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For a limited time, Avon Books
has made the first Bridgerton novel available in its entirety online. Get
the details here.
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To Sir Phillip, With Love begins
mere hours after Romancing Mr. Bridgerton
ends. Which means that Eloise doesn't know RMB's big secret!
Her family could have told her halfway through the book, but
I decided they wouldn't, just to be cruel. (Not to mentions
that the logistics for me, as the author, were too daunting...)
The working title for this book was FOR ELOISE, WHEREVER I MAY
FIND HER, which then changed to THE IMPORTANCE OF BEING ELOISE.
Eloise's letters (which serve as epigraphs for chapter #2 and
on) were written well after I'd finished the book. I wanted
to do something fun, along the lines of the Lady Whistledown
entries in my previous books, but the muse didn't strike until
SIR PHILLIP was well into the editorial process.
Willow bark contains the same active indredient as aspirin and
is indeed quite useful in reducing a fever.

To Sir Phillip, With Love
is fifth in the Bridgerton series. The rest are as follows:
#1: The Duke and I
#2: The Viscount Who Loved Me
#3: An Offer from a Gentleman
#4: Romancing Mr. Bridgerton
#6: When He Was Wicked
#7: It's In His Kiss
#8: On the Way to the Wedding
top

To Sir Phillip, With Love spent
four weeks on the New York Times bestseller
list (paperback fiction), peaking at #6.
Named
one of the six best original mass market paperbacks of 2003
by Publishers Weekly. To see the full list
of honorees, click
here.
To Sir Phillip, With Love is
in fine company as one of the top ten Favorite Books of
the year (annual poll by Romance Writers of America). For
those of you interested in the entire list, here
it is:
#8
bestselling romance of 2003 at Amazon.com
Six
weeks on the USA Today bestseller list.
Starred
review, Publishers Weekly. Five weeks on the Publishers
Weekly besteller list, reaching #4.
#1
on the Waldenbooks Mass Market bestseller list.
A
Main Selection of the Rhapsody Book Club, and a Featured Alternate
Selection of the Doubleday Book Club.
Available in large
print and as an e-book.
top


Prologue
February, 1823
Gloucestershire, England
It was ironic, really, that it
had happened on such a sunny day.
The first sunny day in what had
it been--six straight weeks of gray skies, accompanied by the
occasional sprinkling of light snow or rain? Even Phillip, who'd
thought himself impervious to the vagaries of the weather, had
felt his spirits lighten, his smile widen. He'd gone outside--
he'd had to. No one could remain indoors during such a splendid
display of sunshine.
Especially in the middle of
such a gray winter.
Even now, more than a month after
it had happened, he couldn't quite believe that the sun had
had the temerity to tease him so.
And how was it that he'd been
so blind, that he'd not expected it? He'd lived with Marina
since the day of their marriage. Eight long years to know the
woman. He should have expected it. And in truth...
Well, in truth, he had
expected it. He just hadn't wanted to admit to the expectation.
Perhaps he was just trying to delude himself, protect himself
even. To hide from the obvious, hoping that if he didn't think
about it, it would never happen.
But it did. And on a sunny day,
to boot. God certainly had a sick sense of humor.
He looked down at his glass of
whiskey, which was, quite inexplicably, empty. He must have
drunk the damned thing, and yet he had no memory of doing so.
He didn't feel woozy, at least not as woozy as he should have
been. Or even as woozy as he wanted to be.
He stared out the window at
the sun, which was slipping low on the horizon. It had been
another sunny day today. That probably explained his exceptional
melancholy. At least he hoped it did. He wanted an explanation,
needed one, for this awful tiredness that seemed to be taking
over. Melancholy terrified him. More than anything. More than
fire, more than war, more than hell itself. The thought of sinking
into sadness, of being like her...
Marina had been melancholy. Marina
had spent her entire life, or at least the entire life he'd
known, melancholy. He couldn't remember the sound of her laughter,
and in truth, he wasn't sure that he'd ever known it.
It had been a sunny day, and--
He squeezed his eyes shut, not
certain whether the motion was meant to urge the memory or dispel
it.
It had been a sunny day, and...

"Never thought you'd feel the
likes of that on your skin again, eh, Sir Phillip?"
Phillip Crane turned his face
to the sun, closing his eyes as he let the warmth spread over
his skin. "It's perfect," he murmured. "Or it would be, if it
weren't so bloody cold."
Miles Carter, his secretary,
chuckled. "It's not as cold as that. The lake hasn't frozen
this year. Just a few patchy spots."
Reluctantly, Phillip turned away
from the sun and opened his eyes. "It isn't spring, though,"
"If you were wishing for spring,
sir, perhaps you should have consulted a calendar."
Phillip regarded him with a sideways
glance. "Do I pay you for such impertinence?"
"Indeed. And rather handsomely,
too."
Phillip smiled to himself as
both men paused to enjoy the sun for a few moments longer.
"I thought you didn't mind the
gray," Miles said conversationally, once they'd resumed their
trek to Phillip's greenhouse.
"I don't," Phillip said, striding
along with the confidence of a natural athlete. "But just because
I don't mind an overcast sky doesn't mean I don't prefer the
sun." He paused, thought for a moment. "Be sure to tell Nurse
Millsby to take the children outside today. They'll need warm
coats, of course, and hats and mittens and the like, but they
ought to get a little sun on their faces. They've been cooped
up far too long."
"As have we all," Miles murmured.
Phillip chuckled. "Indeed." He
glanced over his shoulder at his greenhouse. He probably ought
to take care of his correspondence now, but he had some seeds
he needed to sort through, and truly, there was no reason he
couldn't conduct his business with Miles in an hour or so. "Go
on," he said to Miles. "Find Nurse Millsby. You and I can deal
later. You know you hate the greenhouse, anyway."
"Not this time of year," Miles
said. "The heat is rather welcome."
Phillip arched a brow as he
inclined his head toward Romney Hall. "Are you calling my ancestral
home drafty?"
"All ancestral homes are
drafty."
"True enough," Phillip
said with a grin. He rather liked Miles. He'd hired him six
months earlier to help with the mountains of paperwork and details
that seemed to accumulate from the running of his small property.
Miles was quite good. Young, but good. And his dry sense of
humor was certainly welcome in a house where laughter was never
in abundance. The servants would never dare joke with Phillip,
and Marina... well, it went without saying that Marina did not
laugh or joke.
The children sometimes made Phillip
laugh, but that was a different sort of humor, and besides,
most of the time he did not know what to say to them. He tried,
but then he felt too awkward, too big, too strong if such a
thing were possible. And then he just found himself shooing
them off, telling them to go back to their nurse.
It was easier that way.
"Go on, then," Phillip said,
sending Miles off on a task he probably should have done himself.
He hadn't seen his children yet today, and he supposed he ought
to, but he didn't want to spoil the day by saying something
stern, which he inevitably seemed to do.
He'd find them while they were
off on their nature walk with Nurse Millsby. That would be a
good idea. Then he could point out some sort of plant and tell
them about it, and everything would remain perfectly simple
and benign.
Phillip entered his greenhouse
and shut the door behind him, taking a welcome breath of the
moist air. He'd studied botany at Cambridge, taken a first even,
and in truth, he'd probably have taken up an academic life if
his older brother had not died at Waterloo, thrusting the second-born
Phillip into the role of landowner and country gentleman.
He supposed it could have been
worse. He could have been landowner and city gentleman, after
all. At least here he was able to pursue his botanical pursuits
in relative serenity.
He bent over his workbench, examining
his latest project-- a strain of peas that he was trying to
breed to grow fatter and plumper in the pod. No luck yet, though.
This latest batch was not just shriveled but had even turned
yellow, which had not been the expected result at all.
Phillip frowned, then allowed
himself a small smile as he moved to the back of the greenhouse
to gather his supplies. He never minded too terribly when his
experiments did not produce the expected outcome. In his opinion,
necessity had never been the mother of invention.
Accidents. It was all about accidents.
No scientist would admit to it, of course, but most great invention
occurred while one was attempting to solve some other problem
entirely.
He chuckled as he swept the shriveled
seeds aside. At this rate, he'd cure gout by the end of the
year.
Back to work. Back to work. He
bent over his seed collection, smoothing them out so that he
could examine them all. He needed just the right one for--
He looked up and out the freshly
washed glass. A movement across the field caught his eye. A
flash of red.
Red. Phillip smiled to himself
as he shook his head. It must be Marina.Red was her favorite
color, something that he'd always found odd. Anyone who spent
any time with her would have surely thought she'd prefer something
darker, more somber.
He watched as she disappeared
into the wooded copse, then got back to work. It was rare for
Marina to venture outside. These days she didn't often even
leave the confines of her bedchamber. Phillip was happy to see
her out in the sun. Maybe it would restore her spirits. Not
completely, of course. Phillip didn't think even the sun had
the ability to do that. But maybe a bright, warm day would be
enough to draw her out for a few hours, bring a small smile
to her face.
Heaven knew the children could
use that. They visited their mother in her room almost every
evening, but it wasn't enough.
And Phillip knew that this lack
was not made up for by him.
He sighed, a wave of guilt washing
over him. He was not the sort of father they needed, he knew
that. He tried to tell himself that he was doing his best, that
he was succeeding in what was his only goal when it came to
parenthood-- that he not behave in the manner of his
own father.
But still he knew it wasn't enough.
With resolute motions, he pushed
himself away from his workbench. The seeds could wait. His children
could probably wait, too, but that didn't mean they should.
And he ought to take them on their nature walk, not Nurse Millsby,
who didn't know a deciduous tree from a coniferous and would
most likely tell them that a rose was a daisy and...
He glanced out the window again,
reminding himself that it was February. Nurse Millsby wasn't
likely to locate any sort of flower in this weather, but still,
it didn't excuse the fact that he ought to take the children
on their nature walk. It was the one sort of children's activity
at which he truly excelled, and he ought not shirk the responsibility.
He strode out of the greenhouse
but then stopped, not even a third of the way back to Romney
Hall. If he was going to fetch the children, he ought to take
them out to see their mother. They craved her company, even
when she did nothing more than pat them on the head. Yes, they
should find Marina. That would be even more beneficial than
a nature walk.
But he knew from experience that
he ought not make assumptions about Marina's state of mind.
Just because she'd ventured outside did not mean that she was
feeling well. And he hated when the children saw her in one
of her moods.
Phillip turned around and headed
out toward the copse, where he'd seen Marina disappear just
a few moments earlier. He walked with nearly twice the speed
of Marina; it wouldn't take very long to catch up to her and
ascertain her mood. He could be back at the nursery before the
children set out with Nurse Millsby.
He walked through the woods,
easily following Marina's path. The ground was moist, and Marina
must have been wearing heavy boots, because her prints had sunk
into the earth with clear definition. They led down the slight
incline and out of the woods, then onto a grassy patch.
"Damn," Phillip muttered, the
word barely audible as the wind picked up around him. It was
impossible to see her footprints on the grass. He used his hand
to shade his eyes from the sun and scanned the horizon, looking
for a telltale scrap of red.
Not near the abandoned cottage,
nor at Phillip's field of experimental grains, nor at the large
boulder that Phillip had spent so many hours clambering upon
when he was a child. He turned north, his eyes narrowing when
he finally saw her. She was heading toward the lake.
The lake.
Phillip's lips parted as he stared
down at her form, moving slowly toward the water's edge. He
wasn't quite frozen; it was more that he was... suspended...
as his mind took in the strange sight. Marina didn't swim. He
didn't even know if she could. He supposed she was aware that
there was a lake on the grounds, but in truth, he'd never known
her to go there, not in the eight years they'd been married.
He started walking toward her,
his feet somehow recognizing what his mind refused to accept.
As she stepped into the shallows, he picked up speed, still
too far to do anything but call out her name.
But if she heard him, she made
no indication, just continued her slow and steady progress into
the depths.
"Marina!" he screamed, now breaking
into a run. He was still a good minute away, even moving at
top speed. "Marina!"
She reached the point where the
bottom dropped off, and then she dropped off, too, disappearing
under the gunmetal gray of the surface, her red cloak floating
along the top for a few seconds before being sucked under after
her.
He yelled her name again, even
though she couldn't possibly hear. He skidded and stumbled down
the hill leading to the lake, then had just enough presence
of mind to yank off his coat and boots before diving into the
freezing cold water. She'd been under barely a minute; his mind
recognized that that was probably not enough time to drown,
but every second it took him to find her was one second toward
her death.
He'd swum in the lake countless
times, knew exactly where the bottom dropped off, and he reached
that critical point with swift, even strokes, barely noticing
the drag of the water against his heavy clothes.
He could find her. He had
to find her.
Before it was too late.
He dove down, his eyes scanning
the murky water. Marina must have kicked up some of the sand
from the bottom, and he had surely done the same, because the
fine silt was swirling around him, the puffy opaque clouds making
it difficult to see.
But in the end, Marina was saved
by her one colorful quirk, and Phillip pumped through the water,
down to the bottom where he saw the red of her cloak floating
through the water like a languorous kite. She did not fight
him as he pulled her to the surface; indeed, she had already
lost consciousness and was nothing more than a dead weight in
his arms.
They broke out into the air,
and he took great, big gasps to fill his burning lungs. For
a moment he could do nothing but breathe; his body recognizing
that it had to save itself before he could save anyone else.
Then he pulled her along to the shore, careful to keep her face
above water, even though she didn't seem to be breathing.
Finally, they reached the water's
edge, and he dragged her upon the narrow strip of dirt and pebbles
that separated the water from the grass. With frantic movements
he felt in front of her face for air, but there was none emerging
from her lips.
He didn't know what to do, hadn't
thought he'd ever have to save someone from drowning, so he
just did what seemed most sensible and heaved her over his lap,
face down, whacking her on the back. Nothing happened at first,
but after the fourth violent thrust, she coughed, and a stream
of murky water erupted from her mouth.
He turned her over quickly. "Marina?"
he asked urgently, lightly slapping her face. "Marina?"
She coughed again, her body wracked
by spasmodic tremors. Then she began to suck in air, her lungs
forcing her to live, even when her soul desired something else.
"Marina," Phillip said, his voice
shaking with relief. "Thank God." He didn't love her, had never
really loved her, but she was his wife, and she was the mother
of his children, and she was, deep down, beneath her unshakable
cloak of sorrow and despair, a good and fine person. He may
not have loved her, but he did not want her death.
She blinked, her eyes unfocused.
And then, finally, she seemed to realize where she was, who
he was, and she whispered, "No."
"I've got to get you back to
the house," he said gruffly, startled by how angry he was over
that single word.
No.
How dare she refuse his rescue?
Would she give up on life just because she was sad? Did
her melancholy amount to more than their two children? In the
balance of life, did a bad mood weigh more than their need for
a mother?
"I'm taking you home," he bit
out, heaving her none-too-gently into his arms. She was breathing
now, and clearly in possession of her faculties, misguided though
they may be. There was no need to treat her like a delicate
flower.
"No," she sobbed quietly. "Please
don't. I don't want... I don't..."
"You're going home," he stated,
trudging up the hill, oblivious to the chill wind turning his
sodden clothes to ice.
"I can't," she whispered, with
what seemed like her last ounce of energy.
And as Phillip carried his burden
home, all he could think was how apt those words were.
I can't.
In a way, it seemed to sum up
her entire life.

By nightfall, it became apparent
that fever might succeed where the lake had failed.
Phillip had carried Marina home
as quickly as he was able, and with the aid of Mrs. Hurley,
his housekeeper, they had stripped her of her icy garments and
tried to warm her beneath the goosedown quilt that had been
the centerpiece of her trousseau eight years earlier.
"What happened?" Mrs. Hurley
had gasped when he staggered through the kitchen door. He hadn't
wanted to use the main entrance, where he might be seen by his
children, and besides, the kitchen door was closer by a good
forty yards.
"She fell in the lake,"
he said gruffly.
Mrs. Hurley gave him a look that
was somehow dubious and sympathetic all in one, and he knew
that she knew the truth. She had worked for the Cranes since
their marriage; she knew Marina's moods.
She had shooed him out of the
room once they had Marina in bed, insisting that he change his
own clothing before he caught his death as well. He had returned,
though, to Marina's side. That was his place as her husband,
he thought guiltily, a place he had avoided in recent years.
It was depressing to be with
Marina. It was hard.
But now wasn't the time to shirk
his duties or his place, and so he sat at her bedside throughout
the day and into the night. He mopped her brow when she began
to perspire, tried to pour lukewarm broth down her throat when
she was calm.
He told her to fight, even though
he knew his words fell on deaf ears.
Three days later she was dead.
It was what she'd wanted, but
that was little comfort as Phillip faced his children, twins,
just turned seven years old, and tried to explain that their
mother was gone. He sat in their nursery, his large frame too
big for any of their tot-sized chairs. But he sat, anyway, twisted
like a pretzel, and forced himself to meet their gazes as he
forced the words out.
They said little, which was
unlike them. But they didn't look surprised, which Phillip found
disturbing.
"I--I'm sorry," he choked out,
once he reached the end of his speech. He loved them so much,
and he failed them in so many ways. He barely knew how to be
a father to them; how in hell was he meant to take on the role
of mother as well?
"It's not your fault," Oliver
said, his brown eyes capturing his father's with an intensity
that was unsettling. "She fell in the lake, didn't she? You
didn't push her."
Phillip only nodded, unsure of
how to respond.
"Is she happy now?" Amanda asked
softly.
"I think so," Phillip whispered.
"She gets to watch you all the time now from heaven, so she
must be happy."
The twins seemed to consider
that for quite some time. "I hope she's happy," Oliver finally
said, his voice more resolute than his expression. "Maybe she
won't cry anymore."
Phillip felt his breath catch
in his throat. He hadn't realized that they had heard Marina's
sobs. She only seemed to sink so low late at night; their room
was directly above hers, but he'd always assumed they'd been
asleep when their mother started to cry.
Amanda nodded her agreement,
her little blond head bobbing up and down. "If she's happy now,"
she said, "then I'm glad she's gone."
"She's not gone," Oliver cut
in. "She's dead."
"No, she's gone," Amanda
persisted.
"It's the same thing," Phillip
said flatly, wishing he had something to tell them other than
the truth. "But I think she's happy now."
And in a way, that was the truth,
too. It was what Marina had wanted, after all. Maybe it was
all she had wanted all along.
Amanda and Oliver were quiet
for a long while, both keeping their eyes on the floor as their
legs swung from their perch on Oliver's bed. They looked so
small, sitting there on a bed that was clearly too high for
them. Phillip frowned. How was it that he'd never noticed this
before? Shouldn't they be on lower beds? What if they fell off
in the night?
Or maybe they were too big for
all that. Maybe they didn't fall out of bed any longer. Maybe
they never had.
Maybe he truly was an abominable
father. Maybe he should know these things.
Maybe... Maybe... He closed his
eyes and sighed. Maybe he should stop thinking quite so much
and simply try his best and be happy with that.
"Are you going to go away?" Amanda
asked, raising her head.
He looked into her eyes, so
blue, so like her mother's. "No," he whispered fiercely, kneeling
before her and taking her tiny hands in his own. They looked
so small in his grasp, so fragile.
"No," he repeated. "I'm not going
away. I'm not ever going away..."

Phillip looked down at his whiskey
glass. It was empty again. Funny how a whiskey glass could go
empty even after one filled it four times.
He hated remembering. He wasn't
sure what was the worst. Was it the dive underwater or the moment
Mrs. Hurley had turned to him and said, "She's gone."
Or was it his children, the sorrow
on their faces, the fear in their eyes?
He lifted the glass to his lips,
letting the final drops slide into his mouth. The worst part
was definitely his children. He'd told them he wouldn't ever
leave them, and he hadn't --he wouldn't-- but his simple presence
wasn't enough. They needed more. They needed someone who knew
how to be a parent, who knew how to speak to them and understand
them and get them to mind and behave.
And since he couldn't very well
get them another father, he supposed he ought to think about
finding them a mother. It was too soon, of course. He couldn't
marry anyone until his prescribed period of mourning was completed,
but that didn't mean he couldn't look.
He sighed, slumping in his seat.
He needed a wife. Almost any wife would do. He didn't care what
she looked like. He didn't care if she had money. He didn't
care if she could do sums in her head or speak French or even
ride a horse.
She just had to be happy.
Was that so much to want in a
wife? A smile, at least once a day. Maybe even the sound of
her laughter?
And she had to love his children.
Or at least pretend so well that they never knew the difference.
And she had to stay. He wouldn't
risk breaking their hearts again with a woman who would tire
of their quiet life in the country.
It wasn't so much to ask for,
was it?
"Sir Phillip?"
Phillip looked up, cursing at
himself for having left his study door slightly ajar. Miles
Carter, his secretary, was poking his head in.
"What is it?"
"A letter, sir," Miles said,
walking forward to hand him an envelope. "From London."
Phillip looked down at the envelope
in his hand, his brows rising at the obviously feminine slant
to the handwriting. He dismissed Miles with a nod, then picked
up his letter-opener and slid it under the wax. A single sheet
of paper slipped out. Phillip rubbed it between his fingers.
High quality. Expensive. Heavy, too, a clear sign that the sender
need not economize to reduce franking costs.
Then he turned it over and read:
 |
No. 5, Bruton Street
London
Sir Phillip Crane--
I am writing to express my condolences
on the loss of your wife, my dear cousin Marina. Although
it has been many years since I last saw Marina, I remember
her fondly and was deeply saddened to have heard of
her passing.
Please do not hesitate to write
if there is anything I can do to ease your pain at this
difficult time.
Yrs,
Miss Eloise Bridgerton
|
Phillip rubbed his eyes. Bridgerton...
Bridgerton. Did Marina have Bridgerton cousins? She must have
done, if one of them was sending him a letter.
He sighed, then surprised himself
by reaching for his own stationery and quill. He'd received
precious few condolence notes since Marina had died. It seemed
most of her friends and family had forgotten her since her marriage.
He supposed he shouldn't be upset, or even surprised. She'd
rarely left her bedchamber; it was easy to forget about someone
one never saw.
Miss Bridgerton deserved a reply.
It was common courtesy, or even if it wasn't (and Phillip was
quite certain he didn't know the full etiquette of one's wife
dying), it still somehow seemed like the right thing to do.
And so, with weary breath, he
put his quill to paper.


Chapter One
May 1824
Somewhere on the road from London to Gloucestershire.
The middle of the night.
 |
Dear Miss Bridgerton--
Thank you for your kind note at
the loss of my wife. It was thoughtful of you to take
the time to write to a gentleman you have never met.
I offer you this pressed flower as thanks. It is naught
but the simple red campion (silene dioica), but it brightens
the fields here in Gloucestershire, and indeed seems
to have arrived early this year.
It was Marina's favorite wildflower.
Sincerely,
Sir Phillip Crane
|
Eloise Bridgerton smoothed the
well-read sheet of paper across her lap. There was little light
by which to read, even with the full moon shining through the
windows of the coach, but that didn't really matter. She had
the entire letter memorized, and the delicate pressed flower,
which was actually more pink than red, was safely protected
between the pages of a book she'd nipped from her brother's
library.
She hadn't been too terribly
surprised when she'd received a reply from Sir Phillip. Good
manners dictated as much, although even Eloise's mother, surely
the supreme arbiter of good behavior, said that Eloise took
her correspondence a bit too seriously.
It was common, of course, for
ladies of Eloise's station to spend several hours each week
writing letters, but Eloise had long since fallen into the habit
of taking that amount of time each day. She enjoyed writing
notes, especially to people she hadn't seen in years (she'd
always liked to imagine their surprise when they opened her
envelope) and so she pulled out her pen and paper for most any
occasion--births, deaths, any sort of achievement that deserved
congratulations or condolences.
She wasn't sure why she kept
sending her missives, just that she spent so much time writing
letters to whichever of her siblings were not in residence in
London at the time, and it seemed easy enough to pen a short
note to some far-off relative while she was seated at her escritoire.
And although everyone penned
a short note in reply --she was a Bridgerton, of course, and
no one wanted to offend a Bridgerton-- never had anyone enclosed
a gift, even something so humble as a pressed flower.
Eloise closed her eyes, picturing
the delicate pink petals. It was hard to imagine a man handling
such a fragile bloom. Her four brothers were all big, strong
men, with broad shoulders and large hands that would surely
mangle the poor thing in a heartbeat.
She had been intrigued by Sir
Phillip's reply, especially his use of the Latin, and she had
immediately penned her own response.
 |
Dear Sir Phillip--
Thank you so very much for the
charming pressed flower. It was such a lovely surprise
when it floated out of the envelope. And such a precious
memento of dear Marina, as well.
I could not help but notice your
facility with the flower's scientific name. Are you
a botanist?
Yours,
Miss Eloise Bridgerton
|
It was sneaky of her to end her
letter with a question. Now the poor man would be forced to
respond again.
He did not disappoint her. It
had taken only ten days for Eloise to receive his reply.
 |
Dear Miss Bridgerton--
Indeed I am a botanist, trained
at Cambridge, although I am not currently connected
with any university or scientific board. I conduct experiments
here at Romney Hall, in my own greenhouse.
Are you of a scientific bent as
well?
Yours,
Sir Phillip Crane
|
Something about the correspondence
was thrilling; perhaps it was simply the excitement of finding
someone not related to her who actually seemed eager to conduct
a written dialogue. Whatever it was, Eloise wrote back immediately.
 |
Dear Sir Phillip--
Heavens, no, I have not the scientific
mind, I'm afraid, although I do have a fair head for
sums. My interests lie more in the humanities; you may
have noticed that I enjoy penning letters.
Yours in friendship,
Eloise Bridgerton
|
Eloise hadn't been certain about
signing with such an informal salutation, but she decided to
err on the side of daring. Sir Phillip was obviously enjoying
the correspondence as much as she; surely he wouldn't have finished
his missive with a question, otherwise?
Her answer came a fortnight later.
 |
My dear Miss Bridgerton--
Ah, but it is a sort of friendship,
isn't it? I confess to a certain measure of isolation
here in the country, and if one cannot have a smiling
face across one's breakfast table, then one might at
least have an amiable letter, don't you think?
I have enclosed another flower
for you. This one is geranium pratense, more commonly
known as the meadow cranesbill.
With great regard,
Phillip Crane
|
Eloise remembered that day well.
She had sat in her chair, the one by the window in her bedchamber,
and stared at the carefully pressed, purple flower for what
seemed like an eternity. Was he attempting to court her?
Through the post?
And then one day she received
a note that was quite different from the rest.
 |
My dear Miss Bridgerton--
We have been corresponding now
for quite some time, and although we have never formally
met, I feel as if I know you. I hope you feel the same.
Forgive me if I am too bold, but
I am writing to invite you to visit me here at Romney
Hall. It is my hope that after a suitable period of
time, we might decide that we will suit, and you will
consent to be my wife.
You will, of course, be properly
chaperoned. If you accept my invitation, I will make
immediate plans to bring my widowed aunt to Romney Hall.
I do hope you will consider my
proposal.
Yours, as always,
Phillip Crane
|
Eloise had immediately tucked
the letter away in a drawer, unable to even fathom his request.
He wanted to marry someone he didn't even know?
No, to be fair, that wasn't entirely
true. They did know one another. They'd said more in the course
of a year's correspondence than many husbands and wives did
during the entire course of a marriage.
But still, they'd never met.
Eloise thought about all of the
marriage proposals she'd refused over the years. How many had
there been? At least six. Now she couldn't even remember why
she'd refused some of them. No reason, really, except that they
weren't...
Perfect.
Was that so much to expect?
She shook her head, aware that
she sounded silly and spoiled. No, she didn't need someone perfect.
She just needed someone perfect for her.
She knew what the society matrons
said about her. She was too demanding, worse than foolish. She'd
end up a spinster-- no, they didn't say that anymore. They said
she already was a spinster, which was true. One didn't reach
the age of eight and twenty without hearing that whispered behind
one's back.
Or thrown in one's face.
But the funny truth was, Eloise
didn't mind her situation. Or at least, she hadn't, not until
recently.
It had never occurred to her
that she'd always be a spinster, and besides, she enjoyed her
life quite well. She had the most marvelous family one could
imagine-- seven brothers and sisters in all, named alphabetically,
which put her right in the middle at E, with four older and
three younger. Her mother was a delight, and she'd even stopped
nagging Eloise about getting married. She still held a prominent
place in society; the Bridgertons were universally adored and
respected (and occasionally feared), and Eloise's sunny and
irrepressible personality was such that everyone sought out
her company, spinsterish age or no.
But lately...
She sighed, suddenly feeling
quite a bit older than her twenty-eight years. Lately she hadn't
been feeling so sunny. Lately she'd been starting to think that
maybe those crotchety old matrons were right, and she wasn't
going to find herself a husband. Maybe she had been too picky,
too determined to follow the example of her older brothers and
sister, all of whom had found a deep and passionate love with
their spouses (even if it hadn't necessarily been there at the
outset).
Maybe a marriage based on mutual
respect and companionship was better than none at all.
But it was difficult to talk
about these feelings with anyone. Her mother had spent so many
years urging her to find a husband; as much as Eloise adored
her, it would be difficult to eat crow and say that she should
have listened. Her brothers would have been no help whatsoever.
Anthony, the eldest, would probably have taken it upon himself
to personally select a suitable mate and then browbeat the poor
man into submission. Benedict was too much of a dreamer, and
besides, he almost never came down to London anymore, preferring
the quiet of the country. As for Colin-- Well, that was a another
story entirely, quite worthy of its own paragraph.
She supposed she should have
talked to Daphne, but every time she went to see her, her elder
sister was so bloody happy, so blissfully in love with
her husband and her life as mother to her brood of four. How
could someone like that possibly offer useful advice to one
in Eloise's position? And Francesca seemed half a world away,
off in Scotland. Besides, Eloise didn't think it fair to bother
her with her silly woes. Francesca had been widowed, for heaven's
sake. Eloise's fears and worries seemed terribly inconsequential
by comparison.
And maybe all this was why her
correspondence with Sir Phillip had become such a guilty pleasure.
The Bridgertons were a large family, loud and boisterous. It
was nearly impossible to keep anything a secret, especially
from her sisters, the youngest of whom --Hyacinth-- could probably
have won the war against Napoleon in half the time if His Majesty
had only thought to draft her into the espionage service.
Sir Phillip was, in his own strange
way, hers. The one thing she'd never had to share with anyone.
His letters were bundled and tied with a purple ribbon, hidden
at the bottom of her middle desk drawer, tucked underneath the
piles of stationery she used for her many letters.
He was her secret. Hers.
And because she'd never actually
met him, she'd been able to create him in her mind, using his
letters as the bones and then fleshing him out as she saw fit.
If ever there was a perfect man, surely it had to be the Sir
Phillip Crane of her imagination.
And now he wanted to meet? Meet?
Was he mad? And ruin what had to be the perfect courtship?
But then the impossible had
occurred. Penelope Featherington, Eloise's closest friend for
nearly a dozen years, had married. And what's more, she'd married
Colin. Eloise's brother!
If the moon had suddenly dropped
from the sky and landed in her back garden, Eloise could not
have been more surprised.
Eloise was happy for Penelope.
Truly, she was. And she was happy for Colin, too. They were
quite possibly her two most favorite people in the entire world,
and she was thrilled that they had found happiness. No one deserved
it more.
But that didn't mean that their
marriage hadn't left a hollow spot in her life.
She supposed that when she'd
been considering her life as a spinster, and trying to convince
herself that it was what she really wanted, Penelope had always
been there in the image, spinster right beside her. It was acceptable
--almost fun, even-- to be twenty-eight and unmarried as long
as Penelope was twenty-eight and unmarried, as well. It wasn't
that she hadn't wanted Penelope to find a husband; it
was just that it had never seemed even the least bit likely.
Eloise knew that Penelope was wonderful and kind and smart and
witty, but the gentlemen of the ton had never seemed
to notice. In all her years in society --eleven in all-- Penelope
had not received one proposal of marriage. Nor even a whiff
of interest.
In a way, Eloise had counted
on her to remain where she was, what she was--first and foremost,
Eloise's friend. Her companion in spinsterhood.
And the worst part --the part
that left Eloise wracked with guilt-- was that she'd
never given a thought to how Penelope might feel if she married
first, which, in truth, she'd always supposed she would do.
But now Penelope had Colin, and
Eloise could see that the match was a splendid thing. And she
was alone. Alone in the middle of crowded London, in the middle
of a large and loving family.
It was hard to imagine a lonelier
spot.
Suddenly Sir Phillip's bold proposal--
tucked away at the very bottom of her bundle, at the bottom
of the middle drawer, locked away in a newly-purchased safebox,
just so that Eloise wouldn't be tempted to look at it six times
a day-- Well, it seemed a bit more intriguing.
More intriguing by the day, frankly,
as she grew more and more restless, more dissatisfied with the
lot in life that she had to admit she'd chosen.
And so one day, after she'd gone
to visit Penelope, only to be informed by the butler that Mr.
and Mrs. Bridgerton were not able to receive visitors (uttered
in such a way that even Eloise knew what it meant) she made
a decision. It was time to take her life into her own hands,
time to control her destiny, rather than attending ball after
ball in the vain hope that the perfect man would suddenly materialize
before her, never mind that there was never anybody new in London,
and after a full decade out in society, she'd already met everyone
of the appropriate age and gender to marry.
She told herself that this did
not mean she had to marry Sir Phillip; she was merely
investigating what seemed like it might be an excellent possibility.
If they did not suit, they would not have to marry; she'd made
no promises to him, after all.
But if there was one thing about
Eloise, it was that she was when she made a decision, she acted
upon it quickly. No, she reflected with a rather impressive
(in her opinion, at least) display of self-honesty, there were
two things about her that colored her every action-- she liked
to act quickly and she was tenacious. Penelope had once described
her as akin to a dog with a bone.
And Penelope had not been joking.
Not even a little bit.
Once Eloise got her claws into
an idea, not even the full force of the Bridgerton family could
sway her from her intended goal. (And the Bridgertons constituted
a mighty force, indeed.) It was probably just dumb luck that
her goals and those of her family had never crossed purposes
before, at least not over anything important.
Eloise knew that they would never
countenance her going off blindly to meet a man she'd never
met. Anthony would have probably demanded that Sir Phillip come
to London to meet the entire family en masse, and Eloise couldn't
imagine a single scenario more likely to scare off a prospective
suitor. The men who'd previously sought her favor were at least
familiar with the London scene and knew what they were getting
into; poor Sir Phillip, who had --by his own admission in his
letters-- not set foot in London since his school days, and
never participated in the social season, would be ambushed.
So the only option was for her
to travel to Gloucestershire, and, as she came to realize after
pondering the problem for a few days, she had to do it in secret.
If her family knew of her plans, they might very well forbid
her to go. Eloise was a worthy opponent, and she might prevail
in the end, but it would be a long and painful battle. Not to
mention that if they did allow her to go, whether after a protracted
battle over the subject or not, they would insist upon sending
at least two of their ranks to accompany her.
Eloise shuddered. Those two
would most probably be her mother and Hyacinth.
Good gad, no one could fall in
love with those two around. No one could even form a mild but
lasting attachment, which Eloise thought she might actually
be willing to settle for this go around.
She decided that she would make
her escape during her sister Daphne's ball. It was to be a grand
affair, with hordes of guests, and just the right amount of
noise and confusion to allow her absence to go unnoticed for
a good six hours, maybe more. Her mother had always insisted
that they be punctual --early, even-- when a family member was
hosting a social event, so they would surely arrive at Daphne's
no later than eight. If she slipped away early on, and the ball
did not wind down until the wee hours of the morning... well,
it would be nearly dawn before anyone realized she was gone,
and she could be halfway to Gloucestershire.
And if not halfway, then far
enough to ensure that they wouldn't find it too terribly easy
to follow her trail.
In the end, it had all proven
almost frighteningly easy. Her entire family had been distracted
by some grand announcement Colin planned to make, and so all
she'd had to do was excuse herself to the ladies' retiring room,
slip out the back, and walk the short distance to her own home,
where she'd hidden her bags in the back garden. From there,
she needed only to walk to the corner, where she'd arranged
to have a hired coach waiting.
Goodness, if she'd known it
would be this easy to make her own way in the world, she would
have done so years ago.
And now here she was, rolling
toward Gloucestershire, rolling toward destiny, she supposed
--or hoped, she wasn't sure which-- with nothing but a few changes
of clothing and a pile of letters written to her by a man she'd
never met.
A man she hoped she could love.
It was thrilling.
No, it was terrifying.
It was, she reflected, quite
possibly the stupidest thing she'd done in her life, and she
had to admit that she'd made a few foolish decisions in her
day.
Or it might just be her only
chance at happiness.
Eloise grimaced. She was growing
fanciful. That was a bad sign. She needed to approach this adventure
with all the practicality and pragmatism with which she always
tried to make her decisions. There was still time to turn around.
What did she know about this man, really? He'd said quite a
lot over the course of a year's correspondence--
He was thirty years of age, two
years her elder.
He had attended Cambridge and
studied botany.
He had been married to her fourth
cousin Marina for eight years, which meant that he'd been twenty-one
at his wedding.
He had brown hair.
He had all of his teeth.
He was a baronet.
He lived at Romney Hall, a stone
structure built in the eighteenth century near Tetbury, Gloucestershire.
He liked to read scientific treatises
and poetry but not novels and definitely not works of philosophy.
He liked the rain.
His favorite color was green.
He had never traveled outside
of England.
He did not like fish.
Eloise fought a bubble of nervous
laughter. He didn't like fish? That was what she knew
about him?
"Surely a sound basis for marriage,"
she muttered to herself, trying to ignore the panic in her voice.
And what did he know about her?
What could have possibly led him to propose marriage to a total
stranger?
She tried to recall what she
had included in her many letters--
She was twenty-eight.
She had brown hair (chestnut,
really) and all of her teeth.
She had gray eyes.
She came from a large and loving
family.
Her brother was a viscount.
Her father had died when she
was only eight years of age, incomprehensibly brought down by
a humble beesting.
She had a tendency to talk too
much (Good God, had she really put that into writing?)
She liked to read poetry and
novels but certainly not scientific treatises or works of philosophy.
She had traveled to Scotland,
but that was all.
Her favorite color was purple.
She did not like mutton and positively
detested blood pudding.
Another little burst of panicked
laughter passed over her lips. Put that way, she thought with
no small bit of sarcasm, she seemed a fine catch indeed.
She glanced out the window,
as if that might possibly give her an indication as to where
they were on the road from London to Tetbury.
She frowned, looking back at
the paper in her lap. Rolling green hills looked like rolling
green hills looked like rolling green hills, and she could be
in Wales for all she knew.
She refolded Sir Phillip's letter
and fitted it back into the ribbon-tied bundle she kept in her
valise, then tapped her fingers against her thighs in a nervous
gesture.
She had reason to be nervous.
She had left home and all that
was familiar, after all.
She was traveling halfway across
England, and no one knew.
No one.
Not even Sir Phillip.
Because in her haste to leave
London, she'd neglected to tell him she was coming. It wasn't
that she'd forgotten; rather, she'd sort of... pushed
the task aside until it was too late.
If she told him, then she was
committed to the plan. This way, she still had the chance to
back out at any moment. She told herself it was because she
wanted to keep her options open, but the truth was, she was
quite simply terrified, and she had feared a total loss of her
courage.
Besides, he was the one who
had requested the meeting. He would be happy to see her.
Wouldn't he?

Phillip rose from bed and pulled
open the draperies in his bedchamber, revealing another perfect,
sunny day.
Perfect.
He padded over to his dressing
room to find some clothes, having long since dismissed the servants
who used to perform these duties. He couldn't explain it, but
after Marina had died, he hadn't wanted anyone bustling into
his bedroom in the morning, yanking open his curtains and selecting
his garments.
He'd even dismissed Miles Carter,
who had tried so hard to be a friend after Marina's passing.
But somehow the young secretary just made him feel worse, and
so he'd sent him on his way, along with six month's pay and
a superb letter of reference.
He'd spent his marriage with
Marina looking for someone to talk to, since she was so often
absent, but now that she was gone, all he wanted was his own
company.
He supposed he must have alluded
to this in one of his many letters to the mysterious Eloise
Bridgerton, because he had sent off his proposal of not-quite-marriage-but-maybe-something-leading-up-to-it
over a month ago, and the silence on her part had been deafening,
especially since she usually responded to his letters with charming
alacrity.
He frowned. The mysterious Eloise
Bridgerton wasn't really so mysterious. In her letters
she seemed quite open and honest and possessed of a positively
sunny disposition, which when it all came down to it,
was all he really insisted upon in a wife this time around.
He yanked on a work shirt; he
planned to spend most of the day in the greenhouse, up to his
elbows in dirt. He was rather disappointed that Miss Bridgerton
had obviously decided he was some sort of deranged lunatic to
be avoided at all costs. She had seemed the perfect solution
to his problems. He desperately needed a mother for Amanda and
Oliver, but they'd grown so unmanageable that he couldn't imagine
any woman willingly agreeing to cleave unto him in marriage
and thus bind herself to those two little devils for life (or
at least until they reached majority).
Miss Bridgerton was eight and
twenty, however; quite obviously a spinster. And she'd been
corresponding with a complete stranger for over a year; surely
she was a little desperate? Wouldn't she appreciate the chance
to find a husband? He had a home, a respectable fortune, and
was only thirty years of age. What more could she want?
He muttered several annoyed phrases
as he thrust his legs into his rough, woolen trousers. Obviously
she wanted something more; else she would have had the
courtesy to at least write back and decline.
THUMP!
Phillip glanced up at the ceiling
and grimaced. Romney Hall was old and solid and very well-built,
and if his ceiling was thumping, then his children had dropped
(pushed? hurled?) something very large indeed.
THUMP!
He winced. That one sounded even
worse. Still, their nurse was up there with them, and she always
managed them better than he did. If he could just get his boots
on in under a minute, he could be out of the house before they
inflicted too much more damage, and thus he could pretend none
of it was happening.
He reached for his boots. Yes,
excellent idea. Out of earshot, out of mind.
He donned the rest of his ensemble
with impressive speed and dashed out into the hall, making quick
strides toward the stairs.
"Sir Phillip! Sir Phillip!"
Damn. His butler was after him
now.
Phillip pretended he didn't hear.
"Sir Phillip!"
"Curse it," he muttered. There
was no way he could ignore that bellow unless he was willing
to suffer the torture of his servants hovering over him due
to their worries over his hearing loss.
"Yes," he said, turning around
slowly, "Gunning?"
"Sir Phillip," Gunning said,
clearing his throat. "We have a caller."
"A caller?" Phillip echoed.
"Was that the source of the, ah..."
"Noise?" Gunning supplied helpfully.
"Yes."
"No." The butler cleared his
throat. "That would have been your children."
"I see," Phillip murmured. "How
silly of me to have hoped otherwise."
"I don't believe they broke anything,
sir."
"That's a relief and a change."
"Indeed, sir, but there is the
caller to consider."
Phillip groaned. Who on earth
was visiting at this time of the morning? It wasn't like they
were used to receiving callers even during reasonable hours.
Gunning attempted a smile, but
one could see that he was out of practice. "We used to have
callers, do you recall?"
That was the problem with butlers
who'd worked for the family since before one was born. They
tended to think highly of sarcasm.
"Who is this caller?"
"I'm not entirely certain, sir."
"You're not certain?" Phillip
asked disbelievingly.
"I didn't inquire."
"Isn't that what butlers are
meant to do?"
"Inquire, sir?"
"Yes," Phillip ground out, wondering
if Gunning was trying to see how red in the face his employer
could get without actually collapsing to the floor in an apoplectic
fit.
"I thought I'd let you inquire,
sir."
"You thought you'd let me inquire."
This one came out as a statement, Phillip having realized the
futility of asking questions.
"Yes, sir. She's here
to see you, after all."
"So are all of our callers, and
that has never stopped you from ascertaining their identities
before."
"Well, actually, sir--"
"I'm quite certain--"
Phillip tried to interrupt.
"We don't have callers, sir,"
Gunning finished, quite clearly winning the conversational battle.
Phillip opened his mouth to point
out that they did have callers; there was one downstairs
that very moment, but really, what was the point? "Fine," he
said, thoroughly irritated. "I'll go downstairs."
Gunning beamed. "Excellent, sir."
Phillip stared at his butler
in shock. "Are you unwell, Gunning?"
"No, sir. Why do you ask, sir?"
It didn't seem quite polite to
point out that the broad smile made Gunning look a bit like
a horse, so Phillip just muttered, "It's nothing," and headed
down the stairs.
A caller? Who would be calling?
No one had come to visit in nearly a year, since the neighbors
had finished making their obligatory condolence calls. He supposed
he couldn't really blame them for staying away; the last time
one of them had come to visit, Oliver and Amanda had smeared
strawberry jam on the chairs.
Lady Winslet had left in a fit
of temper quite beyond anything Phillip would have thought healthy
for a woman of her years.
Phillip frowned as he reached
the bottom of the stairs and turned into the entry hall. It
was a she, wasn't it? Hadn't Gunning said his visitor was a
she?
Who the devil--
He stopped short, stumbled even.
Because the woman standing in
his entry hall was young, and quite pretty, and when she looked
up to meet his gaze, he saw that she had the largest, most achingly
beautiful gray eyes he'd ever seen.
He could drown in those eyes.
And Phillip did not, as one might
imagine, even think the word drown lightly.