By Elle Q. Sabine (Guest Blogger)
Dear
Readers,
I’ve
always been fascinated by how societies functioned, whether liberal
or repressive, Georgian or Victorian. For this reason, I was once an
excellent history student when writing essays but with a terrible
tendency to blank on the dates of important battles, names of
battlefields, and the identities of the generals in charge of them.
Thus, my performance on those tedious multiple choice tests was not terribly impressive.
One
of the most fascinating changes in English society between the reign
of George III and Queen Victoria was the evolution
of sexual behaviour.
In Georgian England, pornographic literature was common,
homosexuality was publicly practiced despite anti-sodomy laws, and
French letters (i.e. a non-latex condom made of sheep’s gut or
chemically-treated linen tied on with a ribbon) were sold in public
places and provided to soldiers. Fidelity was not necessarily assumed
or expected, particularly after one’s heirs were born, and it was
common practice for both wives and husbands to establish long-term
relationships outside of marriage. None of these sexually liberated
practices continued in full public view past the 1840s.
Why
the change?
Certainly
the old customs of arranged marriages (in the upper classes) were
fading away, replaced with affectionate marriages at worst and the
idealized relationship of a couple in love at best. But in the
years following the Napoleonic Wars, there was also a real desire to
improve. Families wanted better economic situations. They
wanted security, safety, and stability. Revolutions in America and
Europe had been aggravated by the excesses of Parisian nobility and
the British military, and with the end of conflict and the patriotism
that accompanied warfare, the aristocracy in Great Britain again had
cause to be worried that they themselves might be driven from power.
Setting
an example of hard work, sensible economy, and piety was eminently
practical. The landed nobility had to both conserve and work to renew
decades of declining wealth. They produced respectable families that
the rising bourgeoisie of manufacturers and merchants could support
through daughters and dowries. They established clear codes of
conduct that they themselves had to model. They worried and worked to
discourage rebellion and revolution.
In
addition to these documented economic and political concerns, I
believe the freedoms of the Georgian period impacted family life for
generations after, and developing standards were, in part, the
standard reaction of children to their parents: we are not like
our parents.
My
speculation is the basis of a series of novels about The
Misbegotten Misses, four sisters who are ultimately forced to
cope with the unintended consequences of their parents’ behavior.
The first book, The Outcast Earl, tells the story of Lady
Abigail de Rothesay, who finds herself in an unexpected engagement to
an arrogant earl, primarily thanks to her father’s inability to
manage money. The Outcast Earl is available as a VIP pre-release now (at a 10% discount!) and will have its general ebook release on December 10, with a tentative print
release date of February 2013. The second book, The Rusticated
Duchess, concerns Lady Gloria de Rothesay, and is set for release
as an e-book in April 2013. I’m writing a third book now about Lady
Fiona, and mulling over the fate of Lady Genevieve.
About
The Outcast Earl
Abigail
de Rothesay is to be married to a man known for his bad manners and
foul humour. Resigned to her fate, she is fully capable of managing a
gentleman’s home. Warwickshire will be lonely compared to London,
but she can cope. After all, her mother and father are rarely seen
together, even at meals. How much time does one have to spend with a
spouse, anyway?
Charles,
Earl of Meriden, has every intention of clinging to the side of his
pretty, young bride. Drawn to her flirtatious mannerisms and her
attractive person, he insists on Abigail’s time and attention, much
as his mother was devoted to his father. Even more, he actively looks
after Abigail, a state of affairs that has Abigail at a loss.
Even
as they fight to come to an understanding about marriage both of them
can accept, the couple will have to cope with the difficult
consequences of their loved ones’ actions, and it may very well
tear them apart.
[Reader
Advisory: This book contains scenes of male masturbation, erotic
spanking, sexually charged disciplinary spanking, steamy oral sex,
light bondage and offensive stubborn male possessiveness. There are
also references to anal play and famous French paintings containing
partially clothed women.]
Excerpt
from The Outcast Earl
“I know very well whose rooms they are,” he answered, kicking the door beside them open and shutting it firmly behind them with his heel. Without ceremony, he carried her over to the sofa in a small room that apparently served as a sitting room, and deposited her on the dark green velvet cushions before returning to the door and snibbing the lock, pointedly pocketing the key in his coat. “And in reply to your earlier comment,” he continued as fiercely as she had done, “you may not be subject to the whims of a governess, but you are damn well subject to my whims. And I will not accept blatant subversion of doctor’s orders and my directives because they do not suit you. Do you understand me?”
Abigail
met his glare unflinchingly, but she stilled. Was he reacting to some
perceived threat to her health, or was he one of those men who always
had to be in control of their surroundings? Was his fury violent, or
was he overtired from not sleeping?
“I
think,” she said, gathering every ounce of composure and
reasonableness she possessed to put into the words, “that we have
much to discuss before I would agree that I am subject to you at all,
though I will certainly acknowledge it is one possibility. For the
moment, I am still my father’s daughter and Aunt Betsy is both my
chaperone and now my responsibility. I am the reason she is here, and
if I cannot change the past and somehow prevent the accident or her
injury, I can for certain nurse her back to health.”
Meriden
shook his head, responding in kind to her calm. “No. If anyone is
at fault, it is I. I allowed you to travel in your father’s
carriage all this way, without considering that it would be in as
poor a condition as the rest of his property. I should have arranged
for you to use my own travelling coach. I hope that you will accept
my apology for not considering the means by which he might convey you
north, even for not escorting you myself. Indeed, I would hope that
you accept my apology for not caring for you as I ought. It might
seem a poor start, but I would ask for your consideration under the
circumstances. As it happens, you are not only my first wife, you are
also the first lady for whose welfare I am wholly responsible.”
Abigail
blinked, her world tilting a bit. She had, of course, known her
father could be criticised, but Winchester had never once apologised
to her or her sisters—not even for the current debacle. She was
equally convinced Winchester had never once apologised to her mother
for anything. And yet this man all the women of London called a
brooding monster did so unflinchingly, over a matter that was not
completely within his purview.
“It
was my father’s responsibility,” she said after a long moment.
“Not yours. No apology is necessary.”
“Nevertheless,
I will take better care in the future,” he murmured, still staring
at her. “Because you are mine and in my care now, regardless of the
formalities yet to be observed.”
Abigail
drew a deep breath, trying to calm her inner nerves and save herself
from whirling headfirst into a re-examination of what she had
previously known to be true. “Fiddlesticks!” she eventually
objected, frowning him down as he approached at her words.
Challenging him to an argument over this notion of ownership did seem
the best way to reinforce her earlier impression of selfish
arrogance. She allowed her eyes to briefly graze over the scar along
his jawbone as she reminded herself that they were essentially
adversaries. “You can’t seriously expect me to believe that I am
somehow chattel to be ordered about callously according to your moods
and tempers, simply because we are expected to marry? If you believe
such nonsense, I’m afraid you’ve picked the wrong female and
should perhaps reconsider this ridiculous plan before it’s too
late.”
“I
expect you are sensible enough to follow directions that are given
for your own wellbeing, as we will marry,” he countered very
carefully, sitting down as close to her as he could manage—so close
that his breath raced across her cheek. “And I have not picked the
wrong bride. To my mind, I couldn’t have found a more perfect one.”
Abigail
turned her head to scoff, but he simply leaned closer and murmured in
her ear, the warmth of his breath sliding over her neck and down her
jaw, tempting her to shiver. “In any event, there is no going
backward, even if I were not determined to have you permanently at my
side. You’re here, alone with me, in my house. Your aunt is
present, but she is insensible and cannot be thought of as a proper
chaperone in the minds of the interfering biddies who dictate your
public behaviour. Meanwhile, you are in my own private sitting room,
gowned in nothing more than a nightdress, dressing gown and house
slippers. In addition, you will likely be here for quite a while,
alone with me, as you have already proven conclusively that you did
not learn the skill of obedience during childhood.”
Suddenly
short of breath, Abigail sat very still, but when Meriden leaned in
to kiss her, she couldn’t help her instinctive response to flee.
She
leapt to her feet and backed to the fire, rubbing her hands together
uselessly in the warm room.
“What
did I just finish telling you?” Meriden barked, reaching for her
and grabbing her wrist before she could flit farther away. “If you
try to walk on that ankle again tonight, I swear I’m going to turn
you over my knee and paddle you for behaving like a silly child.”
He grabbed her by the waist and lifted her, setting her squarely on
his knees, locking one arm around her to hold her there.
“You
wouldn’t!” Abigail gasped, unable to think of anything more
profound on such short notice, and trying desperately to squelch the
traitorous part of her gut that seemed to respond more dramatically
every time he touched her. She didn’t know what she was feeling,
but now was not the time or place to work it out.
Instead,
she lifted her hand to push him away but he simply growled, “It’s
either that, or this—” Then he slid his free hand around to the
back of her head, and set his lips to hers.
Abigail
had been kissed before, of course. She was twenty-one and had spent
more than three full years in London society. While not the
Winchester sister to inspire lust from the masses, she was certainly
eligible, and had attracted her fair share of more serious, reserved
men who were not attracted to the glamorous Gloria or the voluptuous,
young Genevieve. Kissing, she had advised her younger siblings, was
an art. Some men had practiced, did it well, considered little things
like how they tasted and whether their partner could still breathe.
Other men had no skill at all, and no interest in acquiring any. They pushed, suffocated, forced and followed it up with self-important pride. It had not taken Abigail more than a few brief experiences to decide that any man in the second group could be gently eased in the direction of some more desperate girl. Abigail had no interest in a man who used kissing as a means to press more invasive intimacies on the female. Men who were patently disinterested in pleasing a partner with something as simple as a kiss could not be expected to do so in any more important pursuit, and were therefore not worth considering.
Other men had no skill at all, and no interest in acquiring any. They pushed, suffocated, forced and followed it up with self-important pride. It had not taken Abigail more than a few brief experiences to decide that any man in the second group could be gently eased in the direction of some more desperate girl. Abigail had no interest in a man who used kissing as a means to press more invasive intimacies on the female. Men who were patently disinterested in pleasing a partner with something as simple as a kiss could not be expected to do so in any more important pursuit, and were therefore not worth considering.
Abigail
was fairly certain Gloria had deliberately ignored Abigail’s
opinion on the subject.
With
such a preconceived opinion, Abigail tensed as Meriden touched his
mouth to hers. Should he turn out so early on to be an insensitive
clod, Abigail knew she would have difficulty with following through
on the engagement, no matter the consequences. She’d have preferred
to ease into such intimacy after she had learnt whether to guard
against him or not. Nevertheless, she stilled and tried to take in
the sensation of his lips rubbing over hers.
He
was not gentle, precisely, but neither did he plunder selfishly. No,
his mouth worshipped her lower lip, then the upper one, learning the
shape and size of her mouth before he eased his tongue just inside
her lower lip to taste her.
Meriden
was definitely not one of the untrained, inconsiderate brutes. She
closed her eyes, softened against the arm that surrounded her waist
and leaned closer, her lips tingling in a rush of sensation where his
tongue stroked hers.
He
caught her fingers with his free hand, where she had pushed futilely
against his chest. Trapping her hand in place, he murmured, their
lips still touching, “I would, you know.”
Abigail
breathed a soft sigh. “Would what?” she asked, a bit wobbly from
the unexpected rush of warmth that had ripped up her spine with the
kiss. She’d forgotten what he had said.
“I
would spank you. Paddle you, if I had to,” Meriden repeated in a
husky whisper against her mouth. He ran his hand up from her waist to
tangle it in the hair at the back of her head, and instead of the
indignant reaction Abigail felt was required, she leaned in closer,
shivering when Meriden used his lips to examine the corners of her
mouth in an exquisite intimacy.
More
of Elle and The Outcast Earl?
I
can be found on Twitter as @elleqsabine or reached by e-mail at
elleqsabine[at]gmail[dot]com. I occasionally write in a blog at
http://elleqsabine.wordpress.com.
Visit to find more information about my writing, free serial fiction,
and (soon!) background material from The
Misbegotten Misses.
Readers
can purchase
now The Outcast Earl from Total-e-bound
directly, or visit their favorite online retailer for the e-book
version of this book after December 10.
Meanwhile - I'm giving away an ebook version of the novel to one lucky person who comments on this post! Please include your email address so that I can find you.
Meanwhile - I'm giving away an ebook version of the novel to one lucky person who comments on this post! Please include your email address so that I can find you.
Thank
you!
Elle
10 comments:
Greetings, Elle!
Welcome to Beyond Romance, and thanks for the fantastic post. Abigail is a fabulous character.
I wish you great sales with all the Misbegotten Misses.
Lovely cover! This is an interesting subject, it is true we are not our parents, but look back in history and see that the excesses that were a problem then are a problem now. Are we doomed to repeat history over and over? The book sounds great, happy sales! Debbie
I always think there is nothing new in the world, just how we view it. The excerpt was great, good luck with the series, sounds a winner!
Suze
Littlesuze at hotmail dot com
I love finding new authors and books. I just started reading historical romances. The book sounds really good. Cant wait to read it.
lauratroxel@yahoo.com
A very interesting post, how society has changed through the years. Always enjoy finding new authors to me, enjoyed the excerpt, sounds like a wonderful book.
skpetal at hotmail dot com
We are definately not our parents. Mine were very strict on how we kids acted during our growing up days. Now kids seem to fend for themselves. I think if we could be a little more like our parents there would not be as much crime in the world.
slpetera@yahoo.com
Thanks for sharing with us today Elle! I enjoy adding new authors to my list to read! Sounds like a very interesting book & series.
greenshamrock AT cox DOT net
Lisabet,
Thank you so much for having me today! I really appreciate your encouragement and advice.
Elle (LOL, no, I'm not in the running for a free copy)
Great excerpt...this sounds like a wonderful book! Love the snippet about how our views change in each generation---this is one of the things I love about reading historicals because it's how life went on with as many restrictions and rules that they had.
thanks for sharing...putting this on my must read and going to check it out!
ivegotmail8889(at)yahoo(dot)com
All,
Congratulations to Laura Troxel, who won the free copy of The Outcast Earl. The ebook version is now available on the Total-e-bound website. Thanks to everyone who commented. (Laura, check your e-mail.)
Elle
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