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Holiday in Bath [MultiFormat]
eBook by Laura Matthews

  Regular     Club
You Pay:  $5.00     $4.25

eBook Category: Romance/Historical Fiction
eBook Description: Trelenny Storwood's parents want her to marry their neighbor, Cranford Ashwicke. But the young and vivacious Trelenny finds Cranford dull--and positively old (at twenty-eight). When Cranford takes her and her mother to Bath, her view of him changes dramatically, but he, alas, now seems attached to Lady Jane Reedness.

eBook Publisher: Belgrave House, Published: 1981
Fictionwise Release Date: June 2003


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Available eBook Formats [MultiFormat - What's this?]: Adobe Acrobat (PDF) [800 KB], eReader (PDB) [253 KB], Palm Doc (PDB) [260 KB], Rocket/REB1100 (RB) [227 KB], Microsoft Reader (LIT) [236 KB] - PocketPC 1.0+ Compatible, Franklin eBookMan (FUB) [266 KB], hiebook (KML) [582 KB], Sony Reader (LRF) [306 KB], iSilo (PDB) [213 KB], Mobipocket (PRC) [266 KB], Kindle Compatible (MOBI) [305 KB], OEBFF Format (IMP) [343 KB]
Words: 79000
Reading time: 225-316 min.
Microsoft Reader (LIT) Format: Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud ENABLED
Adobe Acrobat (PDF) Format:  Printing DISABLED, Read-Aloud DISABLED
All Other formats: Printing DISABLED, Read-aloud DISABLED


"Now, Mama, we have been over all this before!" the young lady declared passionately. "You assure me that nei­ther you nor Papa would dream of forcing me into a disagreeable marriage, and yet every other word from either of you is Cranford's name. I know he is handsome, and that his papa's lands run with Papa's, and that he is intelligent and stable and all the rest of it. He is also insufferably dull! And old," she added as scourging afterthought.

"Old!" Mrs. Storwood's countenance registered dismay. "Trelenny, he cannot be above eight and twenty! Why, of course he isn't, as you were born when he was ten and Lady Chessels and I?"

Trelenny cast her blue eyes heavenward. "Yes, Mama, you and his mother dreamed of the day we would wed. But those were daydreams, don't you see? The days when parents arranged matches for their children are dead! I am sure if he has said it once, Papa has said a hundred times that the young must depend on the older, wiser counsel of their relations, and I would not contradict him for the world. But I haven't even met any other eligible young men! And I am only eighteen. Can't you see what would happen to me? I'd be stuck here all my life just like you."

Guiltily she dropped to her knees beside her mother's chair. "You know I don't mean that quite as I said it, Mama. I know you and Papa have been happy, even with his illness. But... but you had a chance to live in London when you were young. You went to balls and plays and parties. And the friends you made! Would you not feel completely cut off from the world if you did not still correspond with Mrs. Waplington and Lady Sandburn? I haven't even any friends to write to, and God knows what I would tell them if I did. There cannot be many young ladies of my age who would be interested in my visits to the tenants or my rides about the mountains!"

Mrs. Storwood tucked back a straggling wisp of her daughter's blonde hair. "You write to Clare."

Although a great many retorts sprang to Trelenny's lips, she said only "She and Lord Hinton live quite as retired as we do."

"Yes, but still she is your friend and no doubt you await her letters as eagerly as any I might receive."

Trelenny rose and paced agitatedly about the room. "I keep expecting her to tell me how she feels about things... but she never does. Do you think he mistreats her?"

Such a suggestion obviously had never crossed her moth­er's mind, and she stared blankly at her daughter for a moment. "Do not say such a thing even in jest, Trelenny! Lord Hinton is an admirable man and devoted to Clare. Whatever put such an idea in your mind? Did you not see how tenderly he treated her at their wedding?"

"At their wedding, yes," Trelenny said scornfully. "But you cannot have failed to notice that we have not seen them since, Mama. He carried her off to the wilds of Scotland immediately?not even to his seat! And they might as well have disappeared from the face of the earth after that. They've been married well over a year and he has never brought her to Ashwicke Park. Except for her letters, she might be dead for all anyone knows!"

"Don't be absurd!" Mrs. Storwood said sharply. "Her brother has visited her."

"Oh, Cranford. It's a wonder he could take his nose out of a book long enough to journey there, I concede. And what did he tell us of her on his return? Just exactly what anyone tells you when he has visited someone'they look well, seem happy, are busy, etc., etc. Why doesn't she come here to visit?" Trelenny came close to her mother and dropped her voice to a conspiratorial whisper. "I'll tell you what I think. I think he is keeping her prisoner."

"Where do you get this fantastic imagination of yours?" Mrs. Storwood asked despairingly as she twisted her shapely hands in her lap. "It is not from your father, and it is certainly not from me. I have never heard anything more absurd in my life, Trelenny. Must you make a mystery of every common occurrence? She has had a child, for heaven's sake! You don't go jaunting about the countryside when you are carrying a child, and you don't order round your carriage the moment you are delivered of it!"

"Little Catherine must be six months old by now," Trelenny said stubbornly. "Lots of people travel with chil­dren."

"And more don't," her mother retorted. "Have you been reading some lurid novel about an imprisoned wife?"

"Now, Mama, I have to have something entertaining to read. It is just that book Mrs. Waplington sent you and you set aside. Surely there can be no harm in it when your dear friend sent it. You know, the one by Lady Caroline Lamb."

"Glenarvon? It is not meant for a child of your years, my dear. Surely you can find something more uplifting than that to read." Mrs. Storwood habitually used persuasion rather than firm injunction with her daughter, for nothing so surely set up that young lady's back as being told what to do, especially when there was the hint that it was her youth and unworldliness which prompted the instruction.

"Would you have me read the literature that Cranford brings?" Trelenny asked sweetly. "Perhaps you would like me to read aloud to you. Let me see. There is a very large tome on antiquities and another on the Romans. But no, you would probably prefer his own translation of Antoninus. That is the very thing... if you have some desire to nap! Imagine his thinking that I would be interested in such stuff. Well, he cannot possibly believe I am, for I have told him any number of times that I cannot read more than two pages without yawning."

Trelenny stood with hands on hips in a most unladylike posture, which her mother had frequently deplored. Of course, Mrs. Storwood could understand and share her daughter's vexation with a suitor who, himself fascinated by archeological exploration, seemed to think that others shared his enthusiasm. It was all very well for him to discuss tumuli and whatever with Mr. Storwood, but to enlarge on the subject of Roman cremation at the dinner table was going a bit far! There had been a time when the Honorable Cranford Ashwicke had not been such a pedagogue, when he was the despair of his mother and a drain on his father's purse. But after Lady Chessels? death he had settled down quite nicely? too nicely, Mrs. Storwood feared, to appeal to her efferves­cent daughter.

Perhaps it was the wildness surrounding her in the Westmorland countryside which inspired Trelenny to her hoydenish behavior. More likely it was the lack of polite society, with its polishing influence, which had such an effect. No amount of strictures and examples seemed to make the least impression on the girl. Like a pot on the boil, there was no restraining her spirits. It was a wonder, really, that Cranford would even consider her as a bride!

Not that Trelenny was not an attractive girl, in her way. The impish blue eyes were set in a face which had not entirely lost its girlish roundness, though her figure had now developed from its former chubbiness into a rather alluring fullness. And there was no hiding it in today's gowns, Mrs. Storwood thought uneasily. Not that there was anyone to see her emerging butterfly, more was the pity. It was really the greatest shame that Mr. Storwood's weak heart prevented them from taking the girl to London to enjoy a season and meet some people of her own age. Just to acquaint her with the world of fashion, Mrs. Storwood rationalized, as she could see the advantages of Trelenny's marrying Cranford every bit as well as her husband. And the freckles which sprinkled across her cheeks and nose would surely subside without the constant exposure to the sharp winds of the country. If not, they could be bathed with milk, which Trelenny would doubtless allow when she realized the great importance of being in fashion. The braided blonde hair, too, would be so lovely trained into one of those styles one saw in Le Beau Monde, rather than pinned tightly to her head to prevent its escaping when she dashed madly about the lanes on that frisky mare.

Mrs. Storwood sighed. "Yes, my love, it is vexing of Cranford to expect you to read such dry stuff, and I am sure he does not think to praise you for the effort you make to accommodate him. Yesterday I was astonished to find you poring over one of those old volumes of his for an hour or more."

A mischievous light danced in her daughter's eyes. "Oh, I found the most fascinating thing, Mama, and I intend to impress him with my endeavors when he calls this afternoon to take me riding."

"Do you, dear?" Mrs. Storwood asked uncertainly. "I'm sure that's very thoughtful of you."

"Yes, I think so," her daughter proclaimed righteously. "I shall change now, if you will excuse me."


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