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The Undoing of a Lady (De lady's van Fortune's Folly, 4) Mass Market Paperback – July 28, 2009

3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 131 ratings

Courting scandal since girlhood, free-spirited Lady Elizabeth Scarlet vows there is just one way to save her childhood friend from a loveless marriage: to kidnap him! But Nathaniel is furious. So angry that he challenges her to take their assignation to its natural conclusion and seduce him.

When her inexperienced attempt flares into intense passion, Lizzie is ruined…and hopelessly, unexpectedly, in love with Nathaniel, the Earl of Waterhouse. Now the wild and willful Lizzie must convince Nat that they are a perfect match—in every way.

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About the Author

USA Today bestselling author Nicola Cornick has written over thirty historical romances for Harlequin and HQN Books. She has been nominated twice for a RWA RITA Award and twice for the UK RNA Award. She works as a historian and guide in a seventeenth century house. In 2006 she was awarded a Masters degree with distinction from Ruskin College, Oxford, where she wrote her dissertation on heroes.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.



The Folly, Fortune Hall, Yorkshire—June 1810 A little before midnight

It was a beautiful night for an abduction.

The moon sailed high and bright in a starlit sky. The warm breeze sighed in the treetops, stirring the scents of pine and hot grass. Deep in the heart of the wood an owl called, a long, throaty hoot that hung on the night air.

Lady Elizabeth Scarlet sat by the window, watching for the shadow, waiting to hear the step on the path outside. She knew Nat Waterhouse would come. He always came when she called. He would be annoyed of course—what man would not be irritated to be called away from his carousing on the night before his wedding—but he would still be there. He was so responsible; he would not ignore her cry for help. She knew exactly how he would respond. She knew him so well.

Her fingertips beat an impatient tattoo on the stone window ledge. She checked the watch she had purloined earlier from her brother. It felt as though she had been waiting for hours but she was surprised to see that it was only eight minutes since she had last looked. She felt nervous, which surprised her. She knew Nat would be angry but she was acting for his own good. The wedding had to be stopped. He would thank her for it one day.

From across the fields came the faint chime of the church bell. Midnight. There was the crunch of footsteps on the path. He was precisely on time. Of course he would be.

She sat still as a mouse as he opened the door of the folly. She had left the hallway in darkness but there was a candle burning in the room above. If she had calculated correctly he would go up the spiral stair and into the chamber, giving her time to lock the outer door behind him and hide the key. There was no other way out. Her half brother, Sir Montague Fortune, had had the folly built to the design of a miniature fort with arrow slits and windows too small to allow a man to pass. He had thought it a great joke to build a folly in a village called Fortune's Folly. That, Lizzie thought, was Monty's idea of amusement, that and dreaming up new taxes with which to torment the populace.

"Lizzie!"

She jumped. Nat was right outside the door of the guardroom. He sounded impatient. She held her breath.

"Lizzie? Where are you?"

He took the spiral stair two steps at a time and she slid like a wraith out of the tiny guardroom to turn the key in the heavy oaken door. Her fingers were shaking and slipped on the cold iron. She knew what her friend Alice Vickery would say if she were here now:

"Not another of your harebrained schemes, Lizzie! Stop now, before it is too late!"

But it was already too late. She could not allow herself time to think about this or she would lose her nerve. She ran back into the guardroom and stole a hand through one of the arrow slits. There was a nail on the wall outside. The key clinked softly against the stone. There. Nat could not escape until she willed it. She smiled to herself, well pleased. She had known there was no need to involve anyone else in the plan. She could handle an abduction unaided. It was easy.

She went out into the hall. Nat was standing at the top of the stairs, the candle in his hand. The flickering light threw a tall shadow. He looked huge, menacing and angry.

Actually, Lizzie thought, he
was huge, menacing and angry, but he would never hurt her. Nat would never, ever hurt her. She knew exactly how he would behave. She knew him like a brother.

"Lizzie? What the hell's going on?"

He was drunk as well, Lizzie thought. Not drunk enough to be even remotely incapacitated but enough to swear in front of a lady, which was something that Nat would normally never do. But then, if she were marrying Miss Flora Minchin the next morning, she would be swearing, too. And she would have drunk herself into a stupor. Which brought her back to the point. For Nat would
not be marrying Miss Minchin. Not in the morning. Not ever. She was here to make sure of it. She was here to save him.

"Good evening, Nat," Lizzie said brightly, and saw him scowl. "I trust you have had an enjoyable time on your last night of freedom?"

"Cut the pleasantries, Lizzie," Nat said. "I'm not in the mood." He held the candle a little higher so that the light fell on her face. His eyes were black, narrowed and hard. "What could possibly be so urgent that you had to talk to me in secret on the night before my wedding?"

Lizzie did not answer immediately. She caught the hem of her gown up in one hand and made her careful way up the stone stair. She felt Nat's gaze on her face every moment even though she did not look at him. He stood aside to allow her to enter the chamber at the top. It was tiny, furnished only with a table, a chair and a couch. Monty Fortune, having created his miniature fort, had not really known what to do with it.

When she was standing on the rug in the center of the little round turret room Lizzie turned to face Nat. Now that she could see him properly she could see that his black hair was tousled and his elegant clothes looked slightly less than pristine. His jacket hung open and his cravat was undone. Stubble darkened his lean cheek and the hard line of his jaw. There was a smoky air of the alehouse about him. His eyes glittered with impatience and irritation.

"I'm waiting," he said.

Lizzie spread her hands wide in an innocent gesture. "I asked you here to try to persuade you not to go through with the wedding," she said. She looked at him in appeal. "You know she will bore you within five minutes, Nat. No," she corrected herself. "You are already bored with her, aren't you, and you are not even wed yet. And you don't give a rush for her, either. You are making a terrible mistake."

Nat's mouth set in a thin line. He raked a hand through his hair. "Lizzie, we've spoken about this
—"

"I know," Lizzie said. Her heart hammered in her throat. "Which is why I had to do this, Nat. It's for your own good."

Fury was fast replacing the irritation in his eyes. "Do what?" he said. Then, as she did not reply: "Do
what, Lizzie?"

"I've locked you in," Lizzie said rapidly. "I promise that I will release you tomorrow—when the hour of the wedding is past. I doubt that Flora or her parents will forgive you the slight of standing her up at the altar."

She had never previously thought the Earl of Wa-terhouse a man who made a display of his emotions. She had always thought he had a good face for games of chance, showing no feeling, giving nothing away. Now, though, it was all too easy to read him. His first reaction was stupefaction. His second was grim certainty. He did not even stop to question the truth of what she had said. If she knew him well, then the reverse was also the case.

"Lizzie," he said, "you little
hellcat."

He turned and crashed angrily down the spiral stair, taking the candle, leaving her in darkness but for the faint moonlight that slid through the arrow slits in the wall. Lizzie let her breath out in a long, shaky sigh. She had only a moment to compose herself, for once he realized that there really was no escape he would be back. And this time he would be beyond mere fury.

She heard him try the thick oak door—and swear when it would not even give an inch. She saw the candle flame dance across the walls as he checked the guardroom and the passageway for potential exits. The swearing became more colorful as he acknowledged what she already knew—there was no way out. The tiny water closet opened onto the equally miniature moat and was far too small for a six foot man to squeeze through. The room in which she stood had a trapdoor that led up to the pretend battlements but she had locked it earlier and hidden the key in a hollow tree outside. She had wanted to make no mistakes.

He was back and she had been correct—he looked enraged. A muscle pulsed in his lean cheek. Every line of his body was rigid with fury.

When he spoke, however, his voice was deceptively gentle. Lizzie found it more disconcerting than if he had shouted at her.

"Why are you doing this, Lizzie?" he said.

Lizzie wiped the palms of her hands surreptitiously down the side of her gown. She wished she could stop shaking. She knew she was doing the right thing. She simply had not anticipated that it would be quite so frightening.

"I told you," she said, tilting her chin up defiantly. "I'm saving you from yourself."

Nat gave a harsh laugh. "No. You are denying me the chance to gain the fifty thousand pounds I so desperately need. You know how important this is to me, Lizzie."

"It isn't worth it for a lifetime of boredom."

"That is
my choice."

"You've made the wrong choice. I'm here to save you from it." Lizzie kept her voice absolutely level despite the pounding of her blood. "You have always cared for me and tried to protect me. Now it is my turn. I'm doing this because you are my friend and I care for you."

She saw the contemptuous flicker in his eyes that said he did not believe her. Lizzie's temper smoldered. She had always been hot-blooded, or perhaps just plain belligerent depending upon whose opinion one sought. It seemed damnably unfair of Nat to judge her when she had his best interests at heart. He should be
thanking her for saving him from this ghastly match.

Nat put the candle down on the little wooden table beside the door and took a very deliberate step toward her. He was tall
—over six-foot—broad and muscular. Lizzie tried not to feel intimidated and failed.

"Give me the key, Lizzie," he said gently.

"No." Lizzie swallowed hard. He was very close now, his physical presence powerful, threatening, in direct contradiction to the softness of his tone. But she was not afraid of Nat. In the nine years of their acquaintance he had never given her any reason to fear him.

"Where is it?"

"Hidden somewhere you won't find it."

Nat gave an exasperated sigh. He flung out an arm. "This isn't a game, Lizzie," he said. She could tell he was trying to suppress his anger, trying to be reasonable. Nat Waterhouse was, above all, a reasonable man, a rational man, and a
responsible man. And she supposed it was unreasonable of her to expect him to see the situation from her point of view. She was in the right, of course. She knew that. And in time she was sure he would acknowledge it, too. But at the moment he was annoyed. Disappointed. Yes, of course. He would be angry and frustrated to lose Flora's fortune. He had cultivated the heiress, courted her and flirted with her, which must have been a dreadfully tedious business. He had invested time and effort in landing his prize. And now she was queering his pitch. So yes, she could see that he would be cross with her.

"What you are doing is dangerous," Nat said. He still sounded in control. "You have locked yourself in with me. Is this some ridiculous attempt to compromise me so that I am obliged to marry
you instead of Flora?"

Lizzie's temper tightened another notch. She was starting to feel genuinely angry now in addition to feeling afraid. She was infuriated by his presumption in thinking she wanted him for herself. "Of course not," she said. "How conceited you are! I don't want to wed you! I'd rather pull my own ears off!"

Nat's smile was not pleasant. "I don't believe you. You have deliberately compromised yourself by locking us in together."

"Rubbish!" Lizzie said. "I don't intend to tell anyone. I only want to keep you here until it's too late for the marriage to take place, and then I will let you go."

"Handsome of you," Nat said. "You wreck my future and then you let me go to face the ruins."

"Oh, do not be so melodramatic!" Lizzie snapped. "You should not have become a fortune hunter in the first place. It does not become you!"

"There speaks a woman with fifty thousand pounds and a judgmental attitude," Nat said. "You know nothing."

"I know everything about you!" Lizzie flashed. "I have known you for over nine years and I care about you
—"

"You aren't doing this out of disinterested friendship, Lizzie," Nat interrupted her scathingly. "You are doing this because you are selfish and spoiled and immature, and you do not wish another woman to have a greater claim on me. You want to keep me for yourself."

Lizzie gaped. "You are an arrogant pig!"

"And you are a pampered brat. You need to grow up. I have thought so for a long time."

They stood glaring at one another whilst the tension in the room simmered and the candle flame flickered as though responding to something dangerous in the air.

Somewhere inside, Lizzie was hurting, but she cut the pain off, cauterized it with the heat of her anger.

"When have I been spoiled and immature?" she demanded. She had not wanted to ask, to twist the knife in her own wounds, but she found she was unable to keep the words inside.

Nat laughed, a harsh sound that ripped at her soul. "Where shall I start? You have no interest in anyone or anything beyond your own concerns and opinions. You flaunted yourself brazenly at the assembly on the very day that my engagement to Flora was announced, and that could only have been to take attention away from her.

Product details

  • Publisher ‏ : ‎ HQN; Original edition (July 28, 2009)
  • Language ‏ : ‎ English
  • Mass Market Paperback ‏ : ‎ 384 pages
  • ISBN-10 ‏ : ‎ 0373773951
  • ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0373773954
  • Item Weight ‏ : ‎ 5.6 ounces
  • Dimensions ‏ : ‎ 4.22 x 1.01 x 6.61 inches
  • Customer Reviews:
    3.9 3.9 out of 5 stars 131 ratings

About the author

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Nicola Cornick
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Nicola Cornick is a historian and author who works as a researcher and guide for the National Trust in one of the most beautiful 17th century houses in England. She writes dual time novels that illustrate her love of history, mystery and the supernatural, and focus on women from the footnotes of history. Her books have appeared in over twenty five languages, sold over half a million copies worldwide and been described as "perfect for Outlander fans." Nicola also gives writing and history talks, works as a consultant for TV and radio, and is a bookseller at the Wantage Bookshop.

Her new novel, 'The Other Gwyn Girl ' focuses on the life of Rose Gwyn, the elder sister of Nell Gwyn, infamous mistress of King Charles II. Packed with rollicking Restoration intrigue, it tells the story of the lesser-known Gwyn girl. The Other Gwyn Girl is published by Boldwood Books on 7th March 2024 in all formats and is up for pre-order now!

Nicola loves to chat to readers about history, reading and writing.

Join the conversation on Twitter, Facebook and Instagram!

You can also sign up for Nicola's newsletter on her website.

Customer reviews

3.9 out of 5 stars
3.9 out of 5
131 global ratings

Top reviews from the United States

Reviewed in the United States on September 14, 2014
liked the book
Reviewed in the United States on March 22, 2010
This is the final part of a hilarious trilogy of romances set in the fictional Yorkshire village of Fortune's Folly.

These three books are set between 1809 and 1810, which is about five years after the same author's book "
Unmasked " the main events of which also took place in Yorkshire. Many of the characters in that book reappear in the three books in the "Brides of Fortune" series. IMHO it enhances the reader's enjoyment of this trilogy to read all four books in sequence

In other words I would recommend that potential readers should read "Unmasked" first, treating this trilogy as the second, third and fourth part of a quartet, which would therefore consist of:

1) "
Unmasked "
2) "
The Confessions of a Duchess (The Brides of Fortune) "
3) "
The Scandals of An Innocent (The Brides of Fortune) "
4) This book, "The Undoing of a Lady"

The pretext of the "Brides of Fortune" trilogy is that the obnoxious and greedy squire of Fortune's Folly, Sir Montague Fortune, discovers that the village was not included in the legislation which repealed a whole range of ancient medieval laws in the seventeenth century. And that he can reactivate them, claiming outdated and absurd feudal dues.

In particular, Sir Montague reactivates something called the "Dames Tax" whereby any unmarried heiress in the village must pay him half her fortune. Under the terms of the tax, every widow or maid in Fortune's Folly who has or stands to inherit any property must marry within a year or pay half of it to Sir Montague.

Needless to say, this infuriates the maids and widows in Fortune's Folly: and it also causes them to look around for possible husbands, making the village into "a veritable marriage mart." And needless to say, all the male fortune hunters in England, from impecunious aristocrats who need money to maintain a bankrupt estate to young men on the make, flock to Fortune's Folly in the hopes of snaring a wealthy bride who needs to marry or give half her wealth to the greedy squire.

Ironically, one of the female residents most affected by this ridiculous tax is Sir Montague's own half-sister, Lady Elizabeth Scarlet, who inherited a modest fortune from her father, the previous Earl of Scarlet. Elizabeth is a golden hearted but somewhat wild young lady, who is often getting into silly scrapes, or worse, getting her friends into them. For example. Elizabeth was the real culprit when one of her madcap ideas resulted in her friend Alice Lister getting into terrible difficulties in the previous book in the series, "The Scandals of an Innocent".

Elizabeth has been extremely close since she was a girl to Nathaniel Waterhouse, who has the courtesy title of Earl of Waterhouse and is the son and heir of the Duke of Waterhouse.

PEDANT ALERT: let me get off my chest at this point that one of the mistakes in this trilogy and many of Nicola Cornick's other books is that the Dukedoms in her stories have titles which match the family surname. There isn't a single Duke in the British peerage whose family surname is identical to the title: all the English Dukes take their title from a place, usually a county or county town. One Scottish Dukedom is almost an exception - the town of Hamilton is named for the family whose head is the Duke of Hamilton, and not the other way around - but even in this case, thanks to a dynastic alliance the family surname has for centuries been Douglas-Hamilton.

Elizabeth thinks she regards Nat Waterhouse as a friend, but when he got engaged to Miss Flora Minchin in the previous book she was obviously consumed with jealousy: several of her friends commented that she was obviously in love with him.

This book begins the night before the wedding. Elizabeth, who has convinced herself that Nat is making a mistake by contracting a loveless marriage for financial reasons, decides to "kidnap" him so that he misses the wedding. But her scheme goes disastrously wrong ...

Meanwhile, romantic intrigues are not the only thing going on in this trilogy - there is also an ongoing murder investigation. Lord Liverpool, the Home Secretary, saw the the host of young men travelling to the village in seach of a wealthy bride as the perfect cover for a covert investigation into a suspect death.

Liverpool suspected that Sir William Crosby, a local magistrate who had been shot in what appeared to be a hunting accident, may have been murdered by local criminals to whose nefarious activities he was getting too close. And three of the "Guardians" - a (fictitious) group who investigate crimes for the Home Office - were young single men who have inherited serious debt problems from profligate parents.

So Liverpool orders them to go to Fortune's Folly on the pretext of looking for a bride, and to investigate Sir William Crosby's death while they are about it. One of the three Guardians sent to Fortune's Folly is none other than Lady Elizabeth's childhood friend Nat Waterhouse, which is how he comes to be in the village - but not just looking for a wife.

During the first two books, Nat and his colleagues Dexter Anstruther and Lord Miles Vickery investigated first the murder of Sir William Crosby, then that of Warren Sampson who they suspected of the killing but was murdered himself. At the start of this final book it appears that the Guardians have finished their work in Fortune's Folly and can concentrate on finding a bride (in Nat's case) or making a home with the brides they married in the first two books (in Dexter's and Miles' cases.)

But then the most hated person in Fortune's Folly is killed and the Guardians have an even more difficult mystery to solve ...

This book, and indeed the whole trilogy, is quite ridiculous, often funny, distinctly sexy, and highly entertaining. It definately is not Georgette Heyer, let alone Jane Austen. But neither does it read like an insipid attempt to copy their work for a lowbrow audience, a pitfall which all too many modern attempts at a regency romance fall into.

If you are looking for a light-hearted romance to relax with, without making too much of an intellectual demand on the brain and with few pretensions to detailed historical accuracy, this trilogy is very good fun, and on those terms I can recommend it.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2014
Reviewed in the United States on October 14, 2009
Already reviewed this writer. All I can say is READ HER WORK if you like romance novels.
Reviewed in the United States on August 2, 2009
In 1810 Lady Elizabeth "Lizzie" Scarlett is concerned that her childhood friend Lord Nathaniel Waterhouse is marrying someone he does not love out of a sense of duty. She knows Nat has always been there for her so she decides to be there for him even if he does not appreciate what she does. She kidnaps him to keep him from marrying Miss Flora Minchin of Fortune's Folly as this is no love match with his title in exchange for her money.

Lizzie's attempts to seduce Nat lead to their being compromised. Nat breaks off his engagement, but needs money to pay off a blackmailer. His solution is to marry wealthy Lizzie, which he does. However, though both feel a deep desire for the other and passion blazes between them, neither trusts the other any longer and pride leaves bot hiding their love out of fear of rejection.

Although similar in tone to the previous Brides of Fortune series (see THE CONFESSIONS OF A DUCHESS and THE SCANDALS OF THE INNOCENT) especially the lead characters, fans will enjoy this charming regency romance. The amusing story line starts off with a terrific opening abduction by an innocent woman who is seduced by her angry captive leading to THE UNDOING OF A LADY now in love. Fans will enjoy the gender war as neither seems to have the guts to tell the other how they feel.

Harriet Klausner
2 people found this helpful
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Reviewed in the United States on August 27, 2009
Nathaniel Waterhouse lived his life with honor, grace and allot of following the rules. He took his position in society as serious and wore the title of Earl with respect. His friend for nine years Lady Elizabeth Scarlet was the flip side of this coin. She was a hoyden who had little respect for honor, stature of any position nor any desire to follow rules as they were meant to be broken - every last one of them. When her mother deserted her and then her father died she has lived an unstructured and undisciplined life with her half-brothers and they let her run amuck.

But one thing Lizzie has always taken seriously is her feeling for Nat and the love she has felt for him since their first meeting even though she was just a child. She has always kept these feelings hidden from him for fear of rejection but knew that they were meant to be together even though she feigned otherwise. So when Nat decides to enter into a loveless marriage to a woman with a fortune that will free him and his family from debt Lizzie decides to take matters into her own hands to prevent this. She pushes her plan of action into effect on the eve of his wedding by asking him to meet with her in a secluded location. Lizzie knows he will come because he always does when she requests it. But after he shows up and she imprisons him until after the wedding a chain of events she never expected occur. Lizzie finds herself compromised by Nat, his marriage called off and herself trapped into a marriage with Nat she was not prepared for. They light up the night with their passion and intense lust for each other but can that keep the fire burning through the years. Lizzie is not convinced of this but Nat is sure she is his perfect match.

Then Lizzie's brother is murdered and everyone becomes a suspect and wonders who did this terrible thing and if anyone might will be next. Monty was not loved by the village due to his reinstatement of the Dames' Tax but is that enough to provoke someone to murder him? Nat has always been the protector of Lizzie and this tragedy forces him to try even harder to get her under control which only results in Lizzie acting more inappropriately and doing such outlandish things that no can believe how brash she is.

This story is a complete and total delight on every page. You have Nat and Lizzie knocking heads at every instance with this intense and overpowering passion, the underlying mystery of who murdered Monty and all the high drama of how the village is going to combat the latest tax scheme. These characters are so endearing and true to form that you are rooting for them to succeed at their individual successes as well as the chance to figure out that they love each other and get on with it already. The back story with Lydia is a tear jerker as you know this woman deserves better than she is getting but all the friends (Alice & Laura) pull together to show that even in the Regency period of time women were strong enough to run the world.

[...]
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Top reviews from other countries

peter anderson
5.0 out of 5 stars Good value
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on August 29, 2023
Nice book
Marshall Lord
4.0 out of 5 stars Conclusion to the "Brides of Fortune" trilogy
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 22, 2010
This is the final part of a hilarious trilogy of romances set in the fictional Yorkshire village of Fortune's Folly.

All three are set about five years after the same author's novel "
Unmasked " the events of which took place in 1804 and also in Yorkshire. Many of the characters in that book reappear in the three books in the "Brides of Fortune" series. IMHO it enhances the reader's enjoyment of this trilogy to read all four books in sequence.

In other words I would recommend that potential readers should read "Unmasked" first, treating this trilogy as the second, third and fourth part of a quartet, which would therefore consist of:

1) "
Unmasked "
2) "
The Confessions of a Duchess (Brides of Fortune) "
3) "
The Scandals of an Innocent (Brides of Fortune) "
4) "The Undoing of a Lady"

The pretext of the "Brides of Fortune" trilogy is that the obnoxious and greedy squire of Fortune's Folly, Sir Montague Fortune, discovers that the village was not covered when a whole range of ancient medieval laws were repealed in the seventeenth century. And that he can reactivate them, claiming outdated and absurd feudal dues.

In particular, Sir Montague reactivates something called the "Dames Tax" whereby any unmarried heiress in the village must pay him half her fortune. Under the terms of the tax, every widow or maid in Fortune's Folly who has or stands to inherit any property must marry within a year or pay half of it to Sir Montague.

Needless to say, this infuriates the women of Fortune's Folly, particularly the sinngle ones with any money: and it also causes them to look around for possible husbands, making the village into "a veritable marriage mart." And needless to say, all the male fortune hunters in England, from impecunious aristocrats who need money to maintain a bankrupt estate to young men on the make, flock to Fortune's Folly in the hopes of snaring a wealthy bride.

Ironically, one of the female residents most affected by this ridiculous tax is Sir Montague's own half-sister, Lady Elizabeth Scarlet, who inherited a modest fortune from her father, the previous Earl of Scarlet. Elizabeth is a golden hearted but somewhat wild young lady, who often gets into silly scrapes, or worse, gets her friends into them. For example. Elizabeth was the real culprit when one of her madcap ideas caused her friend Alice Lister terrible embarrassment in the previous book in the series, "The Scandals of an Innocent".

Elizabeth has been extremely close since she was a girl to Nathaniel Waterhouse, who has the courtesy title of Earl of Waterhouse and is the son and heir of the Duke of Waterhouse.

PEDANT ALERT: let me get off my chest at this point that one of the mistakes in this trilogy and many of Nicola Cornick's other books is that the Dukedoms in her stories have titles which match the family surname. There isn't a single Duke in the British peerage whose family surname is identical to the title: all the English Dukes take their title from a place, usually a county or county town. One Scottish Dukedom is almost an exception - both because the title is part of the surname, and because the town of Hamilton is named for the family whose head is the Duke of Hamilton, rather than the other way around - but even in this case, thanks to a dynastic alliance hundreds of years ago, the family surname has all that time been Douglas-Hamilton.

Elizabeth thinks she regards Nat Waterhouse as a friend, but when he got engaged to Miss Flora Minchin in the previous book she was consumed with jealousy: several of her friends commented that she was obviously in love with him.

This book begins the night before Nat and Flora are due to be married. Elizabeth, who has convinced herself that Nat is making a mistake by contracting a loveless marriage for financial reasons, decides to "kidnap" him so that he misses the wedding. But her scheme goes disastrously wrong ...

Meanwhile, romantic intrigues are not the only story in this trilogy - there is also an ongoing murder investigation. Lord Liverpool, the Home Secretary, saw the the host of young men travelling to the village in seach of a wealthy bride as the perfect cover for a covert investigation into a suspect death.

Liverpool suspected that Sir William Crosby, a local magistrate who had been shot in what appeared to be a hunting accident, may have been murdered by local criminals to whose nefarious activities he was getting too close. And three of the "Guardians" - a (fictional) group who investigate crimes for the Home Office - were young single men who have inherited serious debt problems from profligate parents. These three: Dexter Anstruther (
The Confessions of a Duchess (Brides of Fortune) ), Lord Miles Vickery ( The Scandals of an Innocent (Brides of Fortune) ), and Nat Waterhouse (this book) are the heroes of the three "Brides of Fortune" books.

Liverpool orders our three heroes to go to Fortune's Folly on the pretext of looking for a bride, and to investigate Sir William Crosby's death while they are about it. And that's how Lady Elizabeth's childhood friend Nat Waterhouse, comes to be in the village - not just looking for a wife, but for a murderer as well!

During the first two books, Nat and his colleagues investigated first the murder of Sir William Crosby, then that of Warren Sampson who they suspected of the killing but was murdered himself. At the start of this final book it appears that the Guardians have finished their work in Fortune's Folly and can concentrate on finding a bride (in Nat's case) or making a home with the brides they married in the first two books (in Dexter's and Miles' cases.)

But then the most hated person in Fortune's Folly is killed and the Guardians have an even more difficult mystery to solve, because practically the entire village had a motive for the murder ...

This book, and indeed the whole trilogy, is quite ridiculous, often funny, distinctly sexy, and highly entertaining. It definately is not Georgette Heyer, let alone Jane Austen. But neither does it read like an insipid attempt to copy their work for a lowbrow audience, a pitfall which all too many modern attempts at a regency romance fall into.

If you are looking for a light-hearted romance to relax with, without making too much of an intellectual demand on the brain and with few pretensions to detailed historical accuracy, this trilogy is very good fun, and on those terms I can recommend it.
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Amazon user
3.0 out of 5 stars Good enough to pass away an evening but maybe not a book I would return to often......
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on December 30, 2012
Had I not read "Deceived" by Nicola Cornick I may have felt inclined to give this book a higher rating but with such a brilliant book by the same author having already been read, several times, I must admit that this book seemed a little lacking in comparison.
Excellently written scenes of passion but the overall storyline was a little weaker than some of her other works. I enjoyed the tension between the two main characters but found the male character far more believable and likeable than the female character.....
Worth a read, but not one you would find yourself returning to.
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john01793
5.0 out of 5 stars Great book
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on October 2, 2020
Great book worth reading
Pixi
2.0 out of 5 stars X
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on March 9, 2018
Totally implausible storyline.