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Authors: My Own Private Hero

Julianne MacLean (23 page)

Wentworth Castle, Yorkshire
Two months later

I
t was just beginning to rain when Lily walked quickly back from the stables following her early morning gallop over the fields. She wore a black riding habit with a top hat, but her shiny new boots—crunching over the white rocks in the courtyard—were pinching her feet. She was looking forward to getting out of them and finding her old ones before someone gave them away.

She entered the house and was pulling off her gloves, when a footman approached with a letter on a silver salver. “For you, my lady,” he said.

She picked up the letter and glanced at it. It was from Sophia. She stuffed her gloves into her
pockets and tore at the seal. Lily slowly climbed the stairs while she read it…

My dearest Lily,

The Season is finally over, and James and I and the boys will be coming home soon. Martin will follow a day or two later.

I can hardly wait to see you and Marion, and the boys are looking forward to returning to the country where they can run about and play with the ponies. They have especially been missing the little gray one.

You will be pleased to hear that Adele is very happy in her new home at Essence House. It was exactly as she had imagined it would be, and she told me she felt she was born to live there. I’m so happy for her. She sends her love.

(In case you’re wondering, my father insisted on giving them a very generous wedding gift, even though they protested it strongly.

But you know my father. When he wants to do something, he does it. Adele has grown to be very much like him, I daresay.)

Please tell Marion that I found a lovely hat for her yesterday, and I believe it will go well with her blue day dress with the navy velvet trim. I’ll bring it when I come.

I hope all is well at home, and I will see you in a few days.

Love,
Sophia

P.S. Whitby left London early this Season, and returned to his country house three weeks ago. James said he was trying to avoid Miss Violet Scott, who evidently was making rather a spectacle of herself, following him everywhere. What a shame. She was very pretty. Though I don’t think she was quite Whitby’s type.

See you soon,
S.

Lily stopped at the top of the stairs and read the postscript again. A single tear ran down her cheek. It was not sadness, but rather relief that she felt—a most delightful, invigorating wave of relief.

T
he heroine of this book, Adele Wilson, is the youngest of three fictional sisters who leave old New York to go husband hunting in London in the late-Victorian period. While these sisters are entirely fictional, I based each of them on a number of real life American heiresses, as well as some fictional characters from the works of some nineteenth-and twentieth-century novelists.

The most obvious models for this trilogy are the Jerome sisters—Jennie, Clara, and Leonie, who according to the book
To Marry an English Lord
, by Gail MacColl and Carol McD. Wallace, came to be known as “the Beautiful, the Good, and the Witty.” My own three fictional sisters I would similarly describe as “the Beau
tiful, the Adventurous, and the Good.”

Jennie Jerome married Lord Randolph Churchill, second son of the seventh Duke of Marlborough, and they became parents to a baby boy who would later lead the nation—Winston Churchill. You can read about Jennie and Randolph in the book,
Jennie: The Life of Lady Randolph Churchill,
by Ralph Martin. Jennie’s two sisters also married Englishmen.

Another real-life American heiress was Consuelo Vanderbilt, who married the ninth Duke of Marlborough in 1895. She is perhaps the most prominent example of an American heiress abroad, partly because she wrote a book about her life—
The Glitter and the Gold.
In it, she describes the hardships and heartbreaks she faced as a young woman who was expected to do her duty to her family by marrying into the British aristocracy. Sophia, the oldest Wilson sister, in my book
To Marry the Duke
, is the closest to Consuelo, as she also marries a duke and experiences much loneliness as an outsider.

In this series, Adele’s mother, Beatrice Wilson, is loosely based on Consuelo’s mother, Alva Vanderbilt, who aggressively fought the social divisions between the old New Yorkers and the nouveaux riches. In March 1883, Alva held a costume ball in honor of her friend Lady Mandeville, a fellow American who had married an English lord in 1876. Alva invited a thousand guests, and all were anxious to see the extravagant mansion Alva and her husband had just built on Fifth Avenue. She neglected to
invite the old New York matriarch, Mrs. Astor, however, because according to protocol, Mrs Astor—being the social superior, who had not acknowledged the Vanderbilts previously—had to call on Alva first. Mrs. Astor finally did have a card delivered to Alva, and was subsequently invited to the Vanderbilt ball.

My fictional heroine Adele describes the Knickerbockers in New York when she’s in the cottage with Damien. If you’re interested in reading about Old New York, try
The Age of Innocence
, by Edith Wharton. Wharton was born into an old New York family, but spent much of her life abroad in Europe. In addition to
The Age of Innocence
, she wrote about American heiresses in London in another of her novels,
The Buccaneers
, which is one of my favorite books of all time and inspired me to write this series.

Edith Wharton became good friends with Henry James, who was also born in New York and chose to live much of his life abroad. He, too, wrote a number of great books about Americans mixing with Europeans. My favorite of his novels is
Washington Square
, set in old New York. This—and the society Edith Wharton writes about in
The Age of Innocence
—is the socially exacting world Adele is so anxious to leave behind.

I hope you enjoyed this trilogy about the Wilson sisters. Lily’s story is coming soon in 2005.

Acknowledgement

Many thanks to Kelly Harms, Paige Wheeler, and Nancy Berland. You are all a pleasure to work with. Thanks, Mom and Dad, for teaching me at a very early age what it’s all about. Thank you, Cathy Donaldson for many years of adventures, Lorraine Vassalo for your assistance on Sleeping With the Playboy, Paula Altenburg for stepping forward to offer help the day before Christmas Eve, and the Romance Writers of Atlantic Canada, especially the supportive, ambitious ladies of the goals loop. And thank you, Michelle—my cousin, my friend—for the uncountable hours of conversation, laughter, and joy you’ve given me. Finally, thank you, Laura, for being my wonderful, darling girl.

About the Author

Julianne MacLean came to the romance genre after completing a degree in English Literature with a focus on nineteenth-century novel study. She fell in love with some of the classic romances—
Jane Eyre, Wuthering Heights
and
Pride and Prejudice
and after a brief stint as a government auditor, she decided to try her hand at becoming a modern day romance writer. She lives in Nova Scotia, Canada, with her husband and seven-year-old daughter.

Julianne loves to hear from readers, and can be reached via email through her website at
www.juliannemaclean.com
, or by regular mail:
c/o Avon Books Author Mail
10 East 53rd Street
New York, NY 10022

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Avon Books by
Julianne MacLean

M
Y
O
WN
P
RIVATE
H
ERO

A
N
A
FFAIR
M
OST
W
ICKED

T
O
M
ARRY THE
D
UKE

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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.

MY OWN PRIVATE HERO
. Copyright © 2004 by Julianne MacLean. All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this e-book on-screen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, down-loaded, 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 December 2006 ISBN 9780061750069

10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

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