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The Sign of Love

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Blurb

Not only has the beautiful eighteen year old Bettina Charlwood lost her beloved mother but is made all but destitute by her father’s constant gambling and she has to leave the French school as her deceased Godmother had financed her fees. 

Now death strikes once more as her chaperone dies on the ferry from Calais to Dover in a wild storm.  And Bettina, not knowing what to do, is saved by an earnest young gentleman whose name is Lord Eustace Veston.

Arriving home she finds that she and her father are invited by the famous Duke of Alveston to accompany him on a trip in his luxurious yacht to Egypt with a large party for the historic Opening of the Suez Canal in 1869.

Another surprise awaits her when she finds that the Duke has invited his half-brother as well, whom her father hopes that she will marry.  And that half-brother is none other than her Good Samaritan at Dover, Lord Eustace Veston himself.

But while Bettinna finds the Duke almost impossibly handsome and awe-inspiring, Lord Eustace by contrast reveals himself to be a mean-spirited ‘do-gooder’ – and something of a bully to boot.

In addition he has developed a deep hatred for the Duke and he has set his heart on inheriting his title and huge fortune by any means.

And, despite Lord Eustace’s assumption that Bettina will happily marry him, she soon finds the magnificence, generosity and great charm of the Duke very hard to resist.

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Author’s Note
Author’s NoteMy grandfather as an undergraduate at Oxford University attended the Opening of the Suez Canal in 1869. The description of the Ceremony, the Royal guests and the magnificent party given by the Khedive of Egypt at Ismailia are all accurate. The building of the Suez Canal combined with the personal extravagance of Ismail Pasha bankrupted Egypt in 1875. Mr. Benjamin Disraeli, the British Prime Minister with much subtlety was able to buy the Khedive’s shares for four million pounds. Whatever the cost, the achievement of Ferdinand de Lesseps, whose dream came true after he had spent a lifetime surmounting incredible difficulties, raising money and coping with obstructions in the Canal itself is one of the great adventure stories of the world. His bronze statue at the entrance to the Suez Canal was destroyed by a hostile mob in 1956, but his name lives on in the pages of history. After his lifelong struggle had been fulfilled, Ferdinand de Lesseps married his second wife, a young French girl in a little Chapel at Ismailia. She was to bear him twelve children.

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