The Noble Savage
The Noble Savage is about a Conde who uses the society companion of a cruel title chaser on the French Riviera in his own scheme. Isobel is trapped in a dead end job as traveling companion and dogsbody to an obnoxious wealthy woman. The Conde cuts the woman dead, only to find she imagines an attraction. The Conde Estigardias de Reyes notices Isobel, whose lips twitch at the embarassing reprimand. He hatches a plan.
On some time off, Isobel reflect her meagre options. She has no resources and no savings, and relishes the stolen days of foreign travel and the perks. Orphaned and alone, Isobel is beautiful with blue eyes and white blonde hair, but is frozen from the death of father. The Conde pounces. When Isobel won't go out with him, he promises revenge. To stave off trouble she relents and they dine out.
Isobel waits for the punch line and it arrives. The Conde wants a wife, one who will pose as the mother of a infant child of his family. His brother has died and left the child, and his ailing noble grandmother will never accept the child's heritage or illegitimacy. The Conde plans to palm the child off as his own. But he needs a "wife" to pull it off. Isobel is entertained but turns him down.
The Conde returns Isobel to the hotel in a thoughtful mood. The angered Conde then dangles Isobel's scarf in front of her employer, in front of social company. The implication that Isobel enjoys the Conde's visits while the employer is rejected drives the woman into a frenzy of anger. She stages a jewel robbery and turns Isobel out into the street.
Dozing off on a bench at sundown, the Conde finds Isobel. He wryly takes her to see the baby, noting she has no choice now but to accompany him. The Conde wants Isobel's pure appearance to work its magic and turn the stolid grandmother's heart into accepting the child as the Conde's heir. Isobel marries him in a ceremony and they drive to the hacienda estate.
Isobel is unnerved at the sharp woman who greets them and looks analytically at the child. The family retainers acknowledge the baby as a Reyes and all is well. But the Conde now wants the benefits of marriage and begins toying with Isobel about bedroom issues. The castle is crawling with eyes and ears and Isobel is forced to play mouse to the Conde's mocking cat.
Isobel begins to sees the parallells to her former life. The Conde grows angry as she does not appreciate her position, ironically that is what she appreciates most of all. But events and interactions in the hacienda reveal the Conde is really just a human being wearing a title after all, he's fallen for Isobel hard and is not sure whether to assert his rights or romance her, afraid both methods will fail.
A final encounter comes when Isobel wanders off into the swamp and gets lost in a mess of glass and mud. The Conde rides in on a charger and rescues her, revealing his feelings for her and allowing her to discover her own emotions without cash or tiaras lying on the table. When the currency between them changes, both the Conde and Isobel climb toward happiness.