Stephanie
Laurens
The
Tempting of Thomas Carrick (A Cynster Novel)
Release
Date: February 24th,
2015
Blurb:
Thomas
Carrick is determined to make his own life in the bustling port city
of Glasgow, far from the demands of the Carrick clan, eventually with
an appropriate wife on his arm. But disturbing events on his family's
estate force Thomas to return to the Scottish countryside—where he
is forced to ask for help from the last woman he wants to face.
Thomas has never forgotten Lucilla Cynster and the connection that
seethes between them, but to marry Lucilla would mean embracing a
life he's adamant is not for him.
Strong-willed
and passionate, Lucilla knows Thomas is hers—her fated lover,
husband, protector, mate. He is the only man for her, just as she is
his one true love. How can he ignore a bond stronger than reason and
choose a different path? She's determined to fight for their future,
and while she cannot command him, she has enticements of her own to
wield when it comes to tempting Thomas Carrick.
What was the hardest thing about writing THE TEMPTING
OF THOMAS CARRICK?
That would be the usual “hardest
thing” in any book—getting the characters fully developed, getting how
they evolve through the story clear and getting the tone of the story itself—the balance between the romance and the mystery/adventure—correct. In this particular book, I had to keep the characters very clear
in my head throughout, as they are both very set in their ways, and that in
large part is the crux of the conflict. In addition, as this book is the first
in the next generation Cynster stories, I had to position it correctly—authentically—for the early Victorian period, and also layer in the
connections not only for the next novel in the series, A MATCH FOR MARCUS
CYNSTER (available June 2015), but also the future Cynster stories to come.
That’s a lot to balance out on top of the main storyline.
About
the Cynster Series
Devil’s Bride (Cynster #1)
When Devil, the most infamous member of the Cynster family, is caught in a compromising position with plucky governess Honoria Wetherby, he astonishes the entire town by offering his hand in marriage. No one dreamed this scandalous rake would ever take a bride. And as society mamas swooned at the loss of England′s most eligible bachelor, Devil′s infamous Cynster cousins began to place wagers on the wedding date.
But
Honoria wasn′t about to bend society′s demands and marry a man
"just" because they′d been found together virtually
unchaperoned. No, she craved adventure, and while solving the murder
of a young Cynster cousin fit the bill for a while, she decided that
once the crime was solved she′d go off to see the world. But the
scalding heat of her unsated desire for Devil soon had Honoria
craving a very different sort of excitement. Could her passion for
Devil cause her to embrace the enchanting peril of a lifelong
adventure of the heart?
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About
Author#1
New York Times bestselling author Stephanie Laurens began writing
romances as an escape from the dry world of professional science. Her
hobby quickly became a career when her first novel was accepted for
publication, and with entirely becoming alacrity, she gave up writing
about facts in favor of writing fiction.
Laurens's
novels are set in the time period of the British Regency, and her
settings range from Scotland to India. Laurens has published fifty
works of historical romance, including 29 New York Times bestsellers.
All her works are continuously available in print and digital formats
in English worldwide, and have been translated into many other
languages. An international bestseller, among other Stephanie's email
contactsaccolades Laurens has received the Romance Writers of America
prestigious RITA Award for Best Romance Novella 2008, for The Fall of
Rogue Gerrard.
Her
continuing novels featuring the Cynster family are widely regarded as
classics of the genre. Other series include the Bastion Club Novels
and the Black Cobra Quartet. For information on upcoming releases and
updates on novels yet to come, visit Stephanie's website.
EXCERPT:
Somewhat
to his surprise, she made no demur at his taking control; instead,
she walked beside him, courtesy of the narrowness of the corridor
rather close, her velvet riding skirt brushing the material of his
trousers. Once he was sure she was, indeed, consenting to leave the
scene, he eased his grip, then released her altogether.
He
would have increased the distance between them, but there was no
space.
Lucilla
found herself dealing with a rather odd fracturing of her awareness.
On one level, she was increasingly exercised over the matter of the
Burns sisters’ deaths, and very conscious of the tug of duty on
that score, yet simultaneously her sensual awareness was reveling in
Thomas’s nearness. In his touch, however brief.
The
toe of her riding boot hit something, and she stumbled. “Oh!” She
pitched forward—
Thomas
caught her and hauled her upright. Hauled her to him.
She
ended in his arms. Locked against him, her palms flat against his
chest.
The
first thing she registered was the heat of him, the warmth that
seeped through the layers of fabric and sank into her.
Into
her flesh, feeding her senses.
They
came alive on a giddy rush of anticipation.
She
raised her gaze to his eyes. In the same instant registered the
sudden tension that had gripped him, that had turned taut, resilient
muscle into granite and steel. The arms that held her so securely
felt less malleable than iron.
But
it was his eyes that most gave him away; the gold-flecked amber
burned.
She
didn’t stop to think. To question.
To
give him time to snap his shields back into place.
The
Lady might help and create the chance, but it was up to her to seize
it.
Stretching
up on her toes, she barely paused to whisper “Thank you” before
she pressed her lips to his.
For
one instant, her confidence wavered. What if he didn’t respond?
Then
she sensed it—a sharp hitch in his breathing, a leaping,
uncontrollable, barely reined impulse to seize.
She’d
felt that reaction in herself—she recognized it in him.
All
doubt evaporated. All caution fell.
She
pressed her kiss on him, sure, certain.
Stepping
boldly into him, she slid her hands up his chest and over his
shoulders, savoring the heat and the strength beneath her palms, then
she reached further, to his nape, and slid her fingers into the
thick, heavy locks of his hair.
The
feathery touch caught her, steadied her.
All
her senses alive, she turned her mind from conquest to persuasion.
Drawing
one hand from the silk of his hair, she placed her palm against one
lean cheek and gave herself over to the communion of the kiss.
Thomas
was lost, his anchor gone, swept away by a tide of ferocious
yearning. His, but equally hers. Her longing had poured into him,
inciting a response he had no hope of reining back. Of taming. Of
restraining.
He
wanted her; he always had.
But
the part of him that wanted her—still, regardless—was the part of
him he normally kept leashed, controlled. Hidden.
It
hadn’t been her kiss, the sharp and shocking pressure of her lips
against his, that had shattered the chains, that had broken the lock
and flung wide the doors of his inner prison.
It
hadn’t been the searing heat of her touch as she’d slid her hands
up his chest and over his shoulders, an evocative, provocative
come-hither act that yet had felt curiously innocent.
Even
her fingers tangling in his hair—he was more than experienced
enough to set all such temptations aside.
But
the feel of her palm, her fingers, lightly riding against his cheek…
It
was as if by that touch she’d tamed him. Slayed all resistance and
claimed the man he truly was.
He’d
always known she was dangerous. That she and she alone could rule
him.
He
hadn’t wanted that. He still didn’t want that. Yet…
Her
lips tasted of a heady blend of rose and nectar. He couldn’t resist
the temptation to sip.
Just
a little. A bit.
THE TEMPTING OF THOMAS CARRICK INTERVIEW:
Thomas
and Lucilla are both especially strong and stubborn characters, as so
many of your heroes and heroines are. Is there a particular reason
for this a) in general, and b) in this particular case?
In
the general sense, I’ve always used strong characters because the
scale and intensity of emotional clashes between such characters is
more powerful, has the potential to be more wide-ranging, and is also
likely to strike brighter sparks. A strong character doesn’t give
way when someone opposes them or gets in the way of their will and
drive—they immediately push back, and that refusal to back away is
one of the key elements that leads such a pair of characters deeper
and deeper into Cupid’s snare as they are forced to adjust and
adapt to each other--a critical element of establishing an emotional
partnership.
There’s
a general assumption that strong and confident characters will have
an easier time dealing with love, however, in reality I think it’s
the opposite, and such characters find the existence of an emotion
strong enough to make them change difficult to accept.
Which
brings me rather neatly to Thomas and Lucilla. He is the ultimate
strong character with a very powerful, emotional, and deeply personal
reason to shut himself off from love. Against that, Lucilla, an
equally strong character, is unswervingly convinced that they are
fated to love and marry—but she, too, has a few lessons to learn in
what love—even a fated love—will demand.
In
short, my motivation for using strong characters can be summed up as:
the stronger they are, the more they resist and, ultimately, the
harder they fall.
Readers
first met Thomas Carrick in the Cynster holiday special By Winter’s
Light. Did his earlier meeting with Lucilla described in that book
affect the pair’s actions in this book?
That
earlier meeting in By Winter’s Light sets the stage for Thomas and
Lucilla’s romance. Both of them leave that first encounter with the
knowledge that the other could be their future spouse. Lucilla is
ready to accept that Thomas is her fated future husband, lover, and
consort, but Thomas, having experienced a complementary visceral
connection to Lucilla, concludes that, as he wishes to avoid love,
then she is someone he would be wise to avoid.
So
from the instant they part after that first encounter, they are set
on opposing tracks—Lucilla expecting and waiting for Thomas to
return to her side and claim her hand, and Thomas doing his level
best to stay far away.
It’s
a standoff, until the actions at the start of The Tempting of Thomas
Carrick force—literally force—them together again.
Deerhounds
feature in By Winter’s Light and also in The Tempting of Thomas
Carrick. Why deerhounds?
I
needed a large dog to accompany Thomas through the snowstorm in By
Winter’s Light, a dog big enough to physically assist, and also the
sort of dog that might have been in such a community—a gentry
family in the Scottish uplands of the period. So I went searching for
breeds of dogs, and stumbled upon Scottish deerhounds. The more I
read about them, the more perfect they seemed, and so Hesta padded
onto my stage, and from there, the addition of Artemis and Apollo was
an obvious extrapolation.
The
dogs are fascinating—a shaggy, curly-coated, quite large breed
built for speed and with superb eyesight. They are sight-hounds, and
also track on the ground by scent, and as their name suggests, were
specifically bred to hunt deer in the rugged terrain.
However,
the real impact of the deerhounds, story-wise, doesn’t occur until
the next book, A Match for Marcus Cynster, in which the packs we
learn about through The Tempting of Thomas Carrick, come into their
own and play an active role in Marcus and his lady’s adventures.
Both
By Winter’s Light and The Tempting of Thomas Carrick are set in
Scotland, in the south western uplands. Were there any particular
challenges in using such a setting?
By
Winter’s Light and The Tempting of Thomas Carrick are both centered
on the Vale of Casphairn, which was a setting first introduced in
Scandal’s Bride, the story of Richard and Catriona, Lucilla and
Marcus’s parents (more on that below). Thus the settings for the
recent books were not a matter of choice, but rather mandated, a
necessary return to a previous place.
Such
a wild country setting is very useful on the one hand, and a drawback
on the other. The rugged beauty and landscape is a plus, while the
isolation and the distance from any larger town or place of social
congregation severely limits the opportunities for social events,
even country house dinners. Consequently, the action in the story
remains at all times strongly focused on the interaction between the
two principal characters, with little to no distraction from external
events. That puts a heavier burden on the romance plot than would be
the case in a more urban setting, but that does mean the romance
dominates and is always front and center. So there’s positives and
negatives in using such a setting, but, overall, such settings
definitely have their place when writing romances.
In
this book, you also take readers to Glasgow—you paint quite a
cosmopolitan picture of the town. How true to life is that depiction?
I
admit that my first mental vision of Glasgow was as a heavily
industrialized town, centered on shipping on the Clyde. While the
importance of shipping on the Clyde was correct, in the mid-1800s,
Glasgow was a thriving merchant center with distinct aspirations
toward the sophistication, polish, and civilized amenity we might
associate with a seaport like Boston. In this period, Glasgow was a
major merchant hub, and it was therefore highly prosperous, and the
resulting wealth found expression in the houses and squares, the
well-appointed offices and genteel clubs and in the evolving social
scene.
Readers
are familiar with Casphairn Manor, and the Vale of Casphairn, but the
nearby village is Carsphairn. Was there a reason for the difference?
This
is one of those tales of things that “would not happen now.” I
wrote the first novel featuring the Vale of Casphairn and Casphairn
Manor back in the days before Google Maps. Or any sort of satellite
imagery, or even ready access to detailed maps via the internet. At
the time, I had several detailed maps of England, but as the village
of Carsphairn is a very small settlement, it was shown in small—not
to say tiny and non-expandable—font. So I read the name as
Casphairn, not the correct Carsphairn.
Years
later, when I was writing Viscount Breckenridge to the Rescue, where
the characters spend time in the Vale and at the manor, I was using
Google Maps to study the areas to the east of where I had positioned
the Vale, and when I zoomed in…I saw that the village name was
really Carsphairn! Horrors! Luckily, I don’t think I’ve ever
actually said the village itself was called Casphairn, only the Vale
and the manor, but it was too late to change those—they’d already
been written into history. So the Vale and the manor, both of which
are fictitious, remain as Casphairn, while the village is correctly
named Carsphairn.
Out
of curiosity, I did go back to the original map. To the naked eye, it
still looks like Casphairn—only with the help of a strong
magnifying glass can you see that extra r.
Lucilla’s
position as healer to the Vale community, and, indeed, all people
under The Lady’s protection, features strongly in this book. How
common were such healers?
Despite
the rise of more formal medicine and the doctors who practiced it,
traditional folk healers—those we might now term homeopathic
healers or herbalists—were not uncommon into the late 1800s in
England. In country areas, they would almost always be the first
consulted, even by those living in the larger, wealthier houses. The
history of herbal remedies is very deep and broad throughout the
British Isles, and the more isolated the community, the greater the
distance from a major town, the more likely that the people would
turn first to the local “healer.” Midwifery and the treatment of
common ailments remained largely the province of such healers even
into the 1900s.
That
said, as mentioned in this book and the next, in this period, when it
came to interacting with the apparatus of law and order, for instance
in formally reporting a death, the “doctor”—meaning a man
formally trained in the western medical tradition—would be the one
sent for.
This
book is the first of the Cynster Next Generation Novels, and will be
followed by Lucilla’s twin brother, Marcus’s story in June. Are
there more Cynster Next Generation Novels to come?
Yes,
indeed! As By Winter’s Light was in essence a pivotal volume,
shifting focus from the original Bar Cynster generation to the lives
of their near-adult children, and within the tale of By Winter’s
Light were the seeds of Lucilla’s romance, then her book had to
come first, in The Tempting of Thomas Carrick. And within Lucilla’s
story lie the seeds of Marcus’s story, and as he is her twin, his
book, A Match for Marcus Cynster, had to come next. It will be
released on May 26, 2015.
But
at the end of The Tempting of Thomas Carrick, and even more
definitely at the end of A Match for Marcus Cynster, we catch up with
the other Cynsters now facing up to the challenge of marriage and
finding a suitable spouse. We see and appreciate that all is not
going to be smooth sailing for such very robust individuals, neither
the males nor the females. There are at least 6 more Cynster Next
Generation novels to come—the romances of Devil’s three children,
Sebastian, Michael, and Louisa, and those of the remaining “older
group”—Prudence, Christopher, and Antonia Rawlings. After
that…well, I’m sure that by the time I finish Louisa’s tale,
we’ll know a lot more about Annabelle, Juliet, and Therese. And I
already know what Calvin and Carter get up to, which should prove a
lot of fun. Lots more to enjoy!




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