Castonbury Park
A Regency Upstairs Downstairs
Survival of the fittest is fine, so long as youâre the one on top ⦠but the family that has everything is about to lose it all â¦
The Montagues have found themselves at the centre of the tonâs rumour mill, with lords and ladies alike claiming the family is not what it used to be.
The mysterious death of the heir to the Dukedom, and the arrival of an unknown woman claiming he fathered her son, is only the tip of the iceberg in a family where scandal upstairs and downstairs threatens the very foundations of their once powerful and revered dynasty â¦
August 2012
THE WICKED LORD MONTAGUE â Carole Mortimer
September 2012
THE HOUSEMAIDâS SCANDALOUS SECRET â Helen Dickson
October 2012
THE LADY WHO BROKE THE RULES â Marguerite Kaye
November 2012
LADY OF SHAME â Ann Lethbridge
December 2012
THE ILLEGITIMATE MONTAGUE â Sarah Mallory
January 2013
UNBEFITTING A LADY â Bronwyn Scott
February 2013
REDEMPTION OF A FALLEN WOMANâ Joanna Fulford
March 2013
A STRANGER AT CASTONBURYâ Amanda McCabe
Duke of Rothermere
Castonbury Park
Dear Ross,
Nephew, I hesitate to ask, because I know you are busy and your life is currently in India, but I would really appreciate your calm head and guidance at this trying time. As you know, we have been led to believe that my dear son Jamie is dead, but to complicate matters I have just this morning received a letter informing us that Jamie was married, and that his new wife and young son are in the grounds of Castonbury Park. The truth is yet to be determined, for I thought I knew my son better. But, Ross, I would be most grateful if you could return to help your family and use your persuasive nature to discover what this woman wants and what indeed did happen. I believe she may be able to shed some light.
But please, however, be discreet. We cannot afford any more scandal to be unearthed whilst you are here.
Yours,
Rothermere
HELEN DICKSON was born and lives in South Yorkshire, with her retired farm manager husband. Having moved out of the busy farmhouse where she raised their two sons, she has more time to indulge in her favourite pastimes. She enjoys being outdoors, travelling, reading and music. An incurable romantic, she writes for pleasure. It was a love of history that drove her to writing historical fiction.
Previous novels by the same author:
A SCOUNDREL OF CONSEQUENCE
FORBIDDEN LORD SCANDALOUS SECRET, DEFIANT BRIDE FROM GOVERNESS TO SOCIETY BRIDE MISTRESS BELOW DECK THE BRIDE WORE SCANDAL DESTITUTE ON HIS DOORSTEP SEDUCING MISS LOCKWOOD MARRYING MISS MONKTON BEAUTY IN BREECHES MISS CAMERONâS FALL FROM GRACE
And in Mills & Boon>® HistoricalUndone!eBooks:
ONE RECKLESS NIGHT
Did you know that some of these novels are
also available as eBooks? Visit www.millsandboon.co.uk
For my husband, George, with loveâ
he has provided unconditional support and encouragement throughout.
Cholera had killed Lisetteâs parents. Suddenly, at nineteen years old, she found herself homeless, penniless, with no family and no purpose in life. She was adrift but she would survive. She could survive anywhere, but she belonged nowhere.
Unable to remain in her beloved India, she was to travel to Bombay, where she hoped to work her passage on board a ship bound for England.
Lisette had enjoyed living in an Anglo-Indian society in Delhi. Her father had been an eccentric academic, a linguist and a botanist, working for the University of Oxford in India. It was through her fatherâs friendship with the Rajah Jahana Sumana of the state of Rhuna that she had met and become a close friend of the Rajahâs daughter, Princess Messalina.
Messalina was being escorted to her wedding in Bhopal and suggested Lisette travel part of the way with her as one of her attendants. Not wishing to draw attention to herself Lisette was dressed as a native girl, for to travel openly as an unescorted English girl was unthinkable.
Lisette had parted from her friend when the rains came. It was a light sprinkling at first that washed the dust from the air. Then, as the lightning pranced closer in a flashing, sizzling display of the stormâs power, a torrential downpour marched across the land, turning the roads to mud and causing the rivers to overflow. The people Lisette was travelling with reached the banks of a wide, fast-flowing river at the only point of safe crossing for twenty miles upstream and down. Usually the banks here were lined with dhobis busy with piles of washing, mahouts bathing their elephants and children playing and splashing in the shallows.
The rain had stopped some time ago. The last rays of the sinking sun catching the river glittered on the rushing water in a haze of gold. The bridge creaked and swayed with the pull of the current. It was almost dark, but rather than wait until morning by which time the bridge could have been washed away or become impossible to cross, the travellers decided not to postpone their crossing.