A DANGEROUS ATTRACTION When her demanding stepmother died, Ella Benoit knew just how far their fortunes had fallen, unlike her spoiled stepsisters. So she never expected the bequest from her late father. A chateau in France and the freedom to live her own life, all at once! The chateau has seen better days, but Ella knows she can put the ruined house to rights. The life-size portrait of its first owner, Jean-Daniel Girard, seems to watch her work with approval, even pleasure. With bright blue eyes, strong features, and an athlete’s body, the viscount is a tempting sight even now, more than three hundred years after his tragic death. But the more she looks at the portrait, the more convinced Ella is that she’s met Jean-Daniel before. In another life, perhaps—or maybe, as the form who haunts the halls at night, invading Ella’s dreams…
Release date:
February 17, 2015
Publisher:
Lyrical Press
Print pages:
248
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Among the inky midnight shadows, Jean-Daniel Girard, formerly le vicomte de Maincy, stirred inside his portrait. It was stifling behind the two-dimensional canvas, but it wasn’t the stuffiness that made him want to escape it. Instead, the profound sense of change Jean-Daniel felt inside his beloved home was prompting him to emerge tonight.
Peering through the darkness, he materialized from the life-sized painting as easily as water flows from a faucet.
Even though I’m dead, I sometimes come alive at night.
He would have laughed aloud at the joke—if he weren’t a ghost. That was the kind of man he’d been over three hundred years ago. Blithe sense of humor. Carefree demeanor. Lover of life and all it had to offer.
Now, of course, Girard was nothing more than a spirit doomed to haunt his former residence. Since 1703, he’d been floating around the sprawling grounds and vast rooms of Château de Maincy. Trapped inside the perimeter of the dilapidated estate, he was the specter of a man who’d suffered a tragic death. And as a phantom, Jean-Daniel could hardly believe he had been dead so long.
At least I’ve had plenty of time to play my favorite game: hide-n-shriek.
He laughed inwardly at that one. Who says you can’t take your sense of humor with you?
Mouth quirking, he turned and looked back at his painted image. The so-called “masterpiece” showed him posed in front of Château de Maincy, garbed in early eighteenth-century attire. God, he hated the solemn expression plastered across his face.
In his defense, nobody smiled in portraits centuries ago.
As a strange ripple of energy filtered through the drawing room, he touched his wig. Damn ugly thing. It had itched immensely when he sat for the portrait. That painter had been an irritating fellow. Had to get every detail right.
Now Jean-Daniel was stuck with the unsightly head piece forever.
Fastening his hands on his hips, he let his eyes rove over the “masterpiece” again. Temperamental artist Michél LeBeau had certainly captured the sun-bathed landscape of Maincy with precision. And the contrast between the gray hues of the palace and the colorful, arching trees was spot-on. The artist had even portrayed the essence of Jean-Daniel’s impeccable upbringing.
Yet he’d failed to depict Jean-Daniel’s soul.
Since then, Jean-Daniel had winced at the comments people muttered when they passed Michél’s painting. “My goodness! What a dire-looking fellow that vicomte was!” Or, “His portrait makes me so sad.”
Truth be told, Jean-Daniel had been anything but solemn and morose during his time as one of France’s distant heirs to the throne. Instead, he’d been the epitome of a lighthearted bachelor, sweeping women off their feet, disappearing from the château for weeks at a time to indulge in wine, dancing, and pleasure.
Those were the days.
Grinning, his stare landed on the brown and white hound dog that sat at his feet in the portrait. Jean-Daniel gave a loud whistle. Rémy stirred, stretched, and then emerged in ghostly form outside the painting.
“Good boy!” He gave the dog an enthusiastic pat before he crouched and scratched the animal behind both ears. “Thank God I have you to keep me company.”
Rémy lifted a paw as if to say, “It’s just you and me, Master.”
“I know,” Jean-Daniel said as he glanced around. “I feel it, too. The lady from the management company set off a strange energy when she came here yesterday. She hasn’t been around in a while and I think she’s readying the house for a new owner. I sense it in my bones. If I had bones, that is.”
Rémy let his tongue hang out in an amused pant.
Jean-Daniel stood. “Do you think the new owner is her?”
The dog let out a firm “yap.”
“If it is, my heart will finally mend.” He exhaled. “And maybe we’ll be released from this purgatory.”
Rémy barked louder.
Before Jean-Daniel died a tragic death, he hadn’t known much about ghosts. Now, unfortunately, he knew too much. Whenever someone died under heartrending circumstances, they manifested as a spirit at the scene of their passing. People asserted Jean-Daniel’s untimely death had been a result of murder or possibly suicide. Of course, he knew the truth about how he died. Well, she knew, too—the woman he’d loved beyond all reason.
With lapis-blue eyes, a stunning face, and gleaming ivory hair, Ella had come to Château de Maincy weeks before his death.
Now, if she resurfaced here in present day (in reincarnated form or whatever one calls it), Jean-Daniel would have to get her to enter his painting and travel back in time. Once she succeeded in returning to 1703, Jean-Daniel wanted her to alter the course of what happened to him.
A fate etched in blood.
He shuddered. Would he recognize Ella when they met for the first time in the eighteenth century? He feared he wouldn’t. Yet he held out hope that they’d gradually fall in love—as he remembered them doing all those years ago.
Only then could they rewrite the scene of their tragic parting.
It was all very complicated, but there it was.
Optimism—as tangible and sweet as a cloud of perfume—circled Jean-Daniel while he stood in the drawing room. Pushing his shoulders back, he floated forward. The time for Ella’s visit was nearing. That’s what his instincts were telling him, anyway. And he was ready.
Gliding out of the room, he drifted along the corridor with Rémy at his heels. He stopped at a bay window and glanced over the château’s extensive gardens.
“The only thing that may spoil my plans is that management agent. She mustn’t rearrange too many things.” He looked down at Rémy, who was listening intently. “You saw her remove the knight-in-armor, didn’t you, boy?”
Rémy cocked his head sadly.
“I know the estate is in pathetic disarray, but I’ve grown used to it.” Jean-Daniel paused. “Do you think the agent will store my portrait?”
At that, Rémy sunk to the floor and hung his head over his paws.
Ten hours later in California ...
Ella Benoit raced along the corridor of the Santa Barbara mansion she shared with her stepmother. She’d heard the call button beep in the middle of the night. It meant Adelaide needed her.
Gathering her robe around her waist, Ella sped around the corner.
Please be alive.
Lungs burning, she streamed barefoot into Adelaide’s bedroom. Ella’s heart pounded as she stared at the buzzing machines and the masses of tubes running to the bed. Her stepmother lay clasping the call button—and to Ella’s horror, Adelaide was pale, still, and barely breathing.
“Where’s the nurse?” Ella muttered under her breath. Her gut clenched. Why had her stepmother insisted on living out her final days at home? Then again, if she’d been given only a few months to live, she might have done the same thing.
“Darlene?” Ella cried. “I need help!”
Nothing.
“Nurse Darlene!” she screamed louder.
A steady line of hospice caretakers had woven their way in and out of the house in the past month. Adelaide was dying of pancreatic cancer. Nasty disease. Fast-moving and relentless—especially when it was diagnosed in stage four.
Darlene finally appeared from the en suite bathroom. Clutching her stomach, she rushed to the bed. “I’m sorry, Miss Benoit. I think I ate something bad last night.”
“My stepmother rang the call button. Thank God it’s connected to my room.”
Darlene took hold of Adelaide’s wrist, which hung limply in her hand. “Gracious! Her pulse has really slowed.”
While Darlene attended to Adelaide, Ella shot a fretful glance at a photograph of her father sitting on Adelaide’s nightstand. Ella had promised him she would take good care of his second wife until the end.
Her father’s memory swept over her and tears sprang to her eyes. When Darlene stepped away from the bed, her shoulders rolled forward.
“Has the time come?” Ella whispered.
“I’m afraid so,” the nurse replied softly. “Unfortunately, there’s nothing more I can do except refresh her morphine drip to make her comfortable.”
Ella nodded numbly.
After the middle-aged nurse replenished the plastic medicine bag, she studied the concern in Ella’s face. “I’ll leave you two alone.”
The bedroom fell into silence. Forcing a dry lump down her throat, Ella leaned over and said, “I know I’m not the one you want to be with in these final hours, Adelaide, but I’m here for you.” She took her stepmother’s hand in hers.
Minutes passed. Ella watched the green line on the monitor rise and fall at slower and longer intervals. She squeezed Adelaide’s hand but Adelaide didn’t squeeze it back. Just before the monitor flatlined, the old woman turned her head away defiantly.
The day of the funeral arrived quickly. Right up until the moment Adelaide was buried, an emptiness filled Ella. She was having a hard time coming to terms with her stepmother’s death. Not because she felt an overwhelming sadness, of course. Adelaide Benoit had been a coldhearted, critical woman—and her poorly-attended memorial service proved just that.
The reason Ella was grappling with Adelaide’s death had to do with a consuming guilt. Heavy and repressive, it hung over her like a dark cloud. Had she taken care of her stepmother well enough? Had she failed her father?
Considering that he would be disappointed in her, Ella had gotten ready in slow motion for the funeral that morning. She barely noticed how much the beautiful Santa Barbara weather contrasted with the solemnity of the ceremony. The skies overhead gleamed clear and blue and a slew of birds chirped merrily in the trees above the city’s largest cemetery. As she watched her stepmother’s silver casket descend into the grave, Ella threw a rose on top of it. There was no denying it now. The woman who’d ruled her life for so long was actually gone.
Don’t let it show. Then no one will know. The motto Ella lived by, but had never spoken aloud, ran through her mind. Inside, she felt relief that Adelaide was dead, but she’d become a master at disguising her emotions, hiding the effects of the verbal abuse she had suffered. Being continually beaten down by Adelaide over the years had prompted her to shut the abuse out completely.
Ella looked at her hands. Calloused. Nicked. Hardened from around the clock cleaning, gardening, and cooking she’d done under her stepmother’s thumb. Luckily, Ella refused to let her heart harden as well.
“Ashes to ashes. Dust to dust,” the priest said. The words signaled the funeral’s guests to start dropping handfuls of dirt on top of Adelaide’s casket.
Ella took a turn. There is nothing more final than this.
Eventually, the priest hung his head and the guests dispersed. Hiding behind a wave of shoulder-length blond hair, Ella stole a look at her stepsisters who stood across the gravesite from her. Now she was alone with the joy brigade.
Hope and Charity. Never had two people been given more ironic names. Squalor and Misery were more like it. Or Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum—because one was never present without the other.
Thus, both of them had left Ella behind to care for their sick mother.
She hadn’t seen the girls since they traipsed off to New York City to pursue careers in fashion design. Hope and Charity had always been preoccupied with their appearance, so the fashion industry suited them perfectly. Meanwhile, Ella had been stuck in Santa Barbara waiting on Adelaide hand and foot because of the promise she’d made to her father.
The not-so-attractive girls waved to Ella. Selfishness washed over their faces—as it always did. Ella had waited on Adelaide dutifully even when Hope and Charity lived at the house. Although the girls had been perfectly capable of pitching in, they’d refused to lift a finger.
She sighed. Sometimes I hate my sense of integrity.
After Hope bid her mother a final goodbye, she met Ella’s stare again. Charity copied the action. Teetering comically on too-high heels, the girls moved in Ella’s direction, but neither showed signs of crying.
“I understand you stayed with Mother till the end,” Hope said as her bright-red hair blew askew in the warm summer breeze.
“Yes,” Ella replied crisply. Who else did you think would be there for her? She studied her stepsisters at close range. Neither was remotely pretty. Hope’s slack chin and beady eyes gave her the look of a possum while shorter and plumper Charity possessed bad skin and over-processed hair that resembled steel wool.
“We got your message that Mother was in hospice.” Charity headed for her car. “But we didn’t think she’d go that fast.”
Gritting her teeth, Ella stuffed her hands into the pockets of her baggy slacks. Although she had a figure, she always wore clothes that were one size too big. The reason? Adelaide had damaged her confidence long ago. As a result, she didn’t have the nerve to show off her curves.
Confidence gone astray is a terrible thing.
“I suppose you’re all alone now.” Hope feigned sympathy.
“Didn’t I tell you?” Ella bit out quietly. “My Prince Charming is waiting for me right over that knoll.”
“What was that?” her stepsister asked sharply.
Ella was too reserved to spew the sarcastic remark in a voice loud enough to be heard. Regardless, she wished it were true. She’d never wanted a man to “save” her from her repressive life, but she hoped to find a special someone with whom she could share her hopes and dreams.
Maybe this special man could show her how to actually live, instead of watching life from the outside looking in.
Charity jammed her tacky sunglasses on her face. “What do you plan to do now, Ella?”
“I really don’t know.”
“What do you think, Hope?” Charity panted. “When Mum’s will is read, do you think we’ll find that she left Ella something spectacular?”
The sisters huddled together, twittering obnoxiously.
For once, Ella couldn’t argue with her stepsisters’ mockery. What money Adelaide had, she’d squandered away. It appeared as if Ella lived the high life inside the Benoits’ stunning Santa Barbara mansion—but nothing could be further from the truth. Few people knew about Adelaide’s dire finances, including Hope and Charity.
Twenty minutes later, Ella and her stepsisters found themselves gathered around the massive dining table inside the family mansion. Walter Brimhall, Adelaide and Laurent Benoit’s attorney for decades, sat at its head. Thin and efficient, Walter sported a neatly-trimmed mustache and salt and pepper hair. From over his bifocals, he scrutinized the small assemblage. His compassionate wife, Mimi, sat next to him.
Mimi was Ella’s favorite person in the world. When Ella’s real mother died nineteen years ago, Ella’s father married Adelaide. Then he adopted Hope and Charity. That was when Mimi stepped into the picture, offering support the way a mother should.
The selfish stepsisters played on their smartphones while Walter gathered his papers. Anger heated Ella’s cheeks and she shot Mimi an incredulous look. Mimi mouthed the words, “Everything will be all right,” before she turned her attention to her husband.
“Ladies,” Walter began, “I dare say we all knew Adelaide as a strong, ambitious woman who enjoyed spoiling her daughters.” He paused. “At least her biological daughters.”
Hope and Charity exchanged greedy grins.
“Adelaide did much in her sixty-five years,” he went on. “She was born in Paris where she met and married her second husband, Laurent Benoit. They settled here in California. After the unfortunate passing of Laurent, Adelaide bought and sold numerous properties. Unfortunately, most of those real estate dealings were not successful.”
Hope’s and Charity’s grins vanished.
“Adding to Adelaide’s financial misfortune was the way she spoiled you girls.” Walter shot the sisters a critical look.
Tweedle Dee and Tweedle Dum began to squirm in their seats.
“In the end,” Walter said grimly, “Adelaide squandered all of her personal assets—as well as the enormous fortune Laurent left her.”
Ella’s heart thudded. She was aware of these things, but it still hurt to hear them. Her father would have been sorely disappointed that there was nothing left.
“What are you saying, Walter?” Hope screeched.
He cast her a serious look. “I chose to lead up to the reading of the will in this manner for a reason.”
The stepsisters tucked their phones away while Walter adjusted his bifocals and unfolded the will. “Let’s begin. To my daughters Hope Agnes and Charity Bernice, I regret that I cannot bequeath you anything except my precious poodles, Creampuff and Cupcake.”
Hope and Charity went white.
“What in God’s name?” Charity yelped. “I thought we’d get the house!”
Walter met the girls’ gapes with a scowl. “As shocking as this may be, this mansion is going into foreclosure. Your mother hasn’t paid the mortgage for six months and the bank is taking it back.”
Hope suppressed tears. “There must be some mistake.”
“I’m afraid it’s true, Hope. I’m sorry, but if you and your sister had spent more time with your mother, you’d have known her circumstances.”
Hope gasped. She leaned toward Charity. “We got the dogs. That’s it?”
Shoulders tensed, Walter proceeded to read from the will again. “To my stepdaughter, Ella.”
A tingling sensation formed in Ella’s stomach. She knew there wasn’t any money left, but perhaps Adelaide had left her something sentimental . . . anything to show her appreciation.
“At the request of my late husband, Laurent Albert Benoit—and I stress that this is at his request only—my stepdaughter Ella shall inherit Château de Maincy, an estate in France purchased by Laurent in 1996.”
Hope and Charity gasped simultaneously. Ella’s entire body prickled with surprise. What? She barely heard Walter as he continued reading.
“Upon my death, the title of this estate—which has been held in a trust thus far—shall be passed to Ella. The trust also holds two hundred and fifty thousand U.S. dollars. This amount has been designated exclusively for the care and renovation of Château de Maincy.”
Walter set the will down. “Ella, I’m pausing to inform you that Laurent appointed a financial planner to manage the trust fund. This savvy planner has grown its total to four hundred and fifty thousand dollars by investing in the stock market.”
Ella’s heart threatened to leave her chest. She wasn’t excited because she’d inherited an exotic estate in France and a good deal of money. She was excited to have the freedom and purpose that came with the gifts.
“We got a pair of slobbering pooches and Ella gets a French estate?” barked Hope.
“I’m not taking those damn dogs.” Charity crossed her arms defiantly.
“Why should Ella get a boatload of money and a château?” shouted Hope. “She’s just the stepdaughter!”
The sisters stood and pounded on the table in a rage.
“Girls!” Walter said sharply. “You aren’t at a bar demanding a drink! This is the reading of your mother’s will. Have some dignity.”
Eyeing Ella with contempt, Hope and Charity slid back into their seats.
“The estate in France was left to Ella by her biological father,” Walter went on. “And it was done so legally.”
“Ella,” Hope said with forced sweetness, “we’ve been stepsisters since we were six. You must give us some of that money. My credit card bill is due. And I just bought some new furniture . . .”
“And I just got a new car!” Charity wailed. “We were depending on Mum to help us.”
Walter thrust them a stern look. “Ella is not at liberty to draw from her trust unless she needs funds for the château. You may not ask her again.”
“I’m sorry.” Ella offered the girls a sobering look. Long ago, she’d held out hope that she could form a genuine sisterhood with Hope and Charity. But gradually, that hope evaporated.
Walter folded the will, placed it inside his briefcase, and laced his hands together. “That concludes the reading of Adelaide’s last will and testament.”
“Speaking of drinks, I need one!” Hope bolted out of her chair. “You can find me at Harry’s Bar.”
“Me too!” Charity scurried behind her sister.
Ella remained immobile. Mimi jumped when she heard the front door slam shut. Then she rose and put her hands on Ella’s shoulders. An attractive, silver-haired woman in her fifties, she always smelled of sweet perfume—a scent Ella found comforting.
“Those horrible girls!” Mimi said. “How did you stand them growing up?”
“I had no choice.” Ella shuddered. The girls’ torturous ways had started right after her father died. From spiders in her bed, lye in her shampoo bottle, and horrible language that could make guests on The Jerry Springer Show blush, Ella’s life had been sabotaged by Hope and Charity. They’d thought nothing of treating her like a servant in her own home. What’s more, the vicious girls had managed to ruin a. . .
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