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Duck ChatThank you for joining us at Duck Chat! Welcome!

Today’s guest is debut author Tessa Dare.

Readers are embracing Tessa’s new trilogy, and the first book, Goddess of the Hunt, release just a couple of days ago. The next two books, Surrender of a Siren and A Lady of Persuasion, will be released over the next two months.If you haven’t gotten your Goddess of the Hunt copies yet, you’d better hurry!

From first putting pen to paper to selling her first book with a three-book deal, Tessa had to suffer through only eleven months. That’s a feat every author out there wishes would happen to them. And the books are coming out back to back. An author’s dream. And Tessa is living it right now, and that’s why we wanted to talk to her.

Tessa was raised in the Midwest and now calls California home with her husband and their two children. She is an former part-time librarian, and this from her website sums a happy life up for me as it apparently does for her: “Tessa enjoys a good book, a good laugh, a good long walk in the woods, a good movie, a good meal, a glass of good wine, and the company of good people.”

Be sure to leave a meaningful comment or question, Tessa is giving away a copy of Goddess of the Hunt. Now let’s chat!

Tessa DareDUCK CHAT: Tessa, there’s a lot of buzz about your new trilogy out there in romanceland. Fans who have patiently but eagerly awaited have been rewarded with the release of the first book, Goddess of the Hunt just a couple of days ago. Congratulations! Let’s talk about the series overall first. Where did the idea for it come from? With the second and third books due to be released shortly, did the series evolve as you first envisioned it?

TESSA DARE: Sandy, thanks so much for inviting me! I am a big TGTBTU fan, so this is a real thrill.

When I began working on Goddess of the Hunt, I had no idea of making it into a trilogy. I’d say my first inkling of sequel potential came while I was writing a scene between Lucy (the heroine of GOTH) and Sophia (the “other woman”, as it were). I’d originally planned for Sophia to be a demure, perfect, boring debutante, but as I was writing that scene she suddenly declared herself to be anything but! Beneath that perfect exterior, she had flaws and desires and boundless imagination. I loved her so much, I just knew I wanted to write her a book of her own. And writing that second book for Sophia meant I needed to write a third book for Toby—for reasons that will be obvious to anyone who’s read the ending of GOTH.

DC: I’ve heard writers often say their stories take them in surprising directions, or dialogue flows from some unknown place. Is it the same with you? Do your characters surprise you sometimes?

TD: As I just described above, Sophia definitely surprised me. I was also surprised when a couple of ancillary characters from the first two books demanded an unlikely secondary romance in the third book, A Lady of Persuasion. But I’ll leave it at that, so as not to give spoilers.

DC: Would you briefly tell us about Goddess of the Hunt, where we meet Jeremy and Lucy?

TD: Goddess of the Hunt is one of those stories where the heroine’s been in love with her brother’s charming, handsome friend ever since she was a girl. She’s absolutely certain that they belong together, forever and ever. But in the case of this particular heroine, Lucy Waltham, she’s dead wrong. The object of her infatuation is poised to marry another woman. Lucy plots to thwart the engagement, and the task of thwarting Lucy falls to the brooding, reserved Jeremy Trescott, the Earl of Kendall. To keep Lucy from ruining his friend’s engagement and her own reputation, Jeremy must give his passions free rein. The proverbial sparks fly. Heated arguments become steamy interludes. Scandal and a hasty marriage ensue, and…and you really don’t want to know everything, do you?

Goddess of the Hunt

Excerpt from Goddess of the Hunt:

Autumn, 1817

A knock on the door in the dead of night could only mean disaster.

Jeremy pulled a pair of worn breeches on under his nightshirt and stumbled toward the bedchamber door. A fire? He didn’t smell smoke. Perhaps a Waltham family emergency? An urgent message from his steward, maybe—unrest at Corbinsdale would not come as a surprise.

A memory assailed him, unbidden. Unnerving. His heart thudded wildly in his chest. He paused, clutching the door handle, cursing his body for recalling so quickly what he’d worked long years to forget.

Logic caught up to his racing pulse, reining it in. The dim glow of banked coals cast ominous shadows, but Jeremy forced the room into focus. This was not that night. He was in his usual bedchamber at Waltham Manor, not wandering Corbinsdale Woods. More than twenty years had passed, and he was no longer a boy. Whatever surprise awaited him on the other side of the door, he was fully equipped to face it.

When he slid back the rusted bolt and wrenched open the door, Jeremy was prepared for the worst.

“Hold still,” came the whispered command.

He had an instant to register a feminine silhouette, a tangle of dark curls, and two hands grasping his shoulders. Then Lucy Waltham, the younger sister of his oldest friend, popped up on her toes and pressed her lips to his with such force, he stumbled against the doorjamb.

Good Lord. The girl was kissing him.

Well, he thought ironically, he’d been prepared for the worst. And of the many kisses Jeremy Trescott had experienced in his nine-and-twenty years, this was, undoubtedly, the worst.

Lucy kissed with her lips perfectly puckered and her eyes open wide. And if she lacked in finesse, she compensated with bold enthusiasm. Her hands were everywhere at once—tangling in his hair, skimming his shoulders, exploring the broad expanse of his chest.

This wasn’t a kiss. It was a siege.

Furthermore, it was incomprehensible, wholly illogical, and a dozen different shades of wrong.

Somehow Jeremy’s hands found their way to her elbows, and he wrested himself from her eager embrace. “Lucy! What the devil do you think you’re doing?”

“Shhhh.” Her eyes darted to either side, scanning the darkened corridor. Then her gaze tilted back up to his, narrowing with a disturbing intensity, and Jeremy fancied briefly—absurdly—that someone had painted a target on his face.

“I’m practicing,” she whispered, her fingers tightening over his arms. “Let me try one more time.”

She swooped up for another kiss, and he instinctively ducked, pulling her into the room and shutting the door behind them. In a more rational moment, it might have occurred to him that the impropriety of kissing his host’s sister in the corridor would only be compounded by yanking her into his bedchamber. But Jeremy’s faculties of reason had temporarily vacated Waltham Manor.

Lucy had, quite literally, kissed him witless.

“Did it work, then?”

He stared at her, mute with confusion. Did what work? At the moment, it seemed that nothing worked, least of all his brain. Shock had frozen his limbs. He certainly couldn’t force an answer from his lips.

Stepping back, she crossed her arms over her crimson velvet dressing gown and surveyed his form boldly. As her gaze traveled downward, Jeremy grew uncomfortably aware of his own dishabille, from nightshirt to worn breeches to bare feet.

A satisfied smile spread across her face. “It must have worked. You did pull me into your bedchamber.” She reached for the door handle. “Very well, Jemmy. I suppose that’s enough practice. I’ll see you at breakfast.”

She cracked open the door. Jeremy put out a hand and slammed it shut.

Shooting him a glare, she grasped the handle with both hands and tugged. “I beg your pardon. I’ll be on my way, then.”

“No, you won’t.” He leaned his weight on the door, effectively bolting it closed. Lucy might be used to flouting her brother’s half-hearted attempts at guardianship, but Jeremy had four inches and two stone on Henry Waltham, not to mention an iron will. Lucy did not walk all over him.

He mustered his most autocratic, Earl-of-Kendall tone. “You are not going anywhere. You’re going to sit down and explain yourself.” She opened her mouth to object. He grabbed her by the elbow and steered her toward the chair. “But first,” he said, “I am going to have a drink.”

She stopped struggling under his grip and dropped gracelessly into the chair. “A drink,” she repeated. “Why didn’t I think of that? A drink would be just the thing, thank you.”

Shaking his head, Jeremy strode to the bar and poured a single glass of whiskey. He downed half the liquor in one greedy swallow, closing his eyes to savor the burn spreading down his throat. When he opened them again, he looked around to assure himself this was, indeed, the same Waltham Manor he’d been visiting each autumn since Cambridge. Roughhewn beams scored the sloping ceiling. Muted tapestries covered the walls, and an unfussy, timeworn carpet obliged his bare feet. The room had not altered in the past eight years, anymore than it likely had in the past one hundred.

In décor, in landscape, in the quartet of old friends enjoying their annual sporting holiday—Waltham Manor had remained a welcome constant in Jeremy’s life. Until this year, when everything had changed.

“Why couldn’t everything just go on as it was?” Lucy stirred the fire with a poker, sending swirls of agitated sparks into the air. “Why did Felix have to go and get married? He’s ruined everything.”

Jeremy drowned his reply with a sip of his drink. He would not have admitted it, but he rather agreed.

“It was all right when Henry got married,” she continued. “Marianne’s so busy with the children, at least she stays out of the way. But that shrew Felix married is going to expect to be entertained. And to make it all worse, she’s brought along her sister, that Sophia.”

“Mrs. Crowley-Cumberbatch and Miss Hathaway are, by all accounts, charming young ladies. One would think you’d be glad of their company.”

She threw him an incredulous look.

“Or not.” Truth be told, Jeremy wasn’t glad of their presence, either. There was nothing precisely offensive about Felix’s wife, Kitty, or her sister, Sophia. To the contrary, Sophia Hathaway was the epitome of an inoffensive, well-bred society beauty. A bit of meringue—insubstantial, but pleasing enough, if one’s tastes ran to sweet. As Toby’s apparently did.

Jeremy tossed back another swallow of whiskey and tasted the irony. Henry and Felix married, Toby on the verge … their bachelor’s retreat had become a family house party. Well, if all his friends were determined to shackle themselves in marriage, at least he would be in no imminent danger of joining them. All three ladies at Waltham Manor were safely accounted for.

The sound of fingers drumming wood interrupted his thoughts. “Do you intend to drink the whole bottle yourself?”

Unless, of course, one counted Lucy.

And he did not count Lucy. She was neither eligible, nor a lady. She was Henry’s much younger sister and ward, and she was Jeremy’s personal version of a biblical plague. She’d spent years devising ways to get under his skin. Now she was charging into his bedchamber and … and practicing.

Much as he wished to erase that kiss from his memory, he couldn’t ignore it. Neither could he ignore the obvious implications of that word, “practicing.”

He could, however, ignore her request for a drink. Jeremy refilled his own glass and carried it toward the hearth, dropping into the chair opposite hers. Raking a hand through his hair, he exhaled slowly. “I don’t like to ask this. I dread your response. But for what, exactly, are you practicing?”

“Not ‘what,’” she answered. “Who.”

Oh, it only got worse. “For whom are you practicing, then? Some local youth? The vicar’s boy?”

“For Toby, of course.”

He gave a wry laugh. “For Toby? Why would you be kissing Toby? He’s all but engaged to Miss Hathaway.”

She hugged her knees to her chest, curling into a ball of red velvet and chestnut curls. The chair’s masculine proportions dwarfed her, and her green eyes brimmed with raw, undisguised hurt. “Then it’s true.”

Bloody hell. Suddenly this bizarre nighttime visit made sense. Jeremy punched the arm of his chair. Of all the irretrievably stupid things to say.

“My maid said she heard it from Toby’s valet. I didn’t want to believe her. I couldn’t believe her. But it’s true.”

Jeremy had to look away. It was a matter of self-preservation. Lucy’s countenance was a collection of pixie features set within a heart-shaped face—a face designed to display, unfiltered, every emotion of the heart within. One couldn’t look at her without knowing exactly how she was feeling—and Jeremy didn’t wish to know how Lucy was feeling. He preferred to keep a respectful distance from even his own emotions.

“How could he?” she squeaked.

Jeremy winced. Lucy sniffed loudly, and he took another slow sip of whiskey. She could not cry, he wanted to remind her. That was the rule—Henry’s single exercise in authority. He’d allowed the chit to run roughshod over them every autumn, tagging along on their hunting and fishing excursions, parroting their curses, even taking nips off their flasks—under one condition. Lucy was not to cry. In eight years, Jeremy had never seen her shed a single tear. He prayed she wasn’t about to start now. If there was one thing he couldn’t abide, it was a crying woman.

He stole a glance at her. Damn it, her chin was quivering. “You’re not going to start weeping, are you?”

“No.” Her voice quivered, too.

Jeremy busied himself adding wood to the fire, stalling for time.

Curse Toby. This was all his fault. He’d always made such a pet of the girl. Every autumn, Lucy clung to Toby like a tick on a hound. He baited her hooks and taught her bawdy Latin conjugations. He brought her flowers and wove her crowns of ivy that went straight to her head. His Diana, Toby called her. Goddess of the hunt.

Goddess he may have dubbed her, but the worship was all on Lucy’s side. A young girl’s harmless infatuation—that was all it had seemed. Obviously, to Lucy it had seemed much more. And now the task of disabusing her of all those romantic notions had somehow fallen to Jeremy. Just his luck. But also fitting, he supposed. If he’d ever harbored a romantic notion, which was doubtful, he’d been disabused of it long ago.

He clapped the dust from his hands and reclined in his chair. In his most magnanimous tone, he began, “Now, Lucy, you must understand…”

She shot him a murderous glare. At least it wasn’t that mournful expression she’d worn just moments ago. “Don’t, Jemmy. Don’t you dare speak to me as if I were a child. I ought to have come out two seasons ago. If only Marianne weren’t perpetually confined. Perhaps I am not a genteel lady like Sophia Hathaway. But I’m not a girl any longer, either.”

She stretched a bare foot toward the fire and absently flexed her ankle. The sinuous grace of the motion caught Jeremy’s gaze. Caught it, and trapped it. He couldn’t look away. She circled her foot idly, her skin glowing golden in the firelight. His eyes swept upwards, tracing the sweet curve of her calf to where it disappeared under her dressing gown.

Then Lucy shifted, crossing her legs. Red velvet fell like a theater curtain, abruptly ending the show. A swift blow of disappointment caught Jeremy in the chest. The sensation drifted downwards, mellowing to the familiar ache of thwarted desire. God, this night was simply rife with surprises.

“I suppose you’re not,” he muttered, tearing his gaze away and giving himself a mental shake. “Very well, let us speak as adults. You can begin by dropping that childish nickname and addressing me in a proper fashion.”

“You mean by your title? I don’t even remember your old one, let alone the new.” She looked up at the ceiling. “You can’t possibly expect me to call you ‘my lord,’ Jemmy.”

Jeremy sighed, abandoning any effort to soothe. “Then let us be perfectly plain. Toby is going to marry Miss Hathaway.”

“But he can’t! It isn’t fair!”

He snorted. “Spoken like a girl, Lucy.”

She ignored him. “I’ve always known I would marry Sir Toby Aldridge, ever since the day we first met.”

“That’s absurd. The day you first met, you were twelve years old.”

“Eleven.”

“Eleven, then. And Toby shot at you.”

“He didn’t shoot at me. He shot at a partridge I startled. He didn’t know I was there, because –”

“Because you were following us after Henry forbade you,” Jeremy finished impatiently. “Yes, yes. I remember it clearly.”

Too clearly, he added in silence. He remembered everything about that day in painful detail. The glaring afternoon sun, the acrid odor of gunpowder. But he especially remembered the sounds. How could he forget? A frantic staccato of wingbeats, the crack of Toby’s gun, a piercing shriek. The dreadful silence as all four of them charged through knee-deep brambles, only to find Lucy sitting in a clearing, unharmed and unrepentant.

Ensuing years had proven that near-miss to be the beginning of a pattern. Lucy Waltham was always flirting with disaster, and therefore Jeremy had always avoided Lucy. He didn’t want to be in the vicinity when disaster inevitably struck.

With a sniff, Lucy reached out and took the glass of whiskey from his hand. Her fingertips grazed his wrist. So much for safe distances.

She rested her chin on one knee and stared morosely into the amber-brown liquid. “What does Sophia Hathaway have that I haven’t?”

“Besides impeccable breeding, accomplishment, and a dowry of twenty-thousand pounds?” He extended his hand to retrieve his drink.

She downed a generous swallow of whiskey before relinquishing the glass. “She doesn’t love him.”

“More girlish fancies. This is marriage, Lucy. Love is hardly required. They get on well enough, and their families will approve. She has wealth but no title; he is a baronet. It’s a fortuitous match for them both.”

“Fortuitous?” She narrowed her eyes. “Only you, Jemmy. Only you would speak of marriage as a prudent business arrangement.”

“It isn’t only me. It’s society. Love matches like your brother’s—they are the exception, not the rule. Ladies who insist on romance end up disappointed. You’d realize the truth of this, if only you –”

“If only I what? If I only I were cold and jaded, like you?”

Jeremy clenched his jaw. “If only you had paid the slightest attention to any of those governesses Henry hired for you. If only you’d had some model of female behavior, aside from an overburdened sister-in-law and a senile aunt. If only you had a modicum of sense.”

“If only I were like Sophia Hathaway.”

“You said it. Not me.”

She crossed her arms. “Well, I don’t care what you—or society—say. I’m going to marry for love, and that means I won’t marry anyone but Toby. I refuse to believe he could marry anyone other than me. He loves me. I know it, even if he doesn’t yet.”

“Lucy, the matter is all but settled. I expect he will propose any day.”

“Then I shall have to act tonight.” She rose from the chair and began pacing the floor. Her brow was furrowed, and she toyed absently with a lock of her hair, catching it between her teeth. It was a warning sign he’d learned to heed. Lucy always fidgeted with her hair when she was scheming.

She usually wore her hair up—for convenience, not fashion. But they hadn’t yet invented the hairpin or bonnet that could contain Lucy’s curls. They were forever working loose at the edges and winding between her fingers, finding their way to her lips. Now her hair fell in heavy waves down to her waist, rippling like a thick, luxurious pelt as she prowled the carpet’s knotted fringe. She turned and swept back across the room, fluid fabric wrapping around her curves.

Curves. Great God. When had Lucy grown curves? Lucy was always a collection of bony, awkward angles, held together by sheer force of will. Now that hard frame of determination was cloaked in soft, supple, womanly curves. And she and her curves were parading about his bedchamber in a state of undress. At the ungodly hour of—he stole a glance at the clock on the mantel—two o’clock. The impropriety of the entire situation struck him with sudden force.

“You shouldn’t be here. It’s late, and you’re … upset. Go back to your room and get some sleep. We can speak more on this tomorrow.”

“Tomorrow may be too late,” she said. “I can’t take that risk. I’ll have to do it tonight.”

“You’ll have to do what tonight?”

“Seduce him, of course.”

Jeremy stared at her, dumbstruck. A log settled in the fire with a loud crack, and a flurry of red sparks shot out from the hearth.

Lucy stopped before the mirror. She untied her dressing gown and opened it, surveying the simple linen nightgown beneath with a dissatisfied expression. “Silk and lace would be better, I suppose, but I haven’t anything finer.” She made a quarter turn and looked askance at her reflected profile. Thrusting her shoulders back, she smoothed her nightgown tight against her torso until every swell and peak of her flesh strained against the sheer fabric.

Jeremy leapt to his feet, upending what remained of his whiskey onto the carpet. In a matter of two paces, he crossed the room and stepped between Lucy and her scandalous reflection, grabbing the edges of her dressing gown and wrapping them firmly about her waist. The third button of her nightgown was undone, and the thin fabric gaped to reveal a crescent of golden skin. Jeremy forced his gaze up to her face. “Don’t tell me that … that this is what you’re practicing.”

She nodded. The cool intensity in her gaze told Jeremy that, ridiculous as the idea might seem to him, Lucy thought seduction an entirely sensible plan. He put his hands on her shoulders and willed authority into his voice. “Lucy, Toby does not love you.”

“Yes, Jemmy, he does.”

“What makes you so sure? Has he given you any reason to hope?”

“I wasn’t aware that hope required a reason, any more than love. In case you have forgotten—I have no talent for hoping. I don’t hope. I know. I believe. I expect. I know that Toby loves me. I believe we belong together.” She jabbed a finger into the center of his chest. “And I expect you to understand.”

Jeremy groaned. How was he supposed to reason with a girl—a woman, he corrected—who put no stock in reasons? “Lucy, Toby is quite fond of you.” He realized he was still holding her by the shoulders. Retreating a step, he let his hands drop to his sides. “But fondness isn’t love. Besides, what would you know of seduction?”

“Oh, I have a book.”

“A book?” He pulled a hand through his hair. “Good Lord, Lucy, I am not going to ask you where you obtained such a book or what pearls of wisdom it might contain.” She opened her mouth to interject, and he silenced her with an outstretched hand. “In fact, I beg you not to tell me. Suffice it to say, I hope you will not heed the lessons of whatever lurid novel you’ve managed to get your hands on.”

“I’ll admit book learning has its limitations.” She regarded him cagily, her gaze searching his.

“That’s one way of putting it.”

She inched closer. “Reading is certainly no substitute for practical experience.” She drew nearer still.

“But … wait … Lucy, you can’t possibly–” And then he blurted out a question directed more at God in heaven than at Lucy herself. “Why me?”

“You mean besides the fact that there’s no one else? You’re so proper, Jemmy, so cold. There are icebergs in the North Sea with less frost on them. If I can thaw you out, I’ll have no problem seducing Toby.”

“I assure you, you could not ‘thaw’ me, even if I wished to be … thawed. Which I don’t.” He retreated a step. Then two.

“Try to resist, by all means. I like a good challenge.” She closed the distance again, her eyes lit with mischief. “I’ve learned to snare grouse and angle for trout. Is catching a husband really so different?”

Yes, Jeremy meant to insist, but somehow his jaw would only move up and down noiselessly, in a rather good imitation of—well, of a trout.

And then she caught him by his shirt and reeled him in, catching him up in that net of chestnut curls and kissing him within an inch of his life. Her lips attacked his with the same steely determination. But when she threw her arms around his neck and fell against him, the rest of her was soft, pliant, yielding. Silky strands of her hair slid over his forearm. Lush curves molded against his chest.

Before he could gather his wits to protest, she pulled away suddenly and studied his face.

“Well? Is it working?”

DC: Do you ever argue with your characters while you’re writing? Who usually wins?

TD: I had a big argument with Toby, my third hero. He was exceedingly irritated that, unlike the first two heroes, he didn’t get to punch or shoot anyone in his book. I insisted that he just wasn’t that kind of hero—he’s so clever and charming, he’d never need to resort to brute violence. Well, we had words about it, Toby and I. I actually wrote the “argument” out as a dialog and sent it to my critique partners. Unsurprisingly, they sided with Toby. He is very persuasive. In the end, we arrived at a compromise.

DC: If you could retire any question and never, ever have it asked again, what would it be? Feel free to answer it.

TD: You know, at this point in my career, every question is new and exciting. Ask me again in a year or two…

DC: What is sure to distract you from sitting down and working/writing?

TD: My children (ages almost-3 and 5). I love them, but they need a lot of attention! And the Internet, of course – between blogs, Twitter, Facebook, and email, it’s a wonder I get anything written some days.

Surrender of a Siren

DC: May we get a sneak peek into the next two books, Surrender of a Siren and A Lady of Persuasion?

A Lady of Persuasion

TD: It’s really hard to tell you too much about those books without giving spoilers for the first one. Of course, there are blurbs and excerpts available on my website. Surrender of a Siren pairs a society beauty falling from grace with a roguish privateer who picked the wrong week to go respectable. In A Lady of Persuasion, an idealistic young lady sets out to marry an influential lord, to bring about political and social change—but she finds herself accidentally betrothed to a rakish, disreputable “Sir” instead.

DC: Is there a genre you haven’t tackled but would like to try?

TD: I’ve always been fond of Young Adult fiction. I can see myself attempting YA someday.

DC: The Legend of the Werestag, I get the feeling from roaming around your web site that this book is not quite what the title implies. Would you tell us a little about it?

The Legend of the Werestag

TD: It’s not a paranormal romance! TLOTW (an e-novella released by Samhain Publishing in May, and recipient of two quite favorable reviews at this here site, I might add) is a straight historical, loosely linked to my trilogy. You see, in GOTH and its two sequels, each heroine passes along a “naughty book” to the next, called The Memoirs of a Wanton Dairymaid. It’s a bawdy little romance that provides inspiration and education to each of the heroines in turn. My e-novella, while telling its own sweet, sexy romance between reunited lovers, explains the origins of that Wanton Dairymaid book—and how it was almost a very different book entirely: a gothic novel called The Legend of the Werestag. For the first wave of readers, the novella has been a sort of teaser for the trilogy, but it’s also meant as an “extra” for readers who’ve enjoyed the print books and want something more.

DC: What advice would you give to your younger self?

TD: Travel more!

DC: You’re now working on a new trilogy titled Stud Club. Would you give us a look at the series as a whole and then give our readers a sneak peek into the first book, One Dance with a Duke?

TD: Sure! The Stud Club trilogy stars three heroes from very different backgrounds—a duke, a warrior, and a scoundrel. Through quirks of fate and fortune, they all own shares in a priceless racehorse (the “stud” in question). When the Stud Club’s founder is tragically killed, the three become unwilling allies in the pursuit of justice. Along the way, they each fall desperately in love.

In One Dance with a Duke, Spencer, the reclusive Duke of Morland, finds himself confronted in a ballroom by Lady Amelia d’Orsay, an impertinent spinster whose spacegrace brother owes him money. Spencer has little sympathy for her complaints and zero tolerance for public scenes. When the tenacious Lady Amelia refuses to back down, he literally sweeps the impossible woman off her feet and carries her off the dance floor, straight out into the night.

Amelia is stunned, outraged, and perversely exhilarated. Even after that dramatic exit, her reputation might have been salvaged…had they not been met on the terrace by two men bearing news of a tragic death. Spencer and Amelia must leave the ball in stealth, instantly linking their names and futures in scandal. Within days, Amelia finds herself marrying this arrogant, aloof, and inconveniently attractive duke who, if rumor can be believed, might also be a murderer.

DC: What would be your “voice’s” tagline?

TD: Maybe “Fresh and flirty.” Or “Sparkling and sexy”? I can never decide!

DC: If you had never become an author, what do you think you would be doing right now?

TD: Probably still working as a librarian (my former full-time career) and mother.

Lightning Round:

– dark or milk chocolate? – Yes.
– smooth or chunky peanut butter? – Chunky.
– heels or flats? – Islander flip-flops for everyday, heels for special occasions.
– coffee or tea? – Coffee
– summer or winter? – Autumn
– mountains or beach? – Beach—preferably a rocky one.
– mustard or mayonnaise? – Mustard
– flowers or candy? – Candy
– pockets or purse? – Pockets
– Pepsi or Coke? – Dr. Pepper
– ebook or print? – I’m a fan of both, but I’ll admit I still have a sentimental preference for print.

And because they’re still a lot of fun:

1. What is your favorite word? – I refuse to choose! I’m a writer; it’s impossible.
2. What is your least favorite word? – In a love scene, “juices.”
3. What turns you on creatively, spiritually or emotionally? – Music—especially alt-rock power ballads, for whatever reason.
4. What turns you off creatively, spiritually or emotionally? – Negativity. Uncertainty.
5. What sound or noise do you love? – The ocean, or light rain.
6. What sound or noise do you hate? – Children squabbling.
7. What is your favorite curse word? – Drat.
8. What profession other than your own would you like to attempt? – Professional scholar of something medieval and esoteric. Preferably something I’d have to study in Italy.
9. What profession would you not like to do? – Scuba diver or astronaut. I have a phobia of limited oxygen supplies.
10. If Heaven exists, what would you like to hear God say when you arrive at the Pearly Gates? – “Good job! Loved the books. You’re just in time for gelato.”

DC: Thank you, Tessa, for a great interview!