Saturday, July 1, 2017
Book Tour + #Giveaway: The Bad Luck Bride by Jane Goodger @JaneGoodger @SDSXXTours
THE BAD LUCK BRIDE
by
Jane Goodger
Pub
Date: 6/13/17
Welcome to St. Ives, the charming
seaside town where even a down-on-her luck bride might find her way
back to love . . .
As if being left at the alter for the
third time isn’t bad enough, Lady Alice Hubbard has now been dubbed
“The Bad Luck Bride” by the London newspapers. Defeated, she
returns to her family’s estate in St. Ives, resolved to a future as
a doting spinster. After all, a lady with her record of marital
mishaps knows better than to dream of happily-ever-after. But then
Alice never expects to see Henderson Southwell again. Her beloved
brother’s best friend disappeared from her life soon after her
brother’s death. Until now…
Alice is just as achingly beautiful as
Henderson remembers. And just as forbidden. For the notorious ladies’
man made one last promise to Alice’s brother before he died—and
that was never to pursue her. But one glimpse of Alice’s sorrow and
Henderson feels a powerful urge to put the light back in her lovely
eyes, one lingering kiss at a time. Even if it means falling in love
with the one woman he can never call his bride . . .
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If only her fiancé
had died five minutes after the ceremony instead of five minutes before, Alice wouldn’t be in her current,
unfathomable, situation.
A terrible thought, yes, but there was
never a truer sentiment to go through her mind.
He was late. Her current and very much
alive fiancé was terribly, horribly, embarrassingly late, and the vicar was
giving her sad looks and the congregation was whispering, and Alice felt like
she might scream for them all to just shut up. Harvey Reginald Heddingford III,
Viscount Northrup, whom she actually liked (the first of her three fiancés whom
she actually had liked) had apparently grown ice cold feet.
It wasn’t much of a surprise, actually.
The night before he’d seemed…off.
Distracted. Overly nice. Guilty. That’s when the first niggling feeling of doubt touched her but she
forced herself to ignore it. Certainly three
men couldn’t leave her at the altar. Though to be
fair, Bertram Russell, her second ill-fated fiancé, was ousted by her enraged father
long before she’d set foot in the church. Bertram had been found out—not one
week before their planned nuptials—to be a complete fraud. He made ordinary
fortune hunters seem like innocent children dabbling at seducing marriage out
of highly placed, rich women.
One dead. One fraud. One very, very
late.
This could not be happening again. She
stood in the vestibule with her father and sister, dread slowly wrapping around
her like a toxic fog, making it almost impossible to breathe. As she waited for
her groom to make an appearance, knowing he would not, Alice vowed she would
never, ever,
be put in this position again. When she saw Vicar Jamison coming toward the
spot where she stood with her father, Alice knew it was over. She couldn’t seem
to gather the energy to cry and in fact had the terrible urge to laugh,
something she sometimes did at the worst possible moment. Actually, other than
feeling a bit off kilter and extremely humiliated, she felt nothing at all.
Certainly not heartbroken.
“Lord Hubbard,” the vicar said, giving
her father a small bow. “It may be time to address the congregation.”
Her dear, dear, papa looked at her, his
eyes filled with sorrow. “I think I must.”
Alice nodded and pressed her hands,
still holding her silly bouquet, into her stomach. God, the humiliation. This was far worse
than Bertram and, well, poor Lord Livingston was deemed a tragedy, not a
humiliation. People at least felt sorry for her when her first ill-fated
husband-to-be dropped dead waiting for her to walk down the aisle. Just five
more minutes and she might have been a widow, and a widow was a far better
thing to be than a jilted bride.
It was all her sister’s fault.
Christina had been fussing with her gown, fixing something in the bustle,
insisting that Alice would never get the chance to be a bride again (what a
lark) and everything must be absolutely perfect for that most important day
when Alice would have become a baroness. And then Lord Livingston died, right
then, right as he walked toward the front of the church. Dropped like a stone
without warning and was dead before he hit the hard marble floor with a
sickening thud. Instead of Lady Livingston or Lady Northrup, she was still Miss
Hubbard and it looked like she would be Miss Hubbard for the rest of her days.
Christina stood, eyes wide with horror,
as their father walked slowly to the front of the church. The large room became
deathly quiet, and Alice turned, grabbed her sister’s arm, and walked out the
front door of the church. She couldn’t bear to see the pity in their eyes, nor
the tears in her mother’s. Certainly Mama had never suspected her eldest
daughter would once again be abandoned by her groom. Thank God they’d decided
to get married in London and not St. Ives, where the villagers would have
likely gathered to celebrate her marriage. No one was about except for the
normal crowds.
“I’ll murder him,” Christina said
feelingly when they reached their carriage. The startled footman hurriedly
dropped the steps and then handed the sisters into the carriage, which was
meant to carry the happy couple to their wedding breakfast.
Alice tore off her veil then gave her
ferocious sister a weak smile. “I think he was in love with Patricia Flemings.”
“No!” Christina said with the
conviction of someone who cannot accept the fact that anyone could choose a
Flemings over a Hubbard. Their father, Lord Richard Hubbard, was the third son
of the fifth Duke of Warwick, and though he held no title, his connection to
the great duke had put their family firmly in the lofty realm of the ton.
Christina adored working “my grandfather, the Duke of Warwick” into as many conversations as possible, no matter what the
topic. At eighteen, Christina was looking forward to her first season and was
no doubt wondering how this latest wedding debacle with her sister would hurt
her chances of making a good match.
Alice realized she was officially a
hopeless case, and would no doubt become the terrible punch line to jokes told
from Nottinghamshire to Cornwall. You’ve
heard of Alice Hubbard—or is it Miss Havisham?
Charles Dickens had done her no favor by portraying a jilted bride as such a
bitterly tragic character. Alice didn’t feel bitter, at least not at the
moment, but she suspected she could not escape the label of ‘tragic.’ Now she
would have to hide away for a time at their country estate in St. Ives, which
wasn’t such a sacrifice, as St. Ives was her favorite place in all the world.
Perhaps in her elder years she could be chaperone to her sister’s beautiful daughters.
She would be known by them as “my poor spinster aunt who never found love.”
Three fiancés and she had hardly
tolerated any of them, never mind loved them. She’d only loved one man in her
life but he, of course, did not love her. And that, perhaps, was the most
humiliating thing of all.
Jane Goodger lives in Rhode Island with
her husband and three children. Jane, a former journalist, has
written seven historical romances. When she isn’t writing, she’s
reading, walking, playing with her kids, or anything else completely
unrelated to cleaning a house.
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