Beverley
is giving away a $10 Amazon Gift Certificate to a randomly drawn
winner via rafflecopter during the tour. Please use the RaffleCopter
below to enter. Remember you may increase your chances of winning by
visiting the other tour stops. You may find those locations here.
Blurb
A
rigged horse race - and a marriage offer riding on the outcome.
When
Miss Eliza Montrose unexpectedly becomes legal owner of the horse
tipped to win the East Anglia Cup, her future is finally in her hands
– but at what cost?
George
Bramley, nephew to the Earl of Quamby, will wager anything. Even his
future bride.
Miss
Eliza Montrose will accept any wager to be reunited with the child
she was forced to relinquish after an indiscretion — even if it
means marrying a man she does not love.
But
when the handsome and charming Rufus Patmore buys a horse from her
betrothed, George Bramley, whose household her son visits from the
foundling home, her heart is captured and the outcome of the wager is
suddenly fraught with peril.
**This
is book 3 in the Scandalous Miss Brightwell series, though it can be
read as a stand-alone.
Excerpt
Chapter
One
“And
there’s nothing else you’d like, my dear? No?” Straightening
after receiving a polite rebuff, George Bramley found it an effort to
keep the syrup in his tone. His bride-to-be had not even looked at
him as she’d declined the piece of marchpane he’d been certain
would win him at least a smile.
Hovering
at her side, he weighed up the advantages of a gentle rebuke, then
decided against it. Until yesterday, he’d thought her quiet
demeanour suggested a charmingly pliant nature. Now he was not so
sure. In fact, suddenly, he was not sure of anything.
“A
glass of lemonade, perhaps, my angel? Or a gentle stroll?”
“I
would prefer to be left alone.” Miss Montrose waved a languid hand
in his general direction, while she continued to gaze at the still
lake beside which their picnic party had situated itself.
The
languid arm-wave had not even been accompanied by a demure thank you
as subtle acknowledgement of her gratitude that not only had Mr
Bramley, heir to a viscountcy, stepped in to rescue Miss Eliza
Montrose from impoverishment, he was prepared to treat her publicly
as if she were as fine a catch as he could have made.
A
soft titter brought his head round sharply, but the ladies behind
him, bent over the latest Ackerman’s Repository, appeared occupied
with their own gossip as they lounged on cushions beneath the canopy
that had been erected to protect them from the sun.
Awkwardly,
he looked for occupation as he continued to eye his intended with a
mixture of irritation and desire—both lustful desire, and the
desire to put her in her place.
The
idea of the latter made him harden. She was beautiful, this quiet,
apparently retiring, young woman who said so little, but whose eyes
spoke such volumes. The afternoon sun glinted on her honey-gold hair
and imbued her porcelain skin with a warm glow. The skin that he
could see, at any rate.
He
pushed back his shoulders. On their wedding night in six weeks, when
he’d at last take possession of her, he’d rip that modesty to
shreds. The skin she was so at pains to hide would be his, not only
to see, but to caress and taste. When she was his wife, the
beautiful, distant Miss Eliza Montrose would no longer get away with
paying George Bramley so little attention. No, he’d have her
screaming and writhing at his command. He would make her like the
things he did to her; or at least, show him she did if she enjoyed
harmony as much as she appeared to. None of this languid reclining
like a half-drugged princess in his presence. He’d keep her on her
toes, ready to leap to his bidding at the sound of his footstep.
She’d learn to be grateful.
Feeling
ignored and superfluous, he turned to his uncle’s detestable wife,
Lady Quamby, and said with a smile, “Perhaps you and Miss Montrose
would like to accompany me to the turret. Since you appear to have
enjoyed this new novel, Northanger Abbey, so much, you might be
interested to know there is an excellent view of the ruined monastery
not far from here.”
He
was just priding himself on being so attuned to the feminine
inclination for pleasure, when Lady Quamby half turned and sent him a
desultory smile. “Oh, I think Miss Eliza looks perfectly
comfortable, and Fanny and I are having such a lovely little coze.”
As if imitating Miss Montrose, she waved a languid hand in his
general direction. “Why don’t you take Mr Patmore off to see it?
The two of you can tell us all about it when you return.”
The
fact that Miss Montrose didn’t deign to even speak for herself,
much less glance in his direction, sent the blood surging to
Bramley’s brain. By God, when he was married to Eliza Montrose, the
limpid look of love so lacking now would be pasted onto her face
every time he crossed her line of vision. She’d soon learn what was
good for her.
He
inclined his head, hiding his fury, and was on the point of leaving
when Lady Quamby’s sister, Fanny —for he’d be damned if he’d
accord the little strumpet the title of Lady Fenton—leapt up from
her chair. She’d been poring over the latest fashions, but now she
smiled brightly up at him.
“I’ll
come with you, Cousin George. We’ll have an excellent view of the
children learning to row from the battlements. I told Nanny Brown she
could take them in the two boats if they’d been good.”
Bramley
stared down her liveliness. In fact, he was about to give up the idea
of going up to the battlements altogether when his other guest, Rufus
Patmore, suddenly rose and joined Fanny’s side with a late and
unexpected show of enthusiasm.
“Capital
idea!” declared Rufus.
George
flashed them both a dispassionate look. He'd chosen to invite his
betrothed, Miss Montrose—whose chaperone was currently tucked up in
the green bed chamber nursing a head cold—to be his guest at his
uncle’s estate, Quamby House, after receiving intelligence that
Ladies Quamby and Fenton would be safely in London with their
husbands and children. Instead, the brazen Brightwell sisters—as
they’d infamously been called when he’d first made their
acquaintance—had altered their plans, and were now in dogged
attendance, reminding him as they always had, of some awful tenacious
climbing plant, determined to find a foothold wherever they could in
order to rise in the world.
Rufus,
a last-minute addition and acquaintance from his club, Boodles, was
here because he’d just purchased a horse from Bramley the night
before. Now, Rufus was gazing at Lady Fenton, with the same dewy-eyed
fondness George was used to seeing reflected in the eye of his uncle,
the Earl of Quamby, who called the Brightwell sisters his precious
rose-buds. To George, they were common dandelions! And now they had
overridden Quamby House, the rambling Queen Anne manor house and
estate that would have passed to George the moment his uncle quit
this mortal coil, were it not for the snotty-nosed infant Lady Quamby
had borne far too early in her marriage to George's uncle.
George
shook his head. He’d changed his mind. Only, there was Rufus
striding across the lawn, skirting the lake with Fanny at his side,
and George didn’t want to be seen as petulant for having offered
the suggestion in the first place. Or have his snubbed and ignored
status so much on parade, since the two remaining ladies—Miss
Montrose and Lady Quamby—had their heads bent together in deep
discussion, with no apparent interest in seeking his company.
By
God, he thought, clenching his fists as he set off after them at a
brisk trot, they'd all rue the day they showed George Bramley so
little respect.
Other
Books in the Series:
About
the Author
Beverley
Oakley was seventeen when she bundled up her first her 500+ page
romance and sent it to a publisher. Unfortunately drowning her
heroine on the last page was apparently not in line with the
expectations of romance readers so Beverley became a journalist.
Twenty-six
years later Beverley was delighted to receive her first publishing
contract from Robert Hale (UK) for a romance in which she ensured her
heroine was saved from drowning in the icy North Sea.
Since
2009 Beverley has written more than thirteen historical romances,
mostly set in England during the early nineteenth century. Mystery,
intrigue and adventure spill from their pages and if she can pull off
a thrilling race to save someone’s honour – or a worthy damsel
from the noose – it’s time to celebrate with a good single malt
Scotch.
Beverley
lives with her husband, two daughters and a Rhodesian Ridgeback puppy
the size of a pony opposite a picturesque nineteenth century lunatic
asylum. She also writes Africa-set adventure-filled romances tarring
handsome bush pilot heroes, and historical romances with less steam
and more sexual tension, as Beverley Eikli.
You
can get in contact with Beverley at:
2 comments:
Hello, Beverley!
Delighted to have you back at Beyond Romance. I hope your tour is going really well.
I'm off to send a message to my email list!
This is the first time I've been introduced to Ms Beverley and her books. But I'm looking forward to hearing more about her books, so thank you!
Post a Comment
Let me know your thoughts! (And if you're having trouble commenting, try enabling third-party cookies in your browser...)