We start out the series with a scene that would give any young boy Mommy/women issues...and it does for Joss, Earl of Tallant. Next we see him he's an adult, and he is a degenerate gamblers, wastrel and a rake who doesn't believe in love, responsibility or caution. So he contrasts interestingly with our heroine, Amy Bainbridge. She's the daughter of a gambler and so grew up with the uncertain windfalls and pitfalls of it all and it has led her to a life of constraint and caution, railing against the evils of gambling...and even though her father is dead, her older brother has taken up his life's gambling work. Right out the gate, Amy disapproves of Joss and he's simply amused by that and her. So when Amy wins against his sister in a game of whist she never intended to play (I'm guessing this was to demonstrate the allure of gambling), the sister offers Joss up as an alternate payment. And Joss accepts the deal: a week in each other's company.
I struggled with liking Joss. He doesn't seem to take Amy or her justified opinions about gambling very seriously and he doesn't seem to mind making a fool or scandal of her. After Amy wins that game of whist and is ashamed of herself for gambling and giving into her principles and she more or less leaves the gaming room in tears at her own humiliation, Joss never once apologizes or even acknowledges what he and his sister had ended up doing. And it all felt like some sort of extra amusement for Joss instead of any real desire to be in Amy's presence. That does start to change but it takes some time...so time for me to warm up to him. And this is even more difficult since as he's getting to know Amy, Joss is continuing on with his mistress, which starts to feel like infidelity, though in fairness to him, he hadn't even kissed Amy yet. And it's his feelings for Amy that cause him to end things with his mistress. Added more angst, but not my favorite kind. So by the time we get to the 70% mark, I was more in Joss's corner, because he'd started taking Amy more seriously and was defending her to his friends and family (don't get me started on his sister...can't believe she's going to be the heroine of the third book)
Amy, for her part, is an interesting character. Having borne the brunt of the stress of being a gambler's daughter, she obviously hates it. And the rub of it, for her, is that she cannot condemn her brother for being the wastrel gambler, she only condemns the people he gambles with. Classic enabling, but this never really gets dealt with in the story sadly. Presumably, her brother continues his gambling addiction, but at least Amy has her lottery money (which, wouldn't that then belong to Richard anyway since he's head of the household? Seems to me if he was losing big he'd be able to just take that money if he needed it). I liked that Amy stuck to her core values and even in the face of finding herself enjoying what she hates (which was an interesting bit of self-conflict for Amy), she sticks to her values. She's obviously a morally upright character, and she has moments where she comes across as a prude, but she doesn't ever really become unlikeable (perhaps a bit unbelievable in how good she is, but she also doesn't feel Mary Sue). So I feel like she was a well-written character.
Overall this was an okay story. I set it down around the 40% mark to do something and for some reason I didn't want to go back and finish it...had to force myself to do it. That's not a good thing, but maybe it was just where I left off. Things did pick up after that, so I was more invested by then.