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The 2nd Epilogue

To Sir Phillip, With Love (Bridgertons, #5)

Iย am not the most patient of individuals. And I have almost no tolerance for stupidity. Which was why I was proud of myself for holding my tongue this afternoon, while having tea with the Brougham family.

The Broughams are our neighbors, and have been for the past six years, since Mr. Brougham inherited the property from his uncle, also named Mr. Brougham. They have four daughters and one extremely spoiled son. Luckily for me the son is five years younger than I am, which means I shall not have to entertain notions of marrying him. (Although my sisters Penelope and Georgiana, nine and ten years my junior, will not be so lucky.) The Brougham daughters are all one year apart, beginning two years ahead of me and ending two behind. They are perfectly pleasant, if perhaps a touch too sweet and gentle for my taste. But lately they have been too much to bear.

This is because I, too, have a brother, and he is not five years younger than they are. In fact, he is my twin, which makes him a matrimonial possibility for any of them.

Unsurprisingly, Oliver did not elect to accompany my mother, Penelope, and me to tea.

But here is what happened, and here is why I am pleased with myself for not saying what I wished to say, which was:ย Surely you must be an idiot.

I was sipping my tea, trying to keep the cup at my lips for as long as possible so as to avoid questions about Oliver, when Mrs. Brougham said, โ€œIt must be so very intriguing to be a twin. Tell me, dear Amanda, how is it different than not being one?โ€

I should hope that I do not have to explain why this question was so asinine. I could hardly tell her what the difference was, as I have spent

approximately one hundred percent of my life as a twin and thus have precisely zero experience at not being one.

I must have worn my disdain on my face because my mother shot me one of her legendary warning looks the moment my lips parted to reply. Because I did not wish to embarrass my mother (and not because I felt any need to make Mrs. Brougham feel cleverer than she actually was), I said, โ€œI suppose one always has a companion.โ€

โ€œBut your brother is not here now,โ€ one of the Brougham girls said. โ€œMy father is not always with my mother, and I would imagine that she

considers him to be her companion,โ€ I replied.

โ€œA brother is hardly the same as a husband,โ€ Mrs. Brougham trilled.

โ€œOne would hope,โ€ I retorted. Truly, this was one of the more ridiculous conversations in which I had taken part. And Penelope looked as if she would have questions when we returned home.

My mother gave me another look, one that said she knew exactly what sort of questions Penelope would have, and she did not wish to answer them. But as my mother had always said she valued curiosity in females . . .

Well, sheโ€™d be hoisted by her own petard.

I should mention that, petard hoistings aside, I am convinced that I have the finest mother in England. And unlike being a non-twin, about which I have no knowledge, I do know what itโ€™s like to have a different mother, so I am fully qualified, in my opinion, to make the judgment.

My mother, Eloise Crane, is actually my stepmother, although I only refer to her as such when required to for purposes of clarification. She married my father when Oliver and I were eight years old, and I am quite certain she saved us all. It is difficult to explain what our lives were like before she entered them. I could certainly describe events, but theย toneย of it all, the feeling in our house . . .

I donโ€™t really know how to convey it.

My motherโ€”my original motherโ€”killed herself. For most of my life I did not know this. I thought she died of a fever, which I suppose is true. What no one told me was that the fever was brought on because she tried to drown herself in a lake in the dead of winter.

I have no intention of taking my own life, but I must say, this would not be my chosen method.

I know I should feel compassion and sympathy for her. My current mother was a distant cousin of hers and tells me that she was sad her entire life. She tells me that some people are like that, just as others are unnaturally cheerful all the time. But I canโ€™t help but think that if she was going to kill herself, she might as well have done it earlier. Perhaps when I was a toddler. Or better yet, an infant. It certainly would have made my life easier.

I asked my uncle Hugh (who is not really my uncle, but he is married to the stepsister of my current motherโ€™s brotherโ€™s wifeย andย he lives quite closeย andย heโ€™s a vicar) if I would be going to hell for such a thought. He said no, that frankly, it made a lot of sense to him.

I do think I prefer his parish to my own.

But the thing is, now I have memories of her. Marina, my first mother. I donโ€™tย wantย memories of her. The ones I have are hazy and muddled. I canโ€™t recall the sound of her voice. Oliver says that might be because she hardly spoke. I canโ€™t remember whether she spoke or not. I canโ€™t remember the exact shape of her face, and I canโ€™t remember her smell.

Instead I remember standing outside her door, feeling very small and frightened. And I remember tiptoeing a great deal, because we knew we mustnโ€™t make noise. I remember always feeling rather nervous, as if I knew something bad were about to happen.

And indeed it did.

Shouldnโ€™t a memory be specific? I would not mind a memory of a moment, or of a face, or a sound. Instead I have vague feelings, and not even happy ones at that.

I once asked Oliver if he had the same memories, and he just shrugged and said he didnโ€™t really think about her. I am not sure if I believe him. I suppose I probably do; he does not often think deeply about such things. Or perhaps more accurately, he does not think deeply about anything. One can only hope that when he marries (which surely will not come soon enough for the sisters Brougham) that he will choose a bride with a similar lack of thoughtfulness and sensibility. Otherwise, she shall be miserable. He wonโ€™t be, of course; he wouldnโ€™t even notice her misery.

Men are like that, Iโ€™m told.

My father, for example, is remarkably unobservant. Unless, of course, you happen to be a plant, and then he notices everything. He is a botanist

and could happily toddle about in his greenhouse all day. He seems to me a most unlikely match for my mother, who is vivacious and outgoing and never at a loss for words, but when they are together it is obvious that they love each other very much. Last week I caught them kissing in the garden. I was aghast. Mother is nearly forty, and Father older than that.

But I have digressed. I was speaking of the Brougham family, more specifically of Mrs. Broughamโ€™s foolish query about not being a twin. I was, as previously mentioned, feeling rather pleased with myself for not having been rude, when Mrs. Brougham said something thatย wasย of interest.

โ€œMy nephew comes to visit this afternoon.โ€

Every one of the Brougham girls popped straighter in her seat. I swear, it was like some childrenโ€™s game with snaps. Bing bing bing bing . . . Up they went, from perfect posture to preternaturally erect.

From this I immediately deduced that Mrs. Broughamโ€™s nephew must be of marriageable age, probably of good fortune, and perhaps of pleasing features.

โ€œYou did not mention that Ian was coming to visit,โ€ one of the daughters said.

โ€œHeโ€™s not,โ€ replied Mrs. Brougham. โ€œHe is still at Oxford, as you well know. Charles is coming.โ€

Poof. The daughters Brougham deflated, all at once. โ€œOh,โ€ said one of them. โ€œCharlie.โ€

โ€œToday, you say,โ€ said another, with a remarkable lack of enthusiasm. And then the third said, โ€œI shall have to hide my dolls.โ€

The fourth said nothing. She just resumed drinking her tea, looking rather bored by the whole thing.

โ€œWhy do you have to hide your dolls?โ€ Penelope asked. In all truth, I was wondering the same thing, but it seemed too childish a question for a lady of nineteen years.

โ€œThat was twelve years ago, Dulcie,โ€ Mrs. Brougham said. โ€œGood heavens, youโ€™ve a memory of an elephant.โ€

โ€œOne does not forget what he did to my dolls,โ€ Dulcie said darkly. โ€œWhat did he do?โ€ Penelope asked.

Dulcie made a slashing motion across her throat. Penelope gasped, and I must confess, there was something rather gruesome in Dulcieโ€™s expression.

โ€œHe is a beast,โ€ said one of Dulcieโ€™s sisters.

โ€œHe isย notย a beast,โ€ Mrs. Brougham insisted.

The Brougham girls all looked at us, shaking their heads in silent agreement, as if to say,ย Do not listen to her.

โ€œHow old is your nephew now?โ€ my mother asked.

โ€œTwo and twenty,โ€ Mrs. Brougham replied, looking rather grateful for the question. โ€œHe was graduated from Oxford last month.โ€

โ€œHe is a year older than Ian,โ€ explained one of the girls.

I nodded, even though I could hardly use Ianโ€”whom I had never metโ€” as a reference point.

โ€œHeโ€™s not as handsome.โ€ โ€œOr as nice.โ€

I looked at the last Brougham daughter, awaiting her contribution. But all she did was yawn.

โ€œHow long will he be staying?โ€ my mother asked politely.

โ€œTwo weeks,โ€ Mrs. Brougham answered, but she really only got out โ€œTwo weeโ€ before one of her daughters howled with dismay.

โ€œTwo weeks! An entire fortnight!โ€

โ€œI was hoping he could accompany us to the local assembly,โ€ Mrs.

Brougham said.

This was met by more groans. I must say, I was beginning to grow curious about this Charles fellow. Anyone who could inspire such dread among the Brougham daughters must have something to recommend him.

Not, I hasten to add, that I dislike the Brougham daughters. Unlike their brother, none of them was granted every wish and whim, and thus they are not at all unbearable. But they areโ€”how shall I say itโ€”placid and biddable, and therefore not a natural sort of companion for me (about whom such adjectives have never been applied). Truthfully, I donโ€™t think I had ever known any of them to express a strong opinion about anything. If all four of them detested someone that muchโ€”well, if nothing else, he would be interesting.

โ€œDoes your nephew like to ride?โ€ my mother asked.

Mrs. Brougham got a crafty look in her eye. โ€œI believe so.โ€

โ€œPerhaps Amanda would consent to showing him the area.โ€ With that, my mother smiled a most uncharacteristically innocent and sweet smile.

Perhaps I should add that one of the reasons I am convinced that mine is the finest mother in England is that she is rarely innocent and sweet. Oh, do

not misunderstandโ€”she has a heart of gold and would do anything for her family. But she grew up the fifth in a family of eight, and she can be marvelously devious and underhanded.

Also, she cannot be bested in conversation. Trust me, I have tried.

So when she offered me up as a guide, I could do nothing but say yes, even as three out of four Brougham sisters began to snicker. (The fourth still looked bored. I was beginning to wonder if there might be something wrong with her.)

โ€œTomorrow,โ€ Mrs. Brougham said delightedly. She clapped her hands together and beamed. โ€œI shall send him over tomorrow afternoon. Will that do?โ€

Again, I could say nothing but yes, and so I did, wondering what exactly I had just consented to.

The following afternoon I was dressed in my best riding habit and was lolling about the drawing room, wondering if the mysterious Charles Brougham would actually make an appearance. If he didnโ€™t, I thought, heโ€™d be entirely within his rights. It would be rude, of course, as he was breaking a commitment made on his behalf by his aunt, but all the same, it wasnโ€™t as if heโ€™d asked to be saddled with the local gentry.

Pun unintended.

My mother had not even tried to deny that she was playing matchmaker. This surprised me; I would have thought sheโ€™d put up at least a feeble protest. But instead she reminded me that I had refused a season in London and then began to expound upon the lack of appropriately aged, eligible gentlemen here in our corner of Gloucestershire.

I reminded her that she had not foundย herย husband in London.

She then said something that began with โ€œBe that as it mayโ€ and then veered off so quickly and with such twists and turns that I could not follow a thing she said.

Which I am fairly certain was her intention.

My mother wasnโ€™t precisely upset that I had said no to a season; she was rather fond of our life in the country, and heaven knows my father would not survive in town for more than a week. Mother called me unkind for saying so, but I believe that she secretly agreed with meโ€”Father would get

distracted by a plant in the park, and weโ€™d never find him again. (Heโ€™s a bit distractable, my father.)

Or, and I confess this is more likely, he would say something utterly inappropriate at a party. Unlike my mother, my father does not have the gift of polite conversation, and he certainly does not see the need for double entendre or cunning twists of phrase. As far as he is concerned, a body ought to say what a body means.

I do love my father, but it is clear that he should be kept away from town.

I could have had a season in London, if I wished. My motherโ€™s family is extremely well connected. Her brother is a viscount, and her sisters married a duke, an earl, and a baron. I should be admitted to all of the most exclusive gatherings. But I really didnโ€™t wish to go. I should have no freedom whatsoever. Here I may take walks or go for a ride by myself so long as I tell someone where I am going. In London a young lady may not so much as touch her toe to her front steps without a chaperone.

I think it sounds dreadful.

But back to my mother. She did not mind that I had refused the season because this meant that she would not have to be apart from my father for several months. (Since, as we have determined, he would have to be left at home.) But at the same time, she was genuinely concerned for my future. To that end, she had launched into a bit of a crusade. If I would not go to the eligible gentlemen, she would bring them to me.

Hence Charles Brougham.

At two oโ€™clock he had still not arrived, and I must confess, I was growing irritable. It was a hot day, or at least as hot as it gets in Gloucestershire, and my dark green habit, which had felt so stylish and jaunty when I had donned it, was beginning to itch.

Iย was beginning to wilt.

Somehow my mother and Mrs. Brougham had forgotten to set a time for the nephewโ€™s arrival, so I had been obligated to be dressed and ready at noon precisely.

โ€œWhat time would you say marks the end of the afternoon?โ€ I asked, fanning myself with a folded-up newspaper.

โ€œHmmm?โ€ My mother was writing a letterโ€”presumably to one of her many siblingsโ€”and wasnโ€™t really listening. She looked quite lovely sitting

there by the window. I have no idea what my original mother would have looked like as an older woman, since she did not deign to live that long, but Eloise had not lost any of her beauty. Her hair was still a rich, chestnut color and her skin unlined. Her eyes are difficult to describeโ€”rather changeable in color, actually.

She tells me that she was never considered a beauty when she was young. No one thought she was unattractive, and she was in fact quite popular, but she was never designated a diamond of the first water. She tells me that women of intelligence age better.

I find this interesting, and I do hope it bodes well for my own future.

But at present I was not concerned for any future outside that of the next ten minutes, after which I was convinced I would perish from the heat. โ€œThe afternoon,โ€ I repeated. โ€œWhen would you say it ends? Four oโ€™clock? Five? Please say it isnโ€™t six.โ€

She finally glanced up. โ€œWhat are you talking about?โ€ โ€œMr. Brougham. We did say the afternoon, did we not?โ€ She looked at me blankly.

โ€œI may stop waiting for him once the afternoon passes into evening, may I not?โ€

Mother paused for a moment, her quill suspended in air. โ€œYou should not be so impatient, Amanda.โ€

โ€œIโ€™m not,โ€ I insisted. โ€œIโ€™mย hot.โ€

She considered that. โ€œIt is warm in here, isnโ€™t it?โ€ I nodded. โ€œMy habit is made of wool.โ€

She grimaced, but I noticed she did not suggest that I change. She was not going to sacrifice a potential suitor for anything as inconsequential as the weather. I resumed fanning myself.

โ€œI donโ€™t think his name is Brougham,โ€ Mother said. โ€œI beg your pardon?โ€

โ€œI believe he is related to Mrs. Brougham, not mister. I donโ€™t know what her family name is.โ€

I shrugged.

She went back to her letter. My mother writes an inordinate number of letters. About what, I cannot imagine. I would not call our family dull, but we are certainly ordinary. Surely her sisters have grown bored ofย Georgiana has mastered French conjugationย andย Frederick has skinned his knee.

But Mother likes to receive letters, and she says that one must send to receive, so there she is at her desk, nearly every day, recounting the boring details of our lives.

โ€œSomeone is coming,โ€ she said, just as I was beginning to nod off on the sofa. I sat up and turned toward the window. Sure enough, a carriage was rolling up the drive.

โ€œI thought we were meant to go for a ride,โ€ I said, somewhat irritably.

Had I sweltered in my riding habit for nothing?

โ€œYou were,โ€ Mother murmured, her brow knitting together as she watched the carriage draw near.

I did not think that Mr. Broughamโ€”or whoever was in the carriageโ€” could see into the drawing room through the open window, but just in case, I maintained my dignified position on the sofa, tilting my head ever so slightly so that I could observe the events in the front drive.

The carriage came to a halt and a gentleman hopped down, but his back was to the house and I could see nothing of him other than his height (average) and his hair (dark). He then reached up and assisted a lady down.

Dulcie Brougham!

โ€œWhat is she doing here?โ€ I said indignantly.

And then, once Dulcie had both feet safely on the ground, the gentleman aided another young lady, and then another. And then another.

โ€œDid he bring all of the Brougham girls?โ€ my mother asked. โ€œApparently so.โ€

โ€œI thought they hated him.โ€

I shook my head. โ€œApparently not.โ€

The reason for the sistersโ€™ about-face became clear a few moments later, when Gunning announced their arrival.

I do not know what Cousin Charlesย usedย to look like, but now . . . well, let us just say that any young lady would find him pleasing. His hair was thick and with a bit of wave, and even from across the room I could see that his eyelashes were ridiculously long. His mouth was the sort that always looks as if it is about to smile, which in my opinion is the best sort of mouth to have.

I am not saying that I felt anything other than polite interest, but the Brougham sisters were falling all over themselves to be the one on his arm.

โ€œDulcie,โ€ my mother said, walking forth with a welcoming smile. โ€œAnd Antonia. And Sarah.โ€ She took a breath. โ€œAnd Cordelia, too. What a pleasant surprise to see all of you.โ€

It is a testament to my motherโ€™s skills as a hostess that she did indeed sound pleased.

โ€œWe could not let dear Cousin Charles come over by himself,โ€ Dulcie explained.

โ€œHe does not know the way,โ€ added Antonia.

It could not have been a simpler journeyโ€”one had only to ride into the village, turn right at the church, and it was only another mile until our drive.

But I did not say this. I did, however, look over at Cousin Charles with some sympathy. It could not have been an entertaining drive.

โ€œCharles, dear,โ€ Dulcie was saying, โ€œthis is Lady Crane, and Miss Amanda Crane.โ€

I bobbed a curtsy, wondering if I was going to have to climb into that carriage with all five of them. I hoped not. If it was hot in here, it would be beastly in the carriage.

โ€œLady Crane, Amanda,โ€ Dulcie continued, โ€œmy dear cousin Charles, Mr. Farraday.โ€

I cocked my head at that. My mother was correctโ€”his name was not Brougham. Oh dear, did that mean he was related toย Mrs. Brougham? I found Mr. Brougham the more sensible of the two.

Mr. Farraday bowed politely, and for the briefest of moments, his eyes caught mine.

I should say at this point that I am not a romantic. Or at least I do not think I am a romantic. If I were, I would have gone to London for that season. I would have spent my days reading poetry and my nights dancing and flirting and making merry.

I certainly do not believe in love at first sight. Even my parents, who are as much in love as anyone I know, tell me that they did not love each other instantly.

But when my eyes met Mr. Farradayโ€™s . . .

As I said, it was not love at first sight, since I do not believe in such things. It was not anything at first sight, really, but there was something . . . a shared recognition . . . a sense of humor. Iโ€™m not certain how to describe it.

I suppose, if pressed, that I would say it was a sense of knowing. That somehow I already knew him. Which was of course ridiculous.

But not as ridiculous as his cousins, who were trilling and frilling and fluttering about. Clearly they had decided that Cousin Charles was no longer a beast, and if anyone was going to marry him, it was going to be one of them.

โ€œMr. Farraday,โ€ I said, and I could feel the corners of my mouth pinching in an attempt to hold back a smile.

โ€œMiss Crane,โ€ he said, wearing much the same expression. He bent over my hand and kissed it, much to the consternation of Dulcie, who was standing right next to me.

Again, Iย mustย stress that I am not a romantic. But my insides did a little flip when his lips touched my skin.

โ€œI am afraid that I am dressed for a ride,โ€ I told him, motioning to my riding habit.

โ€œSo you are.โ€

I glanced ruefully at his cousins, who were most assuredly not dressed for any sort of athletic endeavor. โ€œItโ€™s such a lovely day,โ€ I murmured.

โ€œGirls,โ€ my mother said, looking squarely at the Brougham sisters, โ€œwhy donโ€™t you join me while Amanda and your cousin go for a ride? I did promise your mother that she would show him the area.โ€

Antonia opened her mouth to protest, but she was no match for Eloise Crane, and indeed she did not make even a sound before my mother added, โ€œOliver will be down shortly.โ€

That settled it. They sat, all four of them, in a neat row on the sofa, descending as one, with identically placid smiles on their faces.

I almost felt sorry for Oliver.

โ€œI did not bring my mount,โ€ Mr. Farraday said regretfully.

โ€œThat is no matter,โ€ I replied. โ€œWe have an excellent stable. Iโ€™m certain we can find something suitable.โ€

And off we went, out the drawing room door, then out of the house, then around the corner to the back lawn, and thenโ€”

Mr. Farraday sagged against the wall, laughing. โ€œOh, thank you,โ€ he said, with great feeling. โ€œThank you. Thank you.โ€

I was not sure if I should feign ignorance. I could hardly acknowledge the sentiment without insulting his cousins, which I did not wish to do. As I

have mentioned, I do not dislike the Brougham sisters, even if I found them a bit ridiculous that afternoon.

โ€œTell me you can ride,โ€ he said. โ€œOf course.โ€

He motioned to the house. โ€œNone of them can.โ€

โ€œThatโ€™s not true,โ€ I replied, puzzled. I knew I had seen them on horseback at some point.

โ€œThey can sit in a saddle,โ€ he said, his eyes flashing with what could only be a dare, โ€œbut they cannot ride.โ€

โ€œI see,โ€ I murmured. I considered my options and said, โ€œI can.โ€

He looked at me, one corner of his mouth tilted up. His eyes were a rather nice shade of green, mossy with little brown flecks. And again, I got that odd sense of being in accord.

I hope I am not being immodest when I say that there are a few things I do quite well. I can shoot with a pistol (although not with a rifle, and not as well as my mother, who is freakishly good). I can add up sums twice as quickly as Oliver, provided I have pen and paper. I can fish, and I can swim, and above all, I can ride.

โ€œCome with me,โ€ I said, motioning toward the stables.

He did, falling into step beside me. โ€œTell me, Miss Crane,โ€ he said, his voice laced with amusement, โ€œwith what were you bribed for your presence this afternoon?โ€

โ€œYou think your company was not enough reward?โ€ โ€œYou did not know me,โ€ he pointed out.

โ€œTrue.โ€ We turned onto the path toward the stables, and I was happy to feel that the breeze was picking up. โ€œAs it happens, I was outmaneuvered by my mother.โ€

โ€œYou admit to being outmaneuvered,โ€ he murmured. โ€œInteresting.โ€ โ€œYou donโ€™t know my mother.โ€

โ€œNo,โ€ he assured me, โ€œI am impressed. Most people would not confess to it.โ€

โ€œAs I said, you donโ€™t know my mother.โ€ I turned to him and smiled. โ€œShe is one of eight siblings. Besting her in any sort of devious matter is nothing short of a triumph.โ€

We reached the stables, but I paused before entering. โ€œAnd what about you, Mr. Farraday?โ€ I asked. โ€œWith what were you bribed for your presence

this afternoon?โ€

โ€œI, too, was thwarted,โ€ he said. โ€œI was told Iโ€™d escape my cousins.โ€

I let out a snort of laughter at that. Inappropriate, yes, but unavoidable. โ€œThey attacked just as I was departing,โ€ he told me grimly.

โ€œThey are a fierce lot,โ€ I said, utterly deadpan. โ€œI was outnumbered.โ€

โ€œI thought they didnโ€™t like you,โ€ I said.

โ€œSo did I.โ€ He planted his hands on his hips. โ€œIt was the only reason I consented to the visit.โ€

โ€œWhat exactly did you do to them when you were children?โ€ I asked. โ€œThe better question would beโ€”what did they do to me?โ€

I knew better than to claim that he held the upper hand because of his gender. Four girls could easily trounce one boy. I had gone up against Oliver countless times as a child, and although he would never admit it, I bested him more often than not.

โ€œFrogs?โ€ I asked, thinking of my own childhood pranks. โ€œThat was me,โ€ he admitted sheepishly.

โ€œDead fish?โ€

He didnโ€™t speak, but his expression was clearly one of guilt. โ€œWhich one?โ€ I asked, trying to imagine Dulcieโ€™s horror. โ€œAll of them.โ€

I sucked in my breath. โ€œAt the same time?โ€ He nodded.

I was impressed. I suppose most ladies would not find such things attractive, but I have always had an unusual sense of humor. โ€œHave you ever done a flour ghosting?โ€ I asked.

His eyebrows rose, and he actually leaned forward. โ€œTell me more.โ€

And so I told him about my mother, and how Oliver and I had tried to scare her off before sheโ€™d married my father. Weโ€™d been utter beasts. Truly. Not just mischievous children, but utter and complete blights on the face of humanity. Itโ€™s a wonder my father hadnโ€™t shipped us off to a workhouse. The most memorable of our stunts was when weโ€™d rigged a bucket of flour above her door so that it would dust her when she stepped out into the hall.

Except that weโ€™d filled the bucket quite high, so it was more of a coating than a dusting, and in fact more of a deluge than anything else.

We also hadnโ€™t counted on the bucket hitting her on the head.

When I said that my current motherโ€™s entry into our lives had saved us all, I meant it quite literally. Oliver and I were so desperate for attention, and our father, as lovely as he is now, had no idea how to manage us.

I told all this to Mr. Farraday. It was the strangest thing. I have no idea why I spoke so long and said so much. I thought it must be that he was an extraordinary listener, except that he later told me that he is not, that in fact he is a dreadful listener and usually interrupts too often.

But he didnโ€™t with me. He listened, and I spoke, and then I listened and he spoke, and he told me of his brother Ian, with his angelic good looks and courtly manners. How everyone fawns over him, even though Charles is the elder. How Charles never could manage to hate him, though, because when all was said and done, Ian was a rather fine fellow.

โ€œDo you still want to go for a ride?โ€ I asked, when I noticed that the sun had already begun to dip in the sky. I could not imagine how long we had been standing there, talking and listening, listening and talking.

To my great surprise Charles said no, letโ€™s walk instead. And we did.

It was still warm later that night, and so after supper was done I took myself outside. The sun had sunk below the horizon, but it was not yet completely dark. I sat on the steps of the back patio, facing west so I could watch the last hints of daylight turn from lavender to purple to black.

I love this time of the night.

I sat there for quite some time, long enough so that the stars began to appear, long enough so that I had to hug my arms to my body to ward off the chill. I hadnโ€™t brought a shawl. I suppose I hadnโ€™t thought Iโ€™d be sitting outside for so long. I was just about to head back inside when I heard someone approaching.

It was my father, on his way home from his greenhouse. He was holding a lantern and his hands were dirty. Something about the sight of him made me feel like a child again. He was a big bear of a man, and even before heโ€™d married Eloise, back when he didnโ€™t seem to know what to say to his own children, heโ€™d always made me feel safe. He was my father, and he would protect me. He didnโ€™t need to say it, I just knew.

โ€œYouโ€™re out late,โ€ he said, sitting beside me. He set his lantern down and brushed his hands against his work trousers, shaking off the loose dirt.

โ€œJust thinking,โ€ I replied.

He nodded, then leaned his elbows on his thighs and looked out at the sky. โ€œAny shooting stars tonight?โ€

I shook my head even though he wasnโ€™t facing me. โ€œNo.โ€ โ€œDo you need one?โ€

I smiled to myself. He was asking if I had any wishes to be made. We used to wish on stars together all the time when I was small, but somehow weโ€™d got out of the habit.

โ€œNo,โ€ I said. I was feeling introspective, thinking about Charles and wondering what it meant that Iโ€™d spent the whole of the afternoon with him and now could not wait to see him again tomorrow. But I didnโ€™t feel as if I needed any wishes granted. At least, not yet.

โ€œI always have wishes,โ€ he remarked.

โ€œYou do?โ€ I turned to him, my head tilting to the side as I took in his profile. I know that heโ€™d been terribly unhappy before heโ€™d met my current mother, but that was all well behind him. If ever a man had a happy and fulfilled life, it was he.

โ€œWhat do you wish for?โ€ I asked.

โ€œThe health and happiness of my children, first and foremost.โ€ โ€œThat doesnโ€™t count,โ€ I said, feeling myself smile.

โ€œOh, you donโ€™t think so?โ€ He looked at me, and there was more than a hint of amusement in his eyes. โ€œI assure you, itโ€™s the first thing I think about in the morning, and the last before I lay myself down to sleep.โ€

โ€œReally?โ€

โ€œI have five children, Amanda, and every one of them is healthy and strong. And as far as I know, youโ€™re all happy. Itโ€™s probably dumb luck that youโ€™ve all turned out so well, but Iโ€™m not going to tempt any fates by wishing for something else.โ€

I thought about that for a moment. It had never occurred to me to wish for something I already had. โ€œIs it scary being a parent?โ€ I asked.

โ€œThe most terrifying thing in the world.โ€

I donโ€™t know what I thought he might say, but it wasnโ€™t that. But then I realizedโ€”he was speaking to me as an adult. I donโ€™t know if heโ€™d ever

really done so before. He was still my father, and I was still his daughter, but Iโ€™d crossed some mysterious threshold.

It was thrilling and sad at the same time.

We sat together for a few minutes more, pointing out constellations and not saying anything of import. And then, just when I was about to head back inside he said, โ€œYour mother said that you had a gentleman caller this afternoon.โ€

โ€œAnd four of his female cousins,โ€ I quipped.

He looked over at me with arched brows, a silent scolding for making light of the topic.

โ€œYes,โ€ I said. โ€œI did.โ€ โ€œDid you like him?โ€

โ€œYes.โ€ I felt myself grow a bit light, as if my insides had gone fizzy. โ€œI did.โ€

He digested that, then said, โ€œIโ€™m going to have to get a very large stick.โ€ โ€œWhat?โ€

โ€œI used to say to your mother that when you were old enough to be courted, I was going to have to beat away the gentlemen.โ€

There was something almost sweet about that. โ€œReally?โ€

โ€œWell, not when you were very small. Then you were such a nightmare I despaired of anyone ever wanting you.โ€

โ€œFather!โ€

He chuckled. โ€œDonโ€™t say you donโ€™t know itโ€™s true.โ€ I couldnโ€™t contradict.

โ€œBut when you were a bit older, and I started to see the first hints of the woman you would become . . .โ€ He sighed. โ€œGood Lord, if ever being a parent is terrifying . . .โ€

โ€œAnd now?โ€

He thought about that for a moment. โ€œI suppose now I can only hope I raised you well enough to make sensible decisions.โ€ He paused. โ€œAnd of course, if anyone even thinks about mistreating you, I shall still have that stick.โ€

I smiled, then scooted over slightly, so that I could rest my head on his shoulder. โ€œI love you, Father.โ€

โ€œI love you, too, Amanda.โ€ He turned and kissed me on the top of my head. โ€œI love you, too.โ€

Iย did marry Charles, by the way, and my father never once had to brandish a stick. The wedding occurred six months later, after a proper courtship and slightly improper engagement. But I am certainly not going to put into writing any of the events that made the engagement improper.

My mother insisted upon a premarital chat, but this was conducted the night before the wedding, by which time the information was no longer exactly timely, but I did not let on. I did, however, get the impression that she and my father might also have anticipated their marriage vows. I was shocked. Shocked. It seems most unlike them. Now that I have experienced the physical aspects of love, the mere thought of my parents . . .

It is too much to bear.

Charlesโ€™s family home is in Dorset, rather close to the sea, but as his father is very much alive, we have let a home in Somerset, halfway between his family and mine. He dislikes town as much as I do. He is thinking of beginning a breeding program for horses, and itโ€™s the oddest thing, but apparently the breeding of plants and the breeding of animals are not entirely dissimilar. He and my father have become great friends, which is lovely, except that now my father visits quite often.

Our new home is not large and all of the bedrooms are quite near to one another. Charles has devised a new game he calls โ€œSee how quiet Amanda can be.โ€

Then he proceeds to do all measure of wicked things to meโ€”all whilst my father sleeps across the hall!

He is a devil, but I adore him. I canโ€™t help it. Especially when he . . . Oh, wait, I wasnโ€™t going to put any such things in writing, was I?

Just know that I am smiling very broadly as I remember it. And that it wasย notย covered in my motherโ€™s premarital chat.

I suppose I should admit that last night I lost the game. I was not quiet at all.

My father did not say a word. But he departed rather unexpectedly that afternoon, citing some sort of botanical emergency.

I donโ€™t know that plantsย haveย emergencies, but as soon as he left, Charles insisted upon inspecting our roses for whatever it was my father said was wrong with his.

Except that for some reason he wanted to inspect the roses that were already cut and arranged in a vase in our bedroom.

โ€œWeโ€™re going to play a new game,โ€ he whispered in my ear. โ€œSee how noisy Amanda can be.โ€

โ€œHow do I win?โ€ I asked. โ€œAnd what is the prize?โ€

I can be quite competitive, and so can he, but I think it is safe to say that we both won that time.

And the prize was lovely, indeed.

 

 

Meet the Bridgerton family . . .โ€Œ

The Bridgertons are by far the most prolific family in the upper echelons of society. Such industriousness on the part of the viscountess and the late viscount is commendable, although one can find only banality in their choice of names for their children. Anthony, Benedict, Colin, Daphne, Eloise, Francesca, Gregory, and Hyacinth (orderliness is, of course, beneficial in all things, but one would think that intelligent parents would be able to keep their children straight without needing to alphabetize their names).

It has been said that Lady Bridgertonโ€™s dearest goal is to see all of her offspring happily married, but truly, one can only wonder if this is an impossible feat. Eight children? Eight happy marriages? It boggles the mind.

Lady Whistledownโ€™s Society Papers,

Summer 1813

The Duke and I

WHO: Daphne Bridgerton and the Duke of Hastings. WHAT: A sham courtship.

WHERE: London, of course. Where else could one pull off such a thing?

WHY: They each have their reasons, neither of which includes falling in love . . .

 

 

 

 

The Viscount Who Loved Me

The season has opened for the year of 1814, and there is little reason to hope that we will see any noticeable change from 1813. The ranks of society are once again filled with Ambitious Mamas, whose only aim is to see their Darling Daughters married off to Determined Bachelors. Discussion amongst the Mamas fingers Viscount Bridgerton as this yearโ€™s most eligible catch, and indeed, if the poor manโ€™s hair looks ruffled and windblown, it is because he cannot go anywhere without some young miss batting her eyelashes with such vigor and speed as to create a breeze of hurricane force. Perhaps the only young lady not interested in Bridgerton is Miss Katharine Sheffield, and in fact, her demeanor toward the viscount occasionally borders on the hostile.

And that is why, Dear Reader, This Author feels that a match between Bridgerton and Miss Sheffield would be just the thing to enliven an otherwise ordinary season.

LADY WHISTLEDOWNโ€™S SOCIETY PAPERS,ย 13 APRIL 1814

 

 

An Offer From a Gentleman

The 1815 season is well under way, and while one would think that all talk would be of Wellington and Waterloo, in truth, there is little change from the conversations of 1814, which centered around that most eternal of society topicsโ€”marriage.

As usual, the matrimonial hopes among the debutante set center upon the Bridgerton family, most specifically the eldest of the available brothers, Benedict. He might not possess a title, but his handsome face, pleasing form, and heavy purse appear to have made up for that lack handily. Indeed, This Author has heard, on more than one occasion, an Ambitious Mama saying of her daughter: โ€œSheโ€™ll marry a duke . . . or a Bridgerton.โ€

For his part, Mr. Bridgerton seems most uninterested in the young ladies who frequent society events. He attends almost every party, yet he does nothing but watch the doors, presumably waiting for some special person.

Perhaps . . .

A potential bride?

LADY WHISTLEDOWNโ€™S SOCIETY PAPERS,ย 12 JULY 1815

 

 

Romancing Mister Bridgerton

April is nearly upon us, and with it a new social season here in London. Ambitious Mamas can be found at dress-shops all across town with their Darling Debutantes, eager to purchase that one magical evening gown that they simply know will mean the difference between marriage and spinsterhood.

As for their preyโ€”the Determined Bachelorsโ€”Mr. Colin Bridgerton once again tops the list of desirable husbands, even though he is not yet back from his recent trip abroad. He has no title, that is true, but he is in abundant possession of looks, fortune, and, as anyone who has ever spent even a minute in London knows, charm.

But Mr. Bridgerton has reached the somewhat advanced age of three-and-thirty without ever showing an interest in any particular young lady, and there is little reason to anticipate that 1824 will be any different from 1823 in this respect.

Perhaps the Darling Debutantesโ€”and perhaps more importantly their Ambitious Mamasโ€”would do well to look elsewhere. If Mr. Bridgerton is looking for a wife, he hides that desire well.

On the other hand, is that not just the sort of challenge a debutante likes best?

LADY WHISTLEDOWNโ€™S SOCIETY PAPERS

To Sir Phillip, With Love

. . . I know you say I shall someday like boys, but I say never! NEVER!!! With three exclamation points!!!

โ€”from Eloise Bridgerton to her mother, shoved under Violet Bridgertonโ€™s door during Eloiseโ€™s eighth year

. . . I never dreamed that a season could be so exciting! The men are so handsome and charming. I know I shall fall in love straightaway. How could I not?

โ€”from Eloise Bridgerton to her brother Colin, upon the occasion of her London debut

. . . I am quite certain I shall never marry. If there was someone out there for me, donโ€™t you think I should have found him by now?

โ€”from Eloise Bridgerton to her

dear friend Penelope Featherington, during her sixth season as a debutante

. . . this is my last chance. I am grabbing destiny with both my hands and throwing caution to the wind. Sir Phillip, please,ย please,ย be all that I have imagined you to be. Because if you are the man your letters portray you to be, I think I could love you. And if you felt the same . . .

โ€”from Eloise Bridgerton, jotted on a scrap of paper on her way to meet Sir Phillip Crane

 

 

for the very first time

 

When He Was Wicked

WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE WICKED?

For Michael Stirling, it was a hidden love, an insatiable longing for the one woman who could never be his.

WHAT DOES IT MEAN TO BE WANTON?

For Francesca Bridgerton, it started with a single kiss, placed on her lips by the one man she never thought sheโ€™d desire.

WHAT HAPPENS WHEN THERE ARE NO MORE SECRETS?

Find out in Julia Quinnโ€™s most breathtaking and passionate romance yet . . .

 

 

 

 

Itโ€™s In His Kiss

Our Cast of Characters

Hyacinthย Bridgerton:ย The youngest of the famed Bridgerton siblings, sheโ€™s a little too smart, a little too outspoken, and certainly not your average romance heroine. Sheโ€™s also, much to her dismay, falling in love with . . .

Garethย St.ย Clair:ย There are some men in London with wicked reputations, and there are others who are handsome as sin. But Gareth is the only one who manages to combine the two with such devilish success. Heโ€™d be a complete rogue, if not for . . .

Ladyย Danbury:ย Grandmother to Gareth, mentor to Hyacinth, she has an opinion on everything, especially love and marriage. And sheโ€™d like nothing better than to see Gareth and Hyacinth joined in holy matrimony. Luckily, sheโ€™s to have help from . . .

One meddling mother, one overprotective brother, one very bad string quartet, one (thankfully fictional) mad baron, and of course, let us not forget the shepherdess, the unicorn, and Henry the Eighth.

Join them all in the most memorable love story of the year . . .

On the Way to the Wedding

In which:

Firstly, Gregory Bridgerton falls in love with the wrong woman, and

Secondly, she falls in love with someone else, but

Thirdly, Lucy Abernathy decides to meddle; however,

Fourthly, she falls in love with Gregory, which is highly inconvenient because

Fifthly, she is practically engaged to Lord Haselby, but

Sixthly, Gregory falls in love with Lucy. Which leaves everyone in a bit of a pickle.

Watch them all find their happy endings in:

The stunning conclusion to the Bridgerton series Available now

 

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