Can an unexpected affair...
...lead to a lifetime of happiness?
In this Destination Brides story, while on vacation in Provence, homebody Jenna Brown embarks on a no-strings affair with a handsome stranger. But there’s more to wealthy playboy Philippe D’Usay than meets the eye. Scarred by loss, Philippe’s committed to being alone. But after their Provençal adventure ends, and Jenna discovers she’s pregnant, they must decide if their short-term connection could become a life together forever!
Destination Brides
Will the trip of a lifetime lead to the altar?
When Molly, Maya, Jenna and Eve bid on bucket-list-worthy vacations at a charity auction, they each embark on the adventure of a lifetime at glamorous destinations around the world—but will they find love that lasts forever along the way?
Travel with them from the comfort of your armchair in
Summer Escape with the Tycoon by Donna Alward
Swept Away by the Venetian Millionaire by Nina Singh
One Night in Provence by Barbara Wallace
All available now!
And look out for Eve’s story by Liz Fielding
Available September!
Dear Reader,
This series started as a text conversation. Donna Alward, Nina Singh, Liz Fielding and I decided we wanted to write a miniseries involving exotic, once-in-a lifetime vacations. Getting to work together was a bucket-list item for us, so it made perfect sense we send our heroines on bucket-list adventures.
I knew immediately that my book would be set in Provence. I wanted my heroine to go somewhere breathtakingly romantic, and what could be more breathtaking than miles and miles of flowers in a land that has seen thousands of years of history. (Yeah, you’re going to find a lot of me in my hero, Philippe.)
Throughout writing this book, I jokingly referred to it as my death book, because it involves a hospice nurse and an orphaned hero. Really, though, it’s a book about life. Or rather, about living. Both Jenna and Philippe are alive, but they aren’t living life to the fullest. That’s because they are afraid to love and be loved.
An unplanned pregnancy changes everything, however.
This book has a little bit of everything in it, including French lavender fields, Roman ruins, rocky New England beaches and romantic sunsets. I hope it leaves you yearning for a bucket-list adventure of your own.
Drop me an email at [email protected] and let me know what you think.
Regards,
Barbara Wallace
One Night in Provence
Barbara Wallace
Barbara Wallace can’t remember when she wasn’t dreaming up love stories in her head, so writing romances for Harlequin Romance is a dream come true. Happily married to her own Prince Charming, she lives in New England with a house full of empty-nest animals. Occasionally her son comes home, as well! To stay up-to-date on Barbara’s news and releases, sign up for her newsletter at barbarawallace.com.
Books by Barbara Wallace
Harlequin Romance
The Men Who Make Christmas
Christmas with Her Millionaire Boss
Royal House of Corinthia
Christmas Baby for the Princess
Winter Wedding for the Prince
The Vineyards of Calanetti
Saved by the CEO
In Love with the Boss
A Millionaire for Cinderella
Beauty & Her Billionaire Boss
The Billionaire’s Fair Lady
The Courage to Say Yes
The Man Behind the Mask
Swept Away by the Tycoon
The Unexpected Honeymoon
Their Christmas Miracle
Visit the Author Profile page at Harlequin.com for more titles.
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For Jenna, Shirley and Donna (the real ones). I couldn’t have gotten through this without you.
And, as always, for my hero, Pete. I love you.
Praise for
Barbara Wallace
“Beauty & Her Billionaire Boss [is] a heartwrenching and heartwarming romance rolled into one fabulous read you won’t be able to put down and won’t be able to stop recommending to others!”
—Goodreads
“This will tug at your emotions and make you realize just how much you can feel...an emotional but wonderful romance.”
—Harlequin Junkie on Christmas Baby for the Princess
Contents
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
CHAPTER TWELVE
EXCERPT FROM CINDERELLA’S SECRET ROYAL FLING BY JESSICA GILMORE
CHAPTER ONE
Early August
Is the place as gorgeous as it looked in the brochure? Wait, don’t tell me. I don’t want to know. Tell me it’s horrible.
SUNSHINE WARMED JENNA’S face as she read her friend’s text. Setting down her champagne, she quickly snapped a photo, knowing the camera phone could never do justice to the Provençal sea of gold and lavender. Her phone dinged in response almost immediately.
I hate you.
Jenna snorted. She shouldn’t laugh. Poor Shirley was back in Nantucket with shingles instead of sitting here in the sunshine with her.
She quickly typed a response.
Would it make you feel better if I told you everyone looks like a swimsuit model? I’m the pastiest person here.
That wasn’t exactly true. There were definitely some gorgeous people floating around, but there were plenty of pale tourists like Jenna as well. What was a little white lie, though, if thinking her best friend felt out of place made Shirley feel a little better?
I’m not going to have nearly as much fun without you with me.
That was true. Shirley was her wing person, both at the nursing home where they worked and off duty. In fact, it was Shirley who’d heard about the Merchant charity auction and convinced Jenna to bid on this Provençal vacation. Without her, Jenna wouldn’t be sitting on the terrace of a centuries-old French castle drinking champagne for breakfast.
Better double down on your efforts, then. Otherwise, Beatrice will come back to haunt you. She expected you to have as much fun as possible.
I plan to!
No way was she risking the posthumous wrath of her favorite patient.
Unfortunately, I’ve lost my translator.
Shirley was the one who could speak French. An ex-boyfriend had given her an immersion software course one Christmas with the promise of a French vacation.
Besides, there’s only so much trouble a person can get into by themselves.
A trio of bouncing dots on her screen indicated that Shirley was typing a reply.
Go find a sexy Frenchman to help you. I can think of plenty of trouble you can get into with one of those.
Jenna laughed out loud, causing the couple at the next table to look over. She waved her phone at them to show she wasn’t some random crazy person before replying.
R U kidding? With my luck it’ll be some poser.
You think everyone is a poser.
 
; With good reason. Nantucket attracted them like a magnet. Thirty K millionaires, she and Shirley liked to call them. Guys with rented boats and empty bank accounts who spent their summer weekends pretending they were part of the beautiful people with the hopes of scoring with as many women as possible.
The South of France isn’t the White Whale Tavern.
It’s probably worse. I’d rather be haunted by Beatrice, thank you.
Shirley responded by sending a GIF of a dancing ghost.
If you do find a Frenchman, let me know. If I’m going to be covered in sores, I need some kind of vicarious thrill.
Don’t hold your breath.
I never do.
After a few more exchanges, Shirley signed off to go back to sleep, it being early morning in New England. Jenna signaled the server for a second glass of champagne. Because when in France...
On the other side of the terrace railing, the landscape rolled out like a sea of purple, green and yellow. A picture postcard come to life, only better.
Ten days in a French castle at the height of lavender season. That’s how Merchant Hotels had described the dream package Jenna bid on at the auction. The accompanying brochures made the trip sound magical. Now that she was here, she realized the pictures didn’t begin to do the magic justice.
She raised her glass in honor of the woman who’d made the trip possible. “Thanks for the adventure, Beatrice. I’ll make the most of it.”
Lifting the glass just a bit higher, she snapped a picture and sent the shot to Shirley. Then she switched seats so she could get a photograph of her drinking with the fields behind her. If she was going to rub salt in Shirley’s wounds, then she might as well rub a lot of salt.
Unfortunately, she was the only millennial alive who couldn’t shoot a decent selfie. She either looked like she was squinting at the sky or like she had two extra chins. After four aborted attempts, she gave up and tossed the phone on the table.
A shadow crossed her table. “Excusez-moi de vous déranger,” said a deep voice, “but would you care for some assistance?”
Ho. Ly. Cow. Shirley would be choking on her champagne right now. Jenna nearly did. She was looking at quite possibly the most gorgeous man she’d ever seen. He stood at the ready in a double-breasted suit similar to what the other hotel managers wear wearing, looking like someone plucked him from a hotel brochure. In fact, Château de Beauchamp should put him in the brochure; they’d probably triple their reservation rate. Who knew jaws that chiseled existed in real life?
Granted, he was a tad on the lean side, but then who needed muscles when you could wear a suit with style and had eyes the color of the fields outside?
And...she was staring. As though she’d never seen a handsome man before.
Not this handsome, a voice whispered in her head.
He knew he was handsome, too. She could tell from the way he smiled, his teeth all white and perfect.
“Your camera,” he said in heavily-accented English. “I couldn’t help noticing your frustration. I would be glad to take your photograph, if you’d like. You are trying to take a photo in front of the lavender, are you not?”
From the way he focused all his attention on her, you would think there was nothing else he would rather do than help her with her vacation shots. Her stomach fluttered, and she had to remind herself this was France’s—or rather the Merchant Hotel chain’s—version of five-star service.
“Thank you,” she said. “I’m afraid I don’t have the selfie trick down yet.”
“That is a good thing, is it not? Means you’re busy looking at things other than yourself.”
Smooth, the way he threw in the compliment. “I’m trying to break that habit on this trip. My friend Shirley was unable to come, so I want to document everything so I can show her when I get home.”
“Well, you won’t find a better backdrop in all of Provence than this one right here,” he replied. “Why don’t you stand by the rail? The view is its most breathtaking up close.”
Jenna would call him biased, except that he might be right. She’d never seen so much color in one place. Maybe it was an effect brought on by the champagne, but everything seemed more vivid here. The lavender’s purple deeper, the sunflowers’ gold more brilliant. Even the mountains, with their shadows, looked like they were bathed in blue and green.
“You’re American,” her photographer noted. “Is this your first visit to Château de Beauchamp?”
“Yes, it is.” First time to the château. First time to France. First time outside the United States since spring break in college. “I couldn’t resist the idea of staying in a real-life castle. Especially one that’s a thousand years old. America wasn’t even a gleam in Columbus’s eye then.”
“I hate to disappoint you, but you’ve been shortchanged by a few hundred years.”
“What do you mean?”
He joined her at the railing. As he eased his way around the chair, Jenna noted the fluid grace with which he moved. Like water rounding a bend.
“This isn’t the original castle,” he told her.
“But the brochure said the Château de Beauchamp had stood watch over the valley since the eleventh century. Were they making that up?” If the hotel misled her, she was going to be really ticked off.
“A Château de Beauchamp has stood guard,” he replied. “Just not this one. The original fell into ruin sometime in the sixteenth century. If you look beyond that clump of trees to the right, you’ll see the remains of the tower.”
A gold signet ring on his pinkie finger glittered in the sun as he pointed. Squinting, Jenna made out the peaks of toppled stone.
“The d’Usay family built this as a replacement. They called it the Château Neuf.”
“So I’m staying in a five-hundred-year-old castle instead of a thousand-year-old one.”
“I trust you’re not too disappointed?”
“I’ll survive.”
“I hope so. It would be a shame if you were left unsatisfied.”
Damn, if the double entendre didn’t send a quiver through her. If it was a double entendre. The jet lag had thrown her instincts off.
“Have you taken the tour?” he asked.
“Not yet.” A castle tour was one of the suggested itinerary items listed in her information package, but Jenna had yet to book anything. She’d told Shirley it was because she wanted to be spontaneous, but really it was because she’d been too busy before departure. “I thought I’d take a day and soak in the atmosphere first.”
“You should, if only to appreciate the atmosphere in which you are soaking. Did you know, for example, that the wine cellar doubled as a meeting locale for les Compagnies du Soleil during the White Terror?”
“The white what?”
“When members of the region took revenge on those who supported the revolution. That would be our revolution, by the way,” he added. A dimple in his left cheek punctuated his cheeky grin.
“You mean they were rebelling against the rebellion?” she asked.
“We prefer to think of it as an attempt to preserve tradition. And perhaps their heads.”
“No, they definitely wouldn’t want to lose those.” She wondered how many women had lost their heads over this guy. She’d met men like him before. Players, albeit not as suave.
Or as handsome, the voice reminded her.
Men like him were the worst, because they tricked you. Most poseurs were so obvious you knew not to take them seriously. This kind of guy, however... This was the kind of guy who sucked you in with their smoothness, leading you to believe he were sincerely interested in more than sex. Next thing you knew, you were spending your life like a puppet, dancing a jig every time he jerked your string.
This guy looked like someone who pulled a lot of strings.
He leaned an elbow against the rail, allowing his
eyes to lock with Jenna’s. “Speak for yourself, mademoiselle. Sometimes losing your head can be rather fun.”
“Not in my experience,” Jenna replied.
“Perhaps you haven’t had the right experience.”
If she were in Nantucket, this would be the point where she told him to take a hike. Instead, whether it was the jet lag, the champagne on an empty stomach or the heady French atmosphere, she found herself leaning into his gaze. The hue was far deeper and richer than she realized. More blue-violet than purple, making them even more unique. And captivating...
“How did they make out? The rebels against the rebellion. Did they keep their heads?” she asked him.
“You’ll have to take the tour to find out.” The dimple reappeared. “Unless you would like a more personal tour.”
Despite knowing better, the offer went straight to the base of her spine.
“French history just happens to be a personal passion of mine,” he told her. “Particularly the d’Usay family.”
Wait? Was he offering her an actual tour? “Won’t you get in trouble? With the hotel?” she added when he gave her a quizzical look. There was personalized service, and then there was personalized service. “I wouldn’t want to take you away from the other guests.”
An amused smile tugged the corner of his mouth. “I’m sure the other guests will survive.”
Jenna debated the offer, turning her phone end over end as she thought. What the heck—it was only a walk around the hotel, not a marriage proposal. Besides, unlike most guys on the make, this one was actually entertaining. If he got annoying, she could always beg off by blaming jet lag. “In that case, I would love a tour.”
“Wonderful. My name is Philippe, by the way.”
“Jenna Brown.”
“Enchanté, Jenna Brown.”
Amazing how an accent could turn the plainest of New England names exotic and sensual. Particularly when the words were accompanied by a sweep of admiring eyes. Again, she found herself throwing out Nantucket rules. Instead of being insulted, she felt goose bumps trail in its wake.
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