An
unexpected duchess proves that behaving
badly isn't exclusive to the Dukedom.
MY FAIR DUCHESS
Dukes Behaving Badly #5
Megan Frampton
Releasing Feb 28, 2017
Avon Books
In Megan
Frampton's most recent installment of The Dukes Behaving Badly series, an
unexpected duchess proves that behaving badly isn't exclusive to the Dukedom.
The Unexpected Duchess
Archibald
Salisbury, son of a viscount, war hero, and proficient in the proper ways of
aristocratic society, has received orders for his most challenging mission:
Genevieve, Duchess of Blakesley. How she inherited a duchy isn’t his problem.
Turning her into a perfect duchess is. But how can he keep his mind on business
when her beauty entices him toward pleasure?
It was
impossible, unprecedented…and undeniably true. Genevieve is now a “duke”, or,
rather, a duchess. So what is she to do when the ton eyes her
every move, hoping she’ll make a mistake? Genevieve knows she has brains and
has sometimes been told she has beauty, but, out of her depth, she calls on an
expert. And what an expert, with shoulders broad enough to
lean on, and a wit that matches her own. Archie is supposed to teach her to be
a lady and run her estate, but what she really wants to do is unladylike—run
into his arms.
1845,
Lady Sophia’s Drawing Room
“There’s
only one solution,” Lady Sophia said, passing the letter to Archie
as he felt his stomach drop. And his carefully ordered life teeter on
the verge of change. “You’ll have to go to London to sort my
goddaughter out.” She embellished her point by squeezing her tiny
dog Truffles, who emitted a squeak and glared at Archie. As if it was
his fault.
He
resisted the urge to crumple the paper in his hand. “But the
festival is in a few weeks,” Archie said, hearing the desperate
tone in his voice. He did not want to ever return to London. That was
the purpose of taking a position out here in the country after
leaving the Queen’s Own Hussars a year prior. His family was there,
and his father, at least, had made it clear he never wanted to see
him again. What’s more, he did not want to assist a helpless
aristocrat in some sort of desperate attempt to bring order to their
lives. Even though that was what he was doing in Lady Sophia’s
employ. But working for her had come to have its own kind of
satisfactory order, one he did not want to disrupt.
“There
is work to be done,” Archie continued, hoping to appeal to his
employer’s sensible side.
Although
in the course of working for her he had come to realize his employer
didn’t really have a
sensible side, so what was he hoping to accomplish?
“Didn’t
you tell me Mr. McCready could do everything you could?” Lady
Sophia asked. “You pointed out that if you were to get ill, or busy
with other matters, your assistant steward could handle things just
as well as you.”
That
was when I was trying to get one of my men work,
Archie thought in frustration. To
help him get back on his feet after the rigors of war. And
Bob had proven
himself to be a remarkably able assistant,
allowing Archie to dive
into Lady Sophia’s woefully
neglected accounts and
see into her investments,
neither of which she paid
any attention to.
Lady
Sophia placed Truffles on the rug before lifting her head to look at
Archie. Who knew, in that moment, that he was doomed. Doomed to
return to London to help out a likely far-too- indulged female in the
very difficult position of being a powerful and wealthy aristocrat.
Perhaps
it would have been easier to just get shot on the battlefield. It
certainly would have been quicker.
“It’s
settled.” She punctuated her words with a nod of her head, sending
a few gray curls flying in the air. “You will go see to the new
duchess and take care of her as ably as you do me. Mr. Mc-Cready will
assist me while you are away.”
Archie
looked at the letter again. “This duchess is your relative?” he
asked. That would explain the new duchess’s equally silly mode of
communication. An “unexpected duchess,” indeed. What kind of
idiot wouldn’t have foreseen this circumstance? And done something
to prepare for it?
“She
calls me aunt, but she is not my actual niece, you understand,”
Lady Sophia explained. “She is my goddaughter; her mother married
the duke, the duchess’s father. It is quite unusual for a woman to
inherit the duchy.”
“Quite,”
Archie echoed.
“But
it happened, somehow, and since I don’t know anything about being a
duchess . . .” Because I
do? Archie wondered. But
there wasn’t anybody else. She wouldn’t have asked Lady Sophia,
of all people, unless there was nobody else.
Or
if she was as flighty and confident as her faux-aunt. A scenario that
seemed more and more likely.
“The
only thing Mr. McCready can’t do is attract as much feminine
interest as you do, Mr. Salisbury.” She sat back up and regarded
him. “Which might make him more productive,” she added. She
leaned over to offer Truffles the end of her biscuit.
Archie
opened his mouth to object, but closed it when he realized she was
right. He wasn’t vain, but he did recognize that ladies tended to
find his appearance attractive. Lady Sophia received many more
visitors, she’d told him in an irritated tone, now that he’d been
hired.
Bob,
damn his eyes, smirked knowingly every time Archie was summoned to
Lady Sophia’s drawing room to answer yet another question about
estate management posed by a lady who’d likely never had such a
question in her life.
Archie
responded by making Bob personally in charge of the fertilizer. It
didn’t stop Bob’s smirking, but it did make Archie feel better.
“And
you will return in a month’s time so you can be here for the
festival.”
“Sooner
if I can, my lady.” If this duchess needed more time than a month,
there would be no hope for her anyway. Country life suited him; he
liked its quiet and regularity. It was a vast change from life in
battle, or even being just on duty, but it was far more interesting
than being the third son from a viscount’s family. A viscount who
disowned his third boy when said boy was determined to join the army.
Meanwhile,
however, he had to pack to head off to a new kind of battle—that of
preparing a completely unprepared woman, likely a woman as flighty
and often confused as Lady Sophia, to hold a position that she was
entirely unsuited for.
Very
much like working with raw recruits, in fact.
Megan
Frampton writes
historical romance under her own name and romantic women’s fiction as Megan
Caldwell. She likes the color black, gin, dark-haired British men, and huge
earrings, not in that order. She lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her husband
and son. You can visit her on her website, @meganf, and at Facebook.















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