In the next sparkling romance in debut author
Charis Michael’s Bachelor Lords of London series, a proper viscount meets his
match in a beguiling virgin who can't help but break all the rules.
The Virgin
Lady Elisabeth Hamilton-Baythes has a painful secret. At the innocent age of fifteen, she was abducted by highwaymen and sold to a brothel. After two days, a young lord discovers her and enacts a brave rescue to get her out. Now she's a grown woman, working to save other girls from the horror she saw that night and never forgetting the young man who rescued her.
The Viscount
Bryson Courtland, Viscount Rainsleigh has overcome an abusive boyhood, neglectful parents, and a bankrupt title to be one of the wealthiest noblemen in Britain. He works tirelessly to be upright and forthright and proper to a fault. Now he requires only one thing: A proper, forthright, proper wife.
The Unraveling
When a charity event puts Lord Bryson and Lady Elisabeth face-to-face, Bryson has no memory of the wounded girl of long ago. All he can see is a perfect candidate to be his future wife. Elisabeth has never forgotten him, but she worries that the brave boy who saved her so long ago has become a rich man with an unfulfilled life.
As a whirlwind courtship reveals the truth, Bryson must accept that Elisabeth is actually a shadow from his dark past, while Elisabeth must show that love is the noblest virtue of all.
Lady Elisabeth Hamilton-Baythes has a painful secret. At the innocent age of fifteen, she was abducted by highwaymen and sold to a brothel. After two days, a young lord discovers her and enacts a brave rescue to get her out. Now she's a grown woman, working to save other girls from the horror she saw that night and never forgetting the young man who rescued her.
The Viscount
Bryson Courtland, Viscount Rainsleigh has overcome an abusive boyhood, neglectful parents, and a bankrupt title to be one of the wealthiest noblemen in Britain. He works tirelessly to be upright and forthright and proper to a fault. Now he requires only one thing: A proper, forthright, proper wife.
The Unraveling
When a charity event puts Lord Bryson and Lady Elisabeth face-to-face, Bryson has no memory of the wounded girl of long ago. All he can see is a perfect candidate to be his future wife. Elisabeth has never forgotten him, but she worries that the brave boy who saved her so long ago has become a rich man with an unfulfilled life.
As a whirlwind courtship reveals the truth, Bryson must accept that Elisabeth is actually a shadow from his dark past, while Elisabeth must show that love is the noblest virtue of all.
Prologue
On April 12, 1809, Franklin “Frankie” Courtland, 6th
Viscount Rainsleigh, tripped on a root in the bottom of a riverbed and
drowned. He was drunk at the time,
picnicking with friends on the banks of the River Wylye. According an account later given to the
magistrate, his lordship simply fell over, bumped into a fallen log, and sank.
It was there he remained—“enjoying the cool,” or so
his friends believed—until he became too heavy, too slippery, and, alas, too
dead to revive. But they did dislodge
him; and after that, they claimed he floated to the surface, bobbed several
times, and then gently glided downstream.
He was later found just before sunset, face down and bloated (in life,
as also in death), beached on a pebble shoal near Codford.
At the time the elder Courtland was sinking to the
bottom of the river, his son and heir, Bryson was hunched over a desk in the
offices of his fledgling shipping company, waiting for the very moment his
father would die. It had been an
exceedingly long, progressively humiliating wait. Years long—nay, decades.
Luckily for Bryson, for his ships and his future,
he was capable of doing more things at once than wait, and while his father
drank and debauched his way through all respectability and life, Bryson worked.
It was an unthinkable thing for a young heir and
nobleman—to “work”—but Bryson was given little choice, considering the
impoverished state of the Rainsleigh crest.
He was scarcely eleven years of age when he made first foray into labor,
and not so many years after, into private enterprise. His life in work had not ceased since. On the rare occasion that he didn’t work, he
studied.
With his meager earnings (he began by punting boats
on the very river in which his father later drowned), he made meager
investments. These investments reaped
small gains—first in shares in the punting station; later in property along the
water; later still, in other industry up and down the river.
Bryon lived modestly, worked ceaselessly, and
spared only enough to pay his way through Cambridge, bring up his brother, and
see him educated him, as well. Every
guinea earned was reinvested. He
repeated the process again and again, a little less meagerly each time
‘round.
By the time the elder viscount’s self-destructive
lifestyle wrought his river- and drink-soaked end, Bryson had managed to accrue
a small fortune, launch a company that built and sailed ships, and construct an
elaborate plan for what he would do when his father finally cocked up his toes
and died.
When at last that day came, Bryson had but one
complaint: it took fifty-two hours for the constable to find him. He was a viscount for two days before anyone,
including himself, even knew it.
But two days was a trifle compared to a lifetime of
waiting. And on the day he learned of
his inheritance—nay, the very hour—he launched his long awaited plan.
By three o’clock on the fourth day, he’d razed the
rotting, reeking east wing of the family estate in Wiltshire to the ground.
Within the week, he’d extracted his mother from the
west wing and shipped her and a contingent of discreet caregivers to a villa in
Spain.
Within the month,
he’d sold every stick of furniture, every remaining fork and dish, every
sweat-soaked toga and opium-tinged gown.
He burned the drapes, burned the rugs, burned the tapestries. He delivered the half-starved horses and the
fighting dogs to an agricultural college and pensioned off the remaining staff.
By the six-week mark,
he’d unloaded the London townhome—sold at auction to the highest bidder—and
with it, the broken-down carriage, his father’s dusty arsenal, what was left of
the wine stores, and all the lurid art.
It was a whirlwind
evacuation, a gutting, really, and no one among polite society had ever
witnessed a son or heir take such absolute control and haul away so much family
or property quite so fast.
But no one among polite society was acquainted with
Bryson Anders Courtland, the new Viscount Rainsleigh.
And no one understood that it was not so much an
ending as it was an entirely fresh start.
Once the tearing down ceased, the rebuilding could begin. New
viscountsy, new money, new respect, new life.
It was an enterprise into which Bryson threw
himself like no other. Unlike all others, however, he could only do so much,
one man, alone. For this, he would require another. A partner.
Someone with whom he could work together towards a common goal. A collaborator who emulated his precise,
immaculate manner. A matriarch, discreet and pure. A paragon of propriety. A viscountess. A proper, perfect wife.
I liked that both the heroine and hero are in their 30's and never been married as it is not very usual for historical romances. Although Elizabeth seems like the perfect wife for Bryson based on paper, and their attraction is mutual, at first her charity work and then a secret from their past changes their budding relationship into a business transaction. I was bit frustrated by Bryson's pursuit of perfection as he tried and failed to keep an emotional distance from Elizabeth. I understand his childhood drove him to be different from his parents, but it blinded him to the future he could have with Elizabeth by his side. I did enjoy seeing him lose control at times and the way he developed emotionally as the story progressed. I was thrown for a loop by a secret that was revealed and that changed their lives, but I loved what it does for Bryson. Very entertaining read, I would recommend to historical romance lovers. This was my first time reading Charis Michaels, but I am very curious to read about the first couple in this series as well Bryson's younger brother Beau.
I received an ARC via Edelweiss for the purpose of an honest review. I was not compensated for this review, all conclusions are my own.
Charis Michaels is thrilled to be making her
debut with Avon Impulse. Prior to writing romance, she studied Journalism at
Texas A&M and managed PR for a trade association. She has also worked as a
tour guide at Disney World, harvested peaches on her family’s farm, and
entertained children as the “Story Godmother” at birthday parties. She has
lived in Texas, Florida, and London, England. She now makes her home in the
Washington, D.C.-metro area.
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