Chapter 1

Samantha Josephine Drummond set her suitcase upright, lifted her face to the sky, and took a deep breath of freedom.

Well, she was actually only looking at a ceiling and sampling nothing more rarified than the air inside King’s Cross station, but she wasn’t going to complain. She was standing alone in the midst of a crowd and life was very good.

She looked around herself to get her bearings, then glanced reluctantly at the small booklet of instructions in her hand.

She supposed the fact that she was holding on to that sort of thing was her own fault.

She had a smartphone and knew how to use it, and she was perfectly capable of keeping track of a plane ticket and money for a cab.

Unfortunately her parents were stuck in a time warp where she was still twelve and they were eternally in their late thirties and she allowed them to keep on with it because it was easier that way.

Or at least she had until her plane had touched down on British soil. Things were going to be different from now on. As soon as she figured out where she was going.

She had another look at the little album in her hands.

It had obviously been made by someone with a predilection for grunge-style scrapbooking paper and rubber stamps.

At least this one had taken pleasure in her work.

Samantha had, over the course of her twenty-six years, been gifted with an appalling number of similar books, though she couldn’t remember any in the past that had been fashioned with such care.

She could only imagine the comments that had been made during the crafting of those life aids by the graduate assistants gang-pressed into doing so.

She checked her map, had another look around to make sure she was pointing in the right direction, then took hold of the handle of her suitcase and dragged it along behind her.

She wasn’t unused to the number of people she had to weave her way through, but it was a little disconcerting to hear so many other tongues than English.

She had to admit she was rather relieved to find her train and get herself into a seat on it with a minimum of fuss.

The train pulled away from the station and she had the oddest sensation of leaving her known life behind.

It was even stronger than what she’d felt as her plane had taken off from the States.

She’d been to London several times with her parents for various reasons, but this was something else entirely.

This was just her on her own. She supposed Newcastle upon Tyne wasn’t the most glamorous spot in England, but it was easy to get to other places from it and it boasted a couple who had been willing to have her come house-sit for them for the summer.

And it was close to Scotland.

It was probably better not to think about that at the moment on the off chance some do-gooder thought she was about to start hyperventilating.

She looked out the window and happily watched the scenery rush by as she contemplated the miracles that had happened to get her where she was at present.

It had been her brother, of all people, to plant the first seed of subversiveness in her head.

That was surprising given that she couldn’t say that she and Gavin were particularly close.

He had left home when she’d been eight, scampering off to England to study art in London, then fall effortlessly into the cushy job of gallery manager for a woman who had subsequently retired and left him for all intents and purposes as the owner.

He was almost as bad as their parents in treating her as if she were a perpetual child, though it wasn’t as though they spent enough time together for him to have any other opinion.

Until his last visit home, of course, when he had apparently decided it was time for her to make a few changes to her life.

They had been suffering through yet another miserable Thanksgiving family gathering when he had casually pulled a book out of his stylish leather portfolio.

Samantha didn’t really believe in paranormal happenings, but she couldn’t deny that a hush had fallen over the room, as if something monumental was about to happen.

Gavin had started to hand her a book, but her mother had intercepted it before Samantha could touch it.

Gavin had frowned, but there was nothing to be done about it.

When Louise McKinnon Drummond wanted something, she always got it.

Samantha had watched her mother examine the cover of that rather musty old tome on Victorian ivory buttons, then toss it Samantha’s way with an uninterested sniff.

“Already read it,” she had said.

Samantha had thanked Gavin for something new to read, managed to get through the rest of the evening, then carried the book up to her room—on the top floor, of course.

She’d shut the door, then sat on her bed for a few minutes, trying to still her rapidly beating heart.

She’d finally opened the book and read the note hidden inside the front cover, taped carefully under the dust jacket.

Have clients in Newcastle who need a house sitter every summer. Interested?

She’d felt faint. Gavin was a boor and a cad, true, but he wasn’t an idiot.

He had managed to escape their stuffy little East Coast college town, after all, and get himself out of the country.

Of course, he’d known full well that he was leaving behind two sisters who would never have his freedom.

Well, Sophronia had managed to escape as well, but she was another story entirely.

Gavin had known that she, Samantha, had always been and would always be her parents’ last, best hope for the perfect child.

Rapunzel had been a world traveler compared to how locked down she’d been her entire life.

Interested?

No, she hadn’t been interested, she’d been breathless. A desperate hope had bloomed inside her that she might finally manage to get out from under her parents’ collective thumbs.

She hadn’t managed it that first summer; she’d been working like a slave for her mother’s latest exhibition of fine Victorian antiquities.

But she’d gotten a message to her brother that next Thanksgiving, a note taped to the bottom of the plate sporting canned cranberry sauce their mother wouldn’t have touched if it had been the last thing in the house left to eat.

Gavin had sent an email to the appropriate party, winked at her, then helped himself to the rest of the cranberry sauce.

All of which had led her to where she was, watching the train pull into a station she’d never seen before and wondering if she shouldn’t just rip up the pages in her current journal that spelled out every step she was supposed to take during every day of the three months she was to spend in England so she could just do what she wanted to do instead.

She considered, then slipped the book back into her bag. She would rip later, when she could take a penknife to the book and do a proper job of it. It was a pretty journal, so she thought she actually might like to use the rest of it.

She slung her backpack over her shoulder, pulled her suitcase down from overhead, then got off the train and looked around her.

Unfortunately, the first thing that caught her eye was a grinning idiot holding a bouquet of flowers in one hand—cheap ones, she could see that from where she stood—and a sign in the other that read, Samantha Josephine Drummond, your carriage awaits!

She almost turned around and got back onto the train.

She could hardly believe her eyes, though she supposed she shouldn’t have been surprised.

Theodore Alexander Mollineux IV, the fly in her ointment, the suspicious substance in her soup, the annoying insect that kept buzzing around her loudly without really making the commitment to land.

She’d heard he planned a summer internship in England and she’d been told it would be in Newcastle, but she had clung to the hope that he would forget she was going to be within shouting distance.

She supposed, looking at it with a jaundiced eye, that he hadn’t come to England merely to intern.

Given what she knew of his family and hers, he had likely been assigned the task of not only keeping an eye on her but convincing her to marry him.

Her father thought he was just the sort of young man to take her in hand and show her who was boss, and his father thought she was just the sort of young woman who needed a bit of bossing.

Not if she had anything to say about it.

Never mind that she’d only managed to dredge up the courage to decide that in the spring. She’d been plotting for weeks how her life would change once she was on her own. Planes and trains had only been the beginning of what she was sure would be an adventure she would never forget.

And with any luck, she would be telling her parents all about it via email while she lived happily in a very small house in a coastal fishing village where access to the Internet was limited to satellite cards.

But first she had to get past the test that was awaiting her there on the platform. She closed her eyes briefly, then stepped away from the train and walked over to the man she would ditch as soon as humanly possible. More difficult was to avoid Dory’s questing lips, but she managed that as well.

“Let’s not,” she demurred.

“Oh, you may have a point there,” he said, in an affected British accent that she was sure he thought displayed his blue blood to its best advantage. “When in Jolly Olde England, do as the natives do, eh?”

If ads affect your reading experience, click here to remove ads on this page.