In
an unforgettable debut, Lisa Berne introduces you to the
Penhallow Dynasty—men destined to marry, but hesitant to love.
Penhallow Dynasty—men destined to marry, but hesitant to love.
YOU MAY KISS THE BRIDE
The Penhallow Dynasty #1
Lisa Berne
Releasing March 28, 2017
Avon Books
In an
unforgettable debut, Lisa Berne introduces you to the Penhallow Dynasty—men
destined to marry, but hesitant to love.
Wealthy and arrogant, Gabriel Penhallow knows it’s time to fulfill his dynastic duty. All he must do is follow “The Penhallow way”—find a biddable bride, produce an heir and a spare, and then live separate lives. It’s worked so well for generations, certainly one kiss with the delectable Livia Stuart isn’t going to change things. Society dictates he marry her, and one chit is as good as another as long as she’s from a decent family.
Wealthy and arrogant, Gabriel Penhallow knows it’s time to fulfill his dynastic duty. All he must do is follow “The Penhallow way”—find a biddable bride, produce an heir and a spare, and then live separate lives. It’s worked so well for generations, certainly one kiss with the delectable Livia Stuart isn’t going to change things. Society dictates he marry her, and one chit is as good as another as long as she’s from a decent family.
But Livia’s
transformation from an original to a mundane diamond of the first water makes
Gabriel realize he desperately wants the woman who somehow provoked him into
that kiss. And for all the ladies who’ve thrown themselves at him, it’s the one
who wants to flee whom he now wants. But how will he keep this independent miss
from flying away?
Excerpt #3
She
had been dismissed. Livia rose and after dipping the briefest of curtsies in
Lady Glanville’s direction, went to the door with long strides, so angry that
she felt she had to get out of there or explode. Behind her she heard Aunt
Bella saying in a soft little bleat, “Livia! No word of gratitude! Pray come
back!” Instead, she closed the door with exaggerated gentleness and leaned
against it for a moment.
By
the bannister stood a maidservant with an armful of gowns. With a muttered
sentence of thanks Livia took them and hurried upstairs to her room where with
savage satisfaction she flung the gowns against the wall, leaving them to lie
in a crumpled heap on the floor. She paced back and forth, back and forth,
until the red haze of rage subsided. Then she went to her bed and dropped
fulllength upon it with unladylike abandon, causing the old wood frame to
creak alarmingly.
It
was stupid of her, she knew, to react like that to the Orrs. But it was hard,
so hard, when Cecily had every thing and she had so very little. No parents,
no brothers or sisters; no money, no education, no prospects.
Your future must be thought of, too.
It
was strange, now that she considered it, how little time she had spent thinking
about her future. Possibly because there was no point to it. In her existence
here she was like a great hoary tree, deeply, immovably, rooted into the earth.
She
couldn’t even hang on to the morbid hope of inheriting anything from Uncle
Charles when he died. He’d run through most of Aunt Bella’s money ages ago, and
year by year everything had slowly declined, dwindled, faded away. Now there
wasn’t much left; the estate barely brought in enough for Aunt Bella to pay for
her cordial, and for Uncle Charles to spend his days hunting, drinking, and
eating. Speaking of romantic marriages.
Well,
it could be worse. At least she didn’t have a mother like that revolting Lady
Glanville. Imagine having her breathing down one’s neck all day.
Still,
this was only a small consolation. A very small consolation.
Livia
thought about Cecily’s beautiful white gown and those elegant kid slippers with
the dainty pink rosettes.
It
was those rosettes that did it.
Envy,
like a nasty little knife slipping easily into soft flesh, seemed to pierce her
very soul.
Abruptly
Livia twisted onto her side and stared at nothing.
She
would not cry.
Crying
never helped anything.
There
came to her, suddenly, the memory of the first time she had met Cecily, some
twelve years ago; they’d both been around six. Cecily and her mother had come
to call. Livia, recently arrived from faraway India, desperately lonely, was so
anxious to be friends with the lovely, beautifully dressed girl with the long
shining curls. Shyly she had approached, trying to smile, and Cecily had
responded by saying in a clear, carrying voice:
“Oh,
you’re the little orfin girl. Your papa was sent away from here and he died.
And your grandpapa was a runaway and he drownded. And your mama drownded, too.
Why is your skin so brown? Are you dirty?”
And she had backed away, to hide behind the skirts of her mother Lady
Glanville, who had said to her, with that same cold smile that never reached
her eyes, “Poor little Livia isn’t a native, my dear, she’s every bit as
English as you and I. The sun shines quite fiercely in India, and she had no
mama or papa to make sure she stayed under her parasol. Do you see?”
Livia
had never forgotten the burning sense of shame from that day. Nor had Cecily
made it any easier, for from time to time she would laughingly recall the
occasion of their first meeting and how she had thought Livia to be unwashed,
as if it was the funniest anecdote in all the world.
Livia
did not like to remember, even if only hazily, how when she was four, the
monsoon season struck Kanpur with devastating onslaughts of rain. Both her
widowed mother and her grandfather had died in a great flood, and it was with
grudging reluctance that Uncle Charles had sent money for his niece’s passage
to England.
Upon
arriving in Wiltshire, Livia was not so much welcomed into the home—if such the
ancient, ram bling domicile known as Ealdor Abbey could be so termed—of Uncle
Charles and Aunt Bella, as absorbed. Aside from grumbling within earshot about
the expense of feeding her, Uncle Charles barely noticed her. Aunt Bella,
childless, somnolent, always unwell, with interest in neither Society nor
useful occupation, accepted Livia’s presence without a blink but also without
care or concern for the little girl for whom she was, ostensibly, responsible.
Oh, you’re the little orfin girl.
Livia
smiled without humor.
Yes
indeed, Cecily certainly had a knack for getting to the heart of things.
Lisa
Berne read her first Georgette Heyer book at fourteen, and
was instantly captivated. Later, she was a graduate student, a grantwriter, and
an investment banker, but is thrilled to be returning to her roots and writing
her own historical-romance novels! She lives with her family in the Pacific
Northwest
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