Showing posts with label Alastair-Audley. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Alastair-Audley. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 9, 2025

Devil's Cub - Georgette Heyer (Sourcebooks Casablanca - Nov 2009)

Series: Alastair-Audley (Book 2)
 
Dominic Alastair, Marquis of Vidal and fiery son of the notorious Duke of Avon, has established a rakish reputation that rivals his father's, living a life of excess and indulgence. He is a bad lot a rake and seducer, reckless, heedless, and possessed of a murderous temper. He is known by friend and foe alike as the "Devil's Cub." Yet as the handsome and wealthy heir to a Dukedom, he is considered a good prospect on the marriage market. Vidal currently has his eye on the young, lovely, and unintelligent Sophia Challoner, and Sophia's greedy mother is more than happy to encourage his dubious attentions. Banished to the Continent after wounding his opponent in a duel, Vidal decides to abduct the silly aristocrat bent on seducing him into marriage and make her his mistress instead. In his rush, however, he seems to have taken the wrong woman?
 
Intelligent, practical Mary Challoner knew wicked Vidal, wouldn't marry her sister, despite her mother's matchmaking schemes. So Mary coolly prepared to protect her naive sister by deceiving Vidal. Substituting herself for her young sister, she certainly hadn't expected the nobleman to kidnap and take her to France. She had little notion he would grimly hold her to her part of the bargain. Now he had left her, and she was alone, a stranger in a strange land, prey to the intrigues of glittering, heartless, 18th century Paris. Only one person could rescue her--the Marquis himself. But how could she ever trust this man? How could she even hope to overcome the contempt in which he held her? And how could even the sudden flowering of her love ever bridge the terrible gap between them?
 
This was a reread of one of my favorite Georgette Heyer books, an enemies-to-lovers story with her signature wit and humor. Dominic Alastair, Marquis of Vidal, is an unrepentant rake at the age of twenty-four. He is known for his high-stakes card playing, his attentions to unsuitable women, and his quick temper. He is an apple that didn't fall far from either of his parental trees. At the beginning of the book, he kills a highwayman and simply leaves the corpse on the road. He later duels a fellow card player, with the result that his father "encourages" him to leave the country for a period of time. He impulsively decides to ask his current flirt, Sophia Challoner, to go with him. Marriage is the last thing on his mind, but the ditzy Sophia (and her calculating mother) believe they can force the issue.
 
Sophia's older sister, Mary, is unlike her mother and sister. She is practical, intelligent, and protective of her sister. When she intercepts Vidal's invitation to Sophia, she disguises herself and takes Sophia's place. She plans to reveal the deception when it is too late for Vidal to do anything about it, then return home. Unfortunately, she did not count on the ferocity of Vidal's temper. She's stunned when he states his intention to take her with him, with or without her consent. Their confrontation is intense, as Mary has no trouble expressing her opinion of him. Her practical side has her going along for the time being.
 
Here is where the craziness begins. We have Vidal and Mary headed for Paris. His intentions are initially still dishonorable as he compares Mary to her sister. I laughed out loud when she defends her virtue at pistol-point, waking him up to the fact that she is not her sister. Aghast at having compromised a respectable woman, he is gentleman enough to realize that he must marry her. Their interactions are fun, with Mary calling him out when needed, and Vidal doing his best to get his way. Mary insists that marriage is not possible because their stations are so far apart. Paris provides a respectable haven for Mary, where she stays with her friend, Juliana, who is also Vidal's cousin.
 
Juliana has her own romantic troubles. She has fallen for a young man her mother disapproves of, and has been sent to Paris to get her away from him. Juliana is a bit flighty and spoiled, but has a good heart. Her antics frequently appear childish, and the arrival of her somewhat staid suitor brings out the reckless side of her. Misunderstandings create conflict and heartache.
 
Back in England, Mary's mother acts as the wronged woman's devastated mother, demanding action from Vidal's mother, the Duchess of Avon. The Duchess remains the same volatile and outspoken person she was in These Old Shades, determined to save her son from such a clear misalliance. I laughed out loud as she once again importunes her brother-in-law, Rupert, into helping her. Their journey to France in search of the runaways is excellent fun.
 
Meanwhile, misunderstandings all around send Mary fleeing Paris with the assistance of a chivalrous gentleman, to avoid ruining Vidal's life. Vidal, who has finally realized the truth of his feelings, is in hot pursuit. All roads lead to Dijon, where everyone comes together in a flurry of accusations, fights, and further confusion. My favorite part of the book comes near the end, when Mary, fleeing once again, encounters an older gentleman who comes to her aid. I loved watching him draw her out about what had happened to her, and his commentary along the way is priceless. The gentleman, of course, is the Duke of Avon, in all his glory. I loved the subsequent arrival of Vidal and Avon's master touch in the resolution of the issues, topped off with Rupert and his wine.