her legs would no longer support her during this ordeal. âBelinda, Belinda, how could you be so reckless, so irresponsible?â
Belinda felt rising annoyance even as she acknowledgedsheâd been asking herself the same question again and again. She had acted uncharacteristically.
âYou were expected to marry well,â her mother went on. âThe family was counting on it. Why, most of your classmates have already secured advantageous matches.â
Belinda wanted to respond that she had married well. Most people would say that a rich and titled husband qualified as good enough. And yet, Colin was a detested Granville and thus one who was not to be trusted under any circumstances.
âWe spent a long time cultivating the Dillinghams,â her mother continued. âThey were prepared to renovate Downlands so you and Tod might entertain there in style once you were married.â
Belinda didnât need to be reminded of the plan, contingent on her marriage to Tod, to update the Wentworthsâ main ancestral estate in Berkshire. She knew the family finances were, if not precarious, less than robust.
Truth be told, neither she nor Tod had been swept away by passion. Instead, their engagement had been based more on practicalities. She and Tod had known each other forever and had always gotten along well enough. She was in the prime of her friendsâ matrimonial season, if not toward the end of it, at thirty-two. Likewise, she knew Tod was looking for and expected to marry a suitable woman from his highborn social set.
Tod had said he would wait for her to resolve the situation. He had not said how long he would wait, however.
Her mother tilted her head. âI donât suppose you could lay claim to part of Easterbridgeâs estate for being accidentally married for the past two years?â
Belinda was appalled. âMother!â
Her mother widened her eyes. âWhat? There have been plenty of real marriages that have endured for less time.â
âIâd have more leverage if Easterbridge were divorcing me!â
Belinda recalled the marquessâ jesting offer to remain married. It was clear sheâd have to be the one to initiate proceedings to dissolve their marriage.
âYou didnât have time to sign a prenuptial agreement at that wedding chapel in Las Vegas, did you?â her mother persisted and then sniffedâready to answer her own question. âWhy, I wouldnât be surprised if Easterbridge carried a standard contract in his back pocket.â
âMother!â
Uncle Hugh shook his head. âA man as sharp as Easterbridge would have seen to it that his property was not vulnerable. On the other hand, we wouldnât want the marquess to make any claim to Wentworth property.â
Her mother turned back to her. âItâs a good thing that none of the Wentworth estates are in your name.â
âYes,â Uncle Hugh acknowledged, âbut Belinda is an heiress. She stands to inherit the Wentworth wealth. If she remains Easterbridgeâs wife, her property may eventually become his to share, particularly if the assets are not kept separate.â
âIntolerable,â her mother declared.
For her part, Belinda didnât feel like an heiress. In fact, from all of her familyâs focus on making a good match, she felt more stifled than liberated by the Wentworth wealth. True, she was the beneficiary of a small trust fund, but those resources only made it bearable for her to live in Manhattanâs high-rent market on her skimpy art specialistâs salary.
Sheâd been reminded time and again that her task was to carry the Wentworth standard forward for anothergeneration. She was never unaware of her position as an only child. So far, however, she could not have made a bigger mash of things.
âIâll deal with the marquess,â Belinda said grimly, stopping herself from her nervous habit of chewing her