by Christy Carlyle
Series: Accidental Heirs #1
Pub. Date: Sept. 8, 2015
Publisher: Avon Impulse
Pages: 310
Format: eARC
Source: Publisher
My Rating:
Sultry Scale:
When a scheming marquess' daughter offers her one hundred pounds to publicly kiss a nobleman, a desperate Jessamin Wright agrees. She believes the money will save her failing bookstore and finally free her from her father's debts. But when Jess bursts into an aristocratic party and shocks the entire ton, she never expects to enjoy the outrageous embrace she shares with a grim viscount.
Lucius Crawford, Viscount Grimsby, has never met, or kissed, anyone like the beautiful suffragette who unsettles him with a single touch. He has always strived for control and avoided passion at all costs. Lucius is determined to protect his title and restore the estate he's unexpectedly inherited, but Jess' appearance in his life poses a threat to his plans and his heart. After a country house party brings them together once more, neither can resist temptation, and both find that one scandalous kiss just isn't enough.
Lucius Crawford, Viscount Grimsby, has never met, or kissed, anyone like the beautiful suffragette who unsettles him with a single touch. He has always strived for control and avoided passion at all costs. Lucius is determined to protect his title and restore the estate he's unexpectedly inherited, but Jess' appearance in his life poses a threat to his plans and his heart. After a country house party brings them together once more, neither can resist temptation, and both find that one scandalous kiss just isn't enough.
So this was a fun sweet regency romance taking place in the late 19th century... partially in London, but in the country for the most part.
Our heroine is Jessamine Wright, a book lover, bookshop owner and suffragette. All of these things endeared Jess to me, and I suspect we would have gotten along quite well if she lived outside the pages of this book. I would have totally been a suffragette if I was around back then - what woman wants to be chattel? Hmpf.
Jess (an only child) has inherited the indebted bookshop, Wright and Sons, from her father. She is working to keep the shop afloat (in arrears due to her father's gambling), while also trying to raise money for the Women's Union. The desperation she is feeling leads her to accept a hasty endeavor... march up and kiss the dour Lord Grim for 100 pounds. Jess accepts the ill-fated venture... but finds her actions have unintended consequences. Such as the bank foreclosing as a result of her scandalous behavior!
Our hero, Lucius Crawford, Viscount Grimsby has been dubbed Lord Grim due to his severe countenance. He is taken aback by this brazen woman who made a beeline toward him and took liberties with his mouth. But it turns out that kiss was just what Lucius need to shake his foundations and do something for himself for once. I quite liked the broody and meticulous Grimsby... his touch of OCD made him a more interesting character. The need to impose order where there was chaos came from the stress Lucius was enduring at his crumbling estate, and dealing with a father thought to be mad (but whom was really suffering from dementia or Alzheimers).
I thought Lucius and Jess were a good match and I enjoyed meandering through their romance. This story had some great secondary characters, and I hope they get their own books in the future (especially Wellesby and Alice).
I received an advanced copy of this book in exchange for an honest review. (I apologize for the technical difficulties that have been going on with this review today. My file kept corrupting and eating my review. Gah!)
About the Author
Fueled by Pacific Northwest coffee and inspired by multiple viewings of every British costume drama she can get her hands on, Christy Carlyle writes sensual historical romance set in the Victorian era. She loves heroes who struggle against all odds and heroines who are ahead of their time. A former teacher with a degree in history, she finds there's nothing better than being able to combine her love of the past with a die-hard belief in happy endings.
Excerpt
CHAPTER ONE
London, September 1890
She’d never imagined wealth would be so uncomfortable. Nearly every
aspect of the Marquess of Clayborne’s Belgrave Square drawing room made
Jessamin Wright uneasy. There were no books stacked in piles, no candles whose
wax had run down their sides in haphazard sculptures, and not a spot of ash
dusting the hearth—nothing inviting about the room at all. How could any
lived-in space be so clean? The slippery damask settee felt stiff and
unyielding beneath her body. Nothing about it urged you to sit and stop awhile.
Even art was lacking from the walls, except for a series of watercolors of what
must have been a terribly boring fox hunt. A fire burned low in the grate and
offered a bit of warmth against the autumn chill, but the cool beiges and tepid
pinks of the wallpaper and furnishings made Jess feel slightly queasy, as if
blood had been drained from her body as thoroughly as color had been drawn out
of every surface in the room. Even the wood was light colored or painted white
and lacquered to a high sheen. It was all wrong. No room should be so spotless.
As she and Alice had yet to meet their host, she began to doubt that anyone
lived here at all. Then again, she’d never before set foot inside a fine London
townhouse. Perhaps they were all this stark and unpleasant.
Jess
didn’t have to look down to know the room’s pristine neatness contrasted
sharply with her scuffed boots, soot-dusted cloak, and unfashionable work
clothes. She found it impossible to settle herself in such elegant
surroundings. Sitting, then standing, then sitting again, she rearranged her
limbs and scratched her neck in a most unladylike manner. Finally finding a
spot on the settee that suited her, she stripped off her twice-mended gloves
but kept her hands clasped, careful not to touch anything for fear she might
leave a mark.
Her
cluttered thoughts offered as little comfort as the room. She fretted about
leaving the bookshop managed solely by her assistant, Jack. He was a longtime
employee and utterly trustworthy, but he’d never been fond of dealing with
customers. He simply loved books—acquiring them, reading them, repairing
them—and that was something she understood. He hadn’t stayed on after Father’s
death for her, but out of loyalty to Lionel Wright. She understood that too.
One of Father’s gifts had been the ability to inspire a bone deep sense of
obligation in others. Since Jess had taken on the shop, other employees had
been hard to come by—few men wished to take their wages and direction from a
woman.
Slipping
Father’s old watch from its place in her skirt pocket, Jess’s mind sifted
through what she had yet to accomplish before resting her head for the day. It
was a long list and —Ah, that too—now
included an article she’d almost
forgotten to write for the Women’s Union journal.
“I hope
Lady Katherine hasn’t forgotten us. To be honest, I won’t be sad to see the
last of this room. It’s all rather cold, even with the fire. Makes you afraid
to touch anything or even breathe.”
Alice
McGregor had an uncanny talent for reading one’s mind and could always be
counted on for blunt and insightful commentary. Of all Jessamin’s friends at
the Women’s Union, Alice was the most practical and plain-speaking. Delicacy
was overrated as far as Alice was concerned. She said what everyone else was
thinking but knew it impolite to mention.
“No, it’s
not terribly inviting, is it?”
If Jess
could decorate such a room, the colors would be bold and full of life. Red
would do very nicely. And she’d decorate the walls with art so vivid you’d
believe you could smell the pot of basil in a Holman Hunt painting or hear the
swish of silk and satin as one of Mr. Tissot’s beauties crossed the room. She
closed her eyes and imagined crimson walls covered with art in rich, vibrant
colors.
“Miss
Wright, have I caught you napping?” Lady Katherine Adderly’s giggle was like
the clash of two crystal glasses meeting in a toast. Sharp and clear, it
instantly snapped Jessamin out of her fantasies.
As she
swept in, a maid followed close on her heels with a tea tray. Lady Katherine
smelled of flowers, but far too many, the scent cloying and sickly sweet.
“Forgive
me, my lady.” It was easier for Jessamin to apologize for drowsing than
acknowledge how she loathed the decor.
Jess and
Alice exchanged raised-brow glances as their hostess handed each of them a fine
porcelain teacup and began the process of pouring tea and offering them
confections from plates laden with biscuits and tiny pastries. It was an
elaborate ritual, much more fuss about tea than Jess had ever made in life. But
the rich tang of jasmine in the brew was delicious and she was grateful for the
distraction of the warm refreshment, even as she sensed the persistent tick of
Father’s watch against her skirt pocket. She had to get back to the shop and
hoped their meeting with the marquess’s daugther wouldn’t take long.
“I’m
pleased to make this donation to the Women’s Union. You know how I enjoy the
lively meetings.”
Lady
Katherine had attended only three of the group’s weekly meetings over the
course of four months, but she’d been eager to make a financial contribution
and Alice, as the union’s treasurer and co-founder, was all too happy to
accept. Jess wasn’t certain why Alice had asked her to come along to collect
the money, but as editor of the group’s printed journal and author of many of
the speeches given at gatherings, she supposed she was a visible member of the
organization.
“We are
most grateful for the funds, my lady.” As always Alice spoke with sincerity,
gratitude clear in her tone.
“Oh,
please call me Kitty.”
Alice took
a sip of tea, attempting to hold the cup with all the dignity Kitty seemed to manage effortlessly.
“I
understand there’s another worthy cause to which I may also contribute.”
“I’m sure
there are many in London,” Jess offered, thinking of a dozen ways she might
spend charitable funds, not to mention the money needed to salvage the indebted
bookshop her father had left her.
“I was
referring to you, Miss Wright.”
Jessamin
shot Alice a look, wondering just what her scrupulously honest friend had
revealed to Lady Katherine.
“I
understand you have a bookshop and lending library here in town.”
“Yes, my
lady,” Jess bit off, unable to keep the irritation from her voice. Alice
shouldn’t have mentioned her situation to anyone. Kitty might be feeling
benevolent, but the amount needed to clear the shop’s debt was more than any
wealthy aristocrat’s daughter would wish to spend, no matter how generous they
were feeling.
“Would one
hundred pounds be useful to you?”
A shiver
tickled Jessamin’s spine as she contemplated the amount, a sum she couldn’t
earn at the shop in months, perhaps not even in a year. It wasn’t nearly enough
to clear the entire debt, but it would bring her payments with the bank
current.
Jessamin
studied Kitty’s feline smile and tried to unravel the mystery of the young
woman’s wish to help her. She knew Kitty was wealthy, the daughter of a
marquess, and perhaps a bit bored, but she’d never even conversed with her
before today. Kitty was mentioned off and on in the scandal sheets Jess
admitted to no one she indulged in reading, but she was hardly known as an
outstanding philanthropist.
Charity
tasted sour, yet how could she refuse the sum?
“Neither a
borrower nor a lender be” had been one of Father’s favorite lines from Hamlet. But it was an adage he’d failed
to uphold. His gambling had turned him into the worst sort of borrower, taking
loans from friends and money from the bookshop he’d worked so hard to build up.
For Jess’s part, she’d become a lender soon after her father’s death, finally
instituting the lending library she’d been envisioning for years. It seemed
neither of them had heeded the Shakespearian admonition at all.
Kitty
watched Jess closely and appeared to notice the moment she’d almost made up her
mind to accept the money.
“I am so
pleased you’ll allow me to help you, Jessamin. And in return, I’m certain you
won’t mind assisting me with one tiny request.”
Alice
frowned and set her teacup on the table between them, edging forward on the
settee as if she meant to get up and leave. “I’m not sure that’s quite right.”
“What is
the favor, Lady Katherine? Please, let’s speak plainly with one another.” It
didn’t surprise Jess in the least that Kitty expected something in return. No
one offered such a sum without expecting something in return.
“Kitty,
please. Do call me Kitty. It’s a simple favor, really. As simple as a kiss.”
Jess choked. “Pardon?” she squeaked, when
she’d finally managed to swallow her mouthful of tea and could breathe again.
“Just a
kiss, Jessamin. Surely you don’t object to kissing.” Kitty’s teasing tone
belied the glint of steel in her gaze. “You’re a modern, free-thinking woman,
after all. You believe in the suffrage and equality for our sex. You should
feel quite free to kiss any man you like.”
Kissing
men had nothing to do with Jess’s interest in social reform or gaining a voice
for women in the political sphere. If Kitty thought it did, she hadn’t been to
nearly enough meetings.
“You want
me to kiss a man?” Jess spoke the words as if it was an extraordinary feat. And
it was. She’d never kissed a man. Not really. A childish, graceless kiss on the
cheek from Tom Jenkins when she was twelve years old hardly counted.
“This
seems a rather strange favor, Kitty.” Alice’s precise tone cut through the
quiet of the room.
Kitty’s
tinkling laughter rang out. “Yes, I suppose it does. But it’s merely a harmless
bit of revenge.”
“Revenge.”
Jess waited. There had to be more.
“Oh, all
right. If you must know, the dreadful man snubbed me.” Kitty plumped her
bow-shaped mouth in a pout.
Was she
the shallowest heiress in Belgravia? The thought that Kitty wished to seek
revenge because a man did not prefer her company was ridiculous. Her beauty and
wealth could secure her any suitor she set her cap at. In fact, the question of
why the man rejected her was as intriguing as her desire for Jess to kiss him.
“Why did
he snub you?”
“Why,
indeed!” Kitty straightened up in her chair and slid her fingers into honey
blond hair, tucking her already neatly pinned coiffure more firmly into place.
“Perhaps because he is an odious man. If he wasn’t a viscount, soon to be an
earl, and so irredeemably handsome, I wouldn’t have bothered with him. Never
mind Papa’s mad notion I marry Lord Grim. Freddie is much more fun, even if he
doesn’t have a farthing to his name.” Kitty turned the full force of her bright
green gaze on Jess. “You’ll do it then?”
“I’m still
not sure I understand.”
Kitty’s
tone became pedantic, as if she was speaking to a child who needed to be set
aright.
“My dear,
it couldn’t be simpler. Viscount Grimsby snubbed me at a soiree last week and I
would like your help to put him in his place. He’s a dour man, as cold as
marble. Some call him Lord Grim. And so he is. Grim and heartless. He needs a
little comeuppance.” As an afterthought, she added, “He’s against the vote for
women, of course.”
As if that
made the whole ridiculous scheme noble. As if kissing him would change his mind
about women’s suffrage.
“And where
does kissing come into play?” It all sounded wrong to Jess, like the discordant
notes of an untuned piano playing over and over in her mind, but Kitty waved
away her concern dismissively.
“It won’t
be a real kiss, my dear. Not the kind that matters. Just a kiss that knocks him
off his pedestal a bit. It will cause him a trifle of social bother. Stir up
some tittle tattle.”
For a
moment Kitty’s expression altered, the corners of her mouth turning down as if
she’d fallen into troubled contemplation. Jess wondered if she was already
regretting her petty scheme? Then she lifted her head, a satisfied
cat-at-the-cream grin lifting her cheeks.
“The next
time I see the man at a ball, perhaps he’ll manage a bit of humility. And since
no one else will wish to stand up with him, I suspect he’ll be more than happy
to dance with me.”
None of
Kitty’s words put Jess’s mind at ease. She’d never heard of Lord Grimsby but
from Kitty’s description, kissing the man certainly didn’t sound appealing.
“I happen
to know he’ll be at an art gallery in Mayfair this evening.”
“And?”
Jess was growing impatient. Who had time for games when she had a business to
run?
“There
will be a gathering at the gallery. Mrs. Ornish is a great fan of art and has
sponsored one of the artists whose works will be featured. I do wonder why he
always goes to Mrs. Ornish’s events. Could he have his eye on Meredith, do you
think?”
Of course,
Jess had no idea who Mrs. Ornish or Meredith was. She might share their love of
art, but they were the kind of women with wealth enough to offer an artist
patronage. Jess couldn’t even afford to buy a painting. Her walls were
decorated with cut-out prints culled from books and newspapers.
“Kitty,
please just tell me. What must I do?”
Kitty’s
crooked her mouth alluringly. Jess supposed she used the simpering expression
to charm everyone. Everyone except Lord Grimsby, apparently.
“I want
you to show up at the gallery event and stride up to Lord Grim. Yes, you’ll
just walk up and plant a kiss square on that cruel, unsmiling mouth of his.”
“I really
don’t think—“Alice’s voice had taken on the same pitch and volume she used to
quiet the women’s group meetings.
Jess knew
what she was going to say and cut her off. “Wait. Let me consider a moment.”
Jess
closed her eyes and breathed deeply. She had to do it. She needed the one
hundred pounds Kitty offered. There was no denying what the woman proposed was
scandalous, not to mention farcical and childish. But Jess had no reputation to
protect. As Kitty said, she saw herself as a free-thinking woman, unhampered by
society’s strictures and eager for changing women’s roles. She had no idea how
kissing a complete stranger would strike a blow for woman’s rights, but she
knew her desperation for funds made her beholden to Kitty’s whims.
“Come,
Jessamin.” Kitty’s sing song voice was cajoling. “I dare you.”
Because
Jess’s speeches encouraged action over words, perhaps Kitty saw her as brave
and daring. But if she was brave, it was because Father died and took all of
her options with him. She’d lost
everything—her home, a modestly comfortable lifestyle, freedom to study and
spend her days more or less as she wished—and put all her energy into
maintaining his business, even after discovering the massive debt he’d
accumulated. She was beginning to make inroads toward repaying the debt and
Kitty’s funds would be another step toward financial success for Wright and
Sons Booksellers.
“Fine.
I’ll do it.”
Kitty
gasped with delight and clapped her hands together.
Alice shot
her a look as if Jess had taken leave of whatever sense she’d been given.
Jess
couldn’t match Kitty’s enthusiasm nor acknowledge Alice’s concern. She was too
busy fighting off the sense of dread that settled in the pit of her stomach at
the prospect of what she’d agreed to do.
“Where is
this gallery and what time will he be there?”
No comments:
Post a Comment