QUESTIONS
1) What am I working on?
After the release this month of TAMING A GENTLEMAN SPY Book two of the Mayfair Spies Series, I am writing the third: WHAT A RAKE WANTS (Cover reveal coming soon!)The first book in the series was A BARON HER HER BED.
More about WHAT A RAKE WANTS:
The rakish Irish diplomat, Flynn, Lord Montsimon, is private investigator to the soon to be crowned, King, George IV. Alerted to a possible plot brewing against the Crown, Flynn must act. Unfortunately, his plans go awry when Althea, Lady Brookwood, the lady he planned to seduce, unwittingly becomes embroiled with the plotters.
Widowed when her brutal husband is killed in a duel, Althea is determined never to marry again. But circumstances arise which may force her to do so. Montsimon is among the men who have pursued her for an affair. She has refused them all and several offers of marriage. She dislikes most men and rakes, well they deserve all they get! If marriage is the last resort she has, Althea will entertain at her husband's side and warm his bed, but he will never have her love.
Here's an unedited taste:
Althea Brookwood sat with her Aunt Catherine while the
musicians enjoyed a break. Mrs. Maxwell’s ball, always a favorite, was in full
swing.
“It has been two years since Brookwood died.”
“Yes, Aunt.”
Aunt Catherine’s conversation had changed little from the
last time she saw her. Her aunt compressed her lips. “You should marry again.”
Her answer remained the same also. “I have no wish to.”
Aunt Catherine eyed her through her lorgnette. “I know
Brookwood was a devil. I heard the rumors. I thought it was good riddance when
he died in that duel.”
Althea shivered. Aunt Catherine didn’t know the half of
it. Brookwood’s obvious dissatisfaction with her had been a torment from the
very beginning. Now she was free, and determined to stay that way. No man would
ever hold sway over her again, bending her to his will. She smiled at her aunt.
“I know you care about me, Aunt, and I’m very grateful.”
“Did Brookwood leave you well provided for?”
“My income allows me to live comfortably.” If she was
careful. She had learned thrift living with a parsimonious husband.
The elderly lady touched the brilliants at her throat.
“You know the bulk of my estates were entailed, but you will inherit the rest.
I’d like to know to whom I’m leaving my money, before I die. Not another bounder
like Brookwood.”
Althea leaned across and kissed her aunt’s soft cheek.
“Have no fear. I shan’t make that mistake. I had no say in my marriage to
Brookwood. Father arranged it.” The possibility of being at the mercy of
another like him made her stomach flip over.
“Lord Ingleby has
recently been widowed. He’s shown a considerable interest in you and he’s plump
in the pocket.” Undaunted, her aunt continued, “Won’t be after my money.”
Another man with more than a touch of violence about him.
It was in his eyes and the tight way he held himself. Althea recognized the
signs and suppressed a shiver. “I don’t find him attractive.”
“Attractive? That’s of little importance. We are talking
about a husband, not a lover.”
Her aunt’s husband had died some years ago. A generous,
quiet man, a good deal older than Catherine. She studied her aunt, whom she was
said to favor. Catherine was still arresting in a Gros de Naples gown of deep violet, the color of her eyes, which
had not dimmed. Might she have taken a lover at some point? Althea dismissed the
idea immediately. There had never been a whiff of scandal attached to her.
“You can’t say that Irishman, Montsimon, isn’t
attractive,” Aunt Catherine said with a nod of her head.
Althea turned to see his lordship’s sleek head above the
crowd. He was part of the Regent’s fast set. “Yes, he is, and a rake.”
“Some woman will tame him. Rakes make the best husbands
once they settle down.”
“If they settle
down.” She didn’t tell her aunt that Montsimon had attempted to woo her into
his bed. Since she had been widowed, many men pursued her. Widows were seen as
fair game. Men assumed she was dying of frustration! She supposed she was an
oddity. Younger widows often remarried after a year of mourning. Others found
suitable arrangements outside marriage. She curled her fingers tightly into her
palm. After her marriage ended as brutally as it began, she had wished for
neither.
Her aunt’s bright violet eyes fastened on hers. “See the
way Montsimon looks at you. If you play your cards right, you’ll be the one to
tame him, my dear. Well worth the effort, I’ll wager.”
“How do you suggest I do that?” she asked, surprised and
curious despite herself.
“You take him into your bed. Eventually. But first, you
play him like a salmon on a hook. You never promise what you won’t deliver,
mind. That would not be sporting.” Her aunt fluttered her fan as if the thought
made her too warm. “At first let him get to know you. Let him begin to want
more from you than merely someone to warm his bed. When he can’t live without
you, then….”
Althea gasped. Perhaps she’d misjudged her relative.
“Aunt…”
Her aunt laughed. “You’re surprised?”
“I knew you to be wise and somewhat shrewd, but I never
suspected you capable of such….” She fell silent.
Snapping her fan shut, her aunt nodded with a wink. “I’m
as crafty as a fox, my dear. And you are my niece, just as intelligent and
smart yourself.” She gazed over Althea’s shoulder. “The prey advances. No doubt
to ask you to dance. I would advise you not to shun him.”
2 comments:
It's interesting that the evolution of your writing has meant that as a "pantser" you do need to develop a discipline around some basic plotting (and I'm finding this too. As you say too many dead ends!
Writing mysteries and spy plots definitely, Alison. A straight romance might lend itself better to panstering.
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