| The
Wedding Trap
Ballantine/Ivy, ISBN 0-345-48310-3
May 30, 2006
Price $6.99
Regency Historical
Read Excerpt
Order
at Amazon.com
Order
at Barnes&Noble.com
Eliza Hammond has always been quiet and reserved—hardly
the best qualities for finding the man of her dreams and living happily ever after.
A new heiress, Eliza is financially secure, courtesy of her aunt’s fortune,
but even great wealth has its drawbacks since every greedy, fortune-hunting bachelor
suddenly finds Eliza irresistible.
To help her best friend, Violet takes Eliza’s romantic dilemma into her
own hands, enlisting the social skills of her brother-in-law, Lord Christopher
“Kit” Winter. Kit helps transform Eliza into a stunning belle, certain
to attract a worthy beau. There’s just one problem: Eliza has always been
head over heels in love with Kit, the very man who is trying to find her a husband!
But during Eliza’s sometimes-comic extreme makeover, and with a few secret
love lessons from Kit on the side, sparks—and passionate kisses—begin
to fly. Kit soon finds himself completely overcome by an all-consuming desire
for Eliza. But if he waits too long to recognize his love for her, he risks losing
his fair lady forever.

Accolades
New York Times Extended List Bestseller, premiering at
#32.
USA Today Bestseller, debuting at #52 and spending three weeks in
the top 150 bestselling books.
Borders Group Mass Market Single Title Paperback Bestseller’s
list, appearing at #8 for the week of June 3, 2006.
Praise
"A perfect ending to this delightful trilogy. I absolutely loved the
ending...and highly recommend all three books." --Tammie Ard, Fresh
Fiction
"A tale that's steamy and emotionally satisfying. This is one author
on the verge of stardom."
--Kathe Robin, Romantic Times Bookclub
"I
adored every scene throughout this story. Witty and a pure delight to the senses.
I'll definitely be adding the entire trilogy to my keeper bookshelf and awaiting
Ms. Warren's next contribution to the literary world."
-Chrissy Dionne, Romance Junkies

CHAPTER ONE
London, February 1820
This business of acquiring a husband is going to be far from pleasant,
Eliza Hammond decided from her place on the saffron-and-white striped sofa in
the upstairs family drawing room of Raeburn House.
Considering this would be her fifth Season——a lowering realization
indeed——she knew she would need all the assistance she could get,
despite the immense fortune her late aunt had quite unexpectedly left to her only
six weeks ago. At least she knew she would be able to count on the steadfast support
of her dear friend, Violet Brantford Winter, Duchess of Raeburn. Perhaps with
Violet’s assistance, the process would not be as dreadful as she feared.
Then again, thinking of the assorted ne’er-do-wells and fortune hunters
already vying for her hand, perhaps it would.
“There is Mr. Newcomb,” Violet stated as she reviewed the current
selection of Eliza’s prospective suitors. “He seems a very pleasant
sort of gentleman with a genuine interest in the arts.”
“Yes, he was most attentive when we happened upon each other at the gallery
the other day,” Eliza agreed, recalling the man’s even features and
straight auburn hair, a shade that had put her in mind of a glossy-coated Irish
setter. “He demonstrated a definite command of the great masters. Perhaps
he has an interest in historical subjects as well.”
“What he has is an interest in card playing, followed a close second
by a love of the dice,” interrupted a deep, smooth male voice that never
failed to send a pleasurable tingle down Eliza’s spine no matter how firmly
she tried to suppress it.
She shifted her gaze toward Lord Christopher Winter, better known to his family
and friends as Kit. Tall, broad-shouldered and ruggedly lean, he sat relaxed in
a leisurely all-male sprawl upon a nearby chair. Having spent the past twenty
minutes eating his way through a stack of small watercress, cucumber and chicken
sandwiches, he leaned forward now to conduct a perusal of the dessert tray.
A lock of his dark wavy brown hair fell across his handsome forehead as he
selected a pair of lime tarts and a thin slice of rum cake. As he transferred
the sweets to his plate, he got a smudge of whipped cream on one of his knuckles.
Eliza’s stomach tightened as she watched him lick it away.
She forced her gaze down to her shoes. Kit was Violet’s brother-in-law
and nothing more, she reminded herself. Certainly he was nothing more to her.
True, she had once nursed a secret infatuation for him but such silliness was
long since over and done. During the nearly year and half he had been away traveling
on the Continent, she had ruthlessly purged him from her heart. And by the time
he returned to England this Christmas past, she had long since grown used to giving
him scarcely a thought.
Still, that didn’t mean she couldn’t admire him for the gorgeous
male specimen he was. And Kit Winter, with his beautiful, lazy-lidded green and
gold eyes, sensuous lips and infectiously charming smile, was a gorgeous man indeed.
One with an infamously prodigious appetite that seemed to make no impact at all
upon his trim, well-muscled physique.
He bit into one of the tarts from his plate, a tiny smile of gustatory delight
on his lips as he settled back into his chair. Engrossed in the confection, he
seemed utterly oblivious to the volley of disappointment he had just lobbed into
the room.
Violet shot him a mighty frown. “What do you mean by that remark, Kit?”
He swallowed and glanced upward. “Hmm?” He took a drink of tea,
then politely patted his mouth with his napkin. “Oh, about Newcomb, do you
mean?”
“Yes, of course about Newcomb. Of whom else have Eliza and I been conversing?”
“Well, there’s no need to come up cross, Vi. Just thought I ought
to give you fair warning the chap is close to being dipped. Last I heard, he lost
twenty thousand quid to Plimpton playing high-stakes whist and his luck hasn’t
turned for the good since.”
Violet and Eliza released a pair of mutual sighs.
“If that is the case, then he is out,” Violet declared, turning
her bespectacled blue-green gaze upon Eliza. “You certainly don’t
want to take an inveterate gambler to husband.”
Eliza silently agreed and contented herself by sipping her tea.
“There is Sir Silas Jones,” Violet continued. “He sent you
that sweet nosegay of hothouse roses last week. I hear he comes from a lovely
part of Kent. Owns an estate that produces a most bountiful harvest of cherries
and apples each year. Has quite the way with plants, I am given to understand.”
“That’s not all he’s good at planting,” murmured Kit
as he polished off the last of the sweets on his plate and leaned forward for
more.
Violet angled her attractively coiffured blond head. “I suppose by that
you mean there is something wrong with him as well?”
“Depends upon your point of view. Some might say there’s nothing
wrong with him at all.” He ate a guinea-sized crumpet topped with a generous
spoonful of gooseberry jam, then silently held out his empty Meissen cup for more
tea.
Without pause, Violet lifted the heavy silver teapot from a matching silver
tray and poured. A delicate tendril of steam spiraled off the surface of the beverage
for a moment before Kit brought the cup to his lips.
“So?” Violet encouraged when he failed to say more.
Kit set his teacup onto its saucer with a faint clink. “Man’s
a womanizer. Has six by-blows by four different women and those are only the ones
he acknowledges. One might say Jones is a man who likes to plow a field.”
Eliza felt her cheeks grow pink. A small guffaw escaped the duchess before
Violet recovered herself.
“Kit,” Violet said in reproof. “Might I remind you there
are ladies present, myself included. That is no kind of talk for the drawing room.”
He forced an irreverent grin from his lips. “Sorry. You are right, of
course. My apologies, ladies.”
“Nevertheless, I am glad to learn that Sir Silas is not a man to whom
my dear friend should direct her time or attentions.” Violet tapped a thoughtful
nail against the scrolled sofa arm. “Of the other gentlemen who have recently
extended their regards to Eliza, we know Viscount Coyle and Mr. Washburn are not
to be received, the both of them known fortune hunters forever on the lookout
for a likely heiress to replenish their pocketbooks.”
“What of Lord Luffensby?” Eliza said. “He sent me that very
pleasant book of sonnets.” Wordsworth, she recalled with pleasure, the poet
one of her favorites.
“Of course. I only met him once and very briefly but he struck me as
a most amiable man. Very considerate and gently spoken.”
A soft but unmistakable snort erupted from Kit.
Violet shot him another look, one of exasperation this time. “Pray do
not tell me there is something amiss with Lord Luffensby too? Surely not. I know
his cousin and she gave me to understand that he has a most comfortable income
and no predilections for the usual vices.”
“No, not the usual ones, that’s for certain.”
Violet waited for a long moment. “Oh, do go on before Eliza and I both
expire of curiosity.”
“I am not sure I ought to say. As you already reminded me, there are
ladies present.” Kit paused, glanced at Eliza. “Unmarried ladies.”
“Well, dear heavens, what is it? Surely it cannot be so terrible Eliza
cannot be allowed to hear. And it isn’t as if she is a miss just out of
the schoolroom.”
Kit tapped a considering finger against his lips. “He has a nickname
among certain fellows. Lord Poofensby.”
Poofensby? Eliza frowned. Was Kit referring to the man’s wardrobe?
Luffensby did tend toward being a bit of a dandy but nothing too extreme. She
looked over at Violet, whose brows were also furrowed in confusion.
“I am sorry but you’ll have to be clearer,” Violet said.
“Clearer?” Kit rolled his eyes, then heaved a beleaguered sigh.
“You know, for a woman who reads Greek and Latin and speaks five languages,
you can sometimes be remarkably ignorant.”
“There is no need to be insulting. Just say it out. I am sure it cannot
be so very bad.”
“All right. He . . . um . . . has a liking for men.”
“Well, what is so remarkable about that? A great many gentlemen enjoy
the company of others of their sex. I don’t see why you are making such
a——Oh.” Violet broke off, her eyebrows rising. “Oh! Oooh.”
Eliza looked between them, still not entirely understanding the message that
had just been passed. Then suddenly she remembered a bit of text she had read
once in one of her books on ancient history about men who cared for other men
in an amorous way. She had found the notion quite astonishing at the time, yet
never considered such things might still go on. Certainly not here in present-day
England!
A fresh blush stole over her cheeks.
“Quite so.” Kit stretched out his legs, crossed them at the ankle.
“Not the sort of fellow likely to give you a family, assuming that is what
you want?”
A family, Eliza thought, was exactly what she wanted. It was the single most
important reason she had decided to find a husband and wed. Her shoulders dipped,
her spirits disheartened by the entire conversation.
“Well, who else is there?” Violet withdrew a white silk handkerchief
from her dress pocket, then removed her spectacles and began to polish the lenses.
“You have received so many bouquets and trinkets, there must be someone
suitable in the bunch.”
“But there is not,” Eliza bemoaned. “Oh, Violet, don’t
you see, it is simply no use. They are all of them unsuitable in one way or another.
Either they are after my fortune or they have some dreadful personal difficulty
they wish to conceal through a convenient marriage.”
Violet slipped her eyeglasses back on, then reached out and patted the top
of Eliza’s hand. “Now, do not let this discourage you. The Season
has not even begun yet. There is no telling all the eligible bachelors who will
be arriving in the city over the next few weeks. Men who would give their eyeteeth
to have you for their wife.”
“Perhaps a single rotten molar but no more.” Eliza shook her head.
“No, the facts must be faced. The sad truth is that no suitable gentlemen
wanted me before my aunt died and none of them wants me now. Some days I wish
my aunt had not gotten angry with Cousin Philip and cut him out of the will. Some
days poverty seems a remarkably easier choice.”
“Poverty is never easy and do not spout such self-defeating nonsense.
I know you would never wish to go back to that life. You lived under that old
woman’s miserly thumb far too many years——forgive my harsh sentiments
toward the dead——not to enjoy a little comfort now. If anyone deserves
her fortune, it is you.”
”Maybe, but it does not seem to be doing me much good.”
“What you need is a mentor,” Violet said. “Someone who knows
Society and could smooth your way. Teach you how to be easier in company, have
more confidence so your shyness does not leave you tongue-tied and silent among
others, unable to show what a lovely personality you possess.”
Violet paused, tapped a thumb against the knee of her elegant lavender merino
wool day dress. “As you will recall, I once had the same problem as you.
So shy in public I could barely string a pair of words together. Then during those
insane months when I switched places with Jeannette and married Adrian in her
stead, well, I had no choice but to change my ways. Why, if it had not been for
Kit——“ She broke off and stared at her brother-in-law for a
long, pregnant moment. Suddenly a merry laugh bubbled from her lips. “Well,
of course! Why did I not think of it before?”
“Think of what?” Eliza asked.
“Of you and Kit. Why, it is perfect. Kit will help you find a worthy
husband.”
“I’ll do what!” Kit jerked upright in his seat, his cup rattling
precariously on its saucer. Only his innate sense of balance kept him from spilling
hot tea all over his fashionably tight buckskin pantaloons. In no mood to risk
a burn, especially in so vulnerable an area of his anatomy, he steadied the china
and set it onto a nearby side table.
Eliza Hammond, he noticed, looked as shocked as he felt, her pale lips parted,
her slender jaw slack with obvious astonishment.
He straightened his waistcoat with a firm double-handed tug. “I must
have misheard you. Sounded like you just suggested I play matchmaker for Miss
Hammond here.”
“Not matchmaker, no. Eliza and I will be able to locate gentlemen aplenty,
I suspect. Your role will be more in the way of mentor, just as I said. You can
help vet her prospective suitors, but more importantly you can do for her what
you did for me. Teach her how to be more confident in company. Give her techniques
and ways of interacting in Society so she need not feel so reticent.”
“Well, I hardly think I’m the proper one to help,” he sputtered,
anxious to put a stop to Violet’s wild notions before they had a chance
to propagate any further.
“But of course you are,” his earnest-eyed sister-in-law stated.
“You are the very best person to help. For one, you are family, so there
will be no need to worry about you telling the world all the details of our little
project. For another, you know absolutely everyone in the Ton. If you aren’t
friends with them already, you know someone else who is. Plus, you hear all the
best tidbits, as you have so eloquently demonstrated this afternoon.”
“I hardly know everyone. Been out of the country these many
months past, I’ll remind you. Even now I am catching up.” His lids
narrowed accusingly. “And I hope you are not implying that I am a gossip.”
“Nothing of the sort,” Violet assured. “You are just friendly
and popular, that is all. People tell you things, things neither Eliza nor I will
ever be in a position to find out. Which gives us a great advantage since you
will be able to weed out the fortune hunters and blackguards and leave only decent
gentlemen from which Eliza may chose. That way she will be able to concentrate
on deciding if she feels genuine affection for any one particular man without
having to worry that he might have unscrupulous motives. No, I cannot think of
a person better suited to help our dear Eliza than you.”
Kit restrained the pained grimace that rose to his face. If he had known tossing
out a few opinions about a couple of fellows would provoke such dire results,
he would have kept his blasted mouth shut. Should have kept eating, that’s
what he should have done. Kept eating and kept silent.
Reminded of food and suddenly in need of sustenance, he plucked another tart
off the serving tray and popped it into his mouth, the delectable flavors of raspberry
and sweet cream taking the edge off his distress.
“I am not a project,” Eliza said in a low, stiff voice.
“What is that, dear?” Violet questioned, turning her head toward
her friend.
“I said I am not a project, as you referred to me earlier. Neither of
you need feel duty-bound to take pity upon me. I shall find some way to manage
for myself.” Short speech done, Eliza lowered her eyes to her lap, fingers
linked together, her knuckles squeezed tight enough to turn them white around
the edges.
Kit ate another tart, surprised at Eliza’s small burst of outraged pride.
He hadn’t realized she was capable of such fortitude, quiet little brown
wren that she was. In fact, she’d spoken more this afternoon than he was
used to hearing her say in an entire day, not that he ever really spent enough
time around her to be certain how much talking she normally did. Yet she had always
struck him as one of those plain, reserved women who tended to walk into a room
and fade from notice two minutes later. The quintessential wallflower. And a bluestocking,
to make matters worse. Only now she was a rich bluestocking wallflower and Violet
expected him to make her over into a glorious swan.
Impossible.
Perhaps giving birth to her latest child four months before had done something
to disrupt Violet’s usual good sense. Maybe if he phrased his arguments
just right, she would see reason and back away from this ludicrous plan.
Violet shifted toward Eliza. “Now, do not ruffle up so. You know I meant
no insult and neither of us pities you. Do we, Kit?” She gave him a stare
that brooked no opposition.
“Of course not,” he chimed.
“I apologize if my choice of words was poor,” Violet went on. “But
Eliza, even you admit that you are shy and do not feel easy in Society. And while
there is no disgrace in such behavior, it does make it more difficult for others
to see your true beauty. Particularly gentlemen, who——let us be frank——tend
to be led by their eyes and other unmentionable portions of their anatomy.”
“Their brains, do you mean?” Kit remarked, unable to restrain the
quip.
A tiny smile curved across the duchess’s youthful lips, her eyes twinkling
behind their lenses. “Hmm, just so, for we all know that is what men use
to think with when they are around an attractive female.”
And that, Kit thought, is precisely the problem.
Eliza Hammond was not what any man would describe as a stunner. It wasn’t
that she was homely——quite the opposite, if one took the trouble to
look closely enough——it was just that she did nothing to enhance what
attributes she did possess.
Instead of looking thick and lustrous, her brown hair appeared ordinary, yanked
back into a boring knot at the nape of her neck. Although unblemished by the sun,
her white skin often seemed sallow and wan. Quite likely she possessed a pleasant
figure, but who could tell since she hid her slender body inside one shapeless,
hideous dress after another——though he supposed her nip-cheese aunt
could be blamed in large measure for the state of Eliza’s meager wardrobe,
now dyed black for mourning.
She had good eyes, though, bright and luminous despite their soft, unremarkable
gray color. And lovely bone structure, with a classical sweep to her jaw and a
cute, finely bridged nose.
Still, turning Eliza from a frump into a fashion plate would be a truly monumental
achievement. He nearly sighed aloud at the idea.
This scheme is doomed to fail.
***
This plan will never work, Eliza railed inside her head.
What was Violet thinking to suggest such a ridiculous thing? Imagine wanting
to toss her and Kit together as mentor and pupil? She could not do it. Would
not do it even if he had once helped Violet overcome her diffident nature and
step comfortably into her role as wife to one of the most powerful aristocrats
in England. Besides, Kit obviously did not wish to help her. She could see it
in his eyes. The doubt. And yes, the pity, no matter that he said otherwise.
“Please, Violet,” she implored, “I am sure Lord Christopher
has other, more important things to do with his time than spend it instructing
me.”
“I cannot imagine what that might be. Kit was just telling me the other
day how bored he is with the same old round of amusements and so few people yet
in Town. Is that not so, Kit?”
“I believe I confessed to feeling a slight ennui but that does not mean
I have nothing to do. Somehow, I manage to fill my days quite admirably.”
“But only think how much more admirably your time would be employed assisting
Eliza. With her residing here, it will be an easy thing for you to teach her.”
He wiped his fingers on a linen napkin, dusting off crumbs. “If you’ll
remember, I’m in the process of locating bachelor’s quarters and moving
my things in there. If I don’t find something soon, they’ll be nothing
decent left to rent.”
“Maybe you could put that plan on hold for a while. I mean, would it
really be so dreadful if you stayed here with the family for a little while longer?
You mentioned that you’ve nearly gone through your quarterly allowance again,
and I know how you detest applying to Adrian for additional funds.”
“Remind me in future to stop telling you things, Vi. You remember far
too much, far too well.”
Violet sent him a sympathetic smile. “I also remember that you will be
coming into your own money on your birthday this August when you receive your
grandfather’s bequest. Until then, why don’t you simply remain here
at Raeburn House and economize a bit? Only think how easy it will be for you and
Eliza to work together. A few hours in the morning, then you can each go about
your usual routine. You’ll scarcely notice the difference.”
She would notice the difference, Eliza thought. Until now, living
in the same abode with Kit had been tolerable due in great measure to the sheer
enormity of the townhouse. Her and Kit’s paths rarely crossed except for
the occasional meal en famille and the infrequent afternoon visit with
Violet, such as now. But to be daily in his company? To have Kit, of all people,
coaching her on ways to overcome her shyness . . . well, it seemed too intimate,
far too personal.
Despite knowing that her infatuation for him had waned, she wasn’t certain
she would feel comfortable being so near him so often. Yet would she not be a
fool to refuse his help? Assuming, of course, that he agreed to help. Assuming
she even wished him to.
He sat back again in his chair, obviously wrestling with his thoughts as he
rubbed a knuckle against his expressive lips. “I suppose I could stay and
assist Miss Hammond.”
Violet clapped her hands in delight. “Oh, I knew you would see the merit
of my idea.”
“But only if she wishes me to do so, that is,” Kit added.
Eliza and Kit’s eyes met, his clear hazel irises appearing more green
than gold today, the shade enhanced by the elegantly tailored bottle green cutaway
coat he wore.
Her pulse skipped at such scrutiny. What could she say? How could she refuse
under the circumstances? She lowered her gaze. “At your pleasure, my lord.”
“Very well, then. But if we are to proceed with this plan, I must be
blunt and tell you both that it will take more than a few lessons in social comportment
and style to turn the trick. Miss Hammond must put herself entirely in my hands
and do as she is instructed, and that includes making an adjustment to her appearance.”
Her head came up. “M-my appearance?” She was fully aware she was
not the most beautiful of women. Nevertheless it hurt to hear him discuss such
matters aloud.
“Hmm. If you want men who are more than fortune hunters and rogues to
offer you marriage, then half measures will not do.”
“Of what precisely are you thinking?” Violet questioned.
“A complete makeover from head to foot. Hair and clothes to start——“
“But I am still in mourning,” Eliza protested. Defensively, she
plucked at her black skirts, knowing how severe they were. Even so, they were
more becoming than most of the unsightly shades her aunt had been in the habit
of choosing for her. When duty had required her to dye all her old dresses black,
it had come as no great loss.
“Well,” he said, “you shan’t be in mourning forever,
and when you are not you will need a new wardrobe. You’ve plenty of blunt
for it now, what with the inheritance you received from your aunt.”
He was right about that, she mused. Although even now, weeks later, she had
still not gotten used to the realization that her aunt Doris——who
had never shown her anything but scorn and disapproval in her whole life——had
made Eliza the sole beneficiary of a vast fortune.
All two hundred thousand pounds of it!
Eliza had not had so much as an inkling that her aunt possessed such great
wealth. Why would she when the woman had forced them to live like virtual paupers?
Spending the winters, no matter how harsh, bundled into layer upon layer of thick
wool rather than pay to burn a few extra logs in the fireplace. Refusing to let
Eliza buy new handkerchiefs or fresh gloves until the old ones were so worn through
they were just a few threads shy of resembling Swiss cheese. Scoffing at the notion
of purchasing a reliable team of horses, maintaining that a pair of tired, old
rented hacks could do the job satisfactorily enough.
Apparently even Aunt Doris’s son, Philip Pettigrew, had not realized
the size of his mother’s estate. At the reading of the will, he had looked
as stunned as Eliza had felt, clearly reeling as much from learning the amount
of his mother’s fortune as by the fact that he had just been cut off from
it.
Even now she remembered the sick cast to her cousin’s complexion once
the solicitor had finished that day. She also recalled the instant of fierce hatred
that had raged in her cousin’s cold black eyes before he had willed the
expression away.
She shivered at the memory, pushing it aside.
Since then she had spent very little of her new wealth, and nothing on herself.
She had given all of her aunt’s servants a healthy, and long overdue, increase
in wages. She had also instructed her aunt’s man of business to pay for
several much needed repairs to her aunt’s London townhouse. Now her
townhouse, since the abode had also been left to her in the will. But as a single
woman, living there alone would not have been proper. And truth be told, she did
not wish to live alone, not even with a hired companion.
Thank heaven for Violet and Adrian. Bless them, she thought, for so graciously
inviting her into their home.
She supposed under the circumstances it was her duty to spend some of her inheritance.
She gazed at Violet and knew her friend only had her well-being at heart. And
considering all of Violet’s many kindnesses, how could she do anything but
give way?
“A new wardrobe would not come amiss, I suppose,” she agreed.
“Good.” Kit nodded, flashing her a quick smile. He paused to draw
his gold watch out of his vest pocket, snapping open the case to check the time.
“As for the rest, why don’t we talk of it tomorrow? I have plans scheduled
this evening and if I don’t get ready now, I shall be late.”
He stood.
“Of course, go on.” Violet reached out her hands, clasped Kit’s
to give them a friendly parting squeeze. “You won’t regret agreeing
to help.”
“Hmm. Only time shall tell,” he murmured. “Miss Hammond,
until the morrow.”
She nodded her head. “My lord.”
She waited until he was gone from the room. Only then did she become aware
of her fingers and how tightly she had them clasped together in her lap. Pain
shot through her hands, blood flowing normally again as she loosened her grip.
Abashed, she sighed.
Dear heavens, what have I done?
|