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 WOMAN â Joanna Fulford
March 2013
A STRANGER AT CASTONBURY â Amanda McCabe
Duke of Rothermere
Castonbury Park
My dear Giles,
Your reluctance for responsibility, my son, has been apparent since you were a child. But under these tragic circumstances it is your duty to step into the shoes of your missing brother and hold this family together. It is what families do and, during times such as these, I will only ask you once to put your frustration aside and keep your opinions quiet. You are now, whether you like it or not, the new heir to Castonbury Park.
Your father
CAROLE MORTIMER was born in England, the youngest of three children. She began writing in 1978, and has now written over one hundred and fifty books for Mills & Boon>®. Carole has six sons: Matthew, Joshua, Timothy, Michael, David and Peter. She says, âIâm happily married to Peter senior; weâre best friends as well as lovers, which is probably the best recipe for a successful relationship. We live in a lovely part of England.â
Previous novels by the same author:
THE DUKEâS CINDERELLA BRIDE*
THE RAKEâS INDECENT PROPOSAL*
THE ROGUEâS DISGRACED LADY*
LADY ARABELLAâS SCANDALOUS MARRIAGE*
THE LADY GAMBLES**
THE LADY FORFEITS **
THE LADY CONFESSES **
JORDAN ST CLAIRE: DARK AND DANGEROUS ***
THE RELUCTANT DUKE **
TAMING THE LAST ST CLAIRE**
*The Notorious St Claires
** The Copeland Sisters
*** The Scandalous St Claires
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To the seven other lovely authors
who made writing this such fun!
Castonbury Park, Derbyshire, April 1816
âHis Grace seems much better today, Lily, thank you for asking,â Mrs Stratton, the widowed housekeeper at Castonbury Park, assured Lily warmly as she led the way through to her private parlour situated at the back of the grand mansion house that had long been the seat of the Dukes of Rothermere. âHis Graceâs valet informed me only this morning that the advent of a late spring appears to be having an advantageous effect upon the dukeâs spirits.â She glanced approvingly at the sun shining in through the window.
Lily wondered if it was the advent of spring which had succeeded in reviving the grief-stricken Duke of Rothermere, or the possible return of Lord Giles Montague. His homecoming was in response to the letter Lilyâs father said the duke had written to his son four days ago, in which he had demanded that Giles Montague return home and take up his duties as his heir. Sadly, Lord James Montague, previously the eldest son and heir of the Montague family, had died in Spain during the campaign against Napoleon. It had been a devastating blow to the long-widowed Duke of Rothermere, further exacerbated ten months ago by the death of Lord Edward, the dukeâs youngest son.
Being the daughter of the local vicar, and an adopted daughter at that, had put Lily in the unique position of making friends both above and below stairs at Castonbury Park, and she was friends with the two daughters of the household, Lady Phaedra and Lady Kate. But it was the late Lord Edward Montague who had been her dearest and most beloved friend. The two of them had been of an age where they had played together about the estate as children, and remained good friends as they had grown too old to play and had instead turned their attention to dancing together at the local assemblies.
Indeed, their friendship had been of such warmth and duration that Lily had been deeply shocked when Edward had succeeded in persuading his father into buying him a commission in the army a year ago, so that he might join his brother Giles in his regiment. She couldnât bear that Edward had died in that last bloody battle at Waterloo, his life coming to an abrupt end at the point of a French bayonet in only his nineteenth year.
Edwardâs life.
Not Giles, the brother who was eight years older than Edward, and who had been the inspiration for Edwardâs desire to gain a commission in the army.