Clorinda
De Villiers was wed in haste (and dare I say, at random!) to the Duke
of Westhampton, her reason for agreeing to the mad bargain being to save
her family from financial ruin, and his to make a respectable alliance.
He barely looks at her, let alone speaks, and almost as soon as they
arrive at Westhampton, he departs for London and leaves Clorinda behind,
and the poor young girl is ordered (by him) to "be prepared at all
times for his return". In a fit of pique, she decides to go to London by
herself, disguised, and to make the Duke fall in love with her to
"teach him a lesson".
The Duke is incredibly arrogant, boorish,
rude and selfish. And naturally, he is jaw-dropping sexy and sought
after by all the young misses and their matchmaking mamas. He's a Duke.
He's hot. He's rich. Of course everyone loves him. Even though he's a
complete asshole. And remains so throughout the book. He falls in love
with Miss de Vere, yet he never tells her that he's already married, and
he kisses her and treats her like he would any of his mistresses. The
only difference between him and the perverted Lord Winterstoke (the
villain, apparently) was that the latter wasn't hypocritical about his
relations with women. He was a publicly acknowledged dangerous rake and
didn't shy away from it. Westhampton was just as bad, but got away with
his behaviour "because he was a Duke". Bleargh.
My main problem
with the love story though, was that it was purely based on physical
appearance. Westhampton wouldn't look twice at Clorinda when she was
dressed in dowdy country clothing, but now that she's in town
masquerading as the beautiful Miss de Vere, wearing all the latest
fashions, suddenly she's gorgeous and irresistible. The Duke and "Miss
de Vere" meet freaking three times in London and are already desperately
in love with each other. Clorinda HATED the Duke with a passion, and
now she LOVES him with the same passion. It was so dramatic and unrealistic.
The
only things that made this book bearable were the lavish period details
and descriptions, which I surprised but pleased to encounter in such a
short work, and the character of Monsieur Lafayette, who reminded me of
Avon from TOS, calling Miss de Vere his infant and being super wise and
classy and all that. ;)
Other than that, this wasn't a good
read. Much too short for the kind of plot, little to no character
development, too much focus on the hero's mistresses, and a stupid
appearance-based silly love story. It would have been better if Miss de
Villiers and the Duke of Westhampton had been engaged and not married.
Adultery was never attractive, even if Regency noblemen were allowed to