A Scandalous Adventure (28 page)

Read A Scandalous Adventure Online

Authors: Lillian Marek

BOOK: A Scandalous Adventure
7.51Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

“You needn't worry,” Emily assured him. “We are all excellent riders, and I am told that the cold is preferable to the heat of the summer.”

M. Chambertin smiled at her and shook his head. “I do not doubt that you are a horsewoman
par
excellence
, and your mother and Lady Julia as well. However, the journey over the mountains will take weeks. We will encounter few villages, and those we find will be most poor. There will be times when we must sleep in tents or take shelter in stables. Nowhere will there be comfortable inns where ladies can refresh themselves.”

Emily and Julia looked at each other, sharing their irritation. Male condescension was obviously to be found everywhere.

“I believe you misunderstand the situation, gentlemen.” Julia spoke in her iciest, most superior tone. “We are not fragile pieces of porcelain. We are grown women, and English women at that. I do not think you will find us swooning at the sight of a spider. Or, for that matter, at the sight of a lion. Since Lord Penworth has determined that we are capable of undertaking the journey, I see no need for you to question his judgment.”

Mr. Oliphant flushed uncomfortably. “I assure you that no insult was intended either to you or to Lord Penworth. It is simply that ladies do not normally undertake such a journey.”

Julia's tone grew even icier. “
Ladies
do not? Are you suggesting that there is something improper about our taking part in this trip?”

His flush deepened. “Not at all. I would not…I assure you…my only concern is your safety.”

“You need not worry about that either,” said Emily, waving a hand casually in the air. “Harry—that's Lady Julia's brother, Lord Doncaster. He's married to my sister Elinor. He has provided each of us with a revolver.”

There was an odd, choking sound from M. Chambertin.

Emily turned to him. “Are you quite well, monsieur?”

“Quite well.” His face, when it reappeared from his napkin, was slightly red. “And the Lord Doncaster, he has no doubt taught you how to shoot these revolvers?”

“Of course.” Emily smiled rather smugly. “In fact, I am becoming quite a good shot. Would you care for a demonstration? Not here in the dining room,” she assured Mr. Oliphant, who was looking more and more distressed.

M. Chambertin, on the other hand, was grinning broadly. “No demonstration will be needed, I assure you. I begin to think that this will be a most interesting voyage.
Bien
intéressant
.”

Author's Note

Before German unification in 1871, there were dozens of small independent German states—kingdoms and principalities and duchies. Many of them were located in the north, but in the south, between Baden and Württemberg, were two small states, Hohenzollern-Sigmaringen and Hohenzollern-Hechingen. These two were ruled by branches of the same family that ruled Prussia and were actually absorbed by Prussia in 1850.

For the purpose of my story, I have borrowed their location and half of their names, erasing their actual histories and their connection with the Hohenzollerns. Instead, the ruling families of my fictional principalities are descended from the Hohenstaufens, Holy Roman Emperors in the early Middle Ages and rulers of the medieval Duchy of Swabia. Sigmaringen and Hechingen are therefore still independent in 1863 and, like Baden and Württemberg, worried about the ambitions of both Prussia and Austria. This does not greatly depart from the actual course of history. My story only delays by some twenty years the absorption of Sigmaringen and Hechingen into the German Empire, a fate foreseen by many of the characters in the novel.

Needless to say, the characters and the masquerade are all entirely fictitious, though inspired by one of my favorite books, Anthony Hope's
The Prisoner of Zenda
.

Acknowledgments

With grateful appreciation to all the artists, editors, copy editors, and proofreaders at Sourcebooks for all the work they do to make this book as good as they can, especially Hilary Doda, for her insightful comments and suggestions.

I would also like to thank Professor Robert K. Bloomer, coordinator of German programs at SUNY Stony Brook, for his help with Schwäbisch words and phrases. Any mistakes are my own fault.

About the Author

Lillian Marek was born and raised in New York City. At one time or another she has had most of the interesting but underpaid jobs available to English majors. After a few too many years in journalism, she decided she prefers fiction, where the good guys win and the bad guys get what they deserve. The first book in her Victorian Adventure series,
Lady Elinor's Wicked Adventures
, won first prize in both the Launching a Star and the Windy City Four Seasons contests. She now lives on Long Island, next to a pond inhabited by swans and snapping turtles, with occasional visits from cormorants, egrets, and herons.

Thank you for reading
!

At Sourcebooks we are always working on something new and exciting, and we don't want you to miss out.

So sign up now to receive exclusive offers, bonus content, and always be the first to get the scoop on what's new!

SIGN UP NOW!

Discovery of Desire

London Explorers

by Susanne Lord

The one man who's not looking for a wife

Seth Mayhew is the ideal explorer: fearless, profitable, and unmarried. There is nothing and no one he can't find—until his sister disappears en route to India. His search for her takes him to Bombay, where Seth meets the most unlikely of allies—a vulnerable woman who's about to marry the wrong man.

Discovers a woman who changes his dreams forever

Teeming with the bounty of marriageable men employed by the East India Company, Bombay holds hope for security for Wilhelmina Adams. But when the man she's traveled halfway around the world to marry doesn't suit, Mina finds instead that she's falling in love with a man who offers passion, adventure, intimacy—anything but security…

Praise for
In Search of Scandal
:

“Smart and sexy.” —
Booklist

“Beautifully written, deeply romantic, and utterly magnificent.” —
New York Times
bestselling author Courtney Milan

“Delightful… Passionate characters and personal adventures come alive.” —
Booklist

For more Susanne Lord, visit:

www.sourcebooks.com

A Gift for Guile

The Thief-takers

by Alissa Johnson

Never Trust a Thief

Once a famous officer of Scotland Yard and now a renowned private detective, Sir Samuel Brass has better things to do than shadow a reckless hellion in her misguided quest for atonement. But when the daughter of a notorious criminal—and a former thief herself—returns to London to right an old wrong, Samuel is drawn back into the dangerously exciting world of Esther Walker-Bales.

Beautiful and conniving, maddening and brilliant, Esther is everything he shouldn't want. She's a liar. She's a con. She's a thief. And God help him, but he'd do anything to keep her safe.

Esther knows she's put herself in terrible danger, but nothing will stop her from making amends that are long past due—not her family's enemies, not old fears, and certainly not the domineering, interfering, and undeniably handsome Sir Samuel Brass. Yet whenever he's near, Samuel makes her long for a life that can never be hers…and wish she was worthy of being saved.

“Sweet, sexy, and completely irresistible.” —Cecilia Grant, author of
A Lady Awakened

“Witty, quirky, and altogether fun.” —
Publishers Weekly
Starred Review

For more Alissa Johnson, visit:

www.sourcebooks.com

The Girl from Paris

Paget Family Saga

by Joan Aiken

Ellen Paget's life is irrevocably changed when she accepts a position as governess for the radical Comte and Comtesse de la Ferte, in whose Paris salon Ellen is introduced to the most illustrious artists, writers, and philosophers of the day. The charming Benedict Masham, second son of an earl, and an old family friend, makes it his business to look out for Ellen's welfare. That would be nice, if it wasn't so annoying to Ellen, who wants to flout convention and spread her wings in Society.

Ellen soon sheds the stifling conventions of her proper English upbringing, and contends with the questionable affections of a beguiling writer, whose attentions to Ellen dismay the steadfast Benedict.

When tragedy and scandal force her to beat a hasty retreat back to England, it takes all of Ellen's ingenuity and fortitude to solve the mysteries of the past and present—but can she do so in time to save her father and brother from the machinations of those who mean them harm?

Praise for
Mansfield Park Revisited
:

“Delightful and charming.” —
Becky's Book Reviews

“A lovely read—and you don't have to have read
Mansfield Park
to enjoy it.” —
Woman's Own

For more Joan Aiken, visit:

www.sourcebooks.com

Other books

Dark Matter by John Rollason
Wide Open by Shelly Crane
Crush by Lovely, Lutishia; Grant, Michele; Rax, Cydney
Claudius by Douglas Jackson
A Mother's Promise by Dilly Court
Keeping the Tarnished by Bradon Nave
An Imperfect Circle by R.J. Sable
Old Man's Ghosts by Tom Lloyd
Blood Apples by Cameron Jace