Spring Flowers Excerpt: Lady Elinor’s Escape #SpringflingRomance

Spring Fling RomanceIt’s spring, season of flowers and showers (except in California) so I’m sharing an excerpt from my sweet Regency romance.

Lady Elinor's Escape coverLady Elinor’s Escape
By Linda McLaughlin
Sweet Regency Romance

Short blurb: When a runaway heiress masquerades as a seamstress, she complicates the life of a tortured barrister who specializes in rescuing females in distress. Can he save her from a disaster of her own making or will the past repeat itself?

In this excerpt, Stephen shows up at the dress shop on a rainy spring day with a basket of flowers.

He handed her the basket of flowers, then shrugged out of his coat and handed it and his hat to Peggy O’Shea. She gave him a flirtatious smile in return before hanging the wet items on a nearby rack.

Elinor stepped forward. “Flowers, Mr. Chaplin?”

He turned toward her. “Ah, Mrs. Brown. Yes, I thought these spring blossoms just the thing to brighten Madame Latour’s shop on such a dismal day.”

“How very kind you are,” said Ellie. “But an entire basketful?”

He smiled. “The young girl selling them was in despair over the lack of customers. She appeared to be almost drowned and nearly in tears, so I bought all she had, including the basket.”

“And paid far more than they were worth, I am certain,” Elinor murmured.

“Did you say something, Mrs. Brown?” he asked with a raised brow.

“Nothing of importance.”

He rummaged through the basket and produced a nosegay of bluebells, which he presented to Dolly. “These are for you, to match your eyes.”

Her blue eyes grew wide with wonder as she accepted the nosegay. “Oh, sir, no one ever give me flowers afore.”

“Well, I am certain this will not be the last time,” he said gallantly. Ignoring Dolly’s worshipful look, he returned to the basket for another nosegay, white violets this time, which he gave to Peggy.

She bobbed him a curtsy. “Oh, thank ye, yer lordship.”

He gave her a warm smile. “You are very welcome, Miss O’Shea. But I am not a lord, merely a mister.”

“No matter. ’Tis a fine gentleman ye are, to be thinking of us working girls.”

“Girls, why do you not go on home?” Mimi asked. “You have all worked so very hard today, and there will be no more customers, n’est-ce-pas?”

With glad smiles for Mimi, and more thanks and curtsies for Stephen Chaplin, the girls donned their cloaks and left the shop.

“I will get a vase for these lovely flowers,” Mimi said. “Please come into the parlor, Monsieur Chaplin, and warm yourself by the fire. I have made the coffee and there is water for tea.”

“Thank you,” Stephen Chaplin said. He delved into the basket one last time before handing it to Mimi. As she left the room, he handed Elinor a bunch of purple violets.

Elinor held them to her nose and breathed in the sweet, delicate fragrance. “‘A violet in the youth of primary nature, forward, not permanent, sweet, not lasting,’” she quoted.

“‘The perfume and suppliance of a minute; no more,’” he added softly.

Startled, she gazed into his warm honey-brown eyes and her pulse began to race. She would have to guard her heart around this man? Why did he have to have such an effect on her? Was it simply because he was the only eligible gentleman she had ever known?

No, a gentleman who brought flowers to poor shop girls and quoted Shakespeare was surely out of the ordinary. What a catch he would be for some young lady. But of course, not for her.

Lady Elinor’s Escape is available at Amazon: http://amzn.com/B00CHSNEII

Apple: https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/lady-elinors-escape/id645217449
BN/Nook: http://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/lady-elinors-escape-linda-mclaughlin/1100559263
Kobo: http://store.kobobooks.com/en-US/ebook/lady-elinor-s-escape
Smashwords: https://www.smashwords.com/books/view/312406

What’s your spring flower?

Book Review Club: Romancing the Duke by Tessa Dare

Romancing the Duke coverRomancing the Duke
(Castles Ever After)
by Tessa Dare
Regency Romance

(Disclaimer: Tessa Dare is a personal friend from my local writers group, however I bought the book and read it of my own volition.)

Tessa’s book has two of the most unique characters and plot I’ve read in a while, and it’s a variant of the Beauty and the Beast theme. The twist is that the heroine is not actually a beauty, but the “beast” is nearly blind and just assumes she’s a beauty. (He can see a mass of dark hair and a shapely body and that’s enough for him.)

Miss Isolde Ophelia Goodnight is an impoverished spinster of 26 whose father was a well-known author of a series of romantic stories set in the fictional world of Moranglia. Her fortunes appear to change when her godfather wills her a castle of her very own. She travels there with high hopes only to find the castle a ruin inhabited by a bad-tempered man who tells her he is the Duke of Rothbury and the castle belongs to him.

Ransom, the duke, is an embittered man who was left scarred and blind after a duel with the man who stole his fiancee. He has hidden himself in the decrepit Gostley Castle* with just his valet for company, not counting the pesky vicar’s daughter who insists on bringing him baskets of treats. The last thing he wants is a young woman in his castle unless she’s there to warm his bed. He also knows that he hasn’t sold the castle so it can’t possibly be hers.

Kenilworth Castle

Kenilworth Castle via Bigstock license Copyright: siavramova

* In one of my favorite lines, a secondary character asks if the name of the castle is pronounced Ghostly or Ghastly, as either one applies.

The duke hasn’t read any of the correspondence piled on a table, and Izzy agrees to be his private secretary and sort through the mail to find out what has happened. As she goes through it, both realize his solicitors, and possibly his heir, have been stealing from him.

The two have a prickly relationship, filled with equal parts squabbling and sexual tension. Ransom persists in mispronouncing Moranglia and making fun of Izzy’s belief in romance and true love. But she’s the one who stands by him when his solicitors turn up with a doctor, determined to declare him incompetent so his heir can seize his title and estate.

The book is both touching and humorous, and I heartily recommend it.

As always, click on the graphic below for more great reviews from the Barrie Summy Book Review Club.

Linda

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@Barrie Summy