My Lord Beast
Step back in time to England where arranged marriages were often marriages of convenience. We are first introduced to Audrey Drelincourte, Earl of Breme, arriving home from India to save his reputation, his family home and to wed and produce an heir. Is he the beast everyone believes him to be? Then we meet Lilias Merritt, feisty, outspoken second daughter of impoverished merchant Geoffrey Merritt. Lilias flees her father’s home to avoid an arranged marriage to Richard Landham. In her escape she runs to the gypsies who plant her on the doorstep of Breme and directly in the path of Lord Breme himself. Read along and see how the two clash and strike out against the feelings that pull them toward their destiny. Having his carriage stopped on the road, Lord Breme listened to his man, Ram Dass carry on a conversation with a lady on horseback. As the carriage started again he commented, “Rather cheeky assassin.” His thoughts stayed with Miss Merritt as he wondered about a woman “who went out on a winter eve with no groom, when a gentlewoman would have taken a carriage and an abigail. But she spoke like a lady and had just taken to task the owner of a coach and four with a gold crest emblazoned on it.” Even ill, Audrey could find amusement in that. Arriving at Breme, Lilias proposes to be a nurse the ailing master of the house. Only to be told, “I don’t need a well-bred nurse- companion.” With hopes of sanctuary here dashed, Lilias wonders what will become of her. Although Lord Breme relents and keeps her on, their relationship is rocky and built on distrust. She wonders about the rumors, and he is there to stop the flow of rumors. Did Lord Breme kill his wife? Can he clear his name? Can he remember what happened that fateful night? Will he be able to marry and produce an heir, and save his home? How does Lilias fit into all of this? Does she avoid marriage to Landham? Can she earn the trust of the lord of the manor? All this and much more will be found in this book. Mary Lennox gives you very believable characters. Her sense of the times is uncanny. England’s ton can make or break a person and she uses this knowledge to further the plot. It was a delightful read. |