The Countess lends a hand
Now in print
The man of her dreams is a nobleman. What’s a poor ladies’
maid to do? Reinvent herself, of course.
La Comtesse de Chevalier is back! This time Meredith, the
heroine of The Countess Takes a Lover, helps
her maid, Cecile Lambeaux pass as a gentlewoman in order to
gain the attention of Sir Nathaniel Covington.
For the first time in her life, reserved Cecile has fallen
madly in love…with a man she’s only seen from a
distance. She’s willing to have even a brief affair with
Sir Nathaniel, whose haunted face touches her heart across the
social chasm separating them.
Many burdens and secrets weigh down Nathaniel’s lonely
soul. He goes to the countess’s house party to take a
break from his troubles and finds a woman who stirs him deeply.
As Cecile and Nathaniel’s connection grows stronger,
Cecile’s lie hangs over her head. Meanwhile, Meredith
and Chris work through their own relationship issues regarding
trust. Will both women learn their lesson about keeping secrets
before they ruin their chance at love?
Reviews
Mrs Giggles, 81
I absolutely love the romanticism in the relationship between
Cecile and Nate. ... I also love how the author makes their
relationship as erotic as it is romantic.
All About Romance, Reviewer Abi Bishop, B+
The romance between Cecile and Nate is the deep but quiet kind
that develops for the reader, through the characters' thoughts
more than their actions. Both of them are quite introspective
so you learn much of their feelings in prose, not dialogue.
Joyfully Reviewed, Shayna
Passion, deception, and love make for a heady mix in Bonnie
Dee’s sumptuous historical romance. The Countess Lends
a Hand is an enchanting tale with not one, but two love stories
which captured my attention. Sinfully sensual and emotionally
gripping, The Countess Lends a Hand is yet another fantastic
tale by the supremely talented Ms. Dee.
Excerpt
“Madame, may I have a word with you, s’il
vous plait?”
La Comtesse de Chevalier turned from gazing out
the window of her salon to face her lady’s maid and companion.
It wasn’t like Cecile to engage her in conversation, and
her tone was serious.
“Is something the matter, Cecile?”
The woman’s countenance was as serene as
usual. But no, perhaps there was a tightening in her lips, a
slight frown creasing her smooth forehead. Could it be that
she was upset, maybe even planning to end her service? What
would Meredith ever do without her?
Cecile bit her lower lip, betraying nervousness,
an emotion her mistress had never seen her display. “I
could use your counsel, Madame, about a matter of the heart.”
Meredith’s eyes widened. When did Cecile
have time for a personal life? She rarely left the estate or
the townhouse when they were in London.
“Or not the heart precisely,” she
continued, “but about the possibility of securing a paramour.”
Meredith couldn’t have been more surprised
if her lover, Christopher had walked into the room and announced
he planned to follow in his father’s footsteps and seek
a seat in Parliament. She blinked to see if the image of Cecile
twisting her hands together, self-possessed Cecile actually
anxious, would dissolve like a dream.
“You wish to take a lover, and you’re
asking me for advice?”
“Yes, Madame.”
“Please, sit down.” Meredith gestured
her to one of the small, gilt chairs and settled on another,
determined not to display her shock at Cecile’s request.
For her maid to break her habitual reserve and come to Meredith
like this, her desire must be very keen. “May I ask if
there is a particular reason you’ve come to this decision…or
a particular person you have in mind?”
“Yes to both, Madame.” Cecile’s
light gray-green eyes—eyes that could instantly assess
the appropriate accoutrements for any gown—were trained
on the carpet. Her long-fingered hands—hands that could
expertly curl and twist Meredith’s hair into elaborate
designs in the blink of an eye—smoothed the folds of her
dove gray skirt over her lap.
“You see, over the past year I’ve
begun having…different thoughts and feelings about my
life and my future.”
And you don’t want to spend the rest of
your life as my maid, Meredith guessed, embarrassed that she’d
never quite thought of Cecile as a real person with hopes and
dreams of her own. Most of their conversations tended to be
one-sided.
“I realize it is most inappropriate of
me to broach this subject with you, Madame, but I think, over
the years, we’ve become close and, quite honestly, you
are my one friend.”
Meredith’s heart clenched at the soft admission.
“Mon amie, you know I’ve never been what one would
consider orthodox. I want you to feel comfortable confiding
in me, as I have in you so many times in the past. Please, tell
me what you’re thinking.”
There was a pause in which only the clicking
pendulum of the mantel clock disturbed the silence before Cecile
began.
“I’ve seen how you’ve changed
since Mr. Whitby came into your life. Before him, despite all
your wealth and power and…revelry, you were not happy.
Now you glow.”
Meredith nodded, glowing inside at the very mention
of Christopher. She had set out to change his life, but he’d
ended up becoming the center of hers. She hadn’t meant
for that to happen, to become so dependent for her happiness
on another. It was frightening.
Cecile shrugged. “Of course, I don’t
expect to find true love. But I should like to experience an
intimate relationship with a man, if only briefly. My life is
such that it is not easy for me to find the time or opportunity
to make that kind of a connection.”
“Because you’re at my beck and call,
night and day. Oh, my dear, I never thought—”
“It is my place to serve you, Madame, and
I’m glad to do so. But someone in my position might go
her entire life without knowing the joys of”—she
cleared her throat—“the flesh. And I would, just
once, like to experience that.”
“Yes, I can understand that.” It
was true, a genteel woman like Cecile, with her mysterious past,
might spend her life in service. Outclassing the other servants
but beneath the family, such a woman occupied a lonely place
somewhere in the middle.
Meredith remembered her childhood governess,
Miss Dawson, a gentlewoman who’d fallen on hard times.
She’d seemed a sexless spinster then, but now Meredith
remembered the abrupt nature of the woman’s dismissal
and the whispers quickly hushed whenever Meredith had entered
the room. Had there been an affair involved?
“You have a specific man in mind then?”
Her curiosity was piqued as she wondered what kind of man might
have caught the stoic Cecile’s attention.
A pink flush colored her pale complexion and she dipped her
head. “_Oui,_ a man I have seen but never spoken to, someone
I would never have the opportunity to meet, not without your
introduction.”
“I see.” Meredith was more intrigued
than ever by the identity of the man who had brought Cecile
to such a state. “Who is it? You have me on tenterhooks!”
“Sir Nathaniel Covington.”
Meredith nearly laughed aloud, but produced a
choked cough instead. “Oh.”
“You must think I’ve lost my wits.
Not only am I asking for your assistance with a most intimate
matter, but the man I’ve set my sights on is clearly unattainable.”
The Earl of Hillshire’s second son, a decorated
officer, knighted after the battle of Waterloo, wasn’t
remotely whom Meredith would have guessed. She’d imagined
Cecile would have taken a fancy to someone she saw fairly frequently,
someone more suitable to her station.
“Nothing’s unattainable, but it may
take considerable machination to achieve your goal.” Meredith
leaned forward and rested her hand on Cecile’s knee. “A
task I am more than willing to undertake on your behalf, my
dear. You have been my confidante during many difficult times
in my life. I want to help you achieve your desire.”
“Thank you, Madame.” Cecile’s
rare smile lit her oval face and made her pale eyes shine. She
was really a very striking woman, although Meredith had rarely
noticed it.
“You deserve happiness, and I’m sorry
if I’ve been thoughtless in my regard for you. All these
years you’ve been a very devoted friend, much more than
a servant, and I fear I haven’t returned the favor. I
shall make it up to you now, starting with outfitting you in
a new wardrobe.”
Her mind raced as she imagined all that must
be done to help Cecile achieve her goal. New dresses and coiffure
were only the beginning. “We shall have to invent an identity.
Perhaps I can introduce you as a relative from my late husband’s
family come to visit.”
“A false identity? I hadn’t thought—”
“A weekend party with Covington as one
of the guests will be an absolute necessity,” Meredith
continued. “And after that, if necessary, we’ll
spend time in London so you may have more opportunities to bump
into him.”
Cecile’s cheeks had turned from pink to
pale again. “I imagined an assignation of some type, but
to actually attempt such a complicated charade—”
“Nonsense!” Meredith took her hand
and squeezed it. “You can do this. Change is always frightening,
but if this is really what you want, you must attempt it.”
Cecile nodded, but her mouth was tense.
If I could but follow that advice myself, she
thought. Taking the next step, the one she knew Chris wanted,
was too hard. Every day she avoided talk of marriage, and the
more time passed, the harder it grew to discuss the subject.
If she’d been with child last year as she’d thought,
she would have married him, but when the pregnancy turned out
to be a false alarm, everything had changed.
“Cecile, give me some time to come up with
a course of action, but meanwhile, send for the dressmaker today.
Whatever gowns you require will be my gift.”
“Madame, that is too much. I only wish
your advice. I have savings, and you know I can sew my own dresses.”
“No. I insist. I want to do this.”
She rose and offered her hand to Cecile, drawing her to her
feet. Meredith gave her a swift embrace and a peck on each cheek
before letting her go. How strange to realize, all in a moment,
that Cecile was as close to a sister as she would ever have.
“Thank you, Madame.” Cecile’s
eyes glistened, but otherwise her face was as calm and composed
as always as she turned and strode gracefully from the room.
A lover for Cecile? Who would’ve imagined
the day would bring such a bizarre twist? Now that she’d
promised to help, Meredith wasn’t at all certain she could
manage it. Nathaniel Covington was not a close friend and had
only attended one dinner here as a guest of someone else. How
could she invite him for a weekend without it appearing odd,
and how could she ensure he would accept the invitation?