Three Candidates. One Perfect Bride.
Whitfield Calder, Earl of Danning, would much rather spend a fortnight tending to his estate than entertaining three eligible young ladies. But when his valet insists that marriage is an earlâs duty, Whit agrees to the house party. He has no intention of actually proposing to anyoneâ¦until flame-haired Ruby Hollingsford declares sheâd never accept him anyway.
Ruby has been tricked into attending this charade, but she certainly wonât compete for the earlâs attentions. Yet, Whit isnât the selfish aristocrat she envisioned. And with a little trust, two weeks may prove ample time for an unlikely couple to fall headlong into love.
The Master Matchmakers: Wedding bells will ring when downstairs servants play Cupid for upstairs aristocracy
Ruby walked up to Lord Danning and nodded in greeting. âIt appears I was mistaken, my lord. We meet again.â
He pulled himself out of his reverie and bowed. âMiss Hollingsford. A pleasure to see you again, particularly as you are not a dead body.â
Ruby couldnât help chuckling. âI suppose I deserved that after my remark by the bridge. You may have noticed that I have a temper. I also tend to speak my mind.â
âReally?â he said, though she could see the twinkle in those purple-blue eyes.
âSurprising, isnât it? And given that tendency, allow me to make something clear.â She leaned forward and met him gaze for gaze. âI meant what I said at the river. Iâm not here for a proposal.â
âExcellent,â he replied, unflinching. âNeither
am I.â
Ruby frowned as she leaned back, but her father came out of his room just then, and the earl excused himself to start down the stairs ahead of them.
There had to be a reason she and her father had been included in the earlâs invitation. But for the life of her, she couldnât understand why.
REGINA SCOTT
started writing novels in the third grade. Thankfully for literature as we know it, she didnât actually sell her first novel until she learned a bit more about writing. Since her first book was published in 1998, her stories have traveled the globe, with translations in many languages, including Dutch, German, Italian and Portuguese.
She and her husband of over twenty-five years reside in southeast Washington State with their overactive Irish terrier. Regina Scott is a decent fencer, owns a historical costume collection that takes up over a third of her large closet, and she is an active member of the Church of the Nazarene. You can find her online blogging at www.nineteenteen.blogspot.com. Learn more about her at www.reginascott.com, or connect with her on Facebook at www.facebook.com/authorreginascott.
For faith is being sure of what we hope for and certain of what we do not see.
âHebrews 11:1
To my own Earl, for all your advice about fishing. May you one day catch the King of Trout.
And to my King, for opening his arms to catch me.
Chapter One
Fern Lodge, Peak District, Derbyshire, England
July 1815
Ruby Hollingsford threw herself out of a moving coach.
There was little dangerâit hadnât been moving very fast, the carriage slowing to take the gracefully arching bridge over the River Bell. And her father should have expected it. How else was she to react to his cork-brained, ninnyhammer of an idea?
I know I told you we were going to Castleton for business, her father, Mortimer Hollingsford, had said. But the truth is, the Earl of Danning has taken a fancy to you.
Rubyâs temper had flared like a match to oil. Not another aristocrat! I told you Iâd have none of them!
Heâd pulled a gilded invitation from the travel desk on the leather-upholstered seat beside him and held it out to her with a commiserating smile. Oh, heâs a fine fellow. I asked about him. Heâs never invited a lady to his Lodge before. You behave for once, and your future will be secure.
If she had taken that note, sheâd have torn it to shreds her hands had been shaking so hard. My future? Why would my future need to be titled? If you want a title so much, you marry one.
And then sheâd bunched her skirts with one hand, wrenched open the door with the other and jumped.
She landed on the verge of the road, her ankles protesting, then gathered herself to stand. Behind her, she could hear Davis calling to the horses as he reined them in.
âRuby!â her father shouted after her. âOh, come now!â
In answer, she ran down the grassy embankment for the riverâs pebbled edge.
Really, what else was she to do after such an announcement? Sheâd thought her father couldnât shock her any further after sheâd discovered an elderly viscountâ an utter stranger to herâlounging in her withdrawing room, waiting to propose. After that, she had learned to be on her guard from her fatherâs future attempts, which thus far had been many and varied. What wastrel aristocrat in the vicinity of London didnât leap to do her fatherâs bidding when he dangled her sizeable dowry? But to drag her all the way out to the wilds of Derbyshire, to make up a Banbury tale of business up north? That was the outside of enough.