Read Daughters Of Eden: The Eden Series Book 1 Online
Authors: Charlotte Bingham
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CORONET AMONG THE WEEDS
LUCINDA
CORONET AMONG THE GRASS
THE BUSINESS
IN SUNSHINE OR IN SHADOW
STARDUST
NANNY
CHANGE OF HEART
GRAND AFFAIR
LOVE SONG
THE KISSING GARDEN
THE BLUE NOTE
SUMMERTIME
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THE MAGIC HOUR
FRIDAY'S GIRL
OUT OF THE BLUE
IN DISTANT FIELDS
THE WHITE MARRIAGE
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THE ENCHANTED
THE LAND OF SUMMER
THE DAISY CLUB
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The Belgravia series
BELGRAVIA
COUNTRY LIFE
AT HOME
BY INVITATION
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The Nightingale series
TO HEAR A NIGHTINGALE
THE NIGHTINGALE SINGS
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The Debutantes series
DEBUTANTES
THE SEASON
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The Eden series
DAUGHTERS OF EDEN
THE HOUSE OF FLOWERS
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The Bexham trilogy
THE CHESTNUT TREE
THE WIND OFF THE SEA
THE MOON AT MIDNIGHT
Novels with Terence Brady
VICTORIA
VICTORIA AND COMPANY
ROSE'S STORY
YES HONESTLY
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Television Drama Series with Terence Brady
TAKE THREE GIRLS
UPSTAIRS DOWNSTAIRS
THOMAS AND SARAH
NANNY
FOREVER GREEN
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Television Comedy Series with Terence Brady
NO HONESTLY
YES HONESTLY
PIG IN THE MIDDLE
OH MADELINE! (USA)
FATHER MATTHEW'S DAUGHTER
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Television Plays with Terence Brady
MAKING THE PLAY
SUCH A SMALL WORLD
ONE OF THE FAMILY
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Films with Terence Brady
LOVE WITH A PERFECT STRANGER
MAGIC MOMENT
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Stage Plays with Terence Brady
I WISH I WISH
THE SHELL SEEKERS
(adaptation from the novel by Rosamunde Pilcher)
BELOW STAIRS
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For more information on Charlotte Bingham and her books,
see her website at www.charlottebingham.com
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DAUGHTERS
OF EDEN
Charlotte Bingham
Contents
Part One England in the Late Nineteen Thirties
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Version 1.0
Epub ISBN:9781409057154
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Published 2004 by Doubleday a division of Transworld Publishers
Copyright © Charlotte Bingham 2004
The right of Charlotte Bingham to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted in accordance with sections 77 and 78 of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988.
All the characters in this book are fictitious, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
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ISBN 0385 606346
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1 3 5 7 9 10 8 6 4 2
In memory of âJack Ward' â patriot and gentleman.
âThis other Eden â¦
This precious stone set in the silver sea'
Richard II
(Shakespeare)
To dream of Eden is to dream of a quiet wooded valley where nothing but birdsong is heard, where the clean, clear waters of a river undulate in a peaceful ribbon on either side of which the grass is grown and cut for the simple pleasure of walking. Trees have been planted so that it takes only a gentle breeze to bend them forward to see their leafy reflections in the water below. And there is a house palely lit in early morning light, its window casements long and graceful, its classical Corinthian columns guarding shallow steps that lead up to vast, carved double doors.
Around the garden are grouped buildings of the same stone as the house, lodges and cottages, an icehouse, a gazebo for lakeside picnics. Further on a stable yard houses a clock with gold painted numerals, and a cobbled stone yard that once rang to the sound of thoroughbred hooves.
But no one lives at this other Eden now, no one that was born there that is. No one that once ran about its lawns, or pushed the old ridge-bottomed wooden boat on to its lake, or sat above the aqueduct listening to the waters rushing through below, now haunts its follies. There are no beautifully
dressed women to be seen, gloved hands resting on the perfectly tailored sleeves of the men accompanying them, all of them laughing and talking, wondering at the beauty of some new day. Now all that can be heard are secrets being plotted in and around the walls of the old house, secrets that will shape lives and change the world, and Eden, for ever.
Â
Part One
ENGLAND IN THE LATE
NINETEEN THIRTIES
Chapter One
Mrs Beaumont sighed with satisfaction as she put down
The Times
, for there in the engagement column was the announcement of her darling daughter Poppy's forthcoming marriage. She patted the side of her hair, and then picked up the newspaper again.
Mr and Mrs Spencer Tynant Beaumont are pleased to announce the engagement of their beloved daughter Poppy Elizabeth to Arthur Basil Hetchett Tetherington, fourth Baron Tetherington
.
Despite the announcement's having been made some months before, and the wedding's being about to take place â Westminster, the Savoy and all the usual trimmings â Oralia Beaumont still loved to start off the day by once again reading that announcement in the now yellowing copy of the Thunderer. It was the knowledge of the apoplexy with which the rival mothers of other debutantes would have greeted the announcement that gave her such particular pleasure. She could hear them moaning to each other on their telephones, or from under their hats over lunch at the Savoy.
âPoppy Beaumont
of all people
. I mean, of all the girls out this Season, you would never think that
she
would be snapped up by a baron. And not just any baron â not some ropy old Irish peer â but a rich English baron. Owner of a vast estate, a house in Eaton Square, everything you could wish for â and she as plain as a pikestaff, and wears
spectacles
.'
Oralia stared with quiet pride around her bedroom as the maid came in to take away her breakfast tray. Poppy might not be a beauty, but she obviously must have something special to attract such a handsome, amusing, and elegant man as Basil Tetherington. For why else would he have snapped Poppy up after only three balls and a luncheon?
He was so generous, too. Nothing would do but he must buy her a new motor car, which Poppy hoped one day to be able to drive, but in which he now drove her. With all the talk of war, by necessity it had been a whirlwind romance, but a romance it most certainly was, for Mrs Beaumont was sure that Poppy was quite as happy to marry Basil as he was to marry her.
âAh, there you are, my dear. Out again, do I see?'
Poppy peered round the door at her mother, who was now preening herself in front of a silver hand mirror. The ostrich feather trimming of her bedjacket caused Poppy to sneeze suddenly and vehemently as she drew close.
âYes, Mother. I am just going out, to meet Mary Jane Ogilvy for lunch.'
Oralia replaced her hand mirror on the pink satin quilt.
âI expect her mother is spitting nails, isn't she, my dear?'
Poppy pushed her spectacles further up her nose and stared at her beautiful, elegant Southern Belle parent with a puzzled expression.
âI am sorry, Mother?'
Mrs Beaumont stared back at her daughter with barely concealed impatience.
âI mean, about your engagement, Poppy darlin',' she said slowly. âSince Mary Jane is not engaged to anyone at all, and you are engaged to Lord Tetherington, one imagines she will be spitting nails.'
Poppy sighed inwardly. She simply did not understand her mother's competitive nature. She herself had never felt competitive with anyone, and with good reason. Born with what her dear old Irish nurse always called a
stigmata
in her left eye, Poppy had unfortunately been forced to wear glasses â or spectacles, as her mother insisted on calling them â from a very early age.
Sure and she
'
ll never marry now
, Nanny Beaumont had used to say with some satisfaction to the other nannies when Poppy was walked in the Park.
Gentlemen are simply not attracted to girls who wear spectacles, as everyone well knows
.
Even at children's parties little boys would make it quite obvious that they couldn't wait to leave her side and sit beside some other little girl, who did not wear pale pink spectacles whose wire ends pulled her ears forward, making them stick through her hair.
Fortunately she had been educated at home, so her mother and father had been only too happy to
leave her to her own devices, as well as to the kindly if sporadic attentions of the servants, so that Poppy grew up with her books as friends, and her dogs for company. As long as she had books and dogs, however, she was happy, and would have remained so, living an oddly solitary existence on the upper floors of her parents' town and country houses, if her mother had not suddenly decided it might be fun for
her
â if not for Poppy â if Poppy were to do the Season as a debutante.