by Maya Rodale
She, a lowly, impoverished wallflower on her fourth season had just done the unthinkable: refused a wealthy duke. She must have gone mad.
In spite of her rejection, Ashbrooke just smiled. Then he stood, towering over her, and he gently lowered his mouth to hers and brushed his lips across her own. It was only an instant, but she felt sparks.
She felt the snap and sizzle of a fire flickering to life.
And she became aware that she’d never felt that with Benedict.
A lot could happen in an instant.
“What are you about?” she asked, dazed. He gently pushed a lock of hair away from her cheek. It was the affectionate caress of a lover.
“A kiss to celebrate our betrothal. For making me the happiest man in the world when you said yes.”
“I did no such thing,” she declared. Good God, the man was daft. All beauty and no brains.
“According to that dozen of gossips in there,” he said, inclining his head and never once taking his eyes off her face, “you just did.”
“They couldn’t hear me—” she said as the truth dawned. He wasn’t daft at all. He was devious and she had just fallen neatly into his trap.
“But they could see,” he murmured, devastatingly.
They could see that he had proposed on one knee—again, presumably. They could see that he had kissed her. They would never, ever, ever, ever, ever consider that Emma would refuse him.
Emma touched her fingers to her lips. They burned. Still burned. One fleeting kiss in the garden, and she was betrayed. Ruined. Like Judas and Jesus. One fleeting kiss and the duke of Ashbrooke had robbed her of her hopes, her dreams.
They were as good as married now. There would be no more Benedict, no little townhouse. She’d be the lonely duchess, married to a man far more attractive than she, and always the subject of cruel whispers. What does he see in her? She could just imagine the gossip columns: To the surprise of no one, the duke of Ashbrooke continues his rakehell ways despite his marriage to the buxom bluestocking who at least has books to comfort her.
It was not the life she had planned, nor was it a life she wished for.
Emma would never forgive him that.
I am a wallflower, she wanted to protest. I love another. But she was a smart girl. Thus, Emma knew none of that mattered anymore. Not after a duke kissed her in the garden, in full view of at least two dozen of London’s greatest gossips. In a way, that was more official than actually signing the marriage contracts.
“Welcome to happily ever after,” Ashbrooke said, linking his arm with hers. “Allow me to explain.”
“Please do,” she said in a strangled whisper. Rage had a way of tangling up words.
“You are one of London’s Least Likely,” the duke said smoothly and she bit down on her lip.
“Really, you are going to start with that? I had heard you were considered an expert seducer. Clearly, that rumor is an outrageous exaggeration.”
“As you pointed out, I have, over the years, acquired a reputation as something a rake.”
“That’s an understatement,” she said. “One might say a ruthless scoundrel, a notorious libertine, a horrible jackanapes.”
“Think, Emma, of how this betrothal could serve each other,” Ashbrooke said, keeping is voice even and his grasp on her secure. “My reputation would be mended by an engagement with a respectable girl.”
“Words every girl wants to hear to describe herself. Really, I cannot fathom how you got your reputation for being such a seductive charmer.”
“On my arm, you will become a sensation,” Ashbrooke said plainly. “Let us face the facts: No one noticed you before, but everyone will want you now. When you cry off in a few weeks, I shall be inconsolable and take an extended visit away from London and you shall have your pick of suitors.”
Hope flickered. Then died.
“I’m not sure the world works like that,” Emma said. The world was a different place for those that were not charming, powerful, wealthy dukes. “I would be seen as The Duke Of Ashbrooke’s jilted fiancé. Hardly the stuff of other men’s dreams.”
“That’s where you are wrong,” he stated flatly.
“I knew you would be arrogant,” Emma muttered “I am not pleased to be proven correct.”
“It’s not arrogance, it’s the facts,” he said with an impatient sigh.
“Why should I not cry off now? Because I really would like to.” Emma glared stubbornly up at him. She detected a hint of a smile, a spark of appreciation in his eyes. She scowled all the more.
“You could jilt me now,” he said slowly. “Even though two dozen women are already spinning stories of our whirlwind romance and romantic stroll in the garden. Everyone will think this was just a joke. You will be no better off than before. You’d be worse, even. And if you cried off now, we wouldn’t have the fortune.”
Her breath caught. Hope flickered again.
“What fortune?”
“My dear aunt Agatha is holding a house party at which she shall determine who will inherit her enormous fortune. She is also ancient.”
Hope flickered again, and a flame burst forth. And then it died again.
“Allow me to confirm that I am understanding you correctly,” Emma said slowly. “You would like us to pose as a betrothed couple to swindle your wealthy, elderly aunt out of her fortune.”
“It does sound nefarious when phrased like that, I grant you,” he said, grinning. “But it’s all part of The Fortune Games, a mad scheme of Agatha’s own creation.”
“Ah yes, Lady Agatha Grey’s Fortune Games. I have heard the most intriguing things about it. You have never won, have you?” Emma asked, eyes narrowed. Why should I team up with a loser? She didn’t dare say it, but she hoped her expression conveyed it.
“With you as my blushing bride I would,” he said, so confidently. “We would.”
“And then I may jilt you and keep my portion of the reward?”
“If that’s what you wish,” he replied, eyeing her curiously. He obviously could not fathom that she might not with to be with him. She was not at all sorry to provide this rude awakening to him.
“It is exactly what I wish,” she said firmly. It was her one and only one chance to still attain the life she dreamt of. So long as she won the fortune and didn’t do something ridiculous, like fall for the duke.
“Is there anything you wish to tell me, Emma? Is there another man? Are you in a particular condition?”
“We might pose as a happily betrothed couple, but you should know my heart belongs to someone else,” she said, oddly delighted that he thought she, London’s Least Likely To Misbehave, could possibly have gotten herself ruined or in a particular condition.
“So you’ll say yes,” he repeated.
“Apparently I already have,” she remarked dryly. For the fortune. For Benedict.
Ashbrooke broke into a smile, a grin of such pure happiness. The force of such radiant, beautiful joy hit her like a runaway carriage pulled by a half dozen charging stallions.
The duke wrapped his arms around her, swept her off her feet and whirled her around—right there, in the garden, with all the gossips of London watching. And then he kissed her—another swift brush of his warm, firm mouth against hers. She thought of fireworks and a strange feeling of warmth and desire surging through her. She did not think of Benedict.
She thought of the Ashbrooke Affect.
It was real. It knocked her breath away, along with her wits.
“Pack your bags, Emma Wallflower,” Ashbrooke said in a happy, laughing voice. “We have a house party to attend and a dowager to charm out of her fortune.”
About the Author
* * *
Maya Rodale began reading romance novels in college at her mother’s insistence and it wasn’t long before she was writing her own. Maya is now the author of multiple historical and contemporary romances. She lives in New York City with her darling dog and a rogue of her own.
Please visit her at www.mayarodal
e.com.
Visit www.AuthorTracker.com for exclusive information on your favorite HarperCollins authors.
Also by Maya Rodale
The Wicked Wallflower
Three Schemes and a Scandal (Novella)
Seducing Mr. Knightly
The Tattooed Duke
A Tale of Two Lovers
A Groom of One’s Own
Copyright
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
Excerpt from The Bad Boy Billionaire’s Girl Gone Wild copyright © 2014 by Maya Rodale.
Excerpt from The Wicked Wallflower copyright © 2013 by Maya Rodale.
THE BAD BOY BILLIONAIRE’S WICKED ARRANGEMENT. Copyright © 2014 by Maya Rodale. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the nonexclusive, nontransferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, decompiled, reverse-engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of HarperCollins e-books.
EPub Edition JANUARY 2014 ISBN: 9780062230812
Print Edition ISBN: 9780062230829
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