Dls’s Comments (group member since Sep 14, 2010)


Dls’s comments from the Fans of Eloisa James & Julia Quinn group.

Showing 161-180 of 2,104

Aug 31, 2020 08:51AM

38077 I have no idea. But I’m curious!
Aug 24, 2020 09:18PM

38077 I know this one.
August 17 (13 new)
Aug 19, 2020 07:39PM

38077 Aly I agree.
August 17 (13 new)
Aug 18, 2020 07:23PM

38077 It’s Black Hawk by Joanna Bourne. I can not recommend it highly enough but I suggest you read The Forbidden Rose first.
August 17 (13 new)
Aug 18, 2020 01:54PM

38077 She still blogs, and presents places... I think she had some life stuff that slowed her down and she isn't that fast a writer anyway. Her last book was in 2017, I haven't seen anything suggesting she isn't.
August 17 (13 new)
Aug 16, 2020 07:52PM

38077 This author makes every word count.

SHE CHOSE WORDS CAREFULLY, TO CLARIFY MATTERS beyond any possibility of misunderstanding. “It is my wish to spend the night with you, in your bed.”
There. She had said it. It was now too late to take it back. Her mind, which had many cowardly corners, immediately went looking for plausible ways to pretend she did not mean what she had said.

Hero was silent. He would be this self-possessed if tribesmen of the Afghan plains burst through the door and attacked him with scimitars. The refusal to be ruffled was one of his least endearing traits.

Time stretched, very empty of comment, while she swirled the teapot gently and he was inscrutable.

Finally, he took the oil lamp from the end of the mantel and busied himself adjusting the wick, lighting it with a paper spill from the fire. “The hell you say.”

“But, yes. That is what the hell I say. You need not treat this as an inconvenient importunity. Even you do not have hordes of women proposing to share your bed.” I expected him to be stupidly pleased. Instead, he is suspicious of me. “I will pour you tea. Yes?”

“Thank you.”

“You need not thank me. It is your own tea, after all.” Once, she could have offered him an explicit choice of sexual acts. In six languages. Now she had no words. She could not even call to mind the French ones. She lifted the lid of the pot. “I will add water. The tea is a little strong.”

A nod from him, and she did the pouring of hot water into the pot. Then she poured two cups of tea.
This time, I will be in control. I will be the one with all the power. This is how I will free myself. Memory wriggled like dark worms at the edges of her mind. She pushed it away.

He took the sugar bowl from the mantel and stood, holding it. “Do you want sugar?”

“It is kind of you to offer. Yes.”

“I have sugar tongs and spoons around here. Maggie keeps putting silver tableware in here, which is an incitement to theft if I’ve ever seen one. I shove ’em out of sight and that blasted woman they send to clean goes and hides them someplace else, just to make a point.”

“It is the subtle warfare of the servant classes. I am frequently a servant, so I sympathize.” She held up both cups, resting in their saucers. “Do not go seeking sugar tongs, which are probably well concealed. Two lumps for me. You may use your fingers.”

He slid two fingers into the bowl and brought out sugar lumps scissored between first and second finger. Dropped one into his cup, clever and deft. Two into hers. He never took his eyes off her face. “You and me go to bed.”

It was impossible to say anything. She, who had mouthed so many unclean words, so many bawdy songs, poems, ditties . . . could not get that small “yes” off her tongue.

“You want to . . .” He made a gesture. A rude one.
She nodded.

“It’s a dull day that doesn’t bring some surprise.”

He walked away, taking off his coat, hooking it over a peg on the wall. Underneath, he wore a waistcoat of such vivid burgundy one blinked. His knife sheath rested between his shoulder blades, the knife hilt upward. The harness had its own peg. He rolled up his right sleeve to unbuckle another knife sheath. His shirt was full sleeved in an old-fashioned way, the better to hide weapons.

He was unarming himself. A hopeful sign.

In her teacup, the layer of dissolved sugar swirled like silk at the bottom. She drank and watched him over the rim of the cup.

When he turned, she saw that he was aroused. Very aroused. His coat had kept that hidden. A little shock ran through her, as if she had taken a step that was not there, and her pulse raced
.
He did not hurry, coming toward her, but practiced the nonchalance of a bird of prey circling something in which it has developed an interest. When he was close, he leaned on the stones that surrounded the hearth. He paid no attention to the insistence in his breeches. He would not be ruled by his cock, would he? He was not apologetic, either, but seemed wholly unconcerned.

She was the one who did not know how to deal with this. She had sought this confrontation. Sought him. Now, the reality confounded her.

I should not be nervous. I have unbuttoned the breeches of many men.

She imagined herself closing her fingers gently around that bulge and his cock growing even larger and harder under her touch. She knew how to drive a man to unreason with her hands and her mouth. She had been so well trained.

That was what haunted her. Not hunger. Not humiliation. Not waiting in cold corridors, dressed in schoolgirl white, till a man called her into the parlor to hurt her. Not even pain.

She woke in the night, trembling and sweating, because of what she had done. Smiles, practiced in front of a mirror. The sly admiring lies of a whore. The clever tricks of pleasing men. She had not pretended to become a whore. She had become one.

I will never be clean of it.

“Hey.” Hero laid the flat of his hand on her cheek. It was warm from holding the teacup. “Hey. Heroine. It’s just me.”

She looked into his eyes. The moment held a perfect stillness. The rain drummed the slates of the roof, empty of judgment. The fire was harsh and hot all on one side of her body with an indifferent, inhuman intensity.

Nothing could be more masculine than that hard palm of his hand. She had become the center of a determined and focused hunger. Hero’s hunger. It was hard in his body and his spirit. Clean-edged as one of his own knives. She read all that in the single touch on her face.

Soon, he would thrust into her and she would receive him.

A man. Inside her. She waited for the slick chill of nausea to uncoil in her belly. It did not come.

 HEro ran the side of his thumb along her cheekbone, feeling the soft of it. Strange to know a woman like Heroine was soft to the touch. In her eyes, the pupils were contracted to tiny hard points. If she wanted a man’s hands on her, he was a caterpillar.

“Why me?” he said.

“There is not one man in a thousand who would ask such stupid questions when a woman offers herself to him.” Now she looked annoyed. That was better.

“I’m an unusual man.”

Touching her distracted him, so he stopped doing it and folded his arms. Her skin still called to his fingertips. Sort of an itch, making him want to touch her some more. “Why me? Why here? Why now?”

“Oh, then. Reasons.” She huddled into herself, hunching a shoulder, looking sulky. “I have heard rumors of you and I am curious. Is it so strange I would wish to pass a pleasant afternoon with . . . an old friend? We have been something like friends, have we not, though it is inconvenient for both of us. There is no reason we should not come together pour le plaisir.”

“For pleasure.” But she wasn’t hungry for him. Not a sign of it in her anywhere. “Do you do this much—go to bed with men?”

“You know what I am. There is nothing I do not know of the many acts of love.”

That didn’t answer his question, did it?

She raised her cup from the stones of the hearth and hid her face behind it. Hid her eyes by looking down into the tea. “It is not so surprising I wish to lie with you. You have acquired a reputation, did you know? You are said to be a young steed in bed. I stayed in an inn in Milan run by two widows. They had many interesting tales to tell about you.”

Milan. The merry widows. Oh, yes. He remembered them kindly, and not just for being warm and welcoming and what you might call educative in bed. They cooked like angels. “I offered to marry them both, but they didn’t take me up on it.”

“They admired your skill, however. You would blush to hear them speak of it. There was also the foolish young kitchen maid you sent away from your room in the night, telling her to come back when she was older. They have not forgotten that.”

“I’m a prince of a fellow.” He squatted down next to her so their eyes were level. “What are you up to, Heroine?”

“Nothing evil, I promise you. A few hours of your expertise in bed. With you, I might . . .” She drank the last of the tea. “I did not come here with this intent. Now it seems inevitable, as if it were destined. I have been thinking about this for more than a year.”

“Thinking about going to bed with me?”

“Sometimes. I have imagined others, but it did not . . .” There was a little tremor in her hands where they were wrapped around the empty cup. “It did not turn out to be possible, after all, when I faced them.”

He’d made it a policy never to take on a woman with a herd of private nightmares. He broke that rule more often than he kept it, but that didn’t stop it being a good one. If he had any sense, he’d stomp off into the rain and find a bed in Doyle’s house.

But Heroine was shaking. A woman like her, afraid.
And, by God, he wanted her. He kept pushing that out of his mind, but it kept coming back. She’d turned into a woman. She had breasts, for God’s sake. Nice ones, from what he could see. He could almost taste them. But he wasn’t going to play the fool for a lovely body. Not even Heroine’s lovely body.

Then she said in a small, flat voice, “I am weary of being a coward,” and he was lost.

She’s leading around three thousand demons, give or take. I guess I could kill a few. “I keep hearing that. ‘Heroine, the coward.’ Battle of Arcola and you underfoot through the worst of it. They sent you into Verona, alone, and you went. Coward right to the heart.”

“Do not be stupid. That is our profession. If it terrified me, I would take up knitting.” She breathed out. The air brushed his face like she was touching him. “I wake from sleep, shaking. When I think of being with men, I am afraid and ashamed and my stomach is unwell. This will stop, when I have done this with you.”

“It might. Heroine, it might not.”

“You are skilled. You have that reputation. You are known to be discreet. We will part, and our paths do not cross often.” She looked up with an absorbed and grave expression. “We will do this once. It should not take long. I know what to do to—”

“You don’t know a damn thing. You’re worse than bedding a virgin, which I will mention is something I do not do. You know too much that’s wrong.”

“I am very skilled. I am not ignorant. I—”

“You are ignorant as a clod of dirt. If I had any sense I’d just walk right out of this and go sleep in the rain.” Looked like he didn’t have any sense. “I’m not flattered, in case you’re wondering. There’s a name for men who pleasure women for a living.”

She’d gone motionless, the way you do in an alley when there’s men hunting you. Or maybe like she was afraid she’d shatter apart if she wasn’t careful. “Are you saying no?”

Not on your life. “Just pointing out some of the complexities. You’re an enemy agent, for one thing, which is a complicating factor of some magnitude.”
He settled back on his heels, digging into the knot of his neckcloth, thinking. She’d been hurt so bad.
He never understood the way some men treated women. Himself, he never got tired of the marvel of them. The sounds they made when they felt good. When you made them feel good. There was nothing in the world like it.

Maybe they could outrun her ghosts. “I should have sense enough to let you be . . . but you’re so damn beautiful.”
Aug 11, 2020 11:49PM

38077 It’s funny, I was just thinking of this the other day. I liked the book a lot but I really disliked the hero. But part of what made tbe book good was that it was true to the mores of the time.

I love most of what Thomas has written. Not quite a husband is may be my favorite
August 3, 2020 (11 new)
Aug 03, 2020 10:47AM

38077 I know the book. F deserves what he got
Jul 28, 2020 02:04PM

38077 I finished the latest T Kingfisher which is not a romance but is wonderful— A Wizards Guide to Defensive Breakmaking.

Paladins Grace is a romance and is also wonderful ....

Considering the latest SEP...what did people think of it?
Jul 27, 2020 11:39PM

38077 I know it!
July 20th 2020 (9 new)
Jul 20, 2020 09:04PM

38077 No idea but a great reversal of stereotype
Jul 13, 2020 06:18AM

38077 I have no idea...
Jul 10, 2020 11:51AM

38077 Dec 21 is Aly. I don't know why sometimes parts of the post don't show up on phones.
June 29 (8 new)
Jul 03, 2020 06:33PM

38077 She has a group of first persons that I reread periodically. And then she has some third person regencies where she kind of plays out the realities of the day—what it meant if a high born young woman got pregnant and her lover had gone overseas, or how men assumed they could still have mistresses, or how limited the choices were for a young woman whose step father had destroyed her inheritance. I admire that, altho I know some people find the ones with adultery disturbing. I’m not as fond of the ones she is writing today. But The American Earl deals with a situation that probably happened a fair bit and I’ve never seen in a romance before.
June 29 (8 new)
Jul 01, 2020 04:36AM

38077 It’s Fools Masquerade by Joan Wolf
June 29 (8 new)
Jun 28, 2020 04:09PM

38077 This writer is one of the few regency romance writers that I think stands the test of time.


The terrace had steps leading down into a small garden, and we walked as far away from the house as we could go before stopping.

"All right,” he said then. The moon illuminated the blackness of his hair; his eyes were shadowed and dark. “Let's hear it."

"You cannot blame Cousin for marrying Lady Barbara,” I said reasonably. “You had well over a year to make her an offer and you did not."

He spoke very slowly and clearly. “Barbara is a bloody bore and she sits a horse like a sack of potatoes."

"I agree completely, Hero. But Martin thinks she's wonderful and she loves him back, you see, but her papa wanted her to marry you. So Martin and I decided to make her so jealous she would agree to elope with him."

There was a long, rather unnerving silence.

“Are you telling me that all the time you and he were billing and cooing like two doves in a nest, you were only pretending?"

I swallowed. “Er, well, yes."

There was another silence. “Then I see I wasted my time in coming here.”

His voice sounded very cool, very distant, but I was watching his hands.

“Hero,” I asked softly, "why did you come?"

Silence.

I stepped closer to him. “I don't love Martin,” I said. “And I turned down Lord Henry and Lord Stowe. There is only one man in the world for me. Surely you know that."

“Heroine.” Astonishingly, he sounded uncertain.I looked up at him in the moonlight.

“Am I wrong?” I asked. “Don't you care?"

“Heroine,” he said again. “Christ, Heroine.” And he bent his head and kissed me.He had kissed me once before, a gentle and tender kiss, the sort of kiss one uses to reassure a frightened child. This kiss was quite relentlessly adult, and it left me breathless and trembling. It also seemed to convince him of my own feelings.

“I didn't know,” he said after a bit. “You ran away from me, refused to marry me."

"But that was because you felt you had to marry me. I loved you far too much to do that to you."

"I didn't know. I didn't understand. I still thought of you as a child, I suppose."
Jun 28, 2020 03:37PM

38077 Great. If anyone has problems
Let me know ....
Jun 27, 2020 09:08PM

38077 July 6 Oakie
13 Stacey
20 Aly
27 Leigh-Ayn

Aug 3 Susan
10 Manda
17 DLS
24 Oakie
31 Stacey

Sept 7 Aly
14 Leigh-Ayn
21 Susan
28 Manda

Oct 5 DLS
12 Oakie
19 Stacey
26 Aly

Nov 2 Leigh-Ayn
9 Susan
16 Manda
23 DLS
30 Oakie

Dec 7
14 Stacey
21 Aly
28 Leigh-Ayn
Jun 14, 2020 08:53PM

38077 I definitely haven’t read this. But I already like hero
8th June 2020 (13 new)
Jun 11, 2020 08:10PM

38077 I am not sure if Bountiful is considered part of this series but it’s definitely my favorite.