Tiny ginger Georgina is thrown into a complete tizzy by the news that Steven Templeton is coming home. Steven is her big childhood crush. When she was 18 she threw herself at him, but he rejected her and popped off to Canada for 4 years.
So she hates him. Loves his family, loves her BFF, loves riding about on her pretty horse. Loves her job assisting her dad manage the huge Templeton estate, but hates Steven. He’s going to ruin everything. She’s betting he won’t let her take over as estate manager for her dad when her dad retires, and Georgina is going to have to get another job and leave the place she loves and be sad forever.
At least she has a sort of nice boyfriend. Although he’s making less than encouraging noises about how young they both are still, and about how his mother isn’t that thrilled by the idea of Georgina as a daughter in law. It’ll be fine, though. His mother will resign herself to the effort of turning Georgina into a decent wife through well applied nagging and criticism. Won’t that be fun.
The other little worm in the poison apple despoiling Georgina’s bucolic paradise is Auriel. Auriel is Steven’s younger brother’s fiancée, but as soon as Steven shows up it’s clear that these two have a past, and if Auriel gets her way, a future.
I may have misspelled Auriel. There are at least two conversations about how this is a very silly name.
Auriel is very certain she will get her way. How the brother feels about this goes into the usual Patricia Wilson limbo of secondary characters having no agency unless at least one member of the power couple is on the scene.
I really liked Georgina. She was so melodramatic about everything. I liked her because she had a motorbike and loved dashing about on the estate on it. Her father couldn’t tame her! She runs into Steven and is flipped off the motorbike, and Steven puts his foot down about her riding it. Sure, it’s a little on the nose, but she’s pretty fearless and it was endearing.
Also endearing was the insane fantasy she concocted about Steven and Auriel, and how Steven had been in love with Auriel and then went to Canada, and Auriel took up with his brother to punish him, but now that Steven’s back from Canada he’s going to take up with Auriel again, and his brother will just have to lump it, because Steven is so very alpha. Georgina was terribly attached to this fantasy, and it worked well to irritate Steven, and it kept her amused in that devastating ‘my life is over and I’ve lost the one man I’ll ever love!’ fashion.
Her biggest problem is that she’s too pretty and cute and melodramatic for anyone to take her seriously. ‘Terrible things! Devastating, ruin my life forever events unfolding!’ Georgina will occasionally say to her father. ‘That’s nice dear,’ he’ll reply absently. ‘Have you checked with Steven about that?’ Everybody just wants to pat her on the head or give her a hug.
She does have a genius for a good old fashioned scrape. Not only is there the motorbike accident, she and Steven have a car accident. He’s heroic and injured. There’s also, and this was a really interesting scene, the time she encounters a strange man on the estate and wacks him a tree branch because he smiled at her. Only Steven is prepared to consider that she was scared and this was a legitimate defence reaction - everyone else just laughs it off as so Georgina.
The whole deal with the two of them is that when she showed up as a kid she immediately started crushing on Steven and he just adored her. He was the one person she’d listen to, and while he was doing a bit of future mate grooming, it didn’t turn into anything creepy and wrong. He firmly resisted her whole deal of turning sixteen and starting to look at him like a sexy man she wanted to wanted to climb all over, but at the same time kept the same affectionate and gentle relationship going until Georgina forced the issue.
Steven is alpha and likes giving orders. I liked him a lot, he was a good bossy hero to Georgina’s engaging craziness. He did get a bit grabby, but then Georgina did answer the door in her bathrobe, which is classic foreplay in romances of this vintage, and never really gets old. The other woman is the main flaw in his story. I can’t imagine that there wasn’t at least some slight encouragement, or the absence of very clear and firm discouragement, when it came to the possessive way she behaved around Steven.
But look, she was crazy. When Steven’s in the car accident Georgina is sent up to his bedroom to distract him. She’s sitting on his bed when the door is flung open, and enter Auriel. ‘The hired girl is sitting on your bed!’ observes Auriel, in accents of deep insult and suspicious betrayal. What. Look, I mean it’s not as though I didn’t love it, with all the snobbery and possessiveness. I did, but my monkey brain satisfaction in the scene, and the whole deal with Auriel cannot overcome my sensible brain that thinks this is all a bit nonsense.
There are some really good supportive female relationships in this book. Georgina’s BFF, Steven’s little sister, is lovely, as is Georgina’s school friend. Steven’s mother is lovely and sweet to Georgina. I’ll acknowledge that there are the usual terrible women around, but Georgina’s friends did have their own stuff going on, they weren’t cardboard cheer squad, or enabling some hero horribleness for the heroine’s ‘own good.’
I’m not keen on how Georgina was presented as everyone’s tiny pretty pet, and even with the clear sense that some of the most emotionally satisfying aspects of the plot are complete nonsense, I still loved this one.