I am really torn about this review - the writing was great and the story was gripping, but as a romance novel, it fell flat for me.
Sixteen years ago Lady Josephine Pennington, the adopted daughter of the Earl & Countess of Aytoun fell in love with Lt Wynne Melfort and they were engaged to be married. But ten days before the wedding, Wynne broke the engagement, dueled with her brother and left her without a backwards glance.
Jo has suffered greatly, she knows almost nothing about her birth parents, but rumor and speculation run rampant throughout the ton and is often vicious. After Wynne left her, Jo basically retired from society, she devoted her time to various charities, especially those that care for ruined woman and children. But always in the back of her mind is the desire to find the truth about her birth. Now drawings of a woman who looks like her have given her hope that she had almost given up on.
Wynne Melfort is now widowed with a young son and has retired from the Navy and along with his friend Dermot McKendry, has relocated to Scotland. Dermot has started a hospital for people with traumatic brain injuries, Dermot is the doctor and Wynne is the businessman. When a patient begins communicating by drawing pictures of the same woman over and over, Dermot asks Wynne to help him find the woman. Wynne is shocked to see the face of Jo looking back at him and instructs Dermot to write to Jo, but asks him to refrain from mentioning him.
Jo comes to the highlands and is stunned to see Wynne, she is not ready to confront the past between them and asks him to pretend that it never happened. She meets with Charles Barton and his family and it is oblivious that they recognize her, but they deny it - Charles however, takes Jo's hand and speaks for the first time. Dermot is overjoyed and asks her to stay. His family is not as happy and say they will not leave him at the hospital. Dermot begs them to reconsider and reluctantly, they agree. Jo has mixed feelings about staying, she wants to help Charles and hopefully find out who her mother was, but begin close to Wynne picks at a wound that never healed, especially when she learns he married and had a son.
Wynne denies having any feelings for Jo, he needs to concentrate on building a life for his son., Cuffe. Cuffe is not fitting in and refuses to speak to Wynne. He was raised on Jamaica by his maternal grandmother after his mother died shortly after his birth. He barely knows his father and wants to return to Jamaica. Wynne worries for Cuffe, his mixed blood leads many to believe he is not Wynne's legitimate son and Wynne is very protective and defensive on his behalf, but he feels like he is fighting a losing battle and has yet to bond with his son.
This is a story of second chances, for Jo, Wynne, Charles and even Cuffe. I thought the story surrounding Jo's parentage was excellent and very well done, but I really didn't care for the romance aspect of the story. I felt that Wynne's initial rejection was lame, implausible for the era and given that he married an even more unacceptable woman a few years later even more unforgivable. I also felt like Jo was "just too good to be true", seriously the woman should be nominated for sainthood, she is too understanding, too forgiving and too meek. I felt like the love story unfolded too quickly and they reconciled much too easily. But the mystery of her family was fantastic and made this book well the time I invested to read. So for me, this was a 2 star love story with a 5 star mystery.
I would recommend the book, it is second in the series, but could easily be read as a stand alone title.
*I am voluntarily leaving a review for an eARC that was provided to me by NetGalley and the publisher*