A Daring Arrangement
Four Hundred, #1
Four Hundred, #1
by Joanna Shupe
Genre: Adult, Historical
Romance
Publisher: Avon Books
Publication Date: October 31st
2017
Set in New York
City’s Gilded Age, Joanna Shupe’s Avon debut introduces an English beauty with
a wicked scheme to win the man she loves—and the American scoundrel who ruins
her best laid plans…
The Book Junkie
Reads . . . Review of . . . A DARING ARRANGMENT (The Four Hundred, #1) . . .
The Gilded Age in America has not be one that
I have spent a lot of time reading. To find that this read was in Manhattan
with a wealthy, devilishly handsome financier, Julius Hatcher. Nora wanted no
part of the relationship except to meet the needs she had to be dumped and free
to marry the one she wants. I was almost appalled at her lack of self-respect
to fall for the charms and charisma of Julius and take things farther when she
was supposedly in love with another back home. I did in fact love Julius. He
was the experienced rogue that no father was supposed to love.
It took a bit if reading and a little patience for me to fulling get pulled in by this reads. I found Joanna Shupe has a keen mind and delicious writing style. She has given me another tantalizing foray into the Gilded Age in America.
It took a bit if reading and a little patience for me to fulling get pulled in by this reads. I found Joanna Shupe has a keen mind and delicious writing style. She has given me another tantalizing foray into the Gilded Age in America.
BLURB
Lady Honora Parker
must get engaged as soon as possible, and only a particular type of man will
do. Nora seeks a mate so abhorrent, so completely unacceptable, that her father
will reject the match—leaving her free to marry the artist she loves. Who then
is the most appalling man in Manhattan? The wealthy, devilishly handsome
financier, Julius Hatcher, of course….
Julius is intrigued by Nora’s ruse and
decides to play along. But to Nora’s horror, Julius transforms himself into the
perfect fiancé, charming the very people she hoped he would offend. It seems
Julius has a secret plan all his own—one that will solve a dark mystery from
his past, and perhaps turn him into the kind of man Nora could truly love.
EXCERPT
Thirty-Seventh Street and Fifth Avenue
New York City
February 1890
The pressed tin
ceiling was about to cave in on their heads.
Lady Honora
Parker glanced upward once again, fascinated by what was taking place on the
second floor of Sherry’s, one of New York’s most exclusive restaurants. Each
raucous thump and horrific crash from above shook the huge gold and crystal
chandelier in the main dining room and caused the black-coated waiters to
wince. It sounded as if a herd of elephants were up there.
From what Nora
had seen and heard of the reckless Americans in the last month, she would not
be surprised if it were elephants.
Nothing seemed off limits here, no idea too big or too wild. Giant houses, like
English country estates, lined Fifth Avenue. Imported marble, bright limestone,
and shiny gilding blinded from every street corner. Tall buildings stretched
high up into the sky. There was a sense of urgency in New York to buy more,
build more, do more. It made her long
for the dirty, crowded, yet civilized streets of London.
“Nora, dear,”
her aunt’s gentle voice interrupted her thoughts. “Mr. Van Rensselaer asked you
a question.”
She turned to
the older, heavyset man on her right. Her uncle had arranged the dinner, one of
many meetings designed for her to find a “suitable” man. But the idea of
marriage to a man old enough to be her father made Nora’s skin crawl. Even her
aunt disapproved of Van Rensselaer, saying he was, “a set of heavy eyebrows
with a stick up his behind.”
It must be said
that Nora adored her aunt.
More
importantly, Nora did not desire a suitable American man, not when a perfectly
suitable artist awaited her back in London. Her father hadn’t approved of said
artist, unfortunately, which is how she now found herself in America, being
trotted around New York like a prized thoroughbred up for auction. That’s the earl’s daughter, they
whispered behind her back. Here to find a
husband.
No, she
absolutely would not. Nora had no intention of marrying anyone here. “I
apologize,” she replied to the eyebrows. “You were saying?”
“Perfectly
understandable.” Mr. Van Rensselaer smiled tolerantly at her, as if Nora were
some flighty nitwit incapable of following a conversation. Commence additional
skin crawling. “I asked if your ladyship missed London.”
Yes, I miss Robert terribly. Her heart
squeezed in a tight grip, an ache settling in her throat. A young painter,
Robert Landon had no money or title to speak of, but she didn’t care. He’d been
the first person to see Nora for who she truly was, not just her father’s
daughter. He was sweet and romantic and all she desired in this world. After
they married, they planned to travel across Europe so Robert could hone his
craft. She would keep him company and continue to serve as his “muse,” as he
often called her.
Her father, the
Earl of Stratton, hadn’t approved. He’d been horrified when Robert and Nora
were caught together—a scene orchestrated for the earl’s benefit at a dinner
party—and from there, things had taken a disastrous turn. Instead of forcing
the young lovers to marry, as she’d hoped, her furious father rushed Nora off
to his sister in New York. “No one there
will have heard of the scandal yet,” he had said. “Your aunt will help you find a proper husband in America. Do not return without one. Now, do not
disappoint me, Nora.”
Was that not
what she’d been doing her entire life, disappointing him? He’d wanted a boy;
she’d been born a girl. She had studied, practiced, and tried to be the perfect
daughter, and he’d only ignored her. She’d smiled through her debut, eager to
make him proud, and he hadn’t bothered to attend any of the balls or dances.
Attempts at
playing the good daughter, the proper society young woman, had gotten her
nothing. Worse, they’d resulted in a trip to a strange city to be dangled in
front of every fortune hunter and insufferable snob twice her age.
So that proper society young woman was
no more. A new Nora had emerged on the cross-Atlantic voyage four weeks ago,
one who had decided to take matters into her own hands by concocting an
infallible way back to London.
The plan was
simple. If her father wanted her to find a husband, she’d find the most
outrageous man in New York, a fiancé noteworthy and unsuitable enough to land
in the papers. An actor? A politician? She hadn’t quite settled on how to
achieve it yet . . . but she would. She had to. The news must become public
enough to reach the earl’s ear across the Atlantic, horrifying him enough to
summon her home.
To Robert.
Three sets of
eyes were staring, so she returned her attention to the conversation at hand.
“I do miss it. Certainly not the weather, however.”
Aunt Beatrice,
Uncle James, and Mr. Van Rensselaer laughed, and conversation droned on until
another loud thump sounded from above. Her uncle’s mouth flattened. “I cannot
comprehend why that hullabaloo is permitted to continue.”
Mr. Van
Rensselaer wiped his mouth with the linen serviette. “From what I understand,
Mr. Hatcher is up in the ballroom. Some sort of exclusive dinner. This is why
your country is superior to ours, Lady Nora, because the undesirables here have
no idea how to conduct themselves properly.”
By
“undesirables,” it was clear he meant men who had earned their wealth, not
inherited it as he had. Had he any idea how pompous that made him sound? Though
Robert had no money, he was a kind, decent, and loving man with brilliant wit
and unshakable morals. That was the perfect man, not one like Mr. Van
Rensselaer, who’d visibly sneered at the modest blue silk gown she wore
tonight. While it might be conservative compared to the fancier American gowns
throughout the dining room, she believed the color showed off her dark chestnut
hair and golden-brown eyes.
“Mr. Julius
Hatcher?” Aunt Bea asked. “The financier?”
“Indeed. The
man’s a scourge on everything decent and upstanding in this city.” Van
Rensselaer cut into his asparagus spears. “Do not worry, though. He doesn’t
exactly run in the best circles. In fact, he’s tried numerous times to buy his
way into polite society over the years, but they won’t have him.”
Though she’d
only been in New York a month, Nora had heard of Julius Hatcher. A handsome,
brash swell with more money than sense, he threw elaborate parties and
associated with a string of high-profile actresses, at least according to the
gossip pages. He’d even built a replica of a sixteenth-century French castle on
Upper Fifth Avenue—complete with a moat.
Though the
newspapers touted his exploits with glee, society thought him outrageous and
improper. A society he’d apparently tried to buy his way into—and failed. And
here her father had disapproved of Robert when there were scoundrels like
Julius Hatcher running amok. However was that possibly fair? It would serve the
earl right if she brought Hatcher home for—Her brain froze for an instant,
stuck on the delicious idea. Oh, indeed, it would serve the earl right. Her
father would never approve of Hatcher as a husband, a scoundrel who would bring
shame to the venerable Parker name. Surely that would force her father to see
Robert in a more favorable light. It would certainly prove that a hardworking,
decent man like Robert was good enough to marry the earl’s only daughter.
Moreover, the
second her father caught wind of her connection to Hatcher and the depravity of
his reputation, he would undoubtedly bring her home posthaste.
Mr. Hatcher
sounded like the answer to her prayers.
Another thud
sounded from above. This is my chance. She
had to find Hatcher and try to convince him to help her. Right now.
Immediately. Before she lost this opportunity. She started to push her chair
back and a waiter rushed over to assist her. “If you will excuse me, I am
feeling a bit overheated.”
“Shall I come
with you?” her aunt asked as the two gentlemen politely rose as well.
“No, please,”
she rushed out a little desperately, then tempered her tone. “Enjoy your meal.
I’ll put a cool cloth to my neck and return in moments.”
Author
Info
Joanna Shupe has
always loved history, ever since she saw her first Schoolhouse Rock cartoon.
While in college, Joanna read every romance she could get her hands on and soon
started crafting her own racy historical novels. In 2013, she won Romance
Writers of America’s prestigious Golden Heart® Award for Best Historical. She
now lives in New Jersey with her two spirited daughters and dashing husband. To
connect with Joanna, visit JoannaShupe.com.
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