About the Book
   Lysander Hawkley combined breathtaking good looks with the kindest of hearts. He couldn't pass a stray dog, an ill-treated horse or a neglected wife without rushing to the rescue. And with neglected wives the rescue invariably led to ecstatic bonking, which didn't please their erring husbands one bit.
   Lysander's mid-life crisis had begun at twenty-two. Reeling from the death of his beautiful mother, he was out of work, drinking too much and desperately in debt. The solution came from Ferdie, his fat friend: if Lysander was so good at making husbands jealous, why shouldn't he get paid for it?
   Let loose among the neglected wives of the ritzy county of Rutshire, Lysander causes absolute havoc. But it is only when he meets Rannaldini, Rutshire's King Rat and a temperamental, fiendishly promiscuous international conductor, that the trouble really starts. The only unglamorous woman around Rannaldini was Kitty, his plump young wife who ran his life like clockwork. Soon Lysander was convinced that Kitty must be rescued from Rannaldini at all costs, even if it means enlisting the help of the old blue-eyed havoc-maker: Rupert Campbell-Black.
   Jilly Cooper
   THE MAN WHO MADE
   HUSBANDS JEALOUS
   This eBook is copyright material and must not be copied, reproduced, transferred, distributed, leased, licensed or publicly performed or used in any way except as specifically permitted in writing by the publishers, as allowed under the terms and conditions under which it was purchased or as strictly permitted by applicable copyright law. Any unauthorised distribution or use of this text may be a direct infringement of the author’s and publisher’s rights and those responsible may be liable in law accordingly.
   Epub ISBN: 9781409032403
   Version 1.0
   www.randomhouse.co.uk
   TRANSWORLD PUBLISHERS
   61-63 Uxbridge Road, London W5 5SA
   a division of The Random House Group Ltd
   www.booksattransworld.co.uk
   THE MAN WHO MADE HUSBANDS JEALOUS
   A CORGI BOOK: 9780552156394
   First published in Great Britain
   in 1991 by Bantam Press
   a division of Transworld Publishers
   Corgi edition published 1994
   Corgi edition reissued 2007
   Copyright © Jilly Cooper 1993
   Lines from ‘Naked in the Rain’ by McBroom and Glover
   reproduced by kind permission of
   Big Life Music and Bertelsmann Music Group Ltd,
   © Big Life Music 1990 and © Bertelsmann Music Group Ltd 1990.
   Lines from ‘The Last Night of the World’ from the musical Miss Saigon
   by Alain Boublil and Claude-Michel Schönberg. Lyrics by
   Alain Boublil and Richard Maltby Jr. Music by
   Claude-Michel Schönberg. © Alain Boublil Music Ltd.
   Jilly Cooper has asserted her right under the Copyright,
   Designs and Patents Act 1988 to be identified as the author of this work.
   This book is a work of fiction and, except in the case of historical fact, any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental.
   A CIP catalogue record for this book
   is available from the British Library
   This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or otherwise, be lent, resold, hired out or otherwise circulated without the publisher’s prior consent in any form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser
   Addresses for Random House Group Ltd companies outside the UK
   can be found at: www.randomhouse.co.uk
   The Random House Group Ltd Reg. No. 954009
   4 6 8 10 9 7 5 3
   Table of Contents
   Cover
   About the Book
   Title
   Copyright
   About the Author
   Also by Jilly Cooper
   Dedication
   Acknowledgements
   Characters
   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
   Chapter 29
   Chapter 30
   Chapter 31
   Chapter 32
   Chapter 33
   Chapter 34
   Chapter 35
   Chapter 36
   Chapter 37
   Chapter 38
   Chapter 39
   Chapter 40
   Chapter 41
   Chapter 42
   Chapter 43
   Chapter 44
   Chapter 45
   Chapter 46
   Chapter 47
   Chapter 48
   Chapter 49
   Chapter 50
   Chapter 51
   Chapter 52
   Chapter 53
   Chapter 54
   Chapter 55
   Chapter 56
   Chapter 57
   Chapter 58
   Chapter 59
   Chapter 60
   Chapter 61
   Chapter 62
   Chapter 63
   Chapter 64
   Chapter 65
   About the Author
   Jilly Cooper is a journalist, writer and media superstar. The author of many number one bestselling novels, she lives in Gloucestershire with her husband Leo, her rescue greyhound Feather and her black cat Feral.
   She was appointed OBE in 2004 for services to literature, and in 2009 was awarded an honorary Doctorate of Letters by the University of Gloucestershire for her contribution to literature and services to the County.
   Find out more about Jilly Cooper at her website www.jillycooper.co.uk
   By Jilly Cooper
   FICTION
   RIDERS
   RIVALS
   POLO
   THE MAN WHO MADE HUSBANDS JEALOUS
   APPASSIONATA
   SCORE!
   PANDORA
   WICKED!
   JUMP!
   NON-FICTION
   ANIMALS IN WAR
   CLASS
   HOW TO SURVIVE CHRISTMAS
   HOTFOOT TO ZABRISKIE POINT (with Patrick Lichfield)
   INTELLIGENT AND LOYAL
   JOLLY MARSUPIAL
   JOLLY SUPER
   JOLLY SUPERLATIVE
   JOLLY SUPER TOO
   SUPER COOPER
   SUPER JILLY
   SUPER MEN AND SUPER WOMEN
   THE COMMON YEARS
   TURN RIGHT AT THE SPOTTED DOG
   WORK AND WEDLOCK
   ANGELS RUSH IN
   ARAMINTA’S WEDDING
   CHILDREN’S BOOKS
   LITTLE MABEL
   LITTLE MABEL’S GREAT ESCAPE
   LITTLE MABEL SAVES THE DAY
   LITTLE MABEL WINS
   ROMANCE
   BELLA
   EMILY
   HARRIET
   IMOGEN
   LISA & CO
   OCTAVIA
   PRUDENCE
   ANTHOLOGIES
   THE BRITISH IN LOVE
   VIOLETS AND VINEGAR
   To Emily
					     					 			 />   with love and gratitude
   for so much happiness
   Acknowledgements
   One of the delights of writing The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous has been the kindness and enthusiasm of the people who helped me. These include in particular John Lodge, Managing Director of Lodge Securities, who initiated me into the mysteries of highly sophisticated security systems; trainer Nigel Twiston-Davies and his wife Cathy, who took me racing and allowed me to spend several days at their yard; Emily Gardiner and Alicia Winter who advised me on the pop music front; and Ian Maclay, the former Managing Director of The Royal Philharmonic Orchestra and the orchestra themselves, who provided me with much joy and enlightenment, both at rehearsal and concerts.
   I should also like to thank Martin Stephen for telling me about headmasters; composer Geoffrey Burgon and master cellist Bobby Kok for talking to me about music; Andrew Parker-Bowles and John Oaksey for being brilliant about racing; Shirley Bevan for advising me on the illnesses of horses; Simon Cowley for walking the Cheltenham course with me in a deluge; and Raymond and Jenny Mould for inviting me into their box to see Tipping Tim win gloriously at Cheltenham. Peter and Alexandra Hunter and Sally Reygate also told me wonderful stories about their horses Esperanta and Regal, both now sadly departed.
   Many other people helped me. Like those referred to above, they are all skilled in their own fields, but as I was writing fiction, I only followed their advice as far as it fitted my own story, and their expertise is in no way reflected by the accuracy of this book. They include:
   Anthony and Mary Abrahams, Richard Bell, Sebastian Birkhead, John Bowes-Lyon, Charlie Brooks, Peter Cadbury, Edith and Jack Clarkson, Peter Clarkson, Father Damian of Prinknash Abbey, Jim Davidson, Herbert Despard, Fiona Feeley, Dennis Foot, Miriam Francombe, Susannah and William Franklyn, Judy Gaselee, E. W. Gillespie, Managing Director, Cheltenham Racecourse, Tony Hoskins, George and Huw Humphreys, John Irvin, Geoffrey and Jorie Kent, Carl Llewellyn, Roger and Rowena Luard, David Marchwood, Managing Director, Moët & Chandon (London) Ltd., Pussy Minchin, Sharon Morgan, Lana Myers, Peter Norman, Managing Director, Parfums Givenchy, Rosemary Nunneley, Guy Ralls, Henry Sallitt, Lottie Sjögren, Edward Smith, Pauline Stanbury, Diane Stevens, Harry Turner, Barry Watts, Madeline and Malcolm White, Kate Whitehouse and Francis Willey.
   I should also like to thank the National Canine Defence League and in particular Mrs Clarissa Baldwin for allowing me to use their slogan – ‘A Dog is for Life . . . Not Just for Christmas’.
   The subconscious mind works in strange ways. Almost from conception, The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous was set in Paradise, a mythical village in the mythical county of Rutshire. Paradise Village in the book has a population of around eight hundred, an Anglo-Saxon church, a pub, a restaurant, a handful of shops and lies on a river at the bottom of a beautiful valley surrounded by steeply sloping woodland studded with beautiful houses.
   During a driving lesson, when the book was well under way, I told my instructor, Peter Clarkson, about my fictional village. Did I know there was a Paradise in Gloucestershire, he asked, and promptly drove me to a tiny hamlet which looked down into a valley, even more beautiful than the one of my imagination. Charles II is alleged to have named the place Paradise. Arriving by night while escaping from the Roundheads, he gazed out of the window the following morning and asked in rapture if he had arrived in Paradise. As I had written so much of the book by then, and because the two ‘Paradises’ are totally different, except in their rare beauty, I decided to keep the name, but would stress that no-one living nor any of the locations in Paradise, Rutshire, bear any resemblance or are based on anyone living or any of the places in Paradise, Gloucestershire.
   I must also reiterate that The Man Who Made Husbands Jealous is a work of fiction and none of the characters is based on anyone. Any resemblance to any living person is purely coincidental and wholly unintended.
   An author is only as good as her publishers. Mine have been magnificent. I would like to say a massive thank you to Paul Scherer, Mark Barty-King, Patrick Janson-Smith, of Transworld Publishers Ltd., and all their staff for their continued encouragement and advice while I was writing the book. Once it was delivered I had marvellous editorial advice from Diane Pearson, Broo Doherty and Tom Hartman. Nor could anyone have a more charming, merry or skilful agent than Desmond Elliott. I also owe a special debt of gratitude to my son Felix, who in January 1992 restored the gazebo at the bottom of the garden so I was able to write in blissful seclusion uninterrupted by doorbells or telephones.
   Finishing a big book is tremendously exciting and consequently I owe a further huge debt of gratitude to my friends Annette Xuereb-Brennan, Annalise Dobson, Anna Gibbs-Kennet and Marjorie Williams for entering into the spirit by working late into the night typing huge chunks of the manuscript, and often correcting factual mistakes and fearful spelling. Ann Mills was equally marvellous at clearing up after us all without throwing away any vital scribbling.
   Nor could the book have been written without the wonderfully soothing presence of my PA, Jane Watts, who listened when I was in despair, provided numerous funny lines and spent hours collating and photostating the manuscript.
   Finally, I would most of all like to thank my family, Leo, Felix, Emily, Barbara and Hero. All provided comfort, tolerance and inspiration. Few writers are as privileged.
   CHARACTERS
   EDWARD BARTHOLOMEW A significant grandchild.
   ALDERTON
   ARCHANGEL MIKE Landlord of The Pearly
   Gates Public House
   and captain of Paradise
   Cricket XI.
   JULIA ARMSTRONG A passionate painter.
   BEN ARMSTRONG Her husband – a caring
   beard in computers.
   ASTRID A comely Palm Beach groom.
   MISS BATES A temp with tempting
   ankles.
   BEATRICE A fair flautist misused by
   Rannaldini.
   JAMES BENSON A very smooth private
   doctor.
   BONNY A Palm Beach polo groupie.
   SABINE BOTTOMLEY Headmistress of Bagley Hall
   - a less caring beard.
   TEDDY BRIMSCOMBE Larry Lockton’s gardener.
   MRS BRIMSCOMBE His wife.
   BUNNY An ace Gloucestershire vet.
   RUPERT CAMPBELL-BLACK Multi-millionaire owner/
   trainer, ex-world
   show-jumping champion,
   Mecca for most women.
   TAGGIE CAMPBELL-BLACK His second wife – an angel.
   MARCUS CAMPBELL-BLACK His son – an embryo concert
   pianist.
   TABITHA CAMPBELL-BLACK His daughter – a teenage
   tearaway.
   SEB AND DOMMIE CARLISLE The heavenly twins. Vastly
   brave professional polo
   players, whose serious
   wildness has been tempered
   by the recession.
   CHLOE CATFORD Talented mezzo-soprano
   and Boris Levitsky’s mistress.
   BLUEY CHARTERIS Rupert Campbell-Black’s first
   jockey.
   LADY CHISLEDEN An old boot and a pillar of
   Paradise.
   CLIVE Rannaldini’s sinister
   black-leather-clad henchman.
   MRS COLMAN David Hawkley’s secretary —
   nicknamed ‘Mustard’ by the
   boys because she’s so keen on
   him.
   CAMERON COOK A talented television
   termagent.
   MISS CRICKLADE Winner of the home-made
   wine class at Paradise Church
   fete for ten years running.
   DANNY One of Rupert Campbell-
   Black’s stable lads.
   DIZZY Rupert Campbell-Black’s
   head groom. A glamorous
   divorcee.
   FERDINAND FITZGERALD Fat Ferdie. Lysander
   Hawkley’s best friend and
   minder. Estate agent and
   fixer who is riding the
					     					 			>   recession with a cowboy’s
   skill.
   RICKY FRANCE-LYNCH Polo captain of England.
   DAISY FRANCE-LYNCH His painter wife, a friend of
   Julia Armstrong.
   GERALDINE Guy Seymour’s London
   secretary.
   GRAYDON GLUCKSTEIN Chairman of the New World
   Philharmonic Orchestra.
   HELEN GORDON Rupert Cambell-Black’s first
   wife.
   BOB HAREFIELD Orchestra manager of the
   London Met. A saint.
   HERMIONE HAREFIELD His seriously tiresome
   wife. Rannaldini’s mistress.
   One of the world’s leading
   sopranos and an applause
   junkie.
   LITTLE COSMO HAREFIELD A four-year-old fiend.
   LYSANDER HAWKLEY A hero of our time.
   DAVID ‘HATCHET’ Lysander’s father and
   HAWKLEY an unmerry widower.
   Headmaster of Fleetley
   - a top English public
   school.
   DINAH HAWKLEY An old soak, and the
   widow of David Hawkley’s
   much older brother,
   Alastair.
   HEINZ A colourless assistant
   conductor at the London