Welcome Today's Featured Author
Lynne Barron!!
Portrait
of Passion
What’s
a gentleman to do when a mysterious lady with a secret past and a
reputation frayed around the edges suddenly appears in London in
pursuit of his naive young cousin, setting the gossips’ tongues
wagging, stirring his family into pandemonium, and driving him mad
with her irreverent ways?
If
the gentleman in question is Simon Carlisle, Viscount Easton, the
answer is quite simple. Seduce the beguiling lady. But Miss
Beatrice Morgan isn’t your average tarnished lady. She’s lived a
slapdash life wandering the globe like a gypsy, painting fantastical
portraits of duchesses and landscapes featuring a crumbling old
fountain, all the while harboring a secret desire to return to the
only home she’s ever known.
Will
Beatrice sacrifice her honor, her virtue, her very heart to reclaim
Idyllwild?
Excerpt:
As
they walked side by side up the broad staircase, Bea could feel his
curious gaze. She stared straight ahead, afraid of what he might see
in her eyes. Sorrow. Bitterness. Deceit.
Bea
entered her room to find her maid asleep in a chair.
“Abby,”
she whispered, gently shaking her shoulder.
“Oh,
Miss Beatrice,” Abby cried sleepily, jumping to her feet. “I am
that sorry to have fallen asleep!”
“It
is late. Of course you fell asleep.”
“Shall
I undress you?” she asked before spotting Simon standing just
inside the door. She blushed and bobbed a clumsy curtsy.
“Would
you be an angel and find us a bottle of wine?” Bea asked the girl.
“Yes,
Miss Beatrice, right away,” Abby agreed and fled past Simon and out
the door.
“Poor dear,” Bea
murmured, staring down at the chair the maid had abandoned. For some
reason she could not explain, she suddenly felt ashamed—angry and
ashamed. The sight of the sleeping girl, her eagerness to please, her
blushing acceptance of the lord in her mistress’s bedchamber, it
all combined to make Beatrice feel dirty, dishonest.
Finally
she looked over her shoulder. Simon had not moved, simply stood by
the door regarding her silently.
“Why
are you standing there?” she demanded, her voice low and deep. She
heard the building fury, felt it rush through her blood. She did not
understand where it came from. She did not know how to stop it, was
not sure that she wanted to. The anger felt safe, necessary. It would
drown out the shame, allow her to get through this night and the days
to follow.
Simon
quirked a brow at her. Bea felt mean laughter rumbling up her throat,
hitching her breath. She spun away from his intent gaze, going to the
window to stare sightlessly out into the dark night. She heard Simon
moving about the room.
“Please
make yourself comfortable,” she invited and realized she could see
him reflected in the window glass. She watched him remove his coat,
fold it and lay it over a chair.
A
soft knock on the partially open door announced Abby’s return. Bea
turned from the window. “Will you set it up on the table by the
bed?”
“Yes,
Miss,” the girl replied, again sidling around Simon, who stood
before the table Bea had indicated. Simon stepped out of her way then
sat in a chair before the empty fireplace.
“Shall
I pour for you?” Abby asked, addressing the question to Simon.
“Please,”
he replied with a smile that caused the girl to blush yet again.
Bea
studied Abby’s efficient movements, her hands agile and graceful as
she poured a measure of wine into each glass. Her gaze wandered over
the girl, taking in her soft, blue eyes, the strands of dark-blonde
hair that had escaped from her mobcap, the gray dress and white apron
she wore.
She
was a pretty girl. Had Abby been born into a different family, she
would be making her debut soon, perhaps next year.
Instead
she waited upon a dishonest, lying, scheming woman. A bastard.
Bea
could not hold back bitter laughter at the thought. Simon turned his
head to look at her in surprise. Abby froze, her gaze flying to Bea’s
face.
“You
are a very pretty girl,” Bea said and watched the blush deepen on
the girl’s cheeks.
“Thank
you, Miss Beatrice,” she shyly replied, bobbing another quick
curtsy.
When
Bea only watched her silently, Abby looked to Simon, who gave her a
subtle shrug, before she asked, “Is there anything else I can do
for you, Miss Beatrice?”
“You
may undress me.”
“Beatrice,”
Simon protested quietly.
“I
would like Abby to undress me and brush out my hair,” Bea insisted.
She forced herself to raise her eyes to his, unsure what they would
reveal to him. She was confused, an awful feeling of desperation
mingled with the banked rage and shame. Would he see?
Simon
captured her gaze, his eyes dark, not angry, uncertain perhaps. She
knew she was behaving irrationally. She did not care.
“I’ll
step outside,” Simon finally replied.
“Do
not,” Bea said, waving her hands about in agitation. “Please,
stay.”
Simon
looked from her face to her hands, suspended in midair. She dropped
them to her sides, clenched her fingers in her skirts, grabbing
fistfuls of the dark silk.
Bea
looked at Abby, standing as still as a statue, her eyes wide as she
looked back. Bea realized it was the first time the timid girl had
ever looked her mistress in the eye. As if reading her mind, the maid
tore her gaze away and bent her head down.
“You
may undress me,” Bea whispered, wishing she had not started down
this path, unable to retreat from it.
As
Abby approached her, Simon rose to retrieve the two glasses of wine.
He handed one to Bea, his fingers brushing against hers as she
reached for it. Her gaze flew to his face, to see a small, infinitely
sad smile upon his lips. His eyes were sober, steady. Bea was struck
with the notion that he understood the rage and shame that had taken
hold of her, that he understood her erratic emotions.
He
nodded at Abby, as if encouraging her to continue. Bea sensed the
stiffening of the girls back, though she could no longer see her. She
had stepped behind her mistress to unbutton her gown.
Bea
sipped her wine, hoping the cool liquid would somehow soothe the heat
racing through her body.
Simon
resumed his seat and silently watched as Abby efficiently unbuttoned
her lady’s gown and carefully eased it over her shoulders, expertly
catching it as it fell to her hips, and easing it down to the floor.
She knelt to the side and held up her hand for Bea to hold for
balance as she stepped from the pool of deep-blue silk. Bea was left
in her thin cotton chemise and light stays over lacy drawers and silk
stockings. She looked down at her feet encased in dainty slippers.
Bea
brought her eyes up to find Simon’s gaze fixed upon the swell of
her breasts over her stays. He swallowed, his throat working as if to
get around a lump wedged there. He clenched his jaw once, relaxed and
raised his glass to his lips, his gaze never wavering.
Bea
took a long swallow of her own wine, looked down at Abby silently
kneeling before her and realized that she still held the girls hand.
She gave her fingers a gentle squeeze and Abby looked at her
questioningly.
“Your
slippers?” she asked.
Bea
lifted one foot then the other to allow the girl to remove her
slippers, placing them on the floor beside her gown.
She
felt Abby’s nimble fingers releasing the ribbons that held her
stockings in place and closed her eyes in relief. It was almost done.
Soon she would be naked before Simon and could send the girl to her
bed. Regret for her actions toward her maid left a sour taste in her
mouth. She raised her glass to wash it away.
When
she opened her eyes, she found Simon watching her, studying the line
of her throat, the lift of her chin, the movement of her tongue as
she licked the drops of wine from her lips. His eyes lifted to hers
and Bea was startled by the naked desire she saw there.
Abby
delicately cleared her throat, slowly reached up and under Bea’s
chemise to the ribbon of her drawers. Bea guessed the girl was giving
her time to stop her, time to find a modicum of modesty. Bea did not
halt her, only waited until the lace and cotton crumpled to the floor
to lift her bare feet and allow the maid to add the garment to the
growing pile of clothing next to her.
About Lynne Barron:
Lynne
Barron always wanted to be a writer, if only she could decide what to
write. Every Creative Writing teacher and college professor advised
her to write about what you know. But what did she know? She knew she
enjoyed the guilty pleasure of reading romance novels whenever she
could find the time between studying, working and raising her son as
a single mother. She knew quite a bit about women’s lives in the
Regency and Victorian era from years spent bouncing back and forth
between European History and English Literature as a major in
college. She knew precious little about romance except to know it was
more than the cliché card and a dozen red roses on Valentine’s
Day. Then she met her wonderfully romantic husband and finally she
knew. Passion, Love and Romance. And she began to write. Lynne lives
in Florida with her husband, son and a menagerie of rescued pets.
Social Media
My
Website Link: http://www.lynnebarron.com
Twitter:
https://twitter.com/lynnebarron06
Amazon
Author Page: http://www.amazon.com/Lynne-Barron/e/B00IQS82DU
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