A Southern socialite heads to the English Cotswolds in this modern spin on Austen’s Emma — from the USA Today –bestselling author of the It Girls series. Spoiled, stylish, socially connected Emma Lee Maxwell has spent her life in the idlest of pursuits—attending debutante balls, organizing sorority mixers, and acting as the unofficial Gossip Queen of Charleston, South Carolina. But when her family’s fortune suddenly dwindles, Emma Lee realizes her days as a Lowcountry Princess are numbered. When she discovers that she’s inherited her aunt’s cottage in the Cotswolds, she hightails it to England, nurturing fantasies of polo matches and jaunts to London. All that social organizing is going to come in handy when Emma Lee plans to take after her namesake and put her people-pleasing ways to good use by becoming the village’s very own matchmaker! And she’ll start with three local brothers… There’s just one skeptical, handsome, charming challenge: the oldest brother, Knightley, is stubbornly insisting Emma Lee abandon her well-meaning ways and focus on making a match of her own—with him… Be sure to read about Emma Lee’s sisters, Manderley and Tara! Praise for Leah Marie Brown’s Novels “Humor, heat, and a sexy Frenchman… Brown’s nod to Daphne du Maurier’s classic is a winner!”—#1 New York Times bestseller Helen Hardt on Dreaming of Manderley “Leah Marie Brown has a wily way of bringing her stories to life with sharp dialogue and drop-dead sexy characters.” — National bestselling author Cindy Miles on Faking
Release date:
October 30, 2018
Publisher:
Lyrical Press
Print pages:
352
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It’s official: I am a crap best friend. Not just moderately crappy, but fantastically crappy. Yep. That’s me. Emma Lee Maxwell, Charlestonian by birth, Clemson grad, unemployed, aspiring matchmaker, craptastic best friend.
I am stuck in bumper-to-bumper traffic on Meeting Street and my best friend’s engagement party starts in ten minutes and I am supposed to be giving the opening toast.
“Pardon me”—I say, leaning forward and tapping the taxi driver’s shoulder—“are you fixing to hang a left on Charlotte Street?”
He squints into the rearview mirror, fixing me with a weary, yellow-eyed gaze.
“You going to the Gadsden House, right?”
“Yes, sir.”
“Meeting to Calhoun to Bay Street.”
“Would you mind taking Charlotte to Alexander to Calhoun instead?” I hold his gaze and smile a big, toothy smile, the same smile that won me a place on Clemson’s All Girl Cheerleading Team. “I’m due at my best friend’s engagement party in nine minutes and I can’t be late. I just can’t.”
His gaze softens.
“I gotchu, girl. Trust in old Charles.”
“Thank you, Mr. Charles,” I say. “I sure do—”
The car behind us beeps its horn and old Charles takes off like a pony at a polo match. We are flying down Meeting Street, whizzing past John Street, Charlotte Street, Henrietta Street . . . and then the car in front of us comes to a sudden, violent stop, crashing into a truck. Old Charles hits the brakes with surprisingly quick reflexes and we lurch to a stop.
The box on the seat beside me—a gift-wrapped silver picture frame I found at George C. Birlant antiques—falls to the ground with a sickening thud. I pick up the box, tears pricking the corners of my eyes when I hear the rattle of broken glass, and check the analog clock on the dashboard.
Eight minutes.
Lexi is counting on me. I can’t let her down.
Traffic has stopped moving in both directions. I lean forward in my seat and look down Calhoun. Traffic isn’t moving on Calhoun either.
“I am sorry, girlie,” Charles says, frowning. “There are more cars than palmetto bugs at a picnic.”
“The Gadsden House is only a ten-minute walk from here. If I run, I might-could make it. What do you think, Mr. Charles?”
“What do I think? I think you should go.”
I reach into my purse, pull out the full taxi fare and tip, and hand it to old Charles. Then, I grab my purse and my gift box. I climb out of the car and start walking briskly toward Calhoun.
Mr. Charles beeps his horn and I look back.
“Run, girlie. Run like a scalded haint!”
For a moment, I wonder what Miss Belle would say if she could see me running through downtown Charleston like an ill-bred chicken with her head cut off. Miss Belle Watling taught comportment and etiquette at Rutledge Hall, the private all-girls academy I attended for the first seventeen years of my life. Poor Miss Belle passed when I was at Clemson. She was having lunch at The Grill, excused herself, and was discovered a quarter of an hour later, dead on the lavatory, her orthopedic hose around her ankles. A most undignified ending for a stickler for Southern morals and manners, even if she did expire wearing her polka-dot-lined picture hat and double strand pearls.
I best stop thinking about what Miss Belle would do if she saw me hightailing it in heels and start thinking about what Miss Lexi will do if I am a no-show at her engagement party. After all, I introduced my best friend to her fiancé, Cash William Aiken III. It was my first official foray into the highly pleasing world of matchmaking. Just thinking about my success sends a double-espresso-strength shot of adrenaline surging through my veins, and I start running down Calhoun Street, past the old Episcopal church and the Charleston County Public Library.
I clutch my purse and Lexi’s gift and run like I’m a scalded haint—whatever that is—until I reach the Saffron Bakery, where the scent of buttery Florentine cookies hangs heavy in the humid evening air. By the light of a flickering gas lantern, I tuck my hair behind my ear and dab the dew from my brow; according to Miss Belle, Southern ladies never perspire. We glisten with dew.
My iPhone was vibrating all the way down Calhoun, so I pull it out of my purse to quickly check my texts.
Text from Madison Van Doren:
Cash’s brother is hot—in a Southern Charm meets Duck Dynasty kind of way. Will you introduce me? Do you think he would consider shaving the sideburns and putting on a pair of socks? Where are you, btw? You’re late.
Text from Roberta Hearst:
Procreation is highly overrated. Fatigue, nausea, constipation, hairy nipples (WTH?). Give Lexi my love and tell her I would rather be at her engagement party than stuck at home on bed rest. Text me all the deets. I want to know everything.
After typing my responses, I walk the short distance from the bakery to the Gadsden House, a magnificent eighteenth-century carriage house with a brick façade and wide, inviting side porches. It was the perfect setting for an engagement party, which is why I’d suggested it when Lexi’s momma phoned asking for my help. Lexi and her people are from Virginia, but Cash is Charleston born and bred.
Ravenel. Calhoun. Middleton. Aiken. Maxwell. Pinckney. Ashley. Barton. Some names have cachet in Charleston, and Aiken is one of them. I know what you must be thinking: You best pray for good weather, Emma Lee Maxwell, because you’ve got your nose so high in the air you would drown in a rainstorm.
I swear on my Kappa Kappa Gamma key I didn’t mean that in a highfalutin, snobby way. It’s not about strutting around town thinking your sh*t tastes like sherbet. It’s about having roots that go deep into Charleston’s sandy soil. It’s about the pride that comes from flipping through the pages of Colonial South Carolina: A History and seeing your ancestor listed as a founding father, someone who helped shape your hometown in a significant, lasting way.
I get the same warm-all-over, puffed-up-with-pride feeling when I imagine myself ten years from now, a successful matchmaker, with stacks of leather-bound albums bulging with photographs of perfectly matched couples. Couples I brought together—same as I brought Lexi and Cash together.
Some might argue that being a matchmaker isn’t as important as helping to write the Constitution of South Carolina, but I strenuously disagree. No disrespect to my nine-times great-granddaddy, Benjamin Josiah Maxwell, but connecting soul mates is as significant an accomplishment as drafting a state’s governing document. Love Matters. Maybe if the world spent more time focusing on the heart and less time focusing on the hate, we wouldn’t be in this school shootings/terrorist attacks/gender divide /racial divide/North Korean Missile Scare meltdown. All’s I’m Sayin’. Hashtag that.
I walk through the open wrought-iron gates into the courtyard, lit by strands of fairy lights strung overhead and crowded with guests already clutching glasses of champagne. Round tables covered with crisp white linen tablecloths and decorated with bouquets of ivory patience garden roses, white peonies, and white hydrangea in mercury glass containers have been arranged beneath the oak trees. A string quartet is playing Debussy’s “Clair de Lune” from their perch on the upper porch, the soft, sweet notes falling gently like morning rain, mixing with the tinkling laughter and clinking glasses.
I deposit my present on the gifts table and pause to take it all in—the candles glowing in hurricane lanterns, the cicadas chirping in the trees, the scent of magnolias perfuming the air—and my heart aches with the sublime perfection of this moment. It literally aches, y’all. Tears flood my eyes. If I don’t get a handle on my emotions, I am going to be doing one of those ugly, mascara-running, just-watched-a-Hallmark-Christmas-movie cries.
Cash and Lexi suddenly appear on the white-painted porch and I just about die. Die! My best friend is wearing an ivory fit-and-flare cocktail gown with a sweetheart neckline. The dress is perfection in lace. Per-fec-shun! I’m serious, y’all. It looks like something Reese Witherspoon—Hail, Queen—would wear in a rom-com about a warmhearted big-city girl who finds love with a wisecracking, small-town boy.
Lexi notices me staring at her and squeals the way best friends do when they haven’t seen each other for years—or several hours. She presses a kiss to Cash’s cheek and walks across the porch, her heels tapping an excited staccato on the wood floor. We meet at the bottom of the stairs and throw our arms around each other. A thick lump forms in my throat, my eyes fill with tears, and I wonder if this is how thousands of mommas feel each September when they drop their children off for their first day of school. Joy and loss commingling until you don’t know whether to laugh or cry. I give her an extra squeeze, blink back my tears, and let her go.
“You look amazing.” I reach for the chiffon overskirt of her gown. “Is this lace or embroidery?”
“Appliqué,” she says, beaming. “It’s a Miiko Sashiko. Can you believe it took three petites mains over two hundred and fifty hours to apply the flowers? Can you imagine being stuck in an atelier for that long, sewing a thousand fabric cherry blossoms?”
“Stuck in Miiko Sashiko’s atelier? To dream.”
Miiko Sashiko won Project Runway four years ago. Since then, she has become the golden child of couture, launching her own label and a line of bespoke leather handbags. She even designed the ethereal gown Hailee Steinfeld wore in her “LoveStruck” music video.
Lexi looks over at Cash.
“You don’t think it makes me look like a Disney Princess?”
“What’s wrong with looking like a Disney Princess?”
Lexi nibbles on her bottom lip and looks down at her feet.
“Lex?”
“Cash said I look like I should be sitting on a parade float, waving at the people on Main Street U.S.A.”
“Is that a bad thing?” I scrunch my nose and look at her through narrowed eyes. “Who wouldn’t want to be compared to a Disney Princess?”
Lexi laughs.
“Right?”
“Who would you be? If you could be a Disney Princess, which princess would you want to be?” Lexi opens her mouth to speak. “Wait!” I cry, holding up my hand. “Let’s answer at the same time. Okay?”
“Okay.” She laughs.
“On three?”
She nods.
“One . . . two . . . three.”
“Rapunzel!”
Of course. Princess Rapunzel is spirited, social, and loyal. She fills her time with art and music and friends—and she has magical blond hair that’s always snatch.
We laugh and hug again.
“We both know there’s only one reason you chose Rapunzel,” I say, pulling a face. “Flynn Rider.”
Lexi sighs and looks at me through dreamy, lovesick eyes.
“It’s true. Flynn is boyfriend goals.”
“Alexandria Armistead, you can’t have boyfriend goals. You have a fiancé now.”
“Fine,” she says, laughing. “The animated hottie is yours.”
“Animated hotties are the best,” I say. “They’re heroic and dependable, and they never break your heart. Put that on a T-shirt.”
“That’s so sad,” Lexi says, drawing the last word out. “Don’t be sad, Emma Lee. You’re going to meet your live-action hottie soon. I just know it. Ooo! Maybe over in England.”
“I am not going to England to meet a man, Lex.”
“What if he has Kit Harington’s hair, Tom Hardy’s voice, and Daniel Craig’s Bond bod?”
Kristen Carmichael, Savannah Warren, and Madison Van Doren, three of our Kappa Kappa Gamma sisters, join us, and more squealing and hugging ensues.
“Did someone say Daniel Craig?” Kristen asks.
Kristen is working to get her doctorate in Sports Psychology. She’s athletic, competitive, a total guys-girl, with a dirty sense of humor and Jennifer Lawrence’s beauty.
“I was saying to Ems she might meet her dream man in England. A guy with Kit Harington’s hair, Tom Hardy’s voice, and Daniel Craig’s body, circa Casino Royale.”
“If we are building our dream man”—Kristen wiggles her eyebrows, and I know what she is going to say before she says it—“can he have Orlando Bloom’s—”
“Kristen Anne Carmichael!” Lexi cries. “Don’t you dare finish that sentence.”
Kristen has been obsessed with Orlando’s bloom ever since the paparazzi released pictures of him paddleboarding stark-nekked. Orlando Bloom. Nekked as baby Jesus in the manger. I can’t unsee that. Ever.
“Don’t Kristen me. If Orlando Bloom walked into this courtyard right now and asked you to go paddleboarding with him, you know you would.”
“I am engaged. To be married.”
Kristen rolls her eyes.
Kristen doesn’t believe in matrimony. It’s my goal to match her with her forever mate after I have a few more successful matches under my belt.
“Daniel Craig and Tom Hardy disdain politics, but Orlando Bloom works with Global Cool to raise awareness about greenhouse gas emissions,” Savannah says, flipping her long, sandy-blond hair off her slender shoulder. “I will keep Orlando, and trade Daniel and Tom for Leonardo DiCaprio.”
Savannah Warren looks fragile, like one of the Olsen twins, but she’s sharp and scrappy. Her granddaddy was a senator and her daddy created the Warren Institute, one of the most influential think tanks in the country. Not surprisingly, Savannah is passionate about politics, especially equality, climate change, and LGBTQ+ rights. When she gets too preachy, I remind her of the time she got crazy drunk on Irish Car Bombs and created her alter ego, Sugar Bush, George W. Bush’s secret illegitimate daughter, who works as a stripper while she puts herself through college. Savannah couldn’t dance her way out of a wet paper sack . . . neither could Sugar.
“Enough about Orlando Bloom!” Maddie says, rolling her eyes. “Can we please talk about Cash’s brother? A little manscaping and he could join my BOMC.”
Madison Van Doren, Maddie, grew up in Greenwich, Connecticut. She’s the sixth child of Winston Van Doren IV, heir to the Van Doren chemical and glass fortune. In college, she changed her major more times than her hairstyle. Eastern Asian Art History, Automotive Engineering, Economics, Anthropology. She dated a bunch of random guys and even flirted with lesbianism, which she confessed to me one Wine Wednesday, after Rosé and Real Housewives. Maddie’s living in New York City and working as a barista in a coffee shop/tattoo parlor while she studies international education at NYU.
“BOMC?” Lexi asks.
“Boff of the Month Club.” Maddie dips her chin, staring at Lexi through the thick black fringe of her blunt-cut bangs. “A new guy every month for twelve months. No obligations. Keep the ones I like, send the rest back.”
“Maddie!” I cry, fanning my flushed cheeks with my hand.
“Madison Rose Van Doren!” Lexi hisses. “You best hush your mouth before my momma hears. Boff of the Month Club!”
Maddie laughs, a wicked little laugh that has me mentally making the sign of the cross for her naughty soul. I swear, y’all, Maddie is not a ratchet girl. She’s just a little lost. Maddie’s mom was the second Mrs. Van Doren. Maddie’s story is tragically cliché: her billionaire father had been married to his first wife for twenty-five years when he met Maddie’s mom, a stunning, five-foot-ten Black Irish model nearly thirty years his junior. Mr. and Mrs. Van Doren (the first) battled it out in divorce court, spending millions in litigation and generating dozens of sensational tabloid headlines. The children from Mr. Van Doren’s first marriage, Maddie’s half siblings, are successful captains of industry and philanthropy, movers and shakers from Manhattan to Malibu, who look down on Maddie. They consider Maddie to be the unfortunate product of their father’s midlife crisis. Maddie’s dad is too old to notice. Her mom is too self-involved to care. I swear, it breaks my heart.
“How about it, Ems?” Maddie fixes her bright gaze on me. “Will you introduce me to Cash’s brother?”
I look from Maddie to Lexi. Lexi keeps her expression blank, a vacant, I’m-not-involved look in her eyes. What would Patti Stanger, Millionaire Matchmaker, do? Patti would advise Maddie to make a nonnegotiable list of the things she absolutely wants in a mate. I am not even sure Maddie knows what she wants in a man (or woman, just saying). How could she identify what she wants in a mate when she can’t even settle on an identity for herself? One week she’s the preppy WASP in summer-weight plaids and J.Crew twinsets; the next week she’s Malibu Barbie, saying things like, Yoga isn’t really yoga unless you’re wearing Lululemon Wunder Under Crop leggings. This week, she’s Beatnik Bettie writing slam poetry and musing about social injustice. God bless her heart.
“Are you talking about the tall ginger with mutton chops in the gingham shirt and khakis?” Kristen nods her head at the bar. “The one over there, slamming back his fourth Old Fashioned?”
“That’s him,” Maddie says.
“You don’t want to go out with him,” Kristen says.
“I don’t?” Maddie frowns.
“Nope.”
“Why not?”
“Yeah, why not?” I ask, interested.
“I heard him talking to another guest about crabbing.”
“So?”
“He said he thought it should be an Olympic sport. Crabbing!” Kristen cries. “I don’t care if you’re wearing a snapback and your high school football jersey, lifting a crab trap out of the water isn’t an athletic competition.”
While my friends argue about the physicality required in crabbing, I search the courtyard for a more suitable addition to Maddie’s Boff of the Month Club: someone more suitable than Cash’s big brother, Chase. Chase Aiken is sweet, but he is dumb as a box of rocks. My daddy used to say, If that boy had an idea, it would die of loneliness. I watch him tip the contents of his old-fashioned glass into his mouth, crushed ice, maraschino cherry, orange slice, and all. He notices me watching and flashes a big, old smile, an orange rind where his teeth should be. Sweet baby Jesus and Forrest Gump, too! I can’t possibly encourage someone as bright as Maddie to hook up with a man who lives on the special bus. I am not being mean, y’all. Chase lives on a converted school bus parked out behind his granddaddy’s house on the Wadmalaw. It literally says Santee Special Education in big block letters on the sides.
I shift my gaze to B. Crav. Beauregard Cravath III—B. Crav to his friends—is a member of Charleston’s ancient elite. The Cravaths are an influential political family with roots going clear back to the seventeenth century. B. Crav is an enthusiastic polo player. His Whitney Turn Up is the social event of the polo season, a raucous, Moët-fueled party with a guest list comprised of blue bloods from all over the world. B. Crav has serious connections that stretch far beyond our magnolia-shaded borders. . . He’s also a philandering playboy who has tried to bed or wed every woman under thirty from the Mason– Dixon to the Florida–Georgia line. He would chew my friend up and spit her out.
Hmm. Maybe one of the Barton twins. Truman and Tavish Barton, known around Charleston as Those Barton Boys—usually said in an exasperated tone on account of their wild ways—are wealthy, worldly, and definitely eligible. I narrow my gaze and study their carefully coiffed chestnut curls and ubiquitous bow ties. I reckon they’re handsome-ish. They’re also two of my sister’s best friends, so . . .
The twins notice me staring and stroll over.
“Hey, dahlin’,” Tavish says, giving me a side hug.
“Emma Lee Maxwell, as I live and breathe.” Truman drawls out his vowels, letting them roll around on his mouth, savoring each one as if it were a drop of Old Fitzgerald Bourbon. “What’s this I hear about you leaving Charleston?”
“That’s right,” Tavish chimes in. “Tara said you’re moving to Hong Kong to write fortunes for a fortune cookie manufacturer.”
“Wrong, Brother,” Truman says. “Emma Lee is moving to Mars to be a space travel agent . . . or was it Japan to be a panda fluffer?”
“What’s a panda fluffer?” Tavish says. “Is that even a job?”
“Oh, it’s a job!” Truman cries.
“Pandas are frigid, lazy animals,” Maddie deadpans. “Often, pandas in captivity must be induced to mate. The captivity center in Chengdu employs panda handlers who are tasked with introducing virile male pandas to sexually responsive females.”
“That’s right!” Truman grins at Maddie. “Who are you, dahlin’, and why haven’t we been introduced?” Truman looks at me through narrowed eyes. “I fear your future as a panda fluffer, Emma Lee Maxwell. What are you waiting for, girl? Introduce this virile panda to your friend.”
“Eww.” I wrinkle my nose up and shudder like I just caught whiff of something foul. “There are so many things wrong with that vulgar statement, I don’t even know where to begin.”
“Begin by introducing me to your friend.”
Emma Lee Maxwell’s Facebook Update:
According to Bride Magazine, December is the most popular month for getting engaged. If you are reading this post Jackson Harper you have six months to find a ring and pluck up your courage, boy!
I know what my sister and her friends think: poor, vapid Emma Lee Maxwell. She’s Life of the Party Barbie, fashionably dressed in designer heels and Lily Pulitzer dress, swirling from cotillion to Clemson, perpetually surrounded. . .
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