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Chapter I
It still felt somewhat strange to be part of a gathering of the creme de la creme of English society again and to hear the English language spoken by virtually everyone. Not that the English were the only nationality present, it was true. There were also Dutch, Belgians, and Germans, among others. But the British predominated.
Gervase Ashford, Earl of Rosthorn, was standing just inside the ballroom doors at the house Viscount Cameron had leased on the Rue Ducale in Brussels, looking about him with considerable interest. He was searching for familiar faces. He had seen several since his recent arrival from Austria, but he expected to see more here. The vast majority of both ladies and gentlemen looked exceedingly young to him, though. He felt strangely ancient at thirty.
Most of those young gentlemen, and a few older ones too, wore military dress uniforms--some blue or green, but most scarlet and resplendent with rich facings and multitudes of gold lace braiding. Like peacocks, they outshone the ladies in their pastel shaded, softly flowing, high-waisted gowns. But the ladies looked delicate and very feminine in contrast.
"One feels at a distinct disadvantage dressed even in one's very best civilian clothes, does one not?" the Honorable John Waldane said ruefully into Gervase's left ear--the buzz of a hundred voices or more all raised to be heard above the rest of the hubbub plus the sounds of the orchestra tuning their instruments more than occupied his right.
"If one came here with the intention of impressing the ladies, yes, I suppose so," Gervase admitted with a chuckle. "If one came to be an invisible observer, no."
Atthe moment he preferred to be as unobtrusive as possible. He still felt a little self-conscious around British people, wondering how much they remembered from nine years ago, and wondering too just how much there was for them to remember. Although there had been a few rather public scenes, he was not sure how much of that whole sordid business had become public knowledge. Waldane, who had been one of Gervase's acquaintances at the time and who had hailed him with the greatest amiability when they ran into each other two days ago, had made no reference to it. But, of course, the reputation Gervase had earned since then was undeniably notorious to anyone who had spent time on the Continent.
"Old Boney will probably be captured any day now and dragged back to Elba and kept in irons for the rest of his life if any of his guards have a brain in their heads," Waldane said. "These officers will no longer have an excuse to play at such gallantry or to dazzle the ladies with such a gorgeous display."
"Jealous?" Gervase chuckled again.
"Mortally." Waldane, slightly more portly than he had been nine years ago when Gervase last saw him, and balding at the crown of his thinning fair hair, laughed ruefully. "There are some ladies one might enjoy impressing."
"Are there?" Gervase raised his quizzing glass the better to see to the far side of the crowded ballroom. He recognized Lord Fitzroy Somerset, the Duke of Wellington's military secretary, in conversation with Lady Mebs, and Sir Charles Stuart, British ambassador to the Hague. But his attention moved obligingly onto the young ladies, none of whom he could be expected to recognize--or feel any particular interest in if he did. His tastes did not run to the very young. "By Jove, you are right."
His glass had paused on one member of Sir Charles's group, who was even then turning half away from its other members in order to greet the approach of two young officers of the Life Guards, gorgeous in dazzling white net pantaloons, scarlet coats, blue facings, and gold lace--and dancing shoes instead of their cavalry boots.
She was a very young lady indeed--not long out of the schoolroom if his guess was correct. He would not perhaps have noticed her if Waldane had not set him to the task. But, having looked, he was forced to admit that sometimes one could draw sheer pleasure from simply gazing at extraordinary beauty.
He was gazing at it now.
She was really quite outstandingly lovely, the more so perhaps because the simplicity of her white gown was in marked contrast to the bold richness of the uniforms worn by the two officers. It was a short-sleeved, low-bosomed, high-waisted gown of lace over satin--but Gervase was not interested in the gown. His practiced eye noted that the body beneath it was slender and long-legged, coltish yet undeniably feminine. Her neck, long and swanlike, held her head at a proud angle. And proud she had every right to be. Her dark hair, piled elegantly and threaded with jewels that might well be diamonds, gleamed under the light of a thousand candles in the chandeliers overhead. Her face--oval, dark-eyed, and straight-nosed--was classical perfection. Its beauty was nothing short of dazzling when she smiled, as she did in response to a remark made by the officer on her right, raising a lacy white fan to her chin as she did so.
It seemed to Gervase that he might well never have seen a lovelier woman--if she could be called a woman. She was little more than a girl really--but as breathtakingly lovely as a perfect rosebud that has not yet burst into full bloom.
Fortunately, perhaps, for the young lady in question and any parents or chaperons who were hovering in her vicinity, he preferred mature blooms to tender buds--they were more amenable to being seduced. He had looked his fill and was prepared to move his glass onward.
"That one would be well worth impressing," John Waldane said, noting his friend's pursed lips and the direction of his gaze. "But alas, Rosthorn, she has eyes for no man unless his broad shoulders are encased in a scarlet coat." He sighed forlornly and theatrically.
"And unless he is not a day older than two and twenty," Gervase agreed, noting the youth of the two Guards officers. He must indeed be getting old, he thought, when even military officers were beginning to look like schoolboys playing at war.
"You do not know who she is?" Waldane asked as Gervase turned away, intending to remove to the card room.
"Should I?" he asked in reply. "She is someone important, I presume?"
"One might say so," his friend told him. "She is staying with the Earl and Countess of Caddick on the Rue de Bellevue, since their daughter, Lady Rosamond Havelock, is her particular friend, though her brother is here too. He is attached to the embassy at the Hague in some capacity but is currently in Brussels with Sir Charles Stuart."
"And?" Gervase prompted, making a circular motion with his hand as if to hurry his friend along.
"One of the officers talking to her--the taller, golden-haired one on her right--is Viscount Gordon," Waldane said. "Captain Lord Gordon, Caddick's son and heir. The only son in fact. Hence the military commission in the Life Guards, I suppose--all glory and gold lace but absolutely no danger. They will prance around on horseback on the parade ground, looking magnificent and sending all the ladies into a collective swoon, but they would swoon as a body themselves if this threat of war against Boney were to prove more a reality than an exciting game."
"They may surprise us yet if given the chance for glory," Gervase said more fairly. He took one step toward the ballroom doors. Obviously Waldane, mistaking his interest in the dark-haired girl for something more personal than it was, wanted him to beg for her identity.
"She is Lady Morgan Bedwyn," his friend said.
Gervase paused and looked back at him, his eyebrows raised. "Bedwyn?"
"The youngest of the family," Waldane said. "Fresh from the schoolroom, newly presented at court, the richest prize on the marriage mart if she has not already been snatched off it by Gordon. I understand that an announcement is expected any day. You had better keep your distance, Rosthorn, even if the wolf did remain behind in England when she came here." He slapped a friendly hand on Gervase's shoulder and grinned.
The wolf. Wulfric Bedwyn, Duke of Bewcastle. Although he had not seen the man for nine years and had not particularly thought about him in four or five, nevertheless Gervase could feel all the cold fury of an old hatred as he was reminded of him now. It was to Bewcastle he owed the strangeness of these English faces and these English voices, and his own self-consciousness in being among them--his own people. It was to Bewcastle he owed the fact that he had not been in England--his own country, his father's country--since he was one and twenty. Instead he had wandered the Continent, not really belonging in France despite his French mother because he was English by birth and the heir to a British earldom, and not safe in many other European countries under French occupation for the same reason.
It was because of Bewcastle--whose friendship he had once cultivated--that his whole life had been turned upside down and permanently changed for the worse. Exile really had seemed almost worse than death for the first year or so--that and the terrible humiliation and his impotence to convince anyone that he had been wrongfully treated. He had consoled himself eventually by becoming exactly what he was expected to be--a rake who cared for nothing and no one except himself and the gratification of his own desires, whether sexual or otherwise. He had certainly allowed Bewcastle to win in more ways than one.
Ah, yes, he realized in that flashing moment while he still looked over his shoulder at Waldane, the hatred, the burning desire to do Bewcastle harm in return, had not faded in nine years. It had only been pushed beneath the surface of his consciousness.
And now he was in the same building--the same room--as Bewcastle's sister. It was almost too good to be true.
Gervase looked across the ballroom once more. She had one gloved hand upon the sleeve of the golden-haired officer--Captain Lord Gordon--and was proceeding with him onto the dance floor, where the lines were forming for the opening set of country dances.
Lady Morgan Bedwyn.
Yes, he could well believe it. She carried herself with all the proud bearing, even arrogance, of a born aristocrat.
He could make mischief if he chose, Gervase thought, his eyes narrowing on her. The temptation was almost overwhelming.
As she took her place in the long line of ladies, and Captain Lord Gordon--a handsome young stripling--went to stand opposite in the line of gentlemen, her full smiling attention was on him. And he was very eligible--the son and heir of an earl. Indeed, she was thought to be all but betrothed to him.
The thought of causing mischief grew even more appealing.
She was doubtless an innocent, despite the arrogance. She had probably been hedged about with governesses until the very moment of her presentation and with chaperons ever since then. He, on the other hand, was anything but innocent. It was true that, despite his reputation, he had only ever turned his seductive charms on women who could match him in experience and, usually, in years too. But if he chose to turn those charms on a young innocent, he might perhaps succeed in turning her attention away from a scarlet coat.
If he chose.
How could he not so choose?
As the music began, he felt the very definite stirrings of a slight temptation. Though truth to tell, it was not so slight either.
Lady Morgan Bedwyn performed the steps of the dance with precision and grace. She was small-breasted, Gervase could see, and willowy slender, neither of which physical attributes normally aroused him sexually. He was not aroused now, of course, merely appreciative of her perfect beauty.
And yes--quite powerfully tempted to make trouble for her.
"Are you for the card room, Rosthorn?" John Waldane asked.
"Perhaps later," Gervase said without withdrawing his attention from the dancers, whose feet were thudding rhythmically on the wooden floor. "I must go in search of Lady Cameron and ask her to present me to Lady Morgan Bedwyn at the end of the set."
"Oh, I say!" His friend reached for his snuff box. "You devil you, Rosthorn! Bewcastle would challenge you to a duel even for raising your eyes to his sister."
"Bewcastle, as I remember it, does not deal in duels," Gervase said disdainfully, his nostrils flaring at the remembered insult. "Besides, I am Rosthorn. It is quite unexceptionable to request an introduction to the girl, Waldane. Or even to invite her to dance with me. I am not planning to invite her to elope with me, you know."
Though there was a wicked sense of satisfaction in imaging how Bewcastle would react if he did run off with the girl. Did he dare contemplate such a thing?
"Five pounds on it that she will insist upon dancing every set with a scarlet uniform and will grant you no more than the time of day," John Waldane said, chuckling once more.
"Only five?" Gervase clucked his tongue. "You wound me, Waldane. Make it ten, or one hundred if you wish. You will, of course, lose."
He could not take his eyes off the girl. She was Bewcastle's sister, someone close to him, someone dear to him. Someone through whom Bewcastle's pride and consequence, even if not his heart, could be hurt. It was doubtful that the man had a heart--any more than he himself had, Gervase thought cynically.
It was strange how fate sometimes turned in one's favor--though it was about time. Belgium was as close as Gervase had come to returning home even though his father had been dead for longer than a year and his mother had long been urging him to come home to Windrush Grange in Kent to take up his inheritance and his duties and responsibilities as the new Earl of Rosthorn. He had been in Vienna when Napoleon Bonaparte escaped from Elba in March. Now, two months later, he had taken the tentative step of moving to Brussels in Belgium, where the British and their allies were beginning to gather in some force for the expected showdown with Bonaparte. Many of the British who had sons in the military had brought their wives and daughters and other family members with them. A large number of other Britons had come flocking there too simply because Brussels during this spring of 1815 was the social place to be.
And that number included Lady Morgan Bedwyn, sister of the Duke of Bewcastle.
Ah yes, he was very much more than slightly tempted.
Fate had dealt him a potentially winning hand at last.
Anonymous
Posted July 13, 2011
I laughed, I cried, I loved the characters, and I found their story completely believable. It is definitely a character driven story despite the Battle of Waterloo and feud aspects. Morgan and Gervase were incredibly well drawn characters with personal strengths and weaknesses. This is not only my favorite out of the series so far (I've read Slightly Dangerous, Slightly Scandalous, and A Summer to Remember) but is going on my shelf as one of my favorite books overall. This is not one of those romances that prattles on for a couple hundred pages about how hot the hero and heroine find each other, only to throw them into some sort of extraneous mystery or big misunderstanding culminating in one of them almost dying and the other one realizing how they can't live without the other in the end. I enjoy those books but they aren't real to me. This book not only had a great love story but touched me with its considerations of life and death, war and peace, family, class, pain, loss, forgiveness and love. I have no complaint about it except that, like any good book, it had to end.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Reid20
Posted March 10, 2011
This was really more 3 1/2 stars in my opinion. I liked the historical connection with the Battle of Waterloo. I enjoyed Gervase and loved his French side. (I liked how he continued to call Morgan "Cherie" even after she told him it was not appropriate. Morgan is a honorable girl and I like how she dove right in and helped the soldiers. Finally, I liked their friendship. They were true friends before anything else and I find that romantic.
However, I only gave it 3 1/2 stars because I wanted a final conversation between Gervase and Bewcastle. It was wrapped up in the end, but not to my satisfaction. Also, Gervase should not have agreed with all Morgan's accusations because not all of them were true. He should have explained sooner than he did. It annoyed me.
Still, it is a good read and I am anxious to read the next book. I want to find out about Alleyne. I am also very captivated by the Duke of Bewcastle. He has a lot on his shoulders and hides his true self.
This book had a lot of war and tending to wounded soldiers in it...very Gone With The Wind. I liked Gervase and the feud with him and Wulf. It was alright.
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Posted July 11, 2009
The book although not as good as some of the other Bedwyn books was very well written and more touching than some of the others.
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Posted March 22, 2006
This so far is my favorite one out of the Bedwyn Series....i absolutely loved it all the way through...i totaly recommend it
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Posted January 17, 2005
morgan's story is wonderfully written, and the historical accuracy behind the love story makes this book my favorite in the series... the backdrop of napoleon's reemergence and the battle of waterloo are brought very vividly to life, and give this book and edge over the others in the series.
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Posted January 3, 2005
This is the first book of Mary Balogh's that I've read. I enjoyed it enough to buy the first book in the Bedwyn sibling series (Slightly Married). This book has a reasonably good plot, excellent character development and excellent dialogue reminiscent of Jane Austen. Would recommend to those who like books that are character driven.
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Posted December 9, 2004
im so disappointed about this book. it talked too much about war which im not really interested and i felt so bored and just wanted to finish it just for the sake of finishing it.
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Posted February 7, 2004
The is a great installment in the Bedwyn's saga. Probably the best of the 'Slightly' books and as good as 'A Summer to Remember'. The lead character Earl of Rosthorn is captivating and multi-dimentional, not a typical 'rake gone bad,met the right lady and puff.. reformed' that you find in most Regency novels. This character is charming, selfish, honorable and sexy. I could hear 'cheri' over and over again! Morgan Bedwyn is too young to carry off the sophisticated role she is dealt in this novel. That is the only flaw in the book, if she was 22, OK, but 18 year old cannot possibly have that precense of mind and self, but oh well overall it is very good. The pages devoted to Brussels pre Waterloo and the war's carnage are well written and entertaining, it is still light read. There is a bit of Tolstoy's 'War and Peace' here. A definate must read.
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Posted January 11, 2004
Mary always writes a great story.The Bedwyns have a great sense of character and family.I was a little surprised that Wulf did not have a stronger part in the story. I thought for sure he would have torn Brussels apart looking for Alleyne. Can't wait for Slightly Sinful!
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Posted November 25, 2003
In 1815 Brussels, many English aristocrats arrive in the city to be near loved ones getting ready to fight against Napoleon who has returned to Paris. Also in town is thirty year old Austrian Gervase Ashford. At a party, Gervase finds himself attracted to eighteen years old Lady Morgan Bedwyn, but knows she is too young for him until he learns that she is the sister of Wulfric, a man he hates for making him flee England in shame nine years ago. He wonders if he can attain vengeance through the sister and plans to find out.................................. Gervase displays wit and intelligence to Morgan, who finds him quite attracted from the first sensual waltz they shared. As they become acquainted, he keeps her safe when the French assault the city. As Morgan mourns her missing and presumed dead brother, she and Gervase fall in love. However, once Gervase¿s ¿Cherie¿ learns the truth about his original deception, will she ever be able to trust his vows of love again?................................... The fourth Bedwyn Regency romance is an exhilarating tale that brings to life Western Europe during the final stages of Napoleon¿s comeback. The story line is loaded with action though it takes a bit too long to learn why Gervase detests his beloved¿s brother. Morgan is a young delight who brings out the best in everyone she meets. Sub-genre fans that have missed this series will be more than just slightly miffed at themselves as Mary Balogh has written fabulous tales worth reading................................. Harriet Klausner
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Posted December 29, 2003
Mary Balogh has drawn characters that develop into interesting intersecting plot lines. This is not just another novel with the names and places changed and the same story lines. There is sadness, warmth, underlying depth, suspense, and of course some surprises. Both families are endearing. Highly recommend this to those who are looking for a different sense in the romance genre.
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Posted January 7, 2010
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Posted June 22, 2009
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Posted October 27, 2010
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Posted December 11, 2010
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Posted June 21, 2010
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Overview
BONUS: This edition contains an excerpt from Mary Balogh's The Secret Mistress.Meet the Bedwyns—six brothers and sisters—men and women of passion and privilege, daring and sensuality.
Enter their dazzling world of high society and breathtaking seduction…where each will seek love, fight temptation, and court scandal…and where Morgan Bedwyn, the willful youngest daughter, discovers that true love is a temptation no woman can—or should—resist.
Young. Ravishing. Exquisitely marriageable. From the moment he spies Lady...