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Available 4.15.24


Excerpt of No Marriage of Convenience by Elizabeth Boyle

Purchase


Avon
September 2000
Featuring: Mason St. Clair; Riley Fontaine
384 pages
ISBN: 0380815346
Paperback
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Romance Historical

Also by Elizabeth Boyle:

Six Impossible Things, May 2017
Paperback / e-Book
Four Weddings and a Sixpence, January 2017
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
The Knave of Hearts, February 2016
Paperback / e-Book
Mad About the Major, June 2015
Paperback / e-Book
The Viscount Who Lived Down the Lane, November 2014
Paperback / e-Book
If Wishes Were Earls, January 2014
Paperback / e-Book
Have You Any Rogues?, November 2013
e-Book
And The Miss Ran Away With The Rake, March 2013
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Along Came A Duke, June 2012
Paperback / e-Book
Brazen Angel, February 2012
e-Book
Brazen Temptress, February 2012
e-Book
Brazen Heiress, February 2012
e-Book
Lord Langley Is Back In Town, June 2011
Paperback / e-Book
Mad About The Duke, October 2010
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
How I Met My Countess, January 2010
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Memoirs of a Scandalous Red Dress, May 2009
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Confessions of a Little Black Gown, April 2009
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Tempted By the Night, September 2008
Mass Market Paperback / e-Book
Love Letters From a Duke, September 2007
Paperback / e-Book
His Mistress By Morning, September 2006
Paperback
One Night of Passion, July 2006
Paperback / e-Book
This Rake of Mine, October 2005
Paperback / e-Book
Hero, Come Back, June 2005
Paperback
Something About Emmaline, February 2005
Paperback
It Takes a Hero, March 2004
Paperback
Stealing the Bride, June 2003
Paperback
Once Tempted, July 2001
Paperback
No Marriage of Convenience, September 2000
Paperback

Excerpt of No Marriage of Convenience by Elizabeth Boyle

Chapter One

London, 1798

"Cousin Felicity, my brother had the business sense of a pelican," Mason St. Clair, the new Earl of Ashlin said, waving his hand over his littered desk. "Look at these. Bills for carriages. Bills for horses. I've looked in our stables. We have no horses. And we have no carriages. From what I can surmise, as quickly as Freddie bought these extravagances, he gambled them away."

Mason's announcement hardly seemed to upset his elderly relative, who sat primly on the settee in the comer of his study.

"Frederick always said life was just a dice toss away. Perhaps you should take up gambling." She nodded sagely, as if she'd recited gospel.

He picked up several sheets of paper and shook them at his cousin. "That's exactly what got us into this situation. That and Freddie's ill-advised investments. I never knew anyone who could throw so much money at such nonsense. Gold mines in Italy, Chinese inventions, and of all things, a theatre!" The Earl shook his head. "Only my brother would invest in some tawdry play on Brydge Street."

"Really, my dear, you shouldn't speak ill of the dead," she sniffled. A day never passed that Cousin Felicity didn't find something to cry about, especially when it came to Frederick. "My poor Caro and dear Frederick have only been...been... gone now..." Cousin Felicity faltered, unable to continue. With a shaky hand, she reached for her ever near lacy handkerchief and dramatically blew into it. She glanced up at him, her blue eyes misting, making her look frail beyond her fifty-odd years.

Mason sighed. "Yes, I know the last seven months have been terribly difficult for you and thegirls. But weeping all the time does not solve the problems at hand. The bill collectors are becoming quite insistent, Cousin. If we don't find a way to satisfy some of the more pressing debts...we'll be out on the street."

"Pish posh, my boy," Cousin Felicity declared most decidedly, her bout of tears forgotten as she settled back into the elegant settee and reached for her embroidery. "You are the Earl of Ashlin. They wouldn't dare cast us out. Honorable debts are always overlooked." She leaned forward in a confidential manner. "Frederick informed me thusly whenever my dressmaker became rude or insistent about my account."

"I'm sorry to be the bearer of bad news, Cousin Felicity, but debts are never overlooked, honorable or not."

"But Frederick said — "

He held up his hand to stop her from spouting another litany of Frederickisms. Even Mason had his limits with the saintly accomplishments and nonsensical witticisms his cousin attributed daily to his deceased brother.

"Really, Mason, you always tended toward exaggeration as a child. I would have thought you'd have outgrown that by now. Our situation can hardly be as bad as you say."

"I don't see how it could be any worse."

"If that is the case, you could secure quite a tidy fortune by marrying Miss Pindar," she began deliberately. "She's just come out of mourning for her father, and from what I hear, she's exceedingly well off. Yes, that would be the perfect solution." She went back to selecting a thread.

Mason leaned over the mounds of paper and gave his cousin what he hoped was a censuring look.

Marry Miss Pindar?

He'd rather suffer transportation to Botany Bay. The girl embodied every vapid, silly pretension he detested. Besides, he'd never considered himself the marrying type, having been happy until now to live out a bachelor existence.

But if Cousin Felicity wanted to deal out marriage cards, he had one of his own.

"Cousin Felicity, why don't you marry Lord Chilton?"

Cousin Felicity turned a rosy shade at the mention of her twenty-year romance with the reluctant baron. "I wouldn't find that convenient right now." She took on a renewed interest in her silks.

Mason knew that what she was really saying was that she hadn't been asked. Not once in all these years. Oh, he hadn't meant to embarrass her about her hesitant beau, but he found it the only way to stop her from pushing this proposed marriage to the cloying and wealthy Miss Pindar. And with Cousin Felicity temporarily quieted, he could get back to the accounts at hand.

"My heavens," Cousin Felicity said, interrupting his tally of the greengrocer's bill. "Have you considered the girls' dowries? You could borrow against those accounts."

Mason shook his head. He should have known Cousin Felicity never gave up easily. "Frederick drained them years ago," he told her. "Even Caroline's dower lands are mortgaged to the rooftops."

Cousin Felicity looked aghast as the reality of their situation finally sank in. "Whatever shall we do?" True to form, the elderly lady finally gave way to a full bout of weeping. "Take my poor pin money. I also have some set aside.... It is yours, my dear boy. Take it with my best wishes," she said between sobs.

"No, please, Cousin Felicity," Mason said, getting up from the desk and sitting beside her. He couldn't take her small allowance, besides the fact that it probably wouldn't even begin to cover their bare necessities. But perhaps now she'd be willing to discuss the economies he'd been trying to explain to her earlier when she'd come into his study to badger him about firing their French chef. "You know how I feel about tears."

"But the girls..." she wailed. "How will they ever hope to find husbands without dowries?"

Mason groaned. Not this husband subject again. It was worse than discussing his order that she cease her weekly visits to the dressmaker.

"Oh, Mason, this is a disaster. I'll not say another word about the way you cast out dear Henri, for the girls must have husbands. I will forgo whatever necessities I must, for I've promised them all brilliant matches."

Excerpt from No Marriage of Convenience by Elizabeth Boyle
All rights reserved by publisher and author

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