Two
men only meant for each other.
THE SOLDIER'S SCOUNDREL
Cat Sebastian
Releasing Sept 20th, 2016
Avon Impulse
A scoundrel who
lives in the shadows
Jack Turner grew up in the darkness of London’s slums, born into a life of crime and willing to do anything to keep his belly full and his siblings safe. Now he uses the tricks and schemes of the underworld to help those who need the kind of assistance only a scoundrel can provide. His distrust of the nobility runs deep and his services do not extend to the gorgeous high-born soldier who personifies everything Jack will never be.
A soldier untarnished by vice
After the chaos of war, Oliver Rivington craves the safe predictability of a gentleman’s life-one that doesn’t include sparring with a ne’er-do-well who flouts the law at every turn. But Jack tempts Oliver like no other man has before. Soon his yearning for the unapologetic criminal is only matched by Jack’s pleasure in watching his genteel polish crumble every time they’re together.
Two men only meant for each other
Jack Turner grew up in the darkness of London’s slums, born into a life of crime and willing to do anything to keep his belly full and his siblings safe. Now he uses the tricks and schemes of the underworld to help those who need the kind of assistance only a scoundrel can provide. His distrust of the nobility runs deep and his services do not extend to the gorgeous high-born soldier who personifies everything Jack will never be.
A soldier untarnished by vice
After the chaos of war, Oliver Rivington craves the safe predictability of a gentleman’s life-one that doesn’t include sparring with a ne’er-do-well who flouts the law at every turn. But Jack tempts Oliver like no other man has before. Soon his yearning for the unapologetic criminal is only matched by Jack’s pleasure in watching his genteel polish crumble every time they’re together.
Two men only meant for each other
BUY NOW
Amazon | B
& N | Google | iTunes | Kobo
CAT'S REVIEW
★★★★
Jack absently
skimmed his finger along the surface of his desk, tracing a swirl through the
sand he had used to blot his notes. Another case was solved and done with,
another gentleman too drunk on his own power and consequence to remember to pay
servants and tradesmen, too dissipated to bother being faithful to his wife.
Nearly every client’s problems were variations on that same theme. Jack might
have been bored if he weren’t so angry.
A knock
sounded at the door, a welcome distraction. His sister always knocked, as if
she didn’t want to interrupt whatever depravities Jack was conducting on the
other side of the door. She did it out of an excess of consideration, but Jack
still felt like she was waiting for him to do something unspeakable at any
moment.
She was
right, of course, but still it grated.
“Come in, Sarah.
“There’s a
gentleman here to see you,” she said, packing a world of both disapproval and
deference into those few words.
Really, it
was a pity she hadn’t been born a man because the world had lost a first rate
butler there. The butlers Jack had served under would have been put fairly to
shame.
“Tell him to
bugger off.” Sarah knew perfectly well he didn’t take gentlemen as clients. He
tried to keep any trace of impatience out of his voice, but didn’t think he
quite managed it.
“I have
customers downstairs and I don’t want a scene.” She had pins jammed into the
sleeve of her gown, a sign that she had been interrupted in the middle of a
fitting. No wonder her lips were pursed.
“And I don’t
want any gentlemen.” Too late, he realized he had set her up for a smart-mouthed
response. Now she was going to press her advantage because that’s what older
sisters did. But Sarah must have been developing some restraint, or maybe she
was only in a hurry, because all she did was raise a single eyebrow as if to
say, like hell you don’t.
“I’m not your
gatekeeper,” she said a moment later, her tone deceptively mild. But on her
last word Jack could hear a trace of that old accent they had both worked so
hard to shed. Sarah had to be driven to distraction if she was letting her
accent slip.
“Send him up,
then,” he conceded. This arrangement of theirs depended on a certain amount of
compromise on both sides.
She vanished,
her shoes scarcely making any sound on the stairs. A moment later he heard the
heavier tread of a man not at all concerned about disturbing the clients below.
This man
didn’t bother knocking. He simply sailed through the door Sarah had left ajar
as if he had every right in the world to enter whatever place he pleased, at
whatever time he wanted.
To hell with
that. Jack took his time stacking his cards, pausing a moment to examine one
with feigned and hopefully infuriating interest. The gentleman coughed
impatiently; Jack mentally awarded himself the first point.
“Yes?” Jack
looked up for the first time, as if only now noticing the stranger’s presence.
He could see why Sarah had pegged him straight away as a gentleman. Everything
about him, from his mahogany walking stick to his snowy white linen, proclaimed
his status.
“You’re Jack
Turner?”
There was
something about his voice—the absurd level of polish, perhaps—that made Jack
look more carefully at his visitor’s face.
Could it—it
couldn’t be. But it was.
CAT'S REVIEW
"The Soldier's Scoundrel" by Cat Sebastian. This story tells a tale of two people that fall in love at a time when it's a bit taboo. Jack and Oliver cannot deny their attraction. I truly liked both of these men. Jack, having lived a rougher life than Oliver, comes across a bit gruff but underneath that tough exterior, is a big heart. Oliver certainly fulfills the role of the upper class - a bit snooty at first. Throughout, I grew to adore him as well and the two found places in my heart as they worked together. Ms. Sebastian has done a wonderful job of telling the story of two men from different backgrounds that butt heads to start but the attraction is always there and it sizzles. This is not the most heated story or the most intriguing, yet it still held me in it's grasp throughout. The characters' banter and interaction as they grew to know and love each other. For a debut novel, Ms. Sebastian has done a wonderful job and I look forward to reading more of her works in the future. (received copy for honest review)
Cat
Sebastian lives in a swampy part of the South with her
husband, three kids, and two dogs. Before her kids were born, she practiced law
and taught high school and college writing. When she isn't reading or writing,
she's doing crossword puzzles, bird watching, and wondering where she put her
coffee cup.
a Rafflecopter giveaway
Thank you for hosting and reviewing THE SOLDIER'S SCOUNDREL today!
ReplyDeleteCrystal, Tasty Book Tours