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By
Beverley Eikli
Isn't she beautiful? She doesn't look like she could tell a white lie much less live one - keeping the biggest secret from the man she loves most.
Not that poor, lovely Lady Leeson always loved the kind and honourable Tristan who nurtured her during her darkest hours and married her three years before, thinking her 'lie' to be quite a different one.
Yesterday my first advance copies of The Maid of Milan jetted their way from the freezing UK to sizzling Gisborne in Victoria, Australia. It'll be available as an e-book from Feb 2 and is a pre-order for the paperback here.
Here's the blurb:
After five years of marriage, Adelaide has fallen in love with the handsome, honourable husband who nurtured her through her darkest hours.
Now Adelaide’s former lover, the passionate poet from whose arms she was torn by her family during their illicit liaison in Milan six years previously has returned, a celebrity due to the success of his book The Maid of Milan.
High society is as desperate to discover the identity of his ‘muse’ as Adelaide is to protect her newfound love and her husband’s political career.
If only the men had not been childhood friends.
Published by Choc Lit
March 2014
www.beverleyeikli.com
And here's an extract which takes place when Adelaide is with her mother who tells her she can't possibly be around when Tristan's boyhood friend, James, comes to visit.
Again, her mother's eyes roamed over the room's lavish appointments.– if he so much as suspects the weakness and depravity ofyour character. You have ever been a disappointment butyou are all I have and I am all you can rely upon. I thoughtI’d trained you well, that you were of my mould. Howwrong I was.’Familiar though this litany was, Adelaide once againfought the familiar shame which threatened to swampher, though she refused to succumb to the tears that hadsprung so readily to her eyes in the early days. In the sixmonths after she and James had been parted and she’d beendragged from Milan back to Vienna before being shippedoff to England, all she’d done was cry.‘Nevertheless, as your mother, I have stood by youand I remain determined that you shall not squander thisGod-given opportunity. Tristan’s continued high regardis our only salvation, Adelaide. Remember that. Nowcome.’ Draining her tea cup, Mrs Henley rose. ‘Let us godownstairs and find Tristan so we can tell him of AuntGwendolyn’s letter.’With helpless frustration Adelaide trailed after hermother. Once again Mrs Henley had taken charge andAdelaide’s ideas of independence seemed suddenly hopeless,for if they ran counter to her mother’s she knew who heldthe power.At the moment, it wasn’t Adelaide.Mrs Henley knocked and they entered as Tristan rose,his forced smile replaced by one of pleasure when he sawAdelaide. He took a step forward, extending his handfor hers, the flare in his eyes as intense as the day sheconsented to be his wife, and Adelaide felt an unexpectedjolt somewhere in the region of her heart, her determinationbolstered to bridge the distance between them, despite theoppressive presence of her mother, always a footfall away,it seemed.‘Tristan, I—’She stopped, pulling back as a warm, fragrant breezestirred the papers on his desk.The French doors from the garden had been thrownopen, and the heavy tread of Hessian boots upon thewooden floor pulled their attention towards the muslincurtains which swirled in eddies, silhouetting the shape ofa man: a slender man of middle height – the only ordinarything about him – dressed in a black cutaway coat andbuff breeches, who materialised before them like a youngdemigod, smouldering with an enthusiasm he did nothingto inhibit, for good manners were always in abeyance to thepassion that ruled James’s life.‘Tristan!’ Tossing his low-crowned beaver upon theottoman, James strode forward, arms outstretched, hisvoice taut with emotion.Nearly four years, it had been, and from first impressionsit was as if nothing had changed. Inky curls framed hisdelicately boned face and his eyes were like coals burningthe fire within. No, nothing had changed, she could see,for James was still like a coiled spring, eager for love,eager for life, as ready to give as he was to take … withoutdiscernment.Adelaide froze with nowhere to go, tense withpremonition while shafts of sensation, painful and familiar,tore through her.
Could this really be happening? Unwillingly, her gazewas fixed upon James’s profile, dusted with dark stubble,tapering up to angular cheekbones delineated with theslivers of sideburns sported by the fashionable Corinthiansof the day.In four years he could not be so unchanged whereasshe …She touched her face, her heart. She was a mere husk ofwhat she’d once been. Tristan knew nothing of the passionsthat burned within her when her heart was engaged – andshe didn’t know if he ever would, for suddenly she feltreduced to nothingness by the force of James’s personality.She’d been his equal once – a woman of fire and vitality– and she’d loved him with a savagery that her motherclaimed bordered on insanity. She’d been a child, thrust intoadulthood by this charismatic older man. Married olderman. But as she looked between the two men before her itwas Tristan who made her heart beat faster, as much withlonging as with fear of what he would think of her if heknew the truth.James had not seen her; his gaze was focused entirelyupon Tristan, and Adelaide was astonished to see a differentkind of pleasure light up Tristan’s face as he was envelopedin a welcoming embrace far less restrained than her husbandwas used to.‘Forgive me for coming early, Tristan. I had no choice.’‘Nonsense!’ The pleasure in Tristan’s voice was likenothing Adelaide had ever heard. ‘You’d be welcome ifyou climbed through the window at midnight for no betterreason than you needed a bed. So good to see you, James.It’s been far too long.’She had been forgotten. Rooted to the spot, Adelaidecould only wait to be acknowledged, but how she wishedshe could melt between the floorboards.
‘When I heard the weather promised rain and worse,tomorrow, I admit I acted with my usual thoughtlessspontaneity—’James halted, perhaps alerted by movement just beyondhis peripheral vision, and Adelaide caught her breath,wiping her sweating palms nervously on her skirts as heturned his head to peer into the gloomy recesses beyondTristan’s shoulder.And as her glance met the familiar grey eyes of the oneskeleton in her closet she’d hoped to consign forever to herpast life, she felt the thread of happiness she’d found withTristan pull dangerously taut.The fire in James’s eyes changed to something differentat the sight of her; the telling stillness of his normallyactive, healthy body indicated that his senses were fullyalerted, and Adelaide felt hers answer with a sensation akinto having her steady world ripped from beneath her feet,leaving her to spiral into orbit until her mother’s icy tonesripped through the silence.‘James, I trust you are well.’‘Mrs Henley. I did not see you.’They greeted each other with courtesy, concealing thebrittle antipathy Adelaide knew lay just below the surface.Her mother took a step as if to shield Adelaide fromhis dangerous influence. ‘We had not expected to see you,either, James, as you were due tomorrow and Adelaide andI’—she feigned regret—‘have been summoned on an urgentvisit to my aunt in Lincolnshire.’Tristan swung round to face Adelaide who dropped hergaze and blushed. Leave the explanation to her mother. Howshe wished she could be incinerated to a little pile of asheswith no more of the worries and charades that were her lot.Instead, she had to remain stoic, keep steady, pull taut thatwayward trembling mouth and corroborate her mother’slie.‘So lovely to see you again, James. Unfortunately, yes,Mama and I must leave immediately.’
‘Tristan loves you, Adelaide, but he will not – I promise you
End of Extract
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