BOOK INFORMATION
TITLE – A
Desperate Wager
AUTHOR – Em Taylor
GENRE – Historical Regency Romance
PUBLICATION DATE – 25 August 2014
LENGTH – 71,000 words
COVER ARTIST – Samantha Holt
BOOK BLURB / SYNOPSIS
Nathaniel
Spencer, the Fourteenth Duke of Kirkbourne wakes up with an almighty hangover
and a wager note in his pocket stating he has agreed to marry the Earl of
Brackingham’s daughter. And he can’t even remember ever meeting the chit.
Clearly his drinking has got out of hand.
Lady Sarah
Steele is horrified when her father announces that the Duke of Kirkbourne has
agreed to marry her and even more horrified that her father wagered her hand in
a game of cards. Not only that, but the earl has not told the duke of the
riding accident that left Sarah paralysed when she was sixteen. But he’s dying
and she knows he wants to see her settled before the inevitable
happens.
Despite
Nate’s drinking and Sarah’s possible complicity in the earl’s plan, they agree
to marry. But when accidents start to happen, the newly-weds must deal not only
with the fact they are practically strangers, but they must find out who is
trying to kill one or both of them. Nate’s drink problem and Sarah’s disability
are only a couple of the hurdles they must face to find lasting love.
BUY & TBR LINKS
EXCERPT
Nathaniel
Spencer, fourteenth Duke of Kirkbourne groaned and rolled over in bed. A tattoo
beat a steady rhythm inside his skull, his stomach was bilious and the world
spun at an alarming rate.
Last night he had been in his cups—again. He knew he should
take a more moderate attitude to alcohol but recently, staying sober had seemed
somewhat pointless. Why stay sober if you were just going to end up dead at the
side of the road—another silly young buck who had killed himself in a curricle
race?
Damn Crosby! Why had he made the damned challenge?
Nathaniel, or Nate as he preferred to be called, would never forget Crosby’s
lifeless eyes staring up at him, or the crack of the pistol as a bystander put
his horses out of their misery. And he would never forgive himself for being
the man whom Crosby was racing.
Nate closed his eyes and willed his stomach to stop churning
as he tried to recall the events of the night before. He had been at White’s
for dinner and had moved to the card room. The brandy had been flowing, and
Ormsby had suggested moving on to a less reputable gaming hell. He remembered
the Earl of Brackingham tagging along for some reason that defied Nate.
He had no issue with Brackingham, but the earl was at least
twenty years the senior of everyone else in their party. He had been coughing
somewhat alarmingly, Nate recalled. He hoped the old man was not spreading
disease around. The last thing Nate needed was to be laid up in bed—his mother
fussing around him and pouring vile-tasting concoctions down his throat. There
was another thing that took many young, seemingly healthy lives—fever.
Curricles and fever—good reasons to get absolutely foxed if ever he needed any.
Brackingham! The name seemed to be prodding his tired and
very painful brain—waiting for him to remember something significant from last
night. He had a vague memory of playing vingt et un with him. There had been a
ludicrous bet. Brackingham wagered his daughter’s hand and if Nate lost, he
would have to marry the girl.
Nate had been on a winning streak. Bravado and alcohol made
him foolish. He had a three and a queen. He sat up as the king of diamonds
flashed before his eyes.
God, damn it.
The king of diamonds took him to twenty-three. His head swum
and he tamped down the urge to cast up his accounts. Twenty-three. But surely a
wager like that was a joke. It had to be. Brackingham did not expect him to
marry his chit of a daughter, did he? Had he even set eyes on the girl before?
Again, some piece of information about the girl needled his
brain. He had no recollection of dancing with her at balls. But then he hardly
ever danced at balls. He had no plans to seek a leg-shackle on the marriage
mart, so he steered clear and spent most of the evening in the card room.
God, he hoped she was at least old enough to have had her
come out and this was not some medieval plan to marry a thirteen-year-old off
to him. Eighteen was quite young enough—too young in his rather jaded opinion.
But no. He had no recollection of ever having set eyes on
Lady… Lady what? He had no idea.
He fished in the pocket of his waistcoat, which he still
wore, having obviously been so foxed when he had returned that he had either
shooed his valet away or he had arrived so late the valet had been asleep.
There was a note. A wager. He hoped he owed the man a vast fortune instead.
Marry Lady Sarah Steele. Dowry - £10,000. Meet Brackingham
on 5th day of March to make arrangements.
Today must be the fifth of March. Yesterday had definitely
been the fourth. Christ, he had to see if this was a big joke or, if not, was
there any way he could inveigle his way out of it. He had no plans to marry.
None at all. And that was that.
AUTHOR BIO
Em was born
and brought up in the Central Belt of Scotland and still lives there. She was
told as a child she had an over active imagination--as if that is a bad thing.
She's traded her dreams of owning her own island, just like George in the
Famous Five to hoping to meet her own Mr Darcy one day. But her imagination
remains the same.
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