Jacquie D’Alessandro
Love and the Single Heiress
The second book in the Regency Historical series, 2004
Acknowledgments
I would like to thank the following people for their invaluable help and support:
My editors, Carrie Feron and Erika Tsang, for their kindness, cheerleading, and wonderful ideas.
My agent, Damaris Rowland, for her faith and wisdom.
Martha Kirkland, for always knowing the answers to my research questions.
Jenni Grizzle and Wendy Etherington for keeping me going and always being up for champagne and cheesecake.
Brenda D’Alessandro, for being lots of fun, the world’s best shopper, and for walking three hundred city blocks without complaining (sort of).
Thanks also to Kay and Jim Johnson, Kathy and Dick Guse, Lea and Art D’Alessandro, JoBeth Beard, Ann Wonycott, and Michelle, Steve, and Lindsey Grossman.
A cyberhug to my Looney Loopies Connie Brockway, Marsha Canham, Virginia Henley, Jill Gregory, Sandy Hingston, Julia London, Kathleen Givens, Sherri Browning, and Julie Ortolon, and also to the Temptresses.
A very special thank-you to the members of Georgia Romance Writers, JoBeth Beard, Ana Payne, Judy Wilson, and Jeannie Pierannunzi.
And finally, thank you to all the wonderful readers who have taken the time to write or e-mail me. I love hearing from you!
Chapter 1
by Charles Brightmore
“How do you know?” came another gruff male whisper.
“Damned obvious, what with the way she’s been acting. Been spewing out nonsense about ‘today’s modern woman’ and ‘independence’ like a steaming teakettle. Just yesterday she marched into my private study and proceeded to question me regarding my gambling markers and the amount of time I spend at White’s!”
Sharp intakes of breath followed. “Outrageous,” muttered the gruff whisperer.
“Precisely what I told her.”
“What did you do?”
“Why, I marched her right out of my study, called for a carriage, and sent her to Asprey’s to pick out a new bauble to occupy her mind.”
“Excellent. I assume your strategy worked?”
“Unfortunately not as well as I’d hoped. Last night I found her awaiting me
“My wife did the same thing just last week,” came a third aggrieved whisper. “Entered my bedchamber, bold as you please, pushed me onto the mattress, then… well, I can only describe it as to say she
The voice lowered further and Lady Catherine Ashfield, Viscountess Bickley, leaned closer to the Oriental screen that secreted her presence from the gentlemen on the other side.
“… This Charles Brightmore must be stopped,” whispered one of the gentlemen.
“I agree. A disaster of gargantuan proportions, that’s what he’s brought upon us. Why, if my daughter reads that cursed
Murmurs of agreement followed that pronouncement.
Then the whisperer continued, “And as for the bedchamber, women are demanding enough creatures as it is, always wanting a new gown or earbobs or carriage or the like. ‘Tis outrageous that their expectations should extend to
“Couldn’t agree more. Should I ever find myself in the company of this Brightmore bastard, I’ll personally wring his bloody neck. Tarring and feathering is too good for him. Everyone I’ve spoken to feels certain that ‘Charles Brightmore’ is a pseudonym, and coward that he is, he’s refused to step forward and identify himself. The betting book at White’s is a frenzy of wagers on the subject of his identity. Damn it all, what sort of man would think, let alone write, such unseemly ideas?”
“Well, I stopped at White’s just before coining here, and the latest theory proposes the possibility that Charles Brightmore is in fact a
The gentleman’s low-pitched words were drowned out by a trill of nearby feminine laughter. Catherine inched closer, all but pressing her ear to the screen.
“… and if it’s true, it would be the scandal of the century…” She heard some more unintelligible mumbling,