The Lady Most Willing . . .
A Novel in Three Parts
Julia Quinn
Eloisa James
Connie Brockway

Dedication
For our husbands . . .
. . . Paul. He might not throw cabers,
but give him a pair of scissors,
and he can slice a wasp in half in mid-air.
As far as I’m concerned, that’s the
modern-day equivalent of slaying dragons.
—JQ
. . . Alessandro, because we met on a blind date,
and although it didn’t take place in a Scottish castle,
one might argue that our characters
find themselves in a similarly happy situation.
—EJ
. . . the good Dr. Brockway, whom I forgive
for not gaining a single pound since the day we wed.
No truer love has a woman than this.
—CB
Contents
Dedication
Prologue
Chapter 1
Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Chapter 4
Chapter 5
Chapter 6
Chapter 7
Chapter 8
Chapter 9
Chapter 10
Chapter 11
Chapter 12
Chapter 13
Chapter 14
Chapter 15
Chapter 16
Chapter 17
Chapter 18
Chapter 19
Chapter 20
Chapter 21
Chapter 22
Chapter 23
Chapter 24
Chapter 25
Chapter 26
Chapter 27
Chapter 28
Epilogue
About the Authors
Praise
More Dazzling Romance
Copyright
About the Publisher
Prologue
Some said the legendary storm of 1819 that screamed down from the north pushed madness
ahead of it. Others said the only madness exhibited that night was born inside a bottle
of contraband whiskey. And then there were those who claimed that magic rode vanguard
to the snow, sweeping the halls of Finovair Castle and inspiring its laird to heights
of greatness . . .
Or something along those lines.
All that’s known for certain is that it was a chilly December day when Taran Ferguson
led his clansmen to the brow of a hill from which they could see Bellemere Castle
glowing like a jewel in the dark Highland night. As his men told the story later,
the wind whipped Taran’s tartan back from his shoulders as he forced his steed to
paw the air, then brought the magnificent beast back down to earth.
Nearly disbalanced, ’tis true, but that was part of the miracle: he’d drunk a bottle
of whiskey and kept his seat.
“A glorious and sacred task lays ahead of us this night,” he bellowed. “Our cause
is just, our purpose noble! Down yonder sits the Earl of Maycott . . . The English Earl of Maycott!”
This brought forth a roar from his men. And perhaps a belch or two.
“He sits amongst his gold cups and fine china,” Taran continued grandiosely, “seeking
to worm his way into our good graces by bidding the finest Highland families to dine
and dance with him.”
His clansmen glowered back at him: none of them, including Taran, had been invited.
Not that they’d wanted to be. Or so they told themselves.
“No English interloper will seduce a Scottish lassie on my watch,” Taran shouted.
“Scotland is for the Scots!”
There was another obligatory roar of approval from his men.
“Ye ken full well that I have been sowing wild oats since my dear wife died, some
twenty years ago,” Taran continued. “But sadly, laddies, ye also know that none of
those seeds bore fruit, for it takes a rich field indeed to nourish a seed as mighty
as that of the Ferguson.” Taran had the good sense not to wait to see how this was
received. “My line is threatened with extinction. Aye. Extinction! And where, I ask
you, will you all be then? Where will your children be without a Ferguson laird to
see to their well-being?”
“A better place than we are now,” one of the men muttered, pulling his tartan closer
against the screaming wind.
Taran ignored him. “Yet all is not lost! You ken I have two nephews by my younger
sisters.”
Unhappy mutters met this statement. One of Ferguson’s sisters had married a refugee
from the French Revolution, a penniless comte. The other had wed an English earl who
turned out to be as disagreeable as he was English.
Taran raised his hand, quieting the grumblers. “It’s the half-French one, Rocheforte,
who’ll inherit my castle.” He paused dramatically. “Think on it, lads. If my Frenchie
nephew marries a Scotswoman, his son will be one of us—a true Scotsman!!” He slashed
the air with his broadsword so vehemently the momentum nearly carried him off his
saddle, but at the last moment he righted himself. “Or mostly. And it’s the same for
my English nevvy as well.”
“I’m sorry to tell you but the earl is engaged to an Englishwoman!” one of the men
called out. “Me wife’s cousin lives in London and wrote about it to me wife.”
“Oakley was going to be wed,” Taran said briskly, “but he caught his intended practicing
steps with her dancing master that were never meant to see a ballroom floor.” He paused
dramatically. “Her French dancing master.”
“Didn’t you just say your other nephew is French?” one of his men asked, rubbing his
hands on his kilt for warmth.
Taran brushed this aside. “It pains me to say it, but neither lad can be trusted to
find a bride worthy of Finovair. And marry they must, or our birthright will crumble
to dust.”
“Half there already,” someone muttered.
“It behooves us”—Taran paused, so pleased with the word he thought it bore repeating—“it
behooves us, my fine companions, to make sure both my nevvies marry Scotswomen. Or at the
very least, someone with enough blunt—”
“Get to the bloody point!” shouted someone with freezing fingers and a wife at home.
“What are we doing here?”
No one could fault Taran for missing a good exit line. “What are we doing?” Taran
bellowed back. “What are we doing?” He rose in his stirrups and, wielding the great broadsword of the Ferguson over
his head, shouted,
“We’re going to get us some brides!”
Chapter 1
Finovair Castle
Kilkarnity, Scotland
December 1819
“Remind me again, why are we here?”
Byron Wotton, Earl of Oakley, took a fortifying gulp of his whiskey and nudged his
chair closer to the fire. Castles were notoriously difficult to heat, but it was bloody
freezing at Finovair. He knew his uncle was short on funds, but surely something could have
been done about the arctic breeze that ran like a snake through the sitting room.
“I believe you left a woman at the altar,” his cousin Robin said with an arched brow.
“We were a month away from the wedding,” Byron shot back, perfectly aware that he
had risen—or rather, descended—to Robin’s bait. “As well you know.”
He might have pointed out that he’d caught his fiancée in the arms of her dancing
master, but really, what was the point? Robin knew the whole story already.
“As for me,” Robin said, leaning forward to rub his hands together near the fire,
“I’m here for the food.”
Anyone else might have taken it as the dry riposte Robin had intended it to be, but
Byron knew better. With nothing to his name but a defunct French title, Robert Parles
(Robin to everyone but his mother), quite likely had come to Finovair for the food.
A rush of cold air hit Byron in the face, and he bit off a curse. “Did someone leave