The sweetest gift is the hardest to unwrap. . . Lady Victoria Allen-Hill never dreamed she'd be a widow at twenty-one—let alone a virgin. Her father insists that she attend a matchmaking house party in the snow-covered seaside town of Pevensey in hopes she'll find a suitable husband. But for Victoria, it's an opportunity to indulge in a passionate affair—and the handsome inventor she meets at the Christmas Eve masquerade ball may be just the man for the job. . . Lewis Noble is the cousin of London's famed Redcake sisters, so it almost stands to reason that he's just as irresistible as one of their sugar-iced pastries. Lewis catches the eye of every woman at the party—but Victoria is the only one who catches his. He won't be tied down in her father's business, but watching other men court her amid a flurry of engagements ignites a jealousy he's never felt before. A dose of honesty may be just the thing to mend their broken hearts—for many holidays to come. . . "Before I realized it, the unusually strong and well-developed characters of The Kidnapped Bride had sneaked up on me and captured my full attention. This is one of the best shorter books I have ever read. --Delle Jacobs, author of Lady Wicked "A delightful, sexy glimpse into Victorian life and loving with two wonderfully non-traditional lovers." --Jessa Slade, author of Dark Prince's Desir e on His Wicked Smile 90,300 Words
Release date:
November 1, 2014
Publisher:
eOriginals
Print pages:
278
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“I’ll tell you a story while we wait for the carriage,” said Victoria, Lady Allen-Hill. “Once upon a time, long ago, in the south of England, a princess was left behind to guard the family castle while her father was at war in France.”
“Is this the castle where we’re spending Christmas?” Penelope Courtnay asked from her seat against the wall in Redcake’s tearoom. Cutouts of Father Christmas dangled on green ribbons above her head, dancing against the wall as waitresses called cakies walked around briskly, serving customers.
“Yes. Though it was in sorry shape in those days.” Victoria had to bend over the table to be heard through the din of patrons clattering teacups against saucers and talking excitedly about holiday plans.
“Continue,” said Penelope.
Victoria thought her nine-year-old cousin sounded very grown-up, but then, she had little experience with children. “Very well. This princess, Everilda by name, had spent the beginning of winter stuffing herself with all sorts of game, every bird that could be slaughtered, bread, and frumenty. She’d made herself so ill that when a strange old serving woman approached the dais of her father’s great hall on Christmas Day, with the first mince pie of the Twelve Days, she refused to eat any of it.
“Her retainers looked nervous. The chamberlain bent over her shoulder and whispered, ‘Princess Everilda, it is bad luck to refuse mince pie.’
“‘Oh good heavens,’ the princess said. ‘Here, serving wench, bring me your pie.’
“The woman approached, offering her enormous pie with trembling arms. Princess Everilda stuck in her spoon and pulled out a steaming mass of liberally spiced shredded meat and apple. While she had never heard of the chamberlain’s superstition before, she did know you were supposed to make a wish with your first bite of Christmas mince pie. So she closed her eyes and wished for a husband to take all the cares of running the castle away from her. Thankfully, this was a reasonable wish, as she was betrothed to none other than her beloved, after overcoming a number of obstacles.
“No sooner had she swallowed her first bite when the old woman dropped the mince pie on the long table in front of the princess. She seemed to grow before the princess’s very eyes, until she stood upright, much younger than she had seemed, and now dressed regally.
“ ‘Queen Avice!’ the princess shouted in horror. It was her stepmama, returned from the grave.”
“Ewww,” Penelope said, then coughed as her soup went down the wrong way.
Victoria stood and patted her on the back. “You have to expect ghosts in fairy tales.”
“And wishes,” her cousin added with another cough.
“Exactly.” She reseated herself.
Penelope took a sip of milk. “I’m fine. Go on. We still have lots of time before we have to go to the train station.”
Victoria nodded. “The shade cackled and pointed her finger at the princess. ‘Twelve times shall the clock turn round and round before you find your love. Strife and spice, mummery and magic, ghosts and goblins, quests and questions shall fill your days and nights.’ ”
“My goodness, what a stirring tale!” exclaimed Penelope. “Are you just making this up as you go?”
“I’m glad you like it,” Victoria said. She was enjoying her story spinning. “Yes, it is my own creation.”
“Will you tell me more? I’ll try to be quiet.”
“Finish your soup,” Victoria told her young cousin. “Redcake’s makes the most delicious cream of broccoli.”
“Why didn’t you want any?” Penelope asked, spooning up a glistening green-speckled spoonful.
“I’m reducing,” Victoria said mournfully.
“Haven’t you reduced enough? Why, you are entirely a different shape than you were on your wedding day.”
“From the mouths of babes,” Victoria said, raising an eyebrow. Was her cousin correct? Had she beaten her unruly curves into submission?
“I could never say no to a bun,” her cousin said.
“Not at Redcake’s, certainly,” Victoria murmured. “They make the best in London.” She sighed and looked down at the crumbs of her abstemious plate of clear chicken soup and single slice of gingerbread.
“I expect, now that’s it’s been almost a year and a half since Sir Humphrey died, you’ll want to find another husband. Is that why you’re reducing? You didn’t have trouble finding your first husband.”
“My father found him for me,” she said. A cakie leaned over their table and lifted the lid of their teapot, then poured in more steaming water.
“Didn’t you like him?” Penelope’s forehead wrinkled. She was much too young to understand the complicated getting of titled husbands.
“I hardly had the time to discover whether I did or not. He died so soon after the wedding.” Victoria smiled her thanks to the cakie.
“You didn’t even know if you liked being married or not,” Penelope stated.
“Exactly.” Sir Humphrey had been red-faced and sniffling on their wedding day. By the next night, he’d had a fever. A week later, his cold had gone into his chest. Bronchitis followed, then pneumonia. He’d left her, his still-virgin bride, for a permanent home in Highgate Cemetery less than a month after their wedding. She’d always wondered if she’d been more physically appealing, would he have managed to consummate the thing on that first night, before he’d become too ill. As it was, she’d been denied the mysteries of physical love.
Penelope spooned up her last bite of soup, then cut her scone in half and layered it thickly with strawberry jam. Saliva pooled in Victoria’s mouth. To distract herself, she spun more of her tale.
“Princess Everilda knew her betrothed was meant to arrive at the castle that very evening. What could possibly happen to keep him away for another twelve days?
“ ‘What have you done?’ she shouted at the dead queen’s shade. ‘Prince Hugh is supposed to ride in at any moment.’
“The ghost’s eyes were nothing but dark pits as they stared into the princess’s very soul. ‘You have treated him badly.’
“ ‘He was your stepson,’ the princess hissed. ‘I assumed he was as wicked as you are. But I’ve learned he has a heart of gold. What must I do to save him?’
“ ‘I’ll make you a bargain,’ said the shade, its voice as caressing as shards of ice.”
“No bargains,” Penelope said around a mouthful of scone. The jam had stained the corners of her mouth red. “Bargains are always bad.”
“Tell that to the princess,” Victoria said smartly. “Now, back to the story.
“ ‘What must I do?’ Princess Everilda gasped. Her stomach grumbled and she dearly wished for a bowl of frumenty.
“The shade smirked, as much as shades can smirk with their faces going in and out of focus. ‘Save the merman in the sea, visit two croaking ravens, let three bells stay unrung, allow four jars to be unopened, notice five melting coins cold, see six tarts untasted, bring seven swans their lives untaken.’
“ ‘That’s only seven,’ said the princess sharply, for she was no fool,” Victoria said.
Penelope giggled and thrust out her foot, kicking over an overflowing bagful of Redcake’s Tea and cookie tins that belonged to patrons at the next table.
“Oh, dear. Terribly sorry,” Victoria murmured without looking up. Penelope added her apologies.
“ ‘You’ll give up long before that,’ said the shade, with a hint of the black humor the dead queen had possessed in life. ‘You never had much sticking power.’
“ ‘How dare you!’ Princess Everilda cried. ‘This is Prince Hugh’s life at stake!’ ” Victoria said.
Someone at the next table tittered, and Victoria glanced over to see one of the Redcake sisters, the youngest one the same age as she, staring at her with amusement.
“What?” Victoria asked. Had she been too loud or overly dramatic? Her story was carrying her away.
“That isn’t a very Christmassy story,” the blonde Redcake said with a cough. “It sounds like something for All Hallow’s Eve.”
“Dickens used ghosts in a Christmas story,” said Victoria, defensive.
“Very well,” said Miss Redcake. “But it needs refinement. Why is the princess so obsessed with food? Aren’t princesses all perfect?”
“Not my princess,” Victoria snapped.
Miss Redcake tilted her head. “You can’t ever have been terribly concerned with food. You have a dashing figure.”
Victoria blinked. “You must never have seen me before today. I used to be as plump as a Christmas goose.”
“Actually, I thought we were acquainted,” Miss Redcake said. “Or I wouldn’t have spoken. I’m in London so rarely that I simply thought I’d forgotten your name.”
“I’m Lady Allen-Hill, but I was Victoria Courtnay before I married Sir Humphrey.”
“Oh, your name does sound familiar. I’m Rose Redcake,” she said.
“I’ve met your brother-in-law and his brother,” Victoria said. “The Marquess of Hatbrook and Lord Judah? I’ve seen the rest of you at parties and things, ages ago.”
“You haven’t been to London recently?” Miss Redcake inquired.
“No. I was in mourning, you see. My husband died.” Victoria picked at the jet mourning ring she still wore on her left hand.
“How dreadful. One goes to such trouble to find a husband, you don’t want to lose him.”
“Exactly,” Victoria murmured. “Found one for yourself yet?”
“No, I’m buried in the country, thanks to my lung problems,” Miss Redcake said. “I can’t come into Town without becoming ill, you see.”
“You’re here now,” Penelope interjected.
“Just to run errands, really. I only spent one night here, but I had some new dresses ordered. Then it’s back to Sussex on the train.”
“We’re leaving for Sussex soon, too,” Penelope said. The high pitch of her voice told Victoria her cousin was eager to join in the adult conversation. “We’re going to Pevensey.”
Miss Redcake smiled. “We live near Polegate, only about four miles from Pevensey. Are you going to the house party at Pevensey-Sur-Mer Fort? Some friends of ours are going, and we’ve been invited for dinners and balls and such.”
“Speaking of the Fort, we should leave for Victoria Station soon,” Victoria said.
Miss Redcake looked up at the clock on the wall, which had been wrapped in red ribbon for the season. “So should I.”
“Let’s share a carriage,” Penelope said eagerly. “Then we can hear more of my cousin’s story.”
“I’m sure Miss Redcake doesn’t want to hear that,” Victoria protested.
“But she was listening to every word,” Penelope insisted. “I saw her.”
“It’s not polite to watch people,” Victoria said, her cheeks flaming.
Miss Redcake looked amused. Then her expression shifted and she lifted her handkerchief and coughed, a phlegmy, rattling sound. “I would be happy to join you. I didn’t expect to travel alone, but my sister was delayed in Bristol.”
“Uncle Rupert was delayed in Liverpool. We weren’t supposed to travel alone either,” Penelope said.
“I’m sure three ladies together will be perfectly safe,” Victoria said, pulling out her reticule and putting coins on the table. Miss Redcake hoisted her rattling bag, which made her cough again. This time, a wheeze came with it.
Victoria reached out her hand and grasped the bag. “I’ll take that, shall I? We sent our baggage on ahead.”
“Oh, thank you,” said Miss Redcake, flustered. “I just have this small valise.” She hefted a heavy-looking leather case that had been resting under her table.
Victoria looked at the case, then at Penelope. The girl was too small to carry it. She handed the shopping bag to her cousin and took the valise herself, thankful her new slimness and less cumbersome second-stage mourning attire gave her the energy to haul heavy luggage.
Thankfully, her carriage was only a couple of paces away from the front entrance of Redcake’s, and the luggage was soon stowed away for the trip to the station. An hour later, they were seated in a first-class compartment heading to Sussex. Victoria found the gentle jostling rather restful, but she could tell the train fumes made Miss Redcake increasingly ill.
“I have a flask of cognac. Would it help?”
“No,” said Miss Redcake, pulling out a vial. “But I shall apply my smelling salts.” She opened the vial and breathed deeply. A hint of color returned to her pale cheeks.
The scent of lavender oil filled the cabin. Penelope wrinkled her nose, but Victoria found the scent soothing.
“You know,” said Miss Redcake, “ghost stories go very well with Sussex. We’ve been told Roman and Norman soldiers haunt ruins near our house. There are shell keep remains on the grounds.”
“Can you tell us a story?” Penelope asked.
“I think Miss Redcake should rest,” Victoria said. She hoped this part of her holiday didn’t foreshadow how the house party would go. She was hoping for some good old-fashioned fun of the sort that had doors opening onto corridors and tiptoeing around late at night, not tea with children and ghost stories. By Twelfth Night, she wanted all the mysteries she’d been denied exploring to be completely open to her.
“I know a story about birds,” Miss Redcake said dreamily. “I particularly remember it because my cousin Lewis used to make automaton birds. They spoke in the eeriest voices. When I hear the story I think of his creations.”
“Oh, do tell,” Penelope urged. “You can stop any time you feel out of breath.”
Miss Redcake nodded and began to tell her story, intermixed with pauses to sniff her salts.
“My goodness,” murmured Victoria, barely listening. Another tale of spurned lovers. She’d rather hear one about a lover catching the girl. The tale enthralled her young cousin, though.
“Lucky her,” Victoria said sarcastically, as her companion wrapped up her poetic tale with the heroine’s virtue untouched.
Miss Redcake giggle-coughed. “Lady Allen-Hill,” she chided.
“Victoria, please,” she interjected. “And I must call you Rose.”
“And me, Penelope,” the child said, eager to be included in this gesture of friendship when Rose nodded assent. “Where did you hear that story?”
“It’s the sort of thing my mother likes,” Rose said. “She’s a painter. I expect she told me the story while sketching out the scene.”
Penelope stilled. Was she thinking about her own mother? Victoria didn’t know why her father had taken on guardianship of their cousin. She had found it an irritation without considering too deeply the reasons for it. Penelope had stayed with them the summer before she’d married as well. She’d been much more withdrawn and childlike then. Victoria had heard her crying out in her sleep every night, though it didn’t wake the girl. Now she was just angry and overly active.
“Has your cousin designed a sedge warbler automaton?” Victoria asked, mentioning a bird she knew was common near their destination.
“No, he makes larger, prettier birds. Or so he did, when he had the leisure to do so.”
“It does sound like a fascinating hobby.” She liked the idea of a man who knew how to use his hands. And physical labor tended to build up the muscles. Very attractive.
“Very dirty.” Rose scrunched up her nose. “All those machine parts and greasy substances. But the end results were either interesting or useful.”
“I want to hear about the Romans and the Normans,” Penelope said.
“They wouldn’t be the same story,” Rose told her. “Romans and Normans were more than a thousand years apart, I believe.”
“Then why are Romans haunting a Norman shell keep?”
“I expect there was a Roman structure there before the keep. Defensive features are often reused.”
“You sound very well educated,” Victoria murmured. “Do any of those doughty ghosts take corporeal form?”
Rose giggled. “Lady Allen-Hill! I mean, Victoria. How racy of you.”
The train lurched, and Penelope fell against Victoria.
Penelope righted herself. “I want a Christmas story. Do you know any Roman ones, Rose?”
“The Romans didn’t celebrate Christmas, you know. They were pagans,” Victoria said.
“They did have Saturnalia,” Rose said thoughtfully. “It’s a pagan festival in December, celebrating the Roman god Saturn.”
“Do you know any ghost stories from your neighborhood about that?”
“I do actually. ‘The Ghost Lights.’ ”
“That sounds promising,” Penelope said, resting her head against Victoria’s arm as the train jerked again.
“Ice on the tracks?” Victoria asked.
Rose wiped a spot clear on the window and peered out. “It’s snowing.”
A conductor opened the door and poked his head into the compartment. “We’re getting word of trouble with the branch lines. I believe the end of the road tonight will be Brighton.” He shut the door.
“That’s twenty miles from Polegate,” Rose said.
“We’ll have to cable to get a carriage,” Victoria said. “Unless we can hire something at the station.”
“My father’s driver, Robbie, will have it all arranged,” Rose said with an air of confidence. “He will have discovered the line to Polegate is closed and will drive to Brighton. We can take you to the Fort.”
“Are you sure? It will be a cold drive.”
“They will keep us for the night, if it is too late to return to Redcake Manor.” Rose hid a yawn behind her gloved hand.
“ ‘The Ghost Lights?’ ” Penelope probed with a childish disinterest in their travel arrangements.
Rose sat back. “Oh yes. On the mound, every December eighteenth. That’s when Saturnalia began, so we’re told. It was a festival of lights, you know, to make the human sacrifices more visible.”
Victoria’s brows lifted. “They had human sacrifice?”
Rose nodded cheerfully and continued her tale. “Of the local Christians.”
“How Christmassy,” Victoria said, remembering Rose’s earlier complaint about her story.
Rose threw up her hands. “But the lights are pretty.”
“They’re real?” Penelope’s eyes widened.
“Yes. Probably gases or bugs or something.”
“Or the ghosts of a hundred Roman soldiers, protesting the death of a good Christian,” Penelope said reverently, fingering the cross around her neck, one her mother had given her for her seventh birthday.
Christian zeal irritated Victoria, and Penelope’s mother had been something of a fanatic, following her vicar’s wife around Liverpool like an acolyte, aping her good deeds. Victoria had never liked the desperate light in her aunt’s eyes. Why had her child been removed from her? Because of religious fervor?
They continued trading stories until their train pulled in at Brighton Station. The wind buffeted them when they reached Trafalgar Street, but Rose recognized her family’s carriage.
“How did it get here so quickly?” Victoria asked, battling with her hat against a gust.
“They must have known hours ago.” The sound of Rose’s cough was hidden by the wind.
The driver jumped down from the seat to help the porter they had acquired with Victoria and Penelope’s considerable baggage.
“We’ve warm blankets,” Robbie said. Rose allowed him to help her into the carriage as the porter wrestled with the bags.
With a sigh, Victoria took Penelope’s arm and followed Rose. She hoped they could reach Polegate in two hours, but that speed was unlikely with hired horses and their baggage weighing down the carriage. At this time of year, it was already dark. Inside the carriage, a lantern swung dizzily, creating a kaleidoscope of her companions’ faces.
The driver had been able to supply thick sandwiches and jars of water. Victoria refused it all; she could see that whoever had prepared it had not been expecting to feed three people. Penelope was growing fast, and in a spindly stage. She needed the food far more than Victoria.
A good three hours passed before the horses slowed as they approached Polegate. “I’m sure we can find accommodation for you at the Manor,” Rose suggested with a yawn.
Victoria blinked, startled out of a half sleep by her words. “How much farther to Pevensey?”
“Another seven miles,” Rose told her.
“Then we shall accept your kind invitation,” she said, looking at her cousin, fast asleep with her head on Victoria’s lap. Once again, she remembered the bawdy fun she’d dreamed of when she’d first accepted this invitation for a holiday house party on the coast. Nothing was working out as she had imagined.
They had a late start the next morning, since Lady Redcake, Rose’s mother, had insisted they allow Robbie a full night’s rest. Victoria and Penelope ate breakfast with the family in the formal dining room. The two fireplaces, one on either end of the room, were covered in holly and evergreen boughs, and two small trees on tables near one of the fireplaces had cheerful red ribbons tied to many of their branches, along with an assortment of German ornaments. When Victoria had two steaming cups of black tea in her, she realized that the next day was Christmas Eve.
“How nice to have a house full of family,” she said politely to Lady Redcake, hoping to distract herself from the plate of fried apple dumplings that had been placed in the middle of the table after everyone had served themselves from savory dishes on the sideboard. The scent of cinnamon had her mouth watering.
“This is not everyone, of course,” Lady Redcake said, her flowing sleeve drifting into her bowl of porridge. “Just our youngest daughters and one grandchild. We will see Alys and her family tomorrow afternoon, and Sir Gawain and his family for Epiphany.”
“I didn’t realize you’d married, or been widowed, Lady Allen-Hill,” Matilda, the middle daughter, broke in. She did not share her younger sister’s cool blond looks but had red hair, pulled severely away from her face, and a dusting of large brown freckles across her cheeks and forehead.
“I did become engaged in London but married in Liverpool very quietly,” Victoria said. “My husband passed suddenly and then—”
“And then you had to go into mourning for what, twenty-four times longer than you’d been wed?” Matilda interrupted. “Outrageous, really, these customs of ours.”
“Matilda has become quite strong-minded.” Lady Redcake sighed. “She’s working in the family business now. Do you do the same?”
Victoria gave in to temptation and reached for an apple dumpling. Penelope giggled. With a sigh, Victoria cut the fragrant pastry in half and slid a portion onto Penelope’s plate, though she thought it would have been quite reasonable to keep all of the fruit for herself.
“Cousin Victoria has taken charge of me.” Penelope poured cream from a jug over her dumpling, overflowing the plate. “And I’m quite a handful.”
Victoria’s fork stopped just over her sugar-iced pastry. “Penelope!”
Sir Bartley, Rose’s father, chuckled. “The young lady has just proved her point. You will have a time managing this one. No children of your own?”
Victoria shook her head. “No, I wasn’t blessed.”
“Pretty girl like you, certain to find another husband,” Sir Bartley said, his ruddy face creasing into a smile. “I’d offer you a son if I had any to spare.”
“There’s Lewis,” Rose said. “Our cousin Lewis.”
“Who makes the birds?” Penelope asked.
“Yes. I thought he was coming down for Christmas.”
“I invited him,” Matilda said, with a significant glance at her father.
“He’s never been one to take meals,” Lady Redcake said serenely. “Always fussing over some bit of machinery.”
“Who is going to be at this house party you’re attending?” Matilda asked. “Anyone from the neighborhood?”
“The earl’s family, of course, the Gills. He has two sisters, his mother, and an aunt, I believe. A family called Dickondell,” Victoria said.
Rose glanced up from her apple dumpling. “It’s a large family.”
“Ah. I only knew the name. Are you acquainted?”
“Yes. They are related to Hatbrook’s family.”
Victoria nodded. “My father will be coming. Honestly, I’m not sure who else. Are there Dickondell men who might marry some of the earl’s sisters?”
Rose smiled. “There are definitely Dickondell men. Three sons, two of marriageable age. This is the Earl of Bullen? Why have I never met him?”
“I know the answer to that,” Matilda said. “He’s a scientific man, like Lewis. Awkward in company. He came to call with his mother and sisters once, shortly after we’d moved here. Barely spoke a word.”
“I don’t think he did speak,” her mother said. “Lady Bullen is a forceful personality. How do you know the family, Lady Allen-Hill?”
“Connections of my late husband. Second cousins, perhaps? They all came to the wedding, and Lady Barbara, one of the earl’s sisters, has become my frequent correspondent.” Victoria passed the rest of her dumpling to Penelope after limiting herself to two bites.
“It sounds like a great deal of fun,” Rose said. “The masquerade ball is tomorrow. We’re all attending.”
“Goodness, I’d forgotten about that,” Victoria said. Her trunk had been sent on ahead.
“Would you like to stay until tomorrow and go in with all of us?” Lady Redcake asked.
“I think it would be best if I settle Penelope in now,” Victoria said. “If a carriage can be spared.” The Redcakes were all very pleasant, but this was a house full of women, not the kind of holiday she had in mind.
Lady Redcake nodded and called a footman to make arrangements. An hour later, Victoria and Penelope were on their way.
Snow dusted everything but the centers of the roads, giving the landscape a frosted appearance. Icicles pointed their teeth down from eaves and branches. The carriage would have been intolerable if not for a robust collection of hot bricks and lap robes.
“It does look like Christmas. I was afraid it wouldn’t in the s. . .
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