Tuesday, September 24, 2019

Diana chapter 1

With Elizabeth happily married, as Diana did not, as they say, 'take' at the London Season, the combined Attwood/Ambleside menage travel to Bath where they plan to take up residence for much of the year in the house which used to belong to Mr. Buckley.  On the way they meet a soldier who is convalescing from wounds and trauma gained at Salamanca, and Diana takes him under her wing.


Chapter 1

“Mama, are you comfortable?” asked Diana, as Leontina Attwood sank back into the squabs of the landau with a sigh.
“Yes, thank you, my dear,” said Leontina.  “Dear me, how odd it will seem to be going back to Bath with a much enlarged family.”
“At least we have Buckley’s house, not a pokey little place like the house on Henrietta Street,” said Jane.
“We were glad of a roof over our heads, and that Papa had bought the lease on it, so we only had to find three pounds or so a year ground rent,” said Leontina.  “I cannot think how we would have managed if we had needed to rent a house. As it is, the rent we are getting from it is quite a third each year what your poor father paid for the remaining seventeen years of lease.  I hope you are not going to become spoilt now you have a new, wealthy Papa?”
Jane coloured.
“No, Mama,” she said.  “I was just thinking how fortunate it was that we should not have to try to sleep three to a bed.”
“I see,” said Leontina.  “It would have been a squeeze, I admit.  Of course it will not be as convenient for the lending libraries in .... dear me, we shall have to name the place. I cannot and will not continue to call it Buckley’s house, for it is ours now, and I have no intention of remembering that horrid little man.”
“Do not exercise yourself over him, my dear,” said Edward Attwood. “We shall name it something appropriate, and you girls can amuse yourselves on the journey coming up with names.  Diana, are you certain you are happy to ride?  It is quite one hundred and three miles to Bath.”
“Oh!  I dare say I shall be devilish sore, Papa, but it seems most profligate to get yet another carriage just for one, when you will be riding too, and then Mama and the others might be comfortable.”
Edward Attwood had purchased a coach to bring luggage and a few servants with them, but had placed his wife and their five combined younger daughters in the landau.  It had been freshly polished, especially the hood, in case of inclement weather, and was well-sprung and a comfortable ride.
“Well, you may always sit on the seat with Dobbs for a stage or two if you need a rest,” said Edward, nodding approval at his eldest.
“Or in the coach with Fanshawe, Spencer and Fanny, and even leave my mare to be collected by the grooms following with the other riding horses,” said Diana.  “I’m not too proud to sit with our servants. The only reason we are not some of us riding with them is so they can gossip freely, isn’t it?”
Edward laughed, and sighed.
“You are still as forthright as ever, my love,” he said.  “And yes, it is politer to let them gossip about us, the new house and so on.  A couple of imperials on the roof for our luggage at least give them plenty of room.”
“And Spencer squeezing herself into one corner so as not to have to touch Fanshawe, in case she catches romance from him,” giggled Jane, not squashed for long.  Spencer was Leontina’s new dresser, and she was something of an old maid by what appeared to be inclination, and Fanshawe, Edward’s valet, did his best to shock her whenever he might. Fanny was his sister, and only made half-hearted protest. Fanny’s friend, Kitty, had gone to Leontina’s oldest daughter, Diana’s stepsister Elizabeth, when Elizabeth had married her earl. Diana missed Elizabeth, although they had not been sisters for long before Elizabeth had departed for her new home in Shrewsbury.  Alexander, Lord Hawkesbury, had wanted to show her off to his people.
“How far are we riding at a time, Papa?” she asked.
“The horses will need to rest every couple of hours if we are not to leave them and hire post horses,  I have no intention of pushing them too hard,” said Edward.  “I have consulted ‘Cary’s Itinerary’ and ‘The Traveller’s Guide’ to plan the route, and I thought you would like to push far enough on the first leg to cross the county boundary into Buckinghamshire, and stop at one of the inns in Colnebrooke. Cary lists the ‘George’, the ‘Red Lion’, the ‘Ostrich’ and the ‘Crown.’ Mr. Oulton mentions the ‘George’, the ‘White Hart’ and the ‘Wheel’.  That will be a long leg, but we will do the rest in ten to twelve mile stages, I think.
“Dear me, how vexatious that they do not agree,” said Diana. “Other than on the ‘George’. Why do you suppose that is?”
“Well, my love, Cary concentrates on the coaching inns, so we may suppose that the ‘White Hart’ and the ‘Wheel’ may be quieter, but perhaps less well set up for receiving traffic and producing meals with some dispatch,” said Edward.
“Then we shall stop at the ‘George’, it being agreed upon by both sources,” said Leontina, decisively.  “I read the guides too.  The Ostrich is one of the oldest inns in the country and is probably too quaint to be comfortable.”
“Colnebrook is just over sixteen miles away,” said Edward. “Can you manage that, Diana?”
“Of course, Papa,” said Diana. “Lady Fair is raring to go, and she is fresh.  She has the smoothest gait I’ve ever known, and she can keep up a sort of loping canter forever.”
“Well I shan’t be asking that of either of you!” laughed Edward.  “It’ll be a shorter stage then to Maidenhead where we will have a leisurely meal.  Reading is another short stage after that, and then I hope to push on to stop overnight at Thatcham which has an inn called ‘The King’s Head’ which is supposed to serve good food.  Some stage coaches stop to allow their passengers to eat, but not all, so it should not be too busy.”
“Well, my papa used to say that no plan, however good, survives past meeting the enemy,” said Leontina.  “Of course, I am not suggesting that we meet any enemies, for the routes are well-travelled, and there are almost no highwaymen nowadays, and of course one cannot consider the inn servants as one’s enemies, nor indeed the open road ... where was I?”
“Trying to explain why Papa’s plans might be set at naught by circumstances, Mama,” said Flora.
“Oh, yes, so I was,” said Leontina.  “Because one can make plans ever so carefully and then something unexpected happens, and we just have to hope that whatever it is that happens is nothing drastic.”
“I have ‘Cary’s Itinerary’ and ‘The Traveller’s Guide’ in the landau, my love,” said Edward. “And a piece of paper in the itinerary to show the road, and the continuation page as well.  Whatever happens we can plan to meet it.”
“I am glad you are so organised, my dear,” said Leontina. “I am not good at planning and with servants and daughters there are so many things I worry about, like Diana’s girth breaking and her falling off Lady Fair, or an axle breaking, and yes, I do worry a bit about highwaymen, for Maidenhead Heath and the Downs near Hungerford are very empty areas and the Downs are downright uncanny at times.”
“Oh, Mama, you are thinking of that poor little baby who was burned to death by Wild Darrell and him and his hounds still haunting the place,” said Jane.
“I wasn’t, actually,” said Leontina. “But I shall now. I do wish you did not have a penchant for ghoulish folk tales.”
“But it’s a road just steeped in history, with the Druidical Temples of Avebury and the Grey Wethers, and there’s even a place Henry VIII is supposed to haunt,” said Jane
“Oh, what nonsense,” said Flora. “Henry VIII had six wives, and if you think he has time to haunt with them all bending his ear about what a bad husband he was, you must have let your wits go begging.”
Jane took no offence at this, as it was only Flora, and considered deeply.
“Mama, would it be blasphemous to write an imagined conversation between Henry VIII and his wives when he got to Heaven?” she asked. “If he did go to heaven,” she added, doubtfully.
“He was a very silly and most unpleasant man, but I don’t know that he was exactly evil, so I would not like to think of him in Hell, well, I would not like to think of anyone in Hell,” said Leontina. “Even Mr. Buckley, who is in Van Diemen’s land, and what a shame it is that G-d does not have somewhere to transport people to expiate their sins without being damned for eternity.”
“The Catholics call that Purgatory,” said Catherine.  “Goodness, Mama, the thought of Mr. Buckley and Henry VIII together in Van Diemen’s Land is quite horrifying.”
“Yes, isn’t it?” said Leontina.  “A pair of nasty mis ... whatever that word is for men who hate women.”
“Misogynist,” supplied Minerva.  “And I think Henry VIII’s problem is that he liked them too well in the wrong way.  Jane, I am sure that if Mama is happy to think about Henry VIII being transported she will not take it amiss if you write your imagined conversation.”
“But you must remember to leave out the last one as she wasn’t dead,” said Leontina.  “Imagination is all very well but right is right.”
“One of the Catherines,” said Anne, brightly.
Catherine dissolved into tears.
“How would you like your name being ‘one of’?” she sobbed.
“Well, I would speak of ‘one of the Annes’,” said Anne. “I don’t mean anything about me with that or anything about you with the Catherines.”
“Catherine, that was over-sensitive,” said Leontina. “It was Catherine Parr.”
“Are we going by Chippenham, or Devizes?” asked Jane, hastily, to divert the conversation.
“Chippenham,” said Edward. “It goes by a route which is easier on the horses. The Bath mail doesn’t care, it has six horses to a carriage in any case, and Devizes needs a mail service, so the hills must be braved.”

It was not far to Hyde Park, and through Kensington on the outskirts of the metropolis, and then a couple of miles of countryside before reaching the town of Hammersmith.  And then Diana felt that they were really on their way! She and her father cantered ahead and then slowed to a walk to allow the Landau to catch up.  Edward could have trotted with the posting, or rising trot which was more restful for the horse, but he preferred to remain with his daughter, and trotting in a sidesaddle was fatiguing for horse and rider both.
The first tollgate outside of London was at Smallbury Green, at Isleworth, and three shillings and sixpence for the two vehicles and two riders. Diana was glad to dismount to walk through the toll gate whilst the gatekeeper added up all the fourpence-ha’pennies for the horses, and the 3d each for the riders.  It was about half way to the first stage and they had accomplished it in under the hour, but the next half stage would be tiring.  Her father tossed her up into the saddle again once they had passed through the gate, and they set off once more. 
“At least it is not too hot,” said Edward. “It is warm for September, but the weather is quite pleasant.  I am glad it is not too dusty underfoot as it might have been; that would have been unpleasant.”
“Oh, I know why,” said Diana. “Mama Leontina told me that ‘Beau’ Nash wished to encourage people to go to Bath, so he paid to have pumps put in all along the road, every two miles if you can believe it!  And the funds are there to pay for roadmen to water the roads for our convenience.  Have you not noticed me tossing coins to them?”
“I had, and wondered why, but it is good to vail them for their efforts,” said Edward.  “I should imagine they can make a reasonable amount in vails if some people vail each.”
“It is all in my accounts; I allowed two guineas for vails for the whole journey, in case of needing to distribute higher largesse in inns,” said Diana. “I am giving each of them two pence, which will cost me a little short of a pound, and well worth it to encourage them to continue in their endeavours.  I recall one of the girls at school used to travel a lot, and she said you should vail the head porter at any coaching inn, to make sure you are not fed on scraps from previous visitors, and so they charge less for candles in your chamber.  She told me one woman who felt that servants should subsist on their wages got charged five whole shillings for candles in her room at night in the inn, and serve her right!”
“My goodness, yes!” said Edward.  “Look out!”
There was the sound of the tantivy blown on a yard of tin behind them, and Edward and Diana got off the road, looking back as their landau pulled well into the left to be overtaken by the fast trotting hooves of the mailcoach.
“That must be the London to Bath coach, it gets into Hounslow at twenty to ten, and it’s hardly short of that now,” said Edward.  Diana laughed.
“Have you learned Cary’s ‘Itinerary’ by heart, Papa?” she asked.
“Well, I might have studied it carefully,” said Edward, sheepishly.  “I find it exciting that one can set one’s watch by the mail coaches, and I believe many villagers who have no church or town clock do so!”
“I am looking forward to breakfasting in Colnebrook, I have to say,” said Diana. “Early mornings are all very well, but I like my breakfast at nine.”
“You were eating apples before we left.”
“Yes; I knew I would feel a need,” said Diana. “I don’t know how society ladies can bear to not eat breakfast until after midday as a regular thing.”
“Probably because it is as long after they have risen as it is for you when you have risen,” said Edward.  “And I am in agreement with you, that the morning is the best time of the day, and that there is something of a travesty in paying morning calls in the afternoon.  And to be honest, if it were not for wanting to establish you girls creditably, I would happily let the house in London long term, and live in ... whatever we are going to call the house all the time. But I won’t let you be done out of your seasons.”
“Oh, well, it will not be long before you have managed to marry us all off,” said Diana. “Six years before you can launch Anne, which is not so very long, really.”
“No, that’s so,” said Edward.  “I  was thinking that ‘Pleiades House’ might be a good name for the place, as it will have seven sisters, albeit stepsisters, attached to it – for Elizabeth is your sister, even though she is married to Hawkesbury.”
“Papa! What a splendid idea!” said Diana, her eyes shining like the stars of the Pleiades constellation. “You must tell Mama and the others!”
“I will suggest it when we stop,” said Edward.

Saturday, August 31, 2019

Lord Wyndell's Bride chapter 1


Yes, I know you want more of Rev Chaz, but it isn't happening; I guess that's what you get for an entirely 'pantsed' story without a shape or form.  This one has been fermenting away in my brain since a throwaway remark gave me the plot bunny. Warning; initial sexual abuse of a minor, and the subsequent story covers the victim dealing with it.  I will be going on to Bess, the 7 stepsisters and possibly another standalone.




Chapter 1

“Goodbye, Miss Fotherington-Thomas,” said Gareth, with a sneer. “Your plans hatched with my mother to trap me are, I’m afraid, going to fail.”
He stepped through the broken conservatory window, relying on his heavy jacket to protect him from any shards of glass, and jumped the eight feet or so to the ground.  Miss Fotherington-Thomas was just going to have to wait to be let out; Gareth was not feeling chivalrous. This last scheme of forcing him to become leg-shackled was too much.
He made a brief stop at the stables to order his phaeton set up, and then climbed the ivy to his bedroom window with the ease of long practise.  Although he had inherited the earldom of Wynddell, Gareth Wynd did not use the master bedroom.  His mother still occupied the adjoining room and Gareth had no desire to endure the hysterics if he asked her to move to a room suitable to the status of a dowager.  Moreover, his own room was more comfortable.
Gareth’s valet, Moss, jumped as his master came in the window.
“Strewth! You startled me, milord, what’s toward?  I thought you were at dinner with the latest muffin-faced moralist.”
“I was, and I let my mother talk me into showing her the conservatory; which conveniently locked itself.”
“Your mother locked you in?”
“I believe so.  She wants me to settle down.  Honestly, does she think I would settle down with a feeble creature like Jane Fotherington-Thomas? There’s no greater incentive to abandon the creature in the country and go to kick up a few larks in town with as many blowsy opera-dancers as I could fit into the room.”
“Yes, sir, I can see that.  Was this lady party to the deception?”
“Let me put it this way, Moss, she did not seem surprised and kept going on about the beauties of nature, and what a romantic place this was with the fountain and all.  I told her the fountain gave me overwhelming urges, and started to undo my trouser fall.  I swear she got excited, even if she did say ‘Oh! My lord, please do not...’.  I believe she was disappointed when she found out that my overwhelming urges were to take a piss in Mama’s favourite geraniums. I then broke a window and left.”
Moss laughed.
“So what now? You turn up and confound the dowager?”
“No, Moss, I’m leaving. I am heading out in a random direction.  Every cross roads I will toss a coin. If it is tails, I go left; heads, right. And when Mama goes to let us out in the morning she will find her dupe hungry and cross.  I doubt she can leap through the window, but she will not freeze.  The heating may not be sufficient to save the plants from the winter’s blast but it will be enough if she huddles close to the hot air outlet to preserve her life. Her comfort I do not care about.”
“No, sir, and why should you!” said Moss.
“What I want to do is to pack a couple of valises and throw out of the window; you can pack one for yourself and join me in the phaeton,” said Gareth. “Nobody is likely to stop you.”
“No, sir; I am invisible to milady,” said Moss.

Five hours later, they were in an inn, somewhere off the main North Road. Gareth had drunk more than was wise, and was nursing a hangover.  He had left orders not to be disturbed, and was therefore not happy when there was a sharp rap on the door.  This was followed by the door opening, and a girl entering.  Gareth was about to issue a blistering oath when he took in that the girl was no tavern wench, but was indeed dressed as a lady.  Her gown, pelisse and bonnet were out of date, dowdy, and had seen better days, but were unquestionably clothes belonging to a lady.  A strand of red hair escaped from the bonnet, and the eyes were big, luminous and scared in a peaked little face.
“I do apologise for disturbing you, my lord,” she said, in a voice which also unquestionably belonged to a lady, “But they tell me that you are a rake.  Are you?”
“What, the vicar’s daughter come to moralise?” he sneered.
“Oh! No,” she said. “But if you are a rake you will not mind running away with a girl like me.”
He blinked.
She did not look old enough even to be out.
“I am not a cradle snatcher,” he said.
“Would it ease your conscience to know that I have already been ... used?” she asked, bitterly.
He sat up properly.
“A chit your age?  How old are you?”
“Almost sixteen, sir,” she said.  “I ... I suppose I had better explain.” She looked down, knitting her fingers together.  “My name is Emily Elphinstone, and my father is the local squire and magistrate.”
“Have you not asked him to seek redress for your ... predicament?”
A bitter twist to her mouth made him open his eyes in sudden horror.
“Ah, I see you have divined it,” said Emily. “That makes it easier; I feared you might be naive enough not to recognise that incest is a common enough country crime, though less often amongst our class.  My mother died when I was twelve, and on my fourteenth birthday, my father informed me that I should fulfil all her duties.  We had already lost every maid and my governess, since they feared to stay where he would make advances.  I am unmarriagable, but I hoped you might find a space for me as your mistress for a while, since you have not brought one with you. I thought that a real rake who has to seduce people not just force himself on them might manage to make the act less painful, or his mistresses would not stay with him.”
“I ... I am not often left speechless,” said Gareth.  “Listen, chit!  I will go and speak to your father.”
Her shoulders slumped.
“I knew you would not take my distress seriously,” she said.
He held up a hand.
“Hear me out,” he said.  “If I take a child your age with me, even if I don’t lay a hand on you, I can be charged with abducting a minor.  However!” he added as she looked dismayed, “I plan to threaten your father into giving me permission to marry you.”
“But you can’t marry me; I’m spoiled, Father said nobody would want me, so I might as well resign myself.”
“Well, he’s wrong,” said Gareth.  “Because I’d rather be leg-shackled to a brat who at least knows her own mind, doesn’t care about my reputation and is prepared to have the bottom to run away than to one of what my man calls the muffin-faced moralists my mother keeps trying to pair me with.  I fled from her machinations when she locked me in the conservatory with one tedious wench. I have a passing sympathy for the poor girl, who must be touched in the upper works to agree to such a scheme, and had not managed conversation past ‘look at the pretty flowers’.”
“Dear me! If your mother wants you married so badly you would think she would manage to find someone of personality,” said Emily.  “Are you sure you want to marry me?  I ... he made me take herbs, and when they failed he had a man in to .... to kill the baby,” her voice shrank to a whisper. “And I don’t know if he damaged anything.”
“We’ll cross that bridge when you are old enough to take to bed and consider babies,” said Gareth. “Because I’m not going to lay a finger on you, my betrothed wife, until you ask me to do so.”
“Truly?” she brightened. “But then, what is in it for you?”
“Slighting my mother,” said Gareth, “And a quixotic  whimsy that wishes to rescue you from a most horrible fate.  I had a little sister once,” he added. “She didn’t live to grow up, but I’m sure Mama would have arranged an advantageous marriage for her to someone suitable, whether Lils liked the idea or not, and though I am head of the family it would have been deucedly awkward.  I’m planning on treating you as I would Lils, and if you want it, I will arrange for a governess for you to take up your education where it was so cruelly broken off.  I will have mistresses, of course,” he added.
“Of course,” she nodded. “If you are not taking your pleasure with me, you will need to do so elsewhere.  Am I supposed to be friends with them?”
He laughed.
“No, chit, you are not supposed to know about them, and certainly not to mention them.”
“Oh, I hoped you would tell me about them so I knew you were happy, and I would try to be friendly as they were on good terms with you.”
“You are an extraordinary chit, you know?”
“Papa says I am ugly and boring.”
“I have no very great opinion of your father’s intellect,” said Gareth, dryly.  “You ain’t dressed the way you ought to be, and you don’t eat enough, but when you fill out a bit and lose the pallor which is not a fashionable paleness but a lack of good health, you’ll be uncommonly pretty.  Besides, I have a weakness for redheads; my first mistress was a redhead, and she was kind to me and taught me a lot.”
“I am glad of that,” said Emily. “I think it must make a lot of difference if one’s first encounter with intimacy is kindly.”
“My poor child!” Gareth found his hangover dissipated in anger.  “You will stay here and I will go and see your father and I will obtain written permission from him for you to wed. He will not like the alternatives,” he said. “And then we will go on to York to find a convenient bishop for a special licence.”
“You look awfully dangerous when you are angry,” said Emily, beaming at him.
“And that is a matter of pleasure to you, chit?”
“Oh yes.  It makes me feel very safe,” said Emily.
“I will look after you,” said Gareth, flicking her cheek gently with a careless finger, ere he strode out.


“You are a loathsome, disgusting lecher, and to add incest of your young daughter to your crimes is the lowest thing I have ever heard,” said Gareth.
“Is that what she told you?  Poor child, she has these delusions.  I fear she may end up in Bedlam if she has taken to telling her lies to stranger...AWK!” he broke off perforce with Gareth’s hand at his throat.
“Just when I think nothing can be lower than what you did, you manage to lower the bar of your perfidy,” said Gareth. “Now, there will be the testimony of the maids you drove out, Miss Elphinstone’s governess, the abortioner you had in, and the male servants, who cannot be in ignorance of your actions.  I could smear your name quite thoroughly as well as proving that your daughter is not insane.  It does sit at variance with my personal desires though.” He smiled, nastily.  “If you were a man I would consider calling you out. As you are a cur, my current thoughts run to cutting off everything which has caused Miss Elphinstone any trouble, and making you eat it all, fried.” 
Elphinstone paled and swayed.  He did not doubt that the athletic young man in front of him was capable of carrying out such a threat.  And even if he then prosecuted for assault, the deed would have been done.
“You are a monster!” he croaked.
“No; you are a monster,” said Gareth.  “However, you can escape all the consequences of my ire if you write a letter which I dictate to you, confessing your crimes. This I will send to my solicitor, sealed, to be opened in the case of anything untoward happening to me.  Then you will write another letter to whom it may concern giving permission for your daughter to wed Gareth, Lord Wynddell.  That’s me, by the way.”
“M...marry?  why on earth would you want to marry a whey-faced chit, who won’t even scream when you beat her before bedding her?” said Elphinstone.
Gareth snarled.
“No wonder your poor wife died; I’m amazed she lived as long as she did. Probably to try to keep her daughter safe.  You disgust me, but I will not go back on my word. You may go and sit at your desk and write to my dictation.”
He dictated a full confession to Elphinstone and made the man seal it, and appended his own seal.  And then he dictated the letter of permission, to make sure that Elphinstone did not get any ideas about adding clauses which might be questioned.
“Good,” said Gareth.  “Do not seek out me or my bride for any reason.  Just learn to exercise your right hand, and if you must beat someone to get in the mood, learn self-flagellation.  You never know; you might enjoy it.”  And on that sneering note, he left.

Moss had made himself known to Emily when Gareth returned.
“I’ve put miss’s bandbox up with the other valises, my lord,” he said.  “But miss will be wanting a maid.”
“Are there any of your former maids who would be likely to come along, chit?” asked Gareth.
“I think they will be afraid of your reputation,” said Emily, frankly.  “But there’s Dinah, who was ruined by a gentleman some years ago, whom my father paid to come to him, up until he tried beating her and she would not come again.  I think that was when he decided I would do.  Dinah had a baby boy who died, and I think she would like the city.  She only sold her services because she couldn’t marry, and she had to do something.”
“I’m not about to be shocked, but my wife’s maid must not be promiscuous,” said Gareth.
“I don’t suppose she would want to be if she had a steady salary and somewhere to live,” said Emily.  “Do you think Moss would step round with a note if I wrote one?”
“I am sure he would,” said Gareth.

Dinah came in response to the note with her own bandbox, dressed in her best, dark brown, Sunday frock, and a linen cap.
“You’ll want me looking respectable, dearie,” she said.
“Oh, Dinah, thank you,” said Emily.  “You are good to come at the drop of a hat, and to accept what is, after all, a most unusual situation.”
“Well it has to be better than the old bastard and his odd ideas of what the two-backed mule is about,” said Dinah. “It’ll be an adventure.”

oOoOo


“The Black Swan,
York
November 2nd.1800

Mother:

Your schemes notwithstanding, I am now able to return to town in safety from them, since I have just got married.  The appropriate notices have been sent to the newspapers, so you are unable to repudiate my choice. I am, after all, of age.
I will not be bringing my bride to meet you until you have got over the inevitable temper-tantrum you are going to throw over this matter.  The new countess will be travelling on to Wynd Garth, and if you should happen to write anything disparaging to her there, you will not like the consequences.
Your son,
Wynddell.

Thursday, August 29, 2019

Release of Regency Miss's Survival Guide to Bath

Although I wrote this as a writer's resource, it could be a helpful handbook to a Regency reader as well...




It is for those who love the romance of Bath. It is not a history of Bath, nor its famous sons, it is a book about the everyday things a Regency Heroine might get up to, and what entertainments were available for her delight.
I laboured long and hard to put hyperlinks in the kindle version, I hope I have covered every link needed!

Paperback


Kindle