for later.”
Charlotte took the volume. “It’s full of illustrations. Is it Chinese?”
“It’s from Japan. Look closely at the pictures.”
“They’re lovely, Sarah. The ladies are wearing such beautifully patterned fabrics. Look at this clever design. Such intricate…oh.” She clapped the pages together.
Sarah giggled. “I’m sure your father-in-law doesn’t know he owns this, or he wouldn’t have let me catalogue his books.”
Charlotte couldn’t blink. “I didn’t know people printed such things.”
“Why not? If people do them.”
In the last picture Charlotte had scanned, the sight of the man’s naked body had shocked her, let alone the female lying beneath him with her legs apart. “They do?” Her mouth dried.
“You should know.”
For a moment, only the ticking of the clock broke the silence in the room. “But I can’t discuss that, of course,” Charlotte said, a slight constriction in her voice.
Almost two weeks ago, desperate for financial security, she had married Mr. Nicholas Alden, the only son of Mr. Alfred Alden of Alden House, Burnside, and Alden View in Stirling. A careful selection, Nicholas had the requisite income to support Sarah and herself, but Charlotte had chosen him because the façade of their marriage would benefit him as well. He had no interest in females. Adelaide’s bustling society, however, didn’t know that.
“The luckiest day of your blessed life was the day you met him,” Sarah said with envy in her voice. “I wish a man like him would fall into my lap. Rich and indulgent. What more could a woman want?”
Charlotte tapped her forefinger onto her chin. “I’ll admit the appeal of a man knocked unconscious with a cricket ball is hard to resist, but you know he didn’t propose because of my skills with a cold compress.”
“Just the opposite.” Sarah made a face. “After you were caught with him, half naked.”
Charlotte shrugged. “A gentleman would offer marriage, and he did.”
But no more than marriage, of course. Nicholas had not, up until now, proved he remembered her name, which didn’t bother her a bit. He had never laid one of his misleadingly masculine hands on her. However, not even Sarah, her closest companion, knew Charlotte had to use her knowledge of his secret life before he agreed to marry her. Like the rest of the world, Sarah assumed that Nicholas was simply a too ardent suitor.
“And soon we’ll find the perfect husband for you as well.”
“One who, I hope, will propose to me in the proper way.”
Hearing the reproof in her cousin’s tone, Charlotte nodded. “Decorum certainly has its place.” She moved to drop the Japanese book on Sarah’s pile, but at that moment, a presence loomed in the doorway. Embarrassed by the material she held, she hid the book behind her back instead.
Nicholas Alden was beautiful. Wearing his crisp brown hair fashionably disheveled, he stood propped against the doorjamb. His wide shoulders and lean hips made his unbuttoned evening jacket and his waistcoat of brocaded emerald look especially stylish. Charlotte experienced her usual intake of breath disguised by her carefully oblivious expression.
As if he had all the time in the world, he crossed one elegant ankle with another, aiming a thick-lashed impartial glance at Charlotte. “Are you stealing a book?” His voice was deep, and his tone, as usual, bored.
She breathed out. “Of course not.”
“What are you hiding behind your back?”
“A book I was about to give to Sarah.”
“But seeing me made you change your mind?” With a suspicious expression on his face, he moved toward her.
She took a step back, trying to pass the palmed pages to Sarah who glanced at her with a look of puzzlement.
Nicholas reached out to take the book. Charlotte swung her arm around, evading him. He grabbed her instead, holding her body against his, reaching for the book, which she lifted high over her head, even farther away from him. Not for the world did she want a man with his bent to think she would scan titillating pictures. Face-to-face with him, she noted his mocking expression.
“Come now.” His breath had the aroma of mint. “Let me see.”
“Let me go.”
His mouth tilted. “No.” He settled his body closer to hers. The long length of him fitted against her as intimately as her undergarments. His hand slid to the small of her spine.
Inexplicably, her body relaxed against his, and his eyes changed. The blue-green froze. The moment expanded into a silent challenge, which she realized she shouldn’t even try to win.
“Take it.” She swallowed. Her whole body thrummed with excitement, and she hoped he couldn’t tell that he had such an embarrassing effect on her.
“Oh, that I could, my tempting treasure,” he murmured. Sliding his hand along her arm, he reached his objective. Suddenly, he let her go. He opened the book and turned page after page while she watched, her face hot.
“You were about to give this to Sarah?”
“I was about to put it onto the pile.” Her voice sounded thready.
“You said you wanted to give it to Sarah. It’s hardly suitable for a young female, is it?”
“I, um, no.”
He touched the tip of her nose with his finger as if reprimanding her. “I’ll be taking luncheon with you today.”
Sarah rose to her feet. “That will be nice. If Charlotte wants me to have the book, I’ll take it.” She stared wide-eyed at him, her hands pressed prayer-like in front of her mouth.
“Certainly not. If my wife needs to amuse herself with these illustrations, I’ll keep the collection safe for her in our rooms.” He left with the book.
Sarah fanned her hand in front of her face. “That was a little risqué. You shouldn’t let him fondle you that way in front of others, though, Lolly, no matter how he feels about you.”
“I could hardly stop him without embarrassing us both.” Charlotte placed her cool palms on her cheeks.
Sarah gave a resigned shrug. “I expect most women wouldn’t want to stop him. He’s the catch of the year.”
Charlotte nodded. “A landed fish.”
“A landed gentleman, which is far more important. You were born lucky.”
“I know.” Charlotte gave a rueful smile. She was the luckiest woman in the entire colony.
Nicholas could have repudiated her after she’d proposed
her bargain. He could have resented her and made a snide remark, but he had resigned himself to marriage with no more than a close inspection of her face and a terse nod. She would never let him regret his generosity. Never.
“I couldn’t have done better if I’d tried.”
A crease formed between Sarah’s eyebrows. “A bad beginning with a good end. But if I had such a handsome husband, I wouldn’t let him out of my sight.”
“‘We think caged birds sing when indeed they cry.’”
“What?”
“It’s something I read long ago. It had some meaning for me then, but I’ve forgotten the context. If Nicholas is staying, I must see the housekeeper and organize a more extensive meal. What would you like?”
Sarah waved a dismissive hand. “A peach. I’m not very hungry today.”
“But you’ll join us anyway?”
Sarah nodded and resumed sorting through the books, her way to contribute since she’d always talked of herself as a burden. Heaven knew she’d never had Charlotte’s advantages—education at an expensive school and an opportunity to take her pick of the eligible bachelors. In a fair world, the cousins would have had an equal upbringing and an equal opportunity in life. Sarah could have that now.
Charlotte left for the housekeeper’s room, still surprised by her body’s untoward reaction when Nicholas had snatched her into his arms. Perhaps he would have preferred a man, but marriage protected him from accusations of the unimaginable act of gross indecency, now only a criminal offence rather than a capital one. She could certainly be loyal to a man who would never claim his husbandly rights, for in exchange she had security, the opportunity to be useful, and the chance one day to be a loving aunt. Since she didn’t plan to exploit him again, one day he would like her, too.
Nothing she could do from now on would be as bad as compromising him.
* * * *
Nick changed quickly. He had spent the night with his gloriously infertile mistress and he needed daywear. For the past two weeks since his marriage, he’d spent every night with Beth, not wanting to be tempted by a stunningly beautiful, young wife who he could take if he wished. Judging by today, she would let him, despite her amusingly convenient assumption that he was a daisy.
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