I am thrilled to be hosting a spot
on the BEGUILING THE DUKE by Darcy Burke Blog Tour hosted by Rockstar Book Tours. Check out
my post and make sure to enter the giveaway!
About The Book:
Author: Darcy Burke
Pub. Date: March 7, 2023
Publisher: Zealous Quill Press
Formats: Paperback, eBook
Pages: 195
Find it: Goodreads, https://books2read.com/BEGUILING-THE-DUKE
On the way to meet his future wife,
the Duke of Lawford’s coach loses a wheel. Repair is impossible because he’s
landed in Marrywell on the first day of their annual May Day Matchmaking
Festival and everyone is on holiday. Furthermore, there are no
rooms to let, so Law must accept the hospitality of a country squire or, more
accurately, from his beautiful, clever daughter who obviously runs the
household.
After a disastrous foray at the
matchmaking festival four years ago, Sadie Campion has mostly hidden away at
home. But at twenty-four, this may be her last chance to marry and have a home
and family of her own. When her unexpected houseguest offers to help her
attract a husband, she can hardly refuse and, on the duke’s arm, becomes the
belle of the festival.
As they grow closer and attraction
simmers between them, Law wonders if she is the match he was
destined to make…
Pre order all of the LORDS IN LOVE books now!
Excerpt:
Chapter One
May 1816
Marrywell, England
Sadie
Campion marched across the damp ground after dropping a loaf of Mrs. Rowell’s
fresh bread at Sadie’s eldest brother’s cottage. He hadn’t been at home—he was
out in the sheep pasture with their father—and his wife had been chasing their
three-year-old son around the parlor while clutching the one-year-old boy on
her hip. That had prompted Sadie to take her youngest nephew and amuse him for
a good half hour so his mother could have a respite. But now Sadie was behind
in her regimen for the day.
Quickening
her pace, she glanced up at the gray sky. “Don’t you rain again. Or at least do
me the courtesy of waiting until after I clean the front door. I’d rather not
have to add changing clothes to my list of things to do.”
Sadie strode
to the front of the house where she’d placed the broom and ladder that she
planned to use outside the door. When she reached the porch, she put her basket
down and set the ladder in place. She plucked up the broom and climbed the
ladder, frowning at the cobwebs that had been there for too long now. But what
was she to do? There simply wasn’t enough time in the day for her to complete
everything that needed to be done.
Though her
father would balk and say he didn’t want to spend the money, Sadie needed to
talk to him about hiring at least one more person to help. It didn’t have to be
a housekeeper, though that would be nice, just someone who could take on a
variety of tasks that never seemed to be completed because there weren’t enough
people at Fieldstone to do everything.
Working
quickly—both because she was behind, and she was now slightly irritated by her
father’s obliviousness to how hard she worked—she didn’t look to see if there
was anything living in the webs. So when the spider landed on her forehead, she
yelped. She also let go of the ladder and lost her balance, falling backward.
Panic
flashed through her. She didn’t have time to be hurt!
Instead of
hitting the ground, she landed on…someone. The large figure didn’t quite catch
her, but his strong arms came around her. “Careful,” a masculine voice murmured
near her ear.
His deep
tone and solid form against her back soothed her. She inhaled his sandalwood
scent and felt a stirring of awareness as well as curiosity. This was obviously
not one of her brothers or her father. Nor was it their groom or the land
manager. Who, then, was it?
Sadie turned
to see an astonishingly handsome gentleman she’d never clapped eyes on before.
Tall and white with deep-set eyes the color of walnuts and lips that were
surely too full for a man, he regarded her with concern. His features were
strong and patrician, with a prominent brow and a square jaw, and he looked to
be about thirty years of age. He wore a stylish hat, but she could just make
out blond hair beneath it.
“Why on
earth are you climbing a ladder without assistance?” he asked, sounding a
trifle annoyed as his brows pitched down over his eyes. “What if I hadn’t been
here to catch you?” His presumptuous questions dispelled the enchantment that
had come over her.
Sadie took a
step back, clutching the broom. The gentleman wasn’t alone. There were two
other men standing just beyond him. One, who was a few years older than the
rude Adonis, cradled his left arm and wore a pained expression. He possessed a
snub nose and thick, dark brows. The other man was perhaps twenty years older
than the man who’d caught Sadie. He had a long nose and a sharp chin. His
cravat was perhaps the most intricately tied neckcloth Sadie had ever seen.
“Who are you,
and why are you here?” Sadie asked pertly, even as her body still tingled from
where her body had touched his.
“He is the
Duke of Lawford, and you should mind your tone,” the older man answered, his
dark gray brows pitched into an angry V.
The blond
man shot a look toward the older man before addressing Sadie. “Our coach has
lost a wheel. My coachman has injured his arm, and my valet knocked his head.”
Sadie
gasped. “You lost a wheel? Goodness, you are all lucky you weren’t more
seriously injured.”
“I’m fine,”
the older man insisted as he continued to glower at Sadie. She looked back
toward the “duke.” Was he really a duke? Perhaps they weren’t more badly hurt
because the accident had never happened. Indeed, this entire scenario seemed
highly unlikely, and it would be just like her brothers to play a joke like
this. Sadie narrowed one eye at Adonis. “How do I know you’re a duke? And did
you really suffer a mishap?”
“Of all the
impertinence!” the older man snapped, his eyes flashing in outrage.
The supposed
duke exhaled. “If it’s not too much trouble, Mrs…?”
“Miss
Campion.”
The duke’s
eyes widened slightly as if he found her unmarried state surprising. Perhaps he
did. As a woman of twenty-four, she was practically on the shelf.
“Miss
Campion, I am indeed the Duke of Lawford. If it’s not too much trouble, might
we borrow a vehicle to continue to the nearest town so we may find a physician
and someone to repair my coach?” the duke asked.
Oh dear, it
sounded as if he had no idea where they were. Or when.
“Ah, why
don’t you come inside?” Sadie said, summoning a smile as she was about to ruin
their day even more.
“I don’t
wish to trouble your employer,” the duke said smoothly.
Her…what? He
likely thought she was a maid. Or the housekeeper—perhaps that was why “Miss”
instead of “Mrs.” had surprised him. As housekeeper, she would be Mrs. Campion,
whether she was married or not. Sadie glanced down at the mud on her hem from
walking across the estate earlier and didn’t have to touch her head to know
that a great many curls had escaped her chignon. It was more than believable
that she was an employee at Fieldstone instead of the daughter of the owner.
She didn’t
take the time to disabuse the duke of his assumption. “You really need to come
inside…to sort things out. Please allow me to offer you some refreshment, and
I’ll send for the doctor. Marrywell isn’t two miles down the road.” She
gestured west with the broom.
“Marrywell?
I am not familiar with it,” the duke said with authority. “Perhaps someone can
drive us into town to see the doctor? Then I can hire a coach to continue
driving us to our destination.”
The man was
likely used to getting his way. She gave him a bland smile. “If you’ll just
come inside, I’ll be happy to explain why none of that will be possible, unfortunately.”
The duke
blinked, and his blond brows arched. “I beg your pardon?”
“You’ve
arrived on the first day of the Marrywell May Day Matchmaking Festival. No one
is available for hire to drive you anywhere, and I daresay there won’t be
anyone to repair your coach. Not until the festival concludes. In a week. We
could take all of you to town in our, ah, carriage or the much sturdier cart,
however I think you will be more comfortable waiting here while the doctor is
alerted to your needs.”
The older man—the
valet, Sadie deduced—stepped forward. “That is unacceptable. This is the Duke
of Lawford.”
Goodness,
did the man think the duke was some sort of deity?
Sadie tried
one last time. “Please come inside, at the very least so your coachman can
rest.”
The duke’s
gaze flicked toward the house, a sprawling, several-times-expanded farmhouse
that lacked a uniform style. One might call it “charming” or “quaint.” She
could only imagine what an esteemed peer thought of it.
“It sounds
as if we’ll need to secure lodging,” the duke said with a slight frown.
Sadie gave
him a sympathetic look. “I’m afraid that won’t be possible either. Every inn
within a ten-mile radius will be booked to the rafters for the festival.
Please, just come inside. We can discuss your options while your coachman
rests.”
The duke
turned his head to the man holding his arm. “Come, Holden, let’s get you some
tea.”
“Thank you,
Your Grace.” The coachman winced as he moved forward, and Sadie noticed he was
also limping.
Sadie
hastened to move the ladder. While she set the broom down first, however, the
duke picked up the ladder and moved it out of the way of the door.
“Thank you,”
she murmured, adding, “Your Grace.” She picked up her basket and opened the
door, gesturing for all three men to go inside.
Walking into
the entrance hall, she led them on through the staircase hall into the parlor.
She’d never been embarrassed of her home, and she still wasn’t, but she had to
think their modest domicile was not up to ducal standards. The furniture was
well cared for, but certainly not new, and the room, as a whole, didn’t pretend
to possess any sense of style.
Sadie held
out her hand. “Please sit wherever you’d like. I will have our groom run into
town to fetch Dr. Bigby.”
The coachman
sat carefully in a chair and the valet on the settee while the duke remained
standing. “Your groom?” Lawford asked. “Who are you exactly?”
Before she
could respond, her father and eldest brother, Esmond, burst in.
“Damn me,
there’s a wrecked coach on the road!” Esmond blinked his jewel-green eyes at
the three visitors.
Sadie’s
father, Winchell Campion, glanced toward the duke and his men, his brown gaze
cautious and perhaps even judgmental. “Sadie, who are these gentlemen?”
“Father,
Esmond, allow me to present His Grace, the Duke of Lawford. That is his coach
on the road.”
The duke’s
eyes narrowed slightly as he regarded Sadie with a sudden blatant curiosity.
“Your father owns this estate?”
Sadie
gestured to her father and then her brother. “Yes, this is Winchell Campion,
owner of Fieldstone and squire. This is my eldest brother, Esmond.”
“Your wheel
came clean off!” Esmond said excitedly, sweeping off his hat to reveal his dark
brown curls. “I bet that scared the piss out of you!” He laughed jovially, and
Sadie stared at him.
Their father
jabbed an elbow into Esmond’s side. “That is no way to greet a duke. Or anyone
else, for that matter.”
Esmond
straightened and schooled his features into a more serious expression. It was
an astonishing transformation and one that typically only their dear departed
mother or Esmond’s wife could provoke. “Welcome, Duke,” he said.
“It’s ‘Your
Grace,’” Sadie said softly. “Father, we need to fetch Dr. Bigby. The coachman’s
arm is injured, and the valet hit his head.”
The duke
pivoted toward her father. “I said we could call on the doctor in town since we
have to find lodging. However, your daughter has indicated this will not be
possible.”
“No, it will
not,” her father said with a laugh. “There’s nary a room between here and
Winchester.”
“Then we’ll
hire a coach to drive us to our destination,” the duke said, as if Sadie hadn’t
already explained that wouldn’t be possible. Did he not believe her?
“I told him
that wouldn’t work either.” Sadie didn’t bother hiding her exasperation.
“Listen to
Sadie,” her father said. “She knows what’s what, and you won’t find a more
clever girl.”
“She
mentioned you have a carriage. I would pay you handsomely if we could borrow
it. I’ll have it returned as soon as possible.”
Sadie’s
father laughed. “That carriage barely makes it to Marrywell and back. No, no,
I’m afraid I couldn’t allow you to risk yourselves, especially not after the
bad luck you’ve already experienced. Indeed, there’s no vehicle at Fieldstone
that will suffice. Do not despair, however! You’ll stay here. We’ve plenty of
room, especially since Philip wed a few months ago.” He referred to Sadie’s
other older brother, who, like Esmond, lived in a cottage on the estate.
“We couldn’t
impose,” the duke said tightly.
Her father
walked to him and clapped him on the shoulder, oblivious to the duke’s eyes
subtly rounding. “You must, and that’s all there is to it. Your coach is in
dire need of repair, and you won’t find anyone to fix it until after the
festival. Is your, er, wife with you?”
The duke’s
aristocratic jaw clenched as he looked down his nose at Sadie’s shorter father.
“I do not have a duchess. When, pray tell, will the festival conclude?”
Sadie had
also told him that detail. Had he heard nothing she’d said? She pursed her lips
at him in annoyance.
“In a week.”
Sadie’s father looked positively delighted.
“That is
unacceptable!” the valet snapped.
“It is unfortunate,”
the duke murmured.
While
Sadie’s father might be pleased to host the duke, Sadie found him arrogant. As
well as attractive. No! That didn’t signify. “Can’t Jarvis repair the coach?”
she asked. Jarvis was their retired groom and coachman. He lived in a small
cottage on the estate.
“We can’t
ask him to do that, not with his arthritic hands,” her father protested.
“Perhaps he
could advise Esmond and Philip, and they could do the actual work,” Sadie
suggested. “I’m sure Adam and Richard could help too.” Those were her younger
unmarried brothers.
“I can
direct them,” Holden said. “Can’t do much with my arm like this, but mayhap
tomorrow, I can instruct them on how to repair the coach.” He shifted in the
chair and promptly grimaced. Sadie felt certain he would hurt even more
tomorrow and would need to rest.
“Yes,” the
valet said quickly. “We must do whatever is necessary to see His Grace on his
way at the earliest possible moment.”
“Yates,
everyone will do their best, but our accident has occurred at an inopportune
time,” the duke said to the older man, sounding beleaguered. Lawford then
shifted his gaze to Sadie. “I would appreciate if you could enlist whomever you
can to work with Holden to complete the repair. I’ll pay you for the work and
whatever you need.” The duke looked to his coachman. “I can help you if
necessary.”
Yates
appeared horrified. “You cannot perform manual labor.
They must have a coach we can borrow,” he insisted.
Lawford
swung his gaze back to Sadie’s father, but it was Sadie who responded. “We do
not have a vehicle sufficient for your needs. Our coach is old and…well, it’s
inadequate for long trips.” Decrepit was the best description, but Sadie wasn’t
going to say that.
The valet
appeared thoroughly outraged. “But His Grace has important business that
he must attend to.”
Yes, well,
Sadie needed to not have her orderly life interrupted either. She thought of
all the tasks that weren’t getting done while she dealt with this crisis. And
would continue to deal with if they hosted a very important guest for a week.
Not to mention how their arrival would affect her plans to attend the
matchmaking festival. The welcome reception was that very afternoon and set the
stage for the entire weeklong event. All young ladies seeking to be matched
attended the reception, as well as the May Queen, who chose seven of those
ladies to be maidens fair. The queen and her court were the focal point of the festival,
and being a maiden fair meant almost certain betrothal by the end of the
festival. At twenty-four, Sadie was the same age as the oldest maiden fair ever
chosen. This year was her last chance to find a husband—to have a home and
family of her own.
Sadie needed
to finish her chores so she could get ready. “I’m sure my brothers—with
Holden’s or Jarvis’s instruction—can manage the repair, and you’ll be on to
your destination in no time. Mayhap even tomorrow.”
Her father
shook his head vigorously. “Impossible. Replacing the wheel will take a few
days at least.”
Yates opened
his mouth, but the duke held up his hand toward him while keeping his focus on
Sadie. The older man pressed his lips together.
Their maid
Mavis came in and glanced around the room with interest.
Sadie had
meant to ring for her, but things had been too chaotic. She moved next to Mavis
and spoke quietly. “This is the Duke of Lawford and his coachman and valet.
Their coach lost its wheel, and they’ll be staying with us for…a while.”
“Bad luck
for them unless they’re happy to attend a matchmaking festival.” Mavis grinned,
then her gaze settled on the coachman. “I wouldn’t mind if he came along,” she
whispered.
Ignoring the
maid’s saucy observation, Sadie continued, “We need rooms prepared and a tea
tray. Are you terribly busy helping Mrs. Rowell?” Their cook made the cakes for
the welcome reception, and they were likely in the middle of boxing them all
and loading the cart.
“Gwen and
Bryan can keep helping her,” Mavis said, referring to the other maid, who
primarily assisted Mrs. Rowell in the scullery, and Mrs. Rowell’s son, who was
their groom.
Sadie
grimaced. “We need Bryan to summon Dr. Bigby. His Grace’s coachman has hurt his
arm, and his valet hit his head. But if you’re all leaving soon to set up at
the reception, he can just take care of it then.”
Mavis shook
her head. “I’ll send him now.”
“And Gwen
should bring tea,” Sadie said.
“I’ll let
her know.” Mavis waggled her dark brows. “Nothing like a bit of excitement on
the first day of the festival!”
Sadie didn’t
want this kind of excitement when she was trying to get her chores done so she
could go to the reception!
Mavis looked
to the coachman, who was wincing at that moment. “He looks to be in pain. I’ll
get his room sorted straightaway.” She left the parlor with haste.
Sadie
addressed their guests. “We’ll have tea in a few minutes, and hopefully, the
doctor will arrive within the hour. Your rooms will be ready shortly. Is there
anything else we can do for you at the moment?” Sadie was desperate to get on
with the things she needed to complete before the reception, but wondered if
she ought to stay and entertain the duke. She dearly hoped not.
“I don’t
suppose you could see about removing my coach from the road?” the duke asked.
“Of course.”
Sadie turned her head toward her father and brother. “Papa? Esmond?”
“Yes, yes,”
Papa said. “Esmond! Fetch your brothers and move His Grace’s coach.”
Sadie should
have realized her father wouldn’t help. He much preferred to direct, and even
then, he was content to let Sadie manage nearly everything.
Before
Esmond could go, the duke stopped him. “Mr. Campion, if you also wouldn’t mind
bringing our cases to the house since we are to be…staying here, I would be
most appreciative.”
Esmond
nodded. “Right away, My Grace.”
Wincing
inwardly, Sadie hoped the duke hadn’t noticed that her brother didn’t know the
slightest thing about proper address. Sadie wasn’t sure she knew
all the rules.
The
coachman, Holden, stood abruptly. He clenched his jaw and clutched his injured
arm more tightly. “I must retire. Doesn’t matter if a room’s prepared. Do you
have something in the stables?”
“I’m afraid
not,” Sadie replied, hating to see the man in pain. “You should be in the house
anyway, so the doctor can examine your arm. We’ll have your room ready in no
time. In fact, I’ll go see to it.” That would get her out of the parlor so she
could finish her chores.
Pivoting,
she left the room but was stopped in the staircase hall by her father, who’d
followed her. “Where are you going?”
“To help
Mavis prepare the rooms. That should have been obvious since I said as much.”
“I mean, why
are you leaving the duke? You need to stay and entertain him.”
Sadie looked
down at her attire and tucked a loose curl behind her ear. “Am I garbed for
entertaining? No. I’m dressed for chores. Please let me complete them before I
need to prepare for the reception.”
“You’re
going?” he asked, surprised.
“I’m sure I
mentioned it.”
“I would
have remembered,” he said with misplaced certainty. “You’ve only attended—as a
potential bride—once. I thought you never meant to return.”
That had been
her intent after the disastrous first year she’d attended the festival as a
potential bride. Sadie brushed the memory away. She couldn’t afford to let it
occupy her mind when she was, in fact, hoping to use the festival for what it
was intended—to find a husband. “I’m twenty-four, Father.” Sadie was out of
time, which was why she needed to attend the reception this
year. “Don’t you think it’s time I wed?”
“In fact, I
do,” he said, shocking her. He’d never shown the slightest interest in her
marital prospects. He was content to have her here managing Fieldstone’s
household. “And we must thank divine intervention for the arrival of a duke on
our doorstep.” He grinned, his dark eyes dancing with excitement.
What on
earth was her father doing? “I would appreciate you not matching me with the
duke. That isn’t even within the realm of possibility.”
“Why not?”
he asked, sounding petulant. “You are pretty and capable. I wager you could
manage his ducal estate with ease.”
She stared
at him, wishing he expressed appreciation of her skills when there wasn’t a
duke involved. “Then consider this: I don’t want to manage his
ducal estate.” The idea of wedding a duke was preposterous. She wouldn’t know
the first thing. “I’m going to the reception, where, if I am lucky, the queen
will choose me to be crowned one of her seven maidens fair tonight.” That was
Sadie’s best chance of making a match. The maidens fair were the most sought
after by the bachelors seeking to wed.
Her father
appeared nonplussed. “Why do you need to be a maiden fair or even attend the
festival when you have a duke right here?”
Sadie
exerted considerable effort not to roll her eyes. “I’m going to prepare the rooms,
then do the rest of my chores. You entertain His Grace. And
do not play matchmaker. He’s a duke and I’m a…I don’t know
what I am,” she muttered.
She marched
up the stairs and met Mavis in the corridor. The maid carried a stack of
linens. “I was just taking these to His Grace’s chamber. Then I’m going to run
up and take care of the room for the coachman and valet.”
“I can make
the duke’s bed,” Sadie offered, taking the linens. “Put the coachman and valet
in the room at the end of the corridor.” It was the largest on the second floor
and had two beds. Only two rooms on that level were occupied—by Mavis and Gwen.
Mrs. Rowell lived in a cottage on the estate with her husband and their son.
“That was my
thought as well,” Mavis said. She inclined her head down the corridor. “The
duke will be right across from you.”
Sadie
briefly closed her eyes. “You aren’t going to play matchmaker like my father,
are you?”
The maid,
who was a few years older than Sadie and had been with the household for over
five years, smiled as disbelief flickered in her gaze. “That’s surprising to
hear, but I suppose it’s not every day a duke lands on one’s doorstep.”
“What is it
about a duke that makes everyone atwitter?” Sadie mused.
“Come now,
don’t tell me you don’t find him handsome,” Mavis said with a sly smile.
She did, in
fact. And arrogant. Shaking her head, Sadie walked past Mavis feeling
disgruntled.
Everyone
viewed the arrival of a duke as some sort of splendid opportunity for Sadie,
but to her, it was a massive imposition. She liked order and routine as she had
a great many things to manage on a daily basis. This week, she’d planned on
attending the entire festival for the first time in four years, and now that
was in jeopardy because of the additional work having the duke here would
bring.
She would
just have to make do. This was her last chance to be chosen as a maiden fair,
which would all but guarantee she would wed. Then, she could manage her own household
and have her own family.
If not,
she’d become the Spinster of Fieldstone. And life would pass her by.
About Darcy Burke:
Darcy Burke is the USA Today Bestselling Author of sexy,
emotional historical and contemporary romance. Darcy wrote her first book at
age 11, a happily ever after about a swan addicted to magic and the female swan
who loved him, with exceedingly poor illustrations. Click here to Join her Reader Club.
A native Oregonian, Darcy lives on the edge of wine country
with her guitar-strumming husband, artist daughter, and imaginative son who
will almost certainly out-write her one day (that may be tomorrow).
They’re a crazy cat family with two Bengal cats, a small,
fame-seeking cat named after a fruit, an older rescue Maine Coon with attitude
to spare, and a collection of neighbor cats who hang out on the deck and
occasionally venture inside. You can find Darcy at a winery, in her comfy
writing chair, or binge-watching TV with the family.
Her happy places are Disneyland, Labor Day weekend at the
Gorge, Denmark, and anywhere in the UK—so long as her family is there too.
Join Darcy’s Reader Club
newsletter to get freebies, discounts, and other exclusives!
Website | Twitter
| Facebook | Darcy’s Duchesses
Historical Group |
Burke’s Book Lovers
Contemporary Group | Instagram | TikTok | Pinterest | Goodreads | Amazon | BookBub
Giveaway Details:
1 winner
will receive their choice of print or eBooks of the complete Wicked Dukes Club
series, Print Books, US Only eBooks International.
Ends March 21st, midnight EST.
a Rafflecopter giveawayTour Schedule:
Week One:
3/6/2023 |
Excerpt |
|
3/6/2023 |
Excerpt/IG Post |
|
3/7/2023 |
Excerpt/IG Post |
|
3/7/2023 |
Excerpt/IG Post |
|
3/8/2023 |
Review/IG Post |
|
3/8/2023 |
Excerpt |
|
3/9/2023 |
Review/IG Post |
|
3/9/2023 |
Excerpt/IG Post |
|
3/10/2023 |
Review/IG Post |
|
3/10/2023 |
Excerpt/IG Post |
3/13/2023 |
IG Review |
|
3/13/2023 |
Review/IG Post |
|
3/14/2023 |
IG review/FB Post |
|
3/14/2023 |
IG Review |
|
3/15/2023 |
IG Review/LFL Drop Pic |
|
3/15/2023 |
Review/IG Post |
|
3/16/2023 |
Review |
|
3/16/2023 |
IG Review |
|
3/17/2023 |
IG Review |
|
3/17/2023 |
Review/IG Post |
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.