Keeping Faith
Fair Cyprians of London Series (Book 3)
By Beverley Oakley
Beverley has a print copy of Her Gilded Prison to giveaway during the tour. Please use the Rafflecopter below to enter. Remember you may enter every day for your chance to win a print copy of Her Gilded Prison. You may find the tour locations here.
Beverley has a print copy of Her Gilded Prison to giveaway during the tour. Please use the Rafflecopter below to enter. Remember you may enter every day for your chance to win a print copy of Her Gilded Prison. You may find the tour locations here.
About Keeping Faith:
"My beautiful Revenge."
Four years ago, Faith’s mysterious benefactress falsely accused her of stealing and deposited her in Madame Chambon’s exclusive brothel.
There, Faith was to learn how to entrance London’s noble gentlemen with her learning in philosophy, politics and art.
Her body was to be saved for the greatest enticement of all: revenge.
Faith doesn’t care what she has to do. She lives only to fulfil a bargain that will set her free.
But when Faith is recruited as the muse of a talented, sensitive painter whose victory in a prestigious art competition turns them both into celebrities overnight, she discovers the reasons behind her mission are very different from what she'd been led to believe.
Now she is complicit in something dark and dangerous while riches, adulation and freedom are hers for the taking.
But what value are these if her heart has become a slave to the man she is required to destroy?
Genre - historical romantic suspense Heat Level - Medium
Keep Faith Buy Links: https://www.books2read.com/u/bP5pGY
Amazon US: https://amzn.to/2Dg70UP
Saving Grace
Amazon Buy Link: https://amzn.to/2z7rVGx
Forsaking Hope
Amazon Buy Link: https://amzn.to/2DlzV9M
Beverley Oakley’s Bio:
Debutantes, widows and the occasional courtesan test society’s boundaries in Beverley Oakley’s wicked, passionate historical romances dripping with scandal, intrigue, and suspense.
Her Fair Cyprians of London series is about a group of determined and clever courtesans at a high-class Soho brothel who use their wit and beauty to avenge past betrayals - and who find lasting love along the way.
How can there be a happily ever after? is a question many a reviewer has asked before admitting to being delighted and satisfied by the unexpected plot twists and surprise endings – just like in Beverley’s own life. You can read more on her website.
Beverley's Social Links: Website: http://www.beverleyoakley.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorBeverleyOakley/ Pinterest: https://au.pinterest.com/beverleyeikli/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/BeverleyOakley Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/list/5989577.Beverley_Oakley a Rafflecopter giveaway
Keep Faith Buy Links: https://www.books2read.com/u/bP5pGY
Amazon US: https://amzn.to/2Dg70UP
Excerpt:
Other Books in the Series:
Chapter One
“What did you learn last
night?”
“A gentleman must always
believe he knows best.”
Confident that her answer
was pleasing, Faith reached across the table to help herself to a macaroon but
a sharp slap across the back of the hand stopped her progress by the silver
teapot.
Her smile of feigned
contrition was rewarded with a raised eyebrow from Madame Chambon. Not an
invitation to partake of a macaroon, unfortunately. The table laden with
eclairs and petit fours in Madame’s private sitting room was merely for show.
“Greedy girl, Faith! You
can eat at the Dorchester tomorrow and I daresay you won’t even spare a thought
for the other girls who are justified in being somewhat jealous of your
cossetted life.” Madame sniffed as she patted one of the grizzled, orange curls
of her elaborate coiffure. Faith suspected a squirrel’s pelt had made its
contribution. “I’m sure they wonder every day why you never have to stir
yourself – or anyone else, for that matter – to get your fine clothes or a roof
over your head.” Madame Chambon piled three macaroons onto her already laden
plate before making a sweeping gesture that encompassed the furnishings of her
surprisingly decorous private sitting room with its gold tasseled green velvet
curtains and flock wallpaper. “What have you told them, Faith? About why you
are here, I mean?”
Faith’s stomach rumbled as
she gazed from the prints of the famous artists that lined the walls to the
fine fare in front of her, ordered from Fortnum and Mason. These monthly
sessions in table manners were supposed to give Faith the practice she needed
to deport herself like a lady when eating in public. However, under Madame’s
guardianship, Faith never actually got to try the specialties.
“Answer me, Faith. In all
the three years that you’ve been here, you’ve had to do precisely nothing to
justify your existence. Surely the girls have questioned you? I have my own
version of the truth for them, as you know, but I’d be interested to hear what
you have to say.”
Faith didn’t answer. She
already knew how lucky she was, but Madame was not ready to drop the subject,
despite having just crammed an entire chocolate éclair into her mouth. Faith
just managed to make out the muffled words, “Every night you lie peacefully in
your bed while the other girls have to earn their livings.”
Lying peacefully in her
bed was not how Faith would describe the restfulness of her slumber. She was
kept awake every night by the grunts and cries of ecstasy that penetrated the
thin walls of her attic chamber.
Still, she’d finally
learned when it was wise to respond meekly, so she bowed her head and stared at
her neat kid gloves while dreaming of the delicacies Mrs. Gedge would order for
them when Faith really was dining with her at the Dorchester Hotel the
following afternoon. The Sacher Torte Mrs. Gedge had ummed and aahed over
before finally choosing the baked Alaska from the sweets trolley last month
still haunted her. However, since part of Faith’s tutoring included how to win
over reluctant gentleman ‘and make them wild with wanting’ which is how Madame
phrased it, then surely Faith could persuade her American benefactress to order
the Austrian chocolate specialty?
She was so busy
rehearsing her words for tomorrow that she almost missed Madame’s prophetic and
appalling statement.
“Well, Faith, the time
has come for you to start earning your way, now.”
Faith brought her head up
in shock. Was Madame teasing? When it appeared not, she gripped the table edge
as she struggled for composure. For so long she’d known the reckoning would
come. Yes, and with three years preparing for it, she’d believed she could meet
it head-on with the necessary fortitude.
But there’d been no
warning.
She began to shake,
biting into her bottom lip and clasping her hands in her lap to try and keep
secret the manifestations of her terror from Madame who’d only be spurred onto
gloating and make her suffer even more.
“Mrs. Gedge reported last
month that she wasn’t entirely happy you were ready for what she has in store
for you when she took you to tea, Faith.” Madame chewed noisily, unperturbed,
it seemed, by the crumbs that landed on her gaudy vermillion skirts.
Faith didn’t suggest that
Mrs. Gedge’s dissatisfaction was perhaps the fault of Faith’s tutor – the one
sitting in front of her - who knew nothing about deporting herself as a lady.
With a dainty gesture
using only her forefingers, Madame Chambon raised her plate and licked at the
crumbs that had not been dislodged before saying, “Fortunately, Lady Vernon is
recovered at last from her long indisposition and has agreed to forget your
rudeness to her from six months ago. In fact, she’ll be here shortly. Yes,
she’ll soon have you passing the scrutiny of the most discerning duchess.”
Madame gobbled down another macaroon with as much finesse as the dogs Faith’s
father used to goad into fighting each other after they’d fought over the
scraps from the scrubbed wooden table at the farm. Not that there’d been many
scraps with ten children to feed.
“Should we not have
waited for Lady Vernon?” Faith suggested, daringly. But she had to say
something to stop herself from launching into a volley of querulous questions
about exactly what form this ‘having to earn her own way’ might take.
Madame Chambon pushed
aside an untouched plate of bread and butter to reach for another chocolate
éclair and sighed. “There was just so much food on the table it seemed
unnecessary to wait if her ladyship was going to be late. Ah! And here she is.”
Madame’s orange painted mouth turned up at a knock on the door. “Shoulders
back, Faith! And make sure you don’t talk with your mouth full.”
Since this was not a
danger, Faith supposed there might be some compensation in having to face her
former nemesis who surely must subscribe to the belief that learning table
manners required one having to eat.
Madame threw her arms
wide in a welcome as the door opened to admit the new arrival. “Good evening,
Lady Vernon. We’re so glad you’ve recovered from your chest ailment,” she
gushed. “A good rest has done you the world of good. Why, you look ten years
younger. Just as you do every time I see you, in fact. And we’re indeed humbled
that you’ve consented to return.” Madame simpered at the elderly woman, dressed
all in black who looked, Faith thought, even more wraith-like than usual as she
pinned up the veil of her bonnet and took the seat at the table proffered by
Madame who went on, “I’m sure you’ll feel even better once you’ve heard Faith’s
heartfelt apology.”
Faith blushed under the
scrutiny of the two pairs of expectant, unforgiving eyes, and glanced longingly
at the remaining macaroon.
Yes, there were times
when it was worth being abject. She mightn’t mean what she said, but if the
last three years under Madame Chambon’s roof had taught her one thing, it was
how to sound heartfelt and sincere when she felt anything but.
“I’m sorry for my rude
comments about…” Faith hesitated. Perhaps it was best not to stir up old
memories. While it must be perfectly obvious to anyone who met Lady Vernon as
to why an earl’s daughter could remain a spinster into her sixtieth year, it
hadn’t been in anyone’s interest – Faith’s least of all, it turned out – for
Faith to have gone into quite such specific and extensive detail regarding her
thoughts on the likely reasons. “I behaved like a child, though it’s such a
long time ago, now, I can barely remember what was going through my head at the
time. I was only seventeen and, in those days, prone to losing my temper but
now I’m eighteen and, thanks to all your efforts in teaching me how to act like
a lady, Lady Vernon, I’m so far from the rude and impulsive young thing I was
before, you’d not recognise me today. Thanks to your thorough tutelage, I am
determined that I will never speak out of turn, to you, or anyone. Indeed, I
have changed! I truly believe that, confronted by a table of delicacies like
this, for example, I would certainly not embarrass you or Mrs. Gedge or any
lovely young man or his mother who might take me out to tea by any show of
greediness or lack of restraint.”
Lady Vernon’s eyes
remained fixed firmly on Faith for the duration of this speech with no
indication of how forgiving or otherwise she might prove to be.
After a long silence, she
spoke. “Restraint?” She sniffed. “Restraint is the most important requirement
of any young lady, Faith. I’ve told you this many times, so I’m glad it’s a
lesson you claim to have finally learned.”
With her eyes fixed on
Faith, she reached towards the remaining macaroon that sat lonely on its plate
just in front of them both, her long-fingered hand hovering just above. “Please
pass that to me, Faith. I can’t seem to reach it.”
Wordlessly, Faith
complied, schooling her features into impassivity while she railed inside, I
hate you! I hate you! as she watched Lady Vernon transport the coconut
confection to her thin, bloodless lips.
“Delicious,” Lady Vernon
murmured. “In fact, I believe it is the best macaroon I have ever tasted? You
must surely agree, Faith, since the plate is now empty.”
She looked pointedly at
the two remaining crumbs that clung to the edge of the fine china, as if to
imply that Faith had eaten the rest. Then she indicated the plate of bread and
butter near Madame Chambon. “Please eat, Faith. Madame Chambon and I have a
leisurely afternoon at our disposal. She and I will partake of the remaining
chocolate eclairs --” Her pointed chin wobbled slightly, whether from the
suppression of mirth or the swallowing of bile, Faith could only guess, “while
you make good work of the bread and butter with all the ladylike restraint
you’re so anxious to prove.”
Saving Grace
Amazon Buy Link: https://amzn.to/2z7rVGx
Forsaking Hope
Amazon Buy Link: https://amzn.to/2DlzV9M
Beverley Oakley’s Bio:
Debutantes, widows and the occasional courtesan test society’s boundaries in Beverley Oakley’s wicked, passionate historical romances dripping with scandal, intrigue, and suspense.
Her Fair Cyprians of London series is about a group of determined and clever courtesans at a high-class Soho brothel who use their wit and beauty to avenge past betrayals - and who find lasting love along the way.
How can there be a happily ever after? is a question many a reviewer has asked before admitting to being delighted and satisfied by the unexpected plot twists and surprise endings – just like in Beverley’s own life. You can read more on her website.
Beverley's Social Links: Website: http://www.beverleyoakley.com/ Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/AuthorBeverleyOakley/ Pinterest: https://au.pinterest.com/beverleyeikli/ Twitter: https://twitter.com/BeverleyOakley Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/author/list/5989577.Beverley_Oakley a Rafflecopter giveaway
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