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One Naughty Night2

Page 30

by Laurel McKee


  —RomanceJunkies.com

  “A hero to steal your heart!”

  —Elizabeth Boyle, New York Times bestselling author

  “An immensely satisfying and sophisticated blend of history and romance. I loved every gorgeous, breathtaking page!”

  —Julianne MacLean, USA Today bestselling author of When a Stranger Loves Me

  “Countess of Scandal delivers on all fronts. The story raced along, zigging and zagging from Dublin to the countryside, from uneasy peace to all-out war. And the romance… very satisfying!”

  —MyShelf.com

  “A vivid historical tale with breathtaking characters.”

  —Michelle Willingham, author of Taming Her Irish Warrior

  “Rich, vivid, and passionate.”

  —Nicola Cornick, USA Today bestselling author of The Undoing of a Lady

  Historical Note

  Thank you so much for reading One Naughty Night, the first adventure of the St. Claire family. I loved spending time with these characters and learning more about their world. Ever since I was about ten years old and read Jane Eyre, I have loved the Victorian era, so it was fascinating to dig deeper.

  The sixty years of Victoria’s reign marked a huge shift in society and the way the world worked. The way people traveled, shopped, dealt with illness and childbirth—even the way people dressed and read—were very different from what had come before. Life was transformed for everyone by gaslight and then electricity, the railroads, factories, the world of the arts (literature from authors such as Dickens, Thackeray, and the Brontë sisters; the theater boom led by Irving and Terry; as well as music, painting, and the decorative arts), and exploration and the expansion of the British Empire into every corner of the globe.

  But it was also a time of vast social differences, the rise of the middle classes, a new emphasis on the appearance of “respectability,” and a whole hidden underworld of dark activities. I loved incorporating all these aspects of Victorian life into One Naughty Night and can’t wait to see what happens next for the St. Claires and the Huntingtons. (Watch for Dominic and Sophia’s story in Two Sinful Secrets…)

  If you’re interested in learning more about the Victorian era, I have historical information and background tidbits on my website, http://laurelmckee.net. Here are a few sources I especially enjoyed:

  Donald Thomas, The Victorian Underworld (1998)

  Jennifer Hall-Witt, Fashionable Acts: Opera and Elite Culture in London 1780–1880 (2007)

  Michael Mason, The Making of Victorian Sexuality (1994)

  Suzanne Fagence Cooper, The Victorian Woman (2001)

  Richard D. Altick, Victorian People and Ideas (1973)

  J. J. Tobias, Crime and Police in England, 1700–1900 (1979)

  Sally Mitchell, Daily Life in Victorian England (2009)

  F. M. L. Thompson, The Rise of Respectable Society 1830–1900 (1988)

  THE DISH

  Where authors give you the inside scoop!

  From the desk of Paula Quinn

  Dear Reader,

  I’m so excited to tell you about my latest in the Children of the Mist series, CONQUERED BY A HIGHLANDER. I loved introducing you to Colin MacGregor in Ravished by a Highlander and then meeting up with him again in Tamed by a Highlander, but finally the youngest, battle-hungry MacGregor gets his own story. And let me tell you all, I enjoyed every page, every word.

  Colin wasn’t a difficult hero to write. There were no mysteries complicating his character, no ghosts or regrets haunting him from his past. He was born with a passion to fight and to conquer. Nothing more. Nothing less. He was easy to write. He was a badass in Ravished and he’s a hardass now. My dilemma was what kind of woman would it take to win him? The painted birds fluttering about the many courts he’s visited barely held his attention. A warrior wouldn’t suit him any better than a wallflower would. I knew early on that the Lady who tried to take hold of this soldier’s heart had to possess the innate strength to face her fiercest foe… and the tenderness to recognize something more than a fighter in Colin’s confident gaze.

  I found Gillian Dearly hidden away in the turrets of a castle overlooking the sea, her fingers busy strumming melodies on her beloved lute while her thoughts carried her to places far beyond her prison walls. She wasn’t waiting for a hero, deciding years ago that she would rescue herself. She was perfect for Colin. She also possessed one other thing, a weapon so powerful, even Colin found himself at the mercy of it.

  A three-year-old little boy named Edmund.

  Like Colin, I didn’t intend for Edmund Dearly or his mother to change the path of my story, but they brought out something in the warrior—whom I thought I knew so well—something warm and wonderful and infinitely sexier than any swagger. They brought out the man.

  For me, nothing I’ve written before this book exemplifies the essence of a true hero more than watching Colin fall in love with Gillian and with her child. Not many things are more valiant than a battle-hardened warrior who puts down his practice sword so he can take a kid fishing or save him from bedtime monsters… except maybe a mother who defiantly goes into battle each day in order to give her child a better life. Gillian Dearly was Edmund’s hero and she quickly became mine. How could a man like Colin not fall in love with her?

  Having to end the Children of the Mist series was bittersweet, but I’m thrilled to say there will be more MacGregors of Skye visiting the pages of future books. Camlochlin will live on for another generation at least. And not just in words but in art. Master painter James Lyman has immortalized the home of our beloved MacGregors in beautiful color and with an innate understanding of how the fortress should be represented. Visit PaulaQuinn.com to order a print of your own, signed and numbered by the artist.

  Until we meet again, to you mothers and fathers, husbands and wives, sons and daughters, sisters and brothers, and friends, who put yourselves aside for someone you love, I shout Huzzah! Camlochlin was built for people like you.

  Find her at Facebook

  Twitter @Paula_Quinn

  From the desk of Jill Shalvis

  Dear Reader,

  From the very first moment I put Mysterious Cute Guy on the page, I fell in love. There’s just something about a big, bad, sexy guy whom you know nothing about that fires the imagination. But I have to be honest: When he made a cameo in Head Over Heels (literally a walk-on role only; in fact I believe he only gets a mention or two), I knew nothing about him. Nothing. I never intended to, either. He was just one of life’s little (okay, big, bad, and sexy) mysteries.

  Then my editor called me. Said the first three Lucky Harbor books had done so well that they’d like three more, please. And maybe one of the heroes could be Mysterious Cute Guy.

  It was fun coming up with a story to go with this enigmatic figure, not to mention a name: Ty Garrison. More fun still to give this ex-Navy SEAL a rough, tortured, bad-boy past and a sweet, giving, good-girl heroine (Mallory Quinn, ER nurse). Oh, the fun I had with these two: a bad boy trying to go good, and a good girl looking for a walk on the wild side. Hope you have as much fun reading their story, LUCKY IN LOVE.

  And then, stick around. Because Mallory’s two Chocoholics-in-crime partners, Amy and Grace, get their own love stories in July and August with At Last and then Forever and a Day.

  Happy Reading!

  http://www.jillshalvis.com

  http://www.facebook.com/jillshalvis

  From the desk of Lori Wilde

  Dear Reader,

  Ah, June! Love is in the air, and it’s the time for weddings and romance. With KISS THE BRIDE, you get two romantic books in one, There Goes the Bride and Once Smitten, Twice Shy. Both stories are filled with brides, bouquets, and those devastatingly handsome grooms. But best friends Delaney and Tish go through a lot of ups and downs on their path to happily ever after.

  For those of you hoping for a June wedding of your own, how do you tell if your guy is ready for commitment? He might be ready to pop the question if…
<
br />   Instead of saying “I” when making future plans, he starts saying “we.”

  He gives you his ATM pass code.

  He takes you on vacation with his family.

  Out of the blue, your best friend asks your ring size.

  He sells his sports car/motorcycle and says he’s outgrown that juvenile phase of his life.

  He opens a gold card to get a higher spending limit—say, to pay for a honeymoon.

  When you get a wedding invitation in the mail, he doesn’t groan but instead asks where the bride and groom got the invitations printed.

  He starts remembering to leave the toilet seat down.

  When poker night with the guys rolls around, he says he’d rather stay home and watch The Wedding Planner with you.

  He becomes your dad’s best golfing buddy

  I hope you enjoy KISS THE BRIDE.

  Happy reading,

  loriwilde.com

  Facebook http://facebook.com/lori.wilde

  Twitter @LoriWilde

  From the desk of Laurel McKee

  Dear Reader,

  When I was about eight years old, someone gave me a picture book called Life in Victorian England. I lost the book in a move years ago, but I still remember the gorgeous watercolor illustrations. Ladies in brightly colored hoopskirts and men in frock coats and top hats doing things like walking in the park, ice-skating at Christmas, and dancing in ballrooms. I was completely hooked on this magical world called “the Victorian Age” and couldn’t get enough of it! I read stuff like Jane Eyre, Little Women, and Bleak House, watched every movie where there was the potential for bonnets, and drove my parents crazy by saying all the time, “Well, in the Victorian age it was like this…”

  As I got older and started to study history in a more serious way, I found that beneath this pretty and proper facade was something far darker. Darker—and a lot more interesting. There was a flourishing underworld in Victorian England, all the more intense for being well hidden and suppressed. Prostitution, theft, and the drug trade expanded, and London was bursting at the seams thanks to changes brought about by the Industrial Revolution. The theater and the visual arts were taking on a new life. Even Queen Victoria was not exactly the prissy sourpuss everyone thinks she was. (She and Albert had nine children, after all—and enjoyed making them!)

  I’ve always wanted to set a story in these Victorian years, with the juxtaposition of what’s seen on the surface and what is really going on underneath. But I never came up with just the right characters for this complex setting. The inspiration came (as it so often does for me, don’t laugh) from clothes. I was watching my DVD of Young Victoria for about the fifth time, and when the coronation ball scene came on, I thought, “I really want a heroine who could wear a gown just like that…”

  And Lily St. Claire popped into my head and brought along her whole family of Victorian underworld rakes. I had to run and get out my notebook to write down everything Lily had to tell me. I loved her from that first minute—a woman who created a glamorous life for herself from a childhood on the streets of the London slums. A tough, independent woman (with gorgeous clothes, of course) who thinks she doesn’t need anyone—until she meets this absolutely yummy son a duke. Too bad his family is the St. Claire family’s old enemy…

  I hope you enjoy the adventures of Lily and Aidan as much as I have. It was so much fun to spend some time in Victorian London. Look for more St. Claire trouble to come.

  In the meantime, visit my website at http://laurelmckee.net for more info on the characters and the history behind the book.

  Contents

  Welcome

  From Mary St. Claire Huntington’s Diary

  Prologue

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  Chapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-one

  Chapter Twenty-two

  Chapter Twenty-three

  Chapter Twenty-four

  Epilogue

  A Preview of Two Sinful Secrets

  Also by Laurel McKee

  Praise for Laurel McKee’s The Daughters of Erin Trilogy

  Historical Note

  The Dish

  Copyright

  Copyright

  This book is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events, locales, or persons, living or dead, is coincidental.

  Copyright © 2012 by Laurel McKee

  Excerpt from Two Sinful Secrets copyright © 2012 by Laurel McKee

  All rights reserved. In accordance with the U.S. Copyright Act of 1976, the scanning, uploading, and electronic sharing of any part of this book without the permission of the publisher constitute unlawful piracy and theft of the author’s intellectual property. If you would like to use material from the book (other than for review purposes), prior written permission must be obtained by contacting the publisher at permissions@hbgusa.com. Thank you for your support of the author’s rights.

  Forever

  Hachette Book Group

  237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017

  www.hachettebookgroup.com

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  First e-book edition: May 2012

  Forever is an imprint of Grand Central Publishing.

  The Forever name and logo are trademarks of Hachette Book Group, Inc.

  The publisher is not responsible for websites (or their content) that are not owned by the publisher.

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  ISBN 978-1-4555-1051-1

 

 

 


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