The Belle of Belgrave Square

Mimi Matthews

Book - 2022

"A London heiress rides out to the wilds of the English countryside to honor a marriage of convenience with a mysterious and reclusive stranger. Tall, dark, and dour, the notorious Captain Jasper Blunt was once hailed a military hero, but tales abound of his bastard children and his haunted estate in Yorkshire. What he requires now is a rich wife to ornament his isolated ruin, and he has set his sights on the enchanting Julia Wychwood. For Julia, an incurable romantic cursed with a crippling social anxiety, navigating a London ballroom is absolute torture. The only time Julia feels any degree of confidence is when she's on her horse. Unfortunately, a young lady can't spend the whole of her life in the saddle, so Julia makes a...n impetuous decision to take her future by the reins-she proposes to Captain Blunt. In exchange for her dowry and her hand, Jasper must promise to grant her freedom to do as she pleases. To ride-and to read-as much as she likes without masculine interference. He readily agrees to her conditions, with one provision of his own: Julia is forbidden from going into the tower rooms of his estate and snooping around in his affairs. But the more she learns of the beastly former hero, the more intrigued she becomes..."--

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Subjects
Genres
Romance fiction
Historical fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Berkley Romance [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Mimi Matthews (author)
Edition
First Edition
Physical Description
419 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9780593337158
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Matthews returns readers to the time frame of Siren of Sussex (2022) as Julia Wychwood, the daughter of hypochondriacs, hates being on the marriage market due to her agonizing social anxiety. Captain Jasper Blunt, the reputedly cruel "Hero of Crimea," has a large estate but not the funds to run it. He is also raising his three children and needs to find a well-dowered wife. When Julia and Jasper discover that they both like the same novels, it seems they may have a future together. But unbeknownst to Julia, Lord Wychwood forbids Jasper's suit because he wants his daughter to remain in London as his caregiver. When Julia pleads illness to avoid a society event, her parents call in their doctor, who diagnoses her as having "excess heat" due to reading novels. Julia saves her very life by proposing to Jasper, who will not keep her from riding her horse or reading novels. Instead, he takes her to the country, where everything is a surprise. Readers will enjoy the Victorian marriage of convenience, rich relationships, and delightful twists and turns

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

A grand cross-class romance, a twisty mystery, and emotional internal struggles combine to excellent effect in Matthews's effervescent second Belles of London romance (after Siren of Sussex). Navigating Victorian high society is a necessary nightmare for anxious heiress Julia Wychwood, who prefers the company of a good novel or her horse to men, but longs to escape the clutches of her ailing and overbearing parents. Seeking a spouse is equally unpleasant for war hero Jasper Blunt, who needs a lady's fortune to secure a life for his three children and repair the country estate where they reside. Jasper and Julia discover an unexpected mutual attraction and marry despite Julia's parents' objections to Jasper's suit--and the threat that they will withhold her dowry. Jasper is prepared to sacrifice Julia's money to keep her safe with him, but her family's continued meddling endangers the couple's blissful union--and could dig up secrets that Jasper is desperate to keep buried. Matthews expertly paces out the mystery of what Jasper is hiding; each twist brings Julia and the reader closer to the truth, but the final reveal still manages to be a surprise. Most delightful is the genuine feeling of joy between the newlyweds, who each grow into their own together. Matthews's fans and new readers alike will root for this well-earned love story. Agent: Kevan Lyon, Marsal Lyon Literary. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

Regency romance lovers will swoon over the second offering in the "Belles of London" series. Matthews has penned another fun Regency romp sprinkled with fairy-tale references and outrageous situations. Julia Wychwood is an heiress desperate to escape her demanding parents and the confines of London--she is much more at ease with books than balls or society soirées. Captain Jasper Blunt is in London in search of a wealthy wife who can offer him a cash influx to save his crumbling estate in the English countryside. Both of their problems can be fixed with one minor event--marriage. They decide to eschew the opinions of the London elite and wed. Julia's sizable dowry will go to Jasper, and in return she asks for freedom to read, ride, and wander the estate. Jasper readily grants her that, but she can't wander everywhere on the estate; there are some off-limits areas that certainly pique Julia's interest, especially when she learns what kind of man the Captain really is. Charmingly narrated by Ell Potter and Sebastian Brown, this audiobook brims with fun, charm, and growing sexual tension. VERDICT A must-listen for fans of the "Bridgerton" series, fairy-tale spin-offs, and Regency romance.--Erin Cataldi

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A cloistered wallflower and a notorious war hero look between the covers. Julia Wychwood doesn't want to get married, especially if it means actually talking to someone at a ball. Unfortunately, her overbearing and sickly parents are insisting that she do her duty, as long as she chooses a titled man who lives close enough to their house on Belgrave Square that she can keep taking care of them. They have an elderly nearby earl in mind, but she's drawn to Capt. Jasper Blunt, a mysterious hero (or possible villain) of the Crimean War who happens to love romantic novels as much as she does. Capt. Blunt is taken by Julia as well--and especially her dowry, which would allow him to fix his estate--though he's quickly warned off by her father. But after a brush with death makes Julia realize she needs to escape her family before it's too late, the two impulsively marry and then run away to Blunt's country estate in Yorkshire. Despite mysteries and misunderstandings between them, Julia begins to settle into her new country life, and it seems they may find some happiness in their marriage of convenience. But as secrets from Blunt's past continue to unfurl, Julia wonders whether she will ever trust him enough to love him. The heat in this relatively chaste story comes entirely from the slowest of slow burns between Julia and Jasper, which is irresistible. Matthews brings their story to life with dozens of impeccable details, especially when it comes to fashion and medicine, giving readers a unique glimpse into how the era looked. Secondary characters may feel a bit one-note, but most won't notice, distracted by the beautiful relationship blossoming between the captain and Mrs. Blunt. Julia's bluestocking ways will please contemporary readers, but Matthews never truly abandons the realities of the Victorian era, giving the book excellent balance overall and the feel of a story from Heyer or even Austen. A swoony Victorian romance that celebrates the genre. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

One London, England June 1862 Julia Wychwood was alone in Rotten Row, and that was exactly the way she liked it. Well, not quite alone. There was her groom, Luke Six. And there were some humbly clad men and women tarrying along the viewing rail. But otherwise . . . Yes. Alone. It was often the case at this time of morning-those early moments after break of dawn, when the air was misty cool and the rising sun was shining brightly to burn away the fog. Some ladies and gentlemen chose to ride at this time of day, but not many. Certainly not as many as during the fashionable hour. Then, all of society was out in force. Which was precisely why Julia preferred riding in the morning. There were fewer stares and whispers. Less judgment. With a squeeze of her leg, she urged Cossack into a canter. It was the big ebony gelding's best gait-a steady, even stride, with a sway to it like a rocking chair. She relaxed into it. When cantering, Cossack required nothing more of her than that she maintain a light contact on the double reins. He did the rest, which left her ample time to daydream. Or to fret. She wasn't only alone in Rotten Row. She was alone in London. Her three best friends were all out of town, with two of them not set to return until Sunday. That left four days for her to get through on her own. Four excruciating days, and on every one of them, an equally excruciating society event. Julia considered taking to her bed. She'd done it before to get out of attending a ball or a dinner. But she'd never done it for more than two days at a time. Even then, her parents insisted on summoning Dr. Cordingley-an odious man who always came with his lancet and bleeding bowl in hand. She shuddered to think of it. No. Faking an illness wouldn't work this time. Maybe for one day, but not for all of them. Somehow, she was going to have to get through it. Cossack tossed his head at something in the distance. Julia's gloved hands tightened reflexively on the reins. She squinted down the length of the Row at the rider coming toward them. "Easy," she murmured to Cossack. "It's just another horse." An enormous horse. Bigger and blacker than Cossack himself. But it wasn't the horse that made Julia tense in her sidesaddle. It was the gentleman astride him: a stern-faced, battle-scarred ex-military man. Captain Blunt, the Hero of the Crimea. Her mouth went dry as he approached. She was half-tempted to bolt. But there was no escaping him. She brought Cossack down to a trot and then to a walk. She'd met the captain once before. It had been at Lady Arundell's spring ball. Viscount Ridgeway, a mutual acquaintance of theirs, had introduced him to Julia as a worthy partner. In other circumstances, the interaction might have been the veriest commonplace-a few polite words exchanged and a turn about the polished wood dance floor. Instead, Julia had gawped at Captain Blunt like a stricken nitwit. Her breath had stopped and her pulse had roared in her ears. Afraid she might faint, she'd fled the ballroom before the introduction had been completed, leaving Captain Blunt standing there, his granite-hewn features frozen in a mask of displeasure. It had been one of the most mortifying experiences of Julia's life. And that was saying something. For a lady prone to panicking in company, mortifications were a daily occurrence. At the advanced age of two-and-twenty, she'd nearly grown accustomed to them. But even for her, the incident at Lady Arundell's ball had marked a new low. No doubt Captain Blunt thought her actions had had something to do with his appearance. He was powerfully made. Tall, strong, and impossibly broad shouldered. Already a physically intimidating gentleman, he was made even more so by the scar on his face. The deep, gruesome slash bisected his right eyebrow and ran all the way down to his mouth, notching into the flesh of his lip. It gave the impression of a permanent sneer. Rather ironic that he was hailed as a hero. In looks, there seemed nothing heroic about him. Indeed, he appeared in every way a villain. "Miss Wychwood." He removed his beaver hat, inclining his head in a bow. His hair was a lustrous raven black. Cut short to his collar, it was complemented by a pair of similarly short sideburns edging the harsh lines of his jaw. "Good morning." She scarcely dared look him in the face. "Good morning." He didn't reply. Not immediately. He was studying her. She could feel the weight of his stare. It set off a storm of butterflies in her stomach. Ride on, she wanted to say. Please, ride on. He didn't ride on. He seemed intent on making her squirm. She suspected she knew why. She'd never apologized to him for her behavior at the ball. There'd been no opportunity. Perhaps he wanted her to suffer for embarrassing him? If that was the case, Julia was resigned to take her medicine. Heaven knew she deserved it. She forced herself to meet his gaze. The butterflies in her stomach threatened to revolt. Goodness. His eyes were the color of hoarfrost-a gray so cold and stark it sent an icy shiver tracing down the curve of her spine. Every feminine instinct within her rose up in warning. Run, it said. Flee. But this wasn't Lady Arundell's ballroom. This was Hyde Park. Here in the open air, mounted on Cossack, she wasn't the same person she was at a ball or a dinner dance. For one thing, she wasn't alone. She had a partner-and an imposing one, at that. Cossack lent her his strength and his stature. Made her feel nearly as formidable as he was. It's why she was more confident on horseback. At least, she'd always been so before. "How do you do?" she asked. "Very well." His voice was deep and commanding, with a growl at the edge of it. A soldier's voice. The kind that, when necessary, could be heard across a battlefield. "And yourself?" "I'm enjoying our spell of fine weather," she said. "It's excellent for riding." He flicked a glance over her habit. Made of faded black wool, it did nothing to emphasize the contours of her figure. Rather the opposite. It obscured her shape, much as the net veil on her short-brimmed riding hat obscured her face. His black brows notched into a frown. She suppressed a flicker of self-consciousness. Her clothing wasn't meant to attract attention. It was meant to render her invisible. But it hadn't-not to him. The way he looked at her . . . Hades might have regarded Persephone thus before dragging her down to hell to be his unwilling bride. And everyone knew Captain Blunt was looking for a wife. If one believed the prevailing rumors, it was the sole reason he'd come to town. He was on the hunt for a vulnerable heiress he could spirit back to his isolated Yorkshire estate. An estate that was said to be haunted. "You ride often at this time of day?" he asked. "Whenever I can," she said. "Cossack is glad for the exercise." "You handle him well." Some of the tightness in her chest eased at the compliment. "It's not difficult." She stroked Cossack's neck. "He may look imposing, but he's a lamb underneath. The biggest creatures often are in my experience." Captain Blunt's own mount stamped his gigantic hooves as if in objection to her statement. She gave the great beast an interested look. He was built like a medieval warhorse, with a broad chest, heavy fetlocks, and a thickly waving mane and tail. "What do you call him?" "Quintus." "And is he-" "A brute through and through," Captain Blunt said. "Sometimes, Miss Wychwood, what you see is precisely what you get." Julia wondered if that was true in the captain's own case. Could he really be as menacing as he appeared? She didn't know to a certainty. All she knew was that, according to society gossip, he was positively dangerous-especially to marriageable young ladies. It didn't excuse how she'd behaved toward him at the ball. She moistened her lips. "I believe I owe you an apology." He looked steadily back at her. "When Lord Ridgeway was introducing you to me at Lady Arundell's ball . . ." She faltered. "Perhaps you don't remember-" "I remember," he said gruffly. Heat rose in her cheeks. "Yes, well . . . I'm sorry to have run off like that. I'm afraid I'm not at my best when meeting strangers." "Do you often run off during introductions?" "Not generally, no. Not unless I fear I'm going to swoon." Her mouth ticked up at one corner in a rueful smile. "You wouldn't have appreciated having to catch me." Something flickered behind his icy gaze. An emotion impossible to read. "You don't know me very well, ma'am." Were it any other gentleman, Julia might have suspected him of flirting with her. But not Captain Blunt. His scarred countenance was as coldly serious as his tone. Her smile faded. "No, indeed." She tightened her fingers on the reins. "But I apologize all the same." She dipped her head to him as she urged Cossack on in the opposite direction. "Good day, Captain Blunt." He didn't return her farewell. He didn't say anything. He only sat there atop his horse, watching her ride away. Julia felt the burning impression of his stare at her back. And this time, she didn't will herself to be brave. She did what she'd wanted to do since she'd first laid eyes on him. She pressed her heel into Cossack's side and she fled. Jasper was tempted to ride after her, no matter that sheÕd just dismissed him. But no. He held Quintus to a standstill as Miss Wychwood rode away. She kept to a walk for several strides before kicking her horse into a lofty, ground-covering canter. Her seat was impeccable, her gloved hands light on her reins. She had a reputation for being a good rider. And she must be one to handle a horse so obviously too big for her. Good God. She couldn't be more than five feet and three inches in height. A petite lady, with a gentle way about her. Had she no one to choose her a more suitable mount? Jasper suspected not. Her parents were well-known invalids, prone to all manner of fancies. Their elegant town house in Belgrave Square played host to an endless stream of doctors, chemists, and an ever-changing roster of servants. Even Miss Wychwood's groom was of a recent vintage-a different fellow from the one who had accompanied her three days ago. He cantered a length behind her, the pair of them disappearing into the distance. Jasper's frown deepened. He'd learned many things about Miss Wychwood in the past several weeks, enough to know that marrying her and whisking her away to Yorkshire was going to be anything but simple. Damn Viscount Ridgeway for suggesting it. Exiting the park, Jasper returned to Ridgeway's house in Half Moon Street. It was a fashionable address, if not an ostentatious one, tucked between the house of a rich old widow on one side and that of a well-to-do solicitor on the other. After settling Quintus in the stable with his groom, Jasper made his way up the front steps to the door. Ridgeway's grizzled butler, Skipforth, admitted him into the black-and-white-tiled hall. "His lordship has requested your presence in his chamber," he said as he took Jasper's hat and gloves. "He's breakfasting there." Of course he was. Ridgeway rarely emerged from his room before ten, and then only on sufferance. Jasper felt a flare of irritation. Not for the first time, he regretted accepting Ridgeway's invitation to stay. "Shall I take you to him, sir?" Skipforth asked. "No need." Jasper bounded up the curving staircase to the third floor. He rapped once on Ridgeway's door before entering. The heavy draperies were drawn back from the windows. Sunlight streamed through the glass, revealing an expansive bedchamber decorated in shades of rich crimson and gold. On the far side of it, opposite his unmade four-poster bed and the silver tea tray containing the remains of his breakfast, sat Nathan Grainger, Viscount Ridgeway. He was sprawled in a wooden chair in front of his inlaid mahogany dressing table, eyes closed as his valet trimmed his side-whiskers. "That you, Blunt?" He squinted open one eye. "Back so soon?" "As you see. Skipforth said you had need of me?" "So I do. And excellent timing, too. Fennel's just finished shearing me." Ridgeway dismissed his valet with a wave of his hand. Fennel, a weedy man with a shifty expression, promptly withdrew into the dressing room, shutting the door behind him with a click. "I require your opinion on a horse I've been eyeing at Tattersalls," Ridgeway said. "Unless you have other plans today?" "Nothing that can't be changed. When are you leaving?" "Presently." Ridgeway sat forward in his chair, examining his freshly trimmed side-whiskers in the glass. "What do you think?" Jasper could detect no difference from the way Ridgeway usually looked. "I suppose they're shorter." "I despaired of them growing too full. A man wants to appear dignified, but after all, one doesn't wish to look like the prime minister." "No chance of that." Jasper crossed the floor to take a seat in a velvet-upholstered wing chair near the fire. Ridgeway kept only enough servants to support a bachelor establishment. His house was, nevertheless, comfortable and well tended-a definite improvement from the hotel Jasper had been staying at when he'd first arrived in town. Not that he'd had much choice in lodgings. He had no family in London to impose upon. No real friends on whom he could inflict his company. Even his connection with Ridgeway was tenuous at best. They'd met six years ago in Constantinople-both men at their lowest ebb. Ridgeway had come to Scutari Hospital to collect the body of his younger brother, killed in the skirmish that had taken the lives of the rest of Jasper's men. Jasper had been at Scutari, too; not on an errand, but as a gravely injured patient-the sole survivor of the skirmish, rendered all but unrecognizable by the severe wounds on his face. Ridgeway had spoken to him, attempting to rally his spirits. A futile task. Jasper had been in no mood to speak to anyone. But later, upon his release from hospital, when Ridgeway had written to him, Jasper had grudgingly replied. An occasional correspondence had followed. It wasn't a friendship. Not anywhere near it. Jasper hadn't any friends. And unless he was mistaken, neither had Ridgeway. They were merely two men brought together by circumstance. Cordial acquaintances-and sometimes, not even that. Excerpted from The Belle of Belgrave Square by Mimi Matthews All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.