The Scot Beds His
Wife
Victorian Rebels, #5
by Kerrigan Byrne
Publication
Date: October 3rd 2017
Publisher: St.
Martin’s Press
Genre:
Historical Romance
Author
Interview - The Scot Beds His Wife by Kerrigan Byrne
Are there any books or authors that have really influenced
you and made you want to write? What about those authors inspired or influenced
you?
There are more authors than I can name who’ve influenced and
inspired me, but I’d say that I rely heavily on Elizabeth Gilbert’s book Big
Magic when I need inspiration to write. It reminds me to make my own art, to
rely on the magic of story. The necessity of in my life and the lives of
others. I do always love to read Christopher Moore, Lisa Kleypas, Lindsay Faye,
and Rhys Bowen.
Do you have any special rituals that you find yourself
following when you’re writing? OR Take us through your typical work day.
I couldn’t say I have typical work days. I do try to keep
banker’s hours. But it’s best for me to write when I’m alone because I do have
a rather embarrassing ritual. I tend to try out my character’s dialogue
(terrible accents and all) out loud. I’d die of mortification if anyone heard!
Do you usually work off of an outline while writing or do
you tend to just start writing and see where the story takes you?
I tend to know how a book is going to begin and end, but I’m
not always certain of the road from point A to point B. That journey I love to
discover as I go.
Have you read anything lately that you loved?
I recently read Furiously Happy by Jenny Lawson, and it’s
something I’ve read again and again because it is both hilarious and helpful!
What (if any) research did you have to do for this novel?
What was your favorite piece of research you did for this novel?
I’d say for The Scot Beds His Wife, my favorite research was
for Samantha because, while I’ve done extensive research on the UK for other
stories, I know very little about cattle ranching, cowgirls, or shooting
pistols! It was the most fun I’d had in a while and was an interesting change
of pace.
What do you do to cure writer’s block? Do you have issues
with this often or hardly at all?
I’ve come to learn recently that stress is the enemy to
creativity. I was hit with several crises at once in a short period, and it
wasn’t like my drive to write was lessened, it was as though my ability to
write totally deserted me. After struggling with this for a while, I’ve learned
that gutting through the hard days can still be successful. Even if what I put
on the paper isn’t my best work, it’s something, and that keeps me moving
forward.
Who is your favorite character in this story and why?
I’d say I had two favorite characters! Locryn and Calybrid,
the two old cowhands who can’t live with or without each other. Their
relationship provided me with many much-needed giggles in a sometimes-dark
story.
We'd love to hear more about you! Give us 3
"good to know" facts about you?
I am a
video game nerd. On my days off, I love to play Assassin’s Creed, Tomb Raider,
Uncharted, Horizon: Zero Dawn, etc. It’s what I call “active rest,” where my
mind is resting but my hands are active.
I’m
pretty much prejudiced against all things “80’s.” I’m not a fan of the music,
the dress, or the pop culture. Though I’m a child of the 90’s, my husband and
friends are mostly children of the 80’s and we have many spirited debates!
I’m
only second-generation American, and I’d always been told my family is from
Ireland, Scotland, and Wales. However, I’ve recently taken a DNA test, and
found out I’m 50% Scandanavian and only 30% Irish. I’m mostly a Danish and
Norwegian!
What drew you to historical romance in the
first place?
I
started pilfering my grandma’s harlequins back when I was too young to be
reading them, and I enjoyed the contemporaries enormously. However, the moment
I picked up my first Victoria Holt novel, I was lost to the romance of the
past.
Have
you ever been to Scotland or Ireland?
I’ve
never been out of the US! I’m terrified
of flying, but I’m going on my first plane trip in 15 years next month. So
that’s one step closer to international travel.
Would
you say that your Celtic ancestry provides a source of inspiration for your
characters and settings?
Absolutely.
I remember the stories my grandparents told in their accented voices. I saw
their paintings and their pictures of home. I love the mythology of the old
gods, the old ways, and the traditional music. There’s always been something
wild and romantic about the Celts, and I believe that calls to me on a personal
level.
Similar to your other series the Victorian
Rebels Series as a whole has seen great reviews. What do you think appeals most
to the readers?
I’m so
grateful to have been blessed with incredible fans and readers who have often
become friends. I would say that not only do we women love to fall for a
tortured hero, but we also like to read about other women who share the same
hardships and triumphs that we do. I like to write about women who are
employed, who know adversity, and work hard for their successes, they are both
wise, capable, flawed, and feminine. These ladies can fight their own demons
and those of the men they love. They are not damsels who need to be saved by
their heroes. They become partners who save each other. To me, that is true
romance.
If you
could describe the main characters Gavin and Samantha's relationship in 3
words, what would they be?
Passionate.
Contentious. Forgiving.
What do
you love most about this story?
I love
that a Highlander who considers himself the most wild, willful, and independent
man of his acquaintance, meets a woman who possibly has him outgunned, in every
sense of the word!
As far
as your writing goes, what are your future plans?
I would
love to keep writing historical romances for as long as people would keep
reading them! Eventually, I’d love to sprinkle some paranormal historicals in
there. Since I’m so enamored of Celtic myth, I’d like to bring the romance of
some of those myths to passionate life.
This
book is all about Gavin St. James, the Earl of Thorne. What would you say is
his greatest weakness? What is his greatest strength?
I would
say that Gavin’s greatest weakness is his vendetta against his family. He often
lets his anger blind him to logic, and can make enemies of those who love him
because he won’t let go of his past. I am certain that his greatest strength is
his protectiveness of those he feels responsible for. His mother, his employees, the strays and
outcasts he tends to collect. He cares for them more than he likes to admit. He
has such a large heart beneath all of that rippling muscle. 😉
The
heroine, Samantha Masters, has quite the predicament on her hands. What was
your favorite part about writing her character?
I sort
of loved her struggle with her secrets and lies. She’s an outlaw who really
desires to be a good person and doesn’t quite know how. That was a great deal
of fun to write.
Your
books tend to be a little darker than the usual historical romance. What is
about writing about these characters that draws you in?
Life
has its darker moments for all of us. I think sometimes people go through
darkness and feel that they are ruined by it. I like to write about people who
go through that darkness, and are redeemed from it. Made stronger by it. It
gives me hope to write about it, I hope it give hope to others to read about
it, as well.
What
did you have the most fun with while writing THE SCOT BEDS HIS WIFE?
I had
the most fun using Samantha to humble a Scot as arrogant and handsome as Gavin.
I loved that she had a wit just as scathing and a mouth just a foul as his. She
refuses to be impressed by him, and that only makes him try harder to get
everything he wants.
If you
had to describe this book in three words, what would it be?
Rapid
fire romance.
BLURB
The Scot Beds His Wife is the next lush,
captivating Victorian romance in the Victorian Rebels series by Kerrigan Byrne.
They’re rebels, scoundrels, and blackguards—dark,
dashing men on the wrong side of the law. But for the women who love them, a
hint of danger only makes the heart beat faster.
Gavin
St. James, Earl of Thorne, is a notorious Highlander and an unrelenting
Lothario who uses his slightly menacing charm to get what he wants—including
too many women married to other men. But now, Gavin wants to put his shady past
behind him...more or less. When a fiery lass who is the heiress to the land he
wishes to possess drops into his lap, he sees a perfectly delicious
opportunity...
A
marriage most convenient
Samantha
Masters has come back to Scotland, in a pair of trousers, and with a whole
world of dangerous secrets from her time spent in the Wild West trailing behind
her. Her only hope of protection is to marry—and to do so quickly. Gavin is
only too willing to provide that service for someone he finds so disturbingly
irresistible. But even as danger approaches, what begins as a scandalous
proposition slowly turns into an all-consuming passion. And Gavin discovers
that he will do whatever is necessary to keep the woman he has claimed as his
own…
Buy Links:
EXCERPT
Chapter
Two
Union Pacific Railway, Wyoming Territory, Fall, 1880
Samantha Masters
squeezed the trigger, planting a bullet between her husband’s beautiful brown
eyes.
She whispered his
name. Bennett. Then screamed it.
But it was the woman
in his grasp she reached for as he fell to the ground.
Though they’d known
each other all of twenty minutes, she clung to Alison Ross as though the
younger woman were the most precious soul in the entire world, and they sank to
their knees as their strength gave out.
Alison’s hold was just as tight around her,
and their sobs burst against each other’s in a symphony of terror, shock, and
abject relief.
What in the hell just happened?
Not twenty minutes
ago, Samantha and Alison had been no more to each other than amiable fellow
passengers on an eastbound train, chugging across the wintry landscape of the
Wyoming Territory.
What were they now?
Enemies? Survivors?
“I’m sorry. I’m
sorry. I’m sorry.” Samantha repeated the words with every short, sobbing
exhale. Though she couldn’t have said who the apology was to, exactly. To
Alison? To Bennett? To whoever had been shot on the other railcars?
To God?
This morning she’d
been the irate, disillusioned wife of a charming and dangerous man. An
insignificant and unwilling member of the outlaw Masters Gang.
This afternoon, she’d
been the new acquaintance and confidant to Alison Ross, commiserating over
childhoods spent on secluded cattle ranches.
This evening, because
of what she’d just done, of what they’d all just done . . . chances were good
that she’d be hanged.
This train job was
supposed to be like any other. Each of the Masters boarded on the last platform
for miles and miles. To avoid detection or suspicion, Bennett, Boyd, and
Bradley Masters would each take a seat in separate passenger cars.
Samantha would be
placed in the least populated car, usually first class, as it was also the
least dangerous. Once civilization completely fell away, the signal was given,
and the men would strike, rounding up all passengers into one car.
This was done for the
safety of the passengers as much as the Masters, themselves, as the gang didn’t
generally rob people. Cash, jewelry,
and personal items were never as valuable as actual cargo. The Union Pacific
Railway didn’t only deliver citizens across the vast American continent. It
delivered goods, sundries, and often . . . federal funds.
Even in these modern
times, when it seemed all the gold had been mined from the rich hills of
California, American currency was still minted in the east. Which meant
everything from company payrolls, to government bonds, to cash and precious
metals were transported by transcontinental railways.
And the Masters brothers, aspiring
entrepreneurs, had decided that if the government wouldn’t allow them land, nor
the banks grant them loans . . .
Then they’d take what
they needed.
This was supposed to
have been their fifth and final train job. It was supposed to have gone like
the others.
No one harmed or
robbed. Merely a bit inconvenienced and perhaps a little shaken. The Masters
would escape with a few bags of money that the government could simply print
again, a “frightened” female hostage as played by Samantha herself, and the
papers would have an exciting story to publish in the morning.
The signal, both to
each other and to the passengers, was one shot, fired at the ceiling, and then
a command to disarm, get moving, and a gentle promise that all this would be
over before they knew it. Samantha’s job was to act like any other passenger,
and incite them to obey. Then, if necessary, act as the hostage to force
compliance.
“People are sheep,”
Boyd had always said. “They’ll follow a sweet thing like you to their doom.”
On this job, Samantha
had been more comfortable than any other. At this time in October, with winter
settling in but Christmas still a ways off, travel wasn’t foremost on the mind
of the average American.
Her railcar had only
two occupants other than herself. Alison Ross, a lively, bright-eyed San
Franciscan socialite, and a well-dressed businessman more interested in his
paper than conversation.
At first, Alison’s
friendly overtures had vexed Samantha, as she found it hard to concentrate on
responses when her blood sang with equal parts anticipation and anxiety. But,
she realized, to not engage would be suspicious, and before long she’d found
herself enjoying Alison’s company.
She’d not known many
women her age, least of all friendly ones.
Samantha imagined
that in another life, she and Alison could have, indeed, been friends.
Had she not been
about to rob the train.
Had there not been
more gunshots than were agreed upon . . .
Had Boyd and Bradley
not bailed with the money, leaving Bennett to come after his wife, his white
shirt and dark vest splattered with blood.
Oh God. What had they done?
Over the deafening
beat of her heart, she’d heard Bennett say something about federal marshals.
About someone taking a bullet in the shoulder. Boyd? And then a shootout.
Through vision
blurred with tears, Samantha glanced at the businessman, dead-eyed and
bleeding.
Her fault. All her fault.
Bennett had shot him
without a word or warning. Then he’d grabbed Alison and put his pistol to her
temple, because he’d known.
He’d known the second
he’d seen the horror and denial on Samantha’s face at the blood on his shirt,
that she wouldn’t have gone with him. That, while she’d have stayed married to
an outlaw, she could never love a
murderer.
“Come with me, Sam,”
he’d ordered tersely. “Come with me now, and we will go to Oregon.”
It was in that moment
Samantha had known he lied to her.
They’d fought about
it the night before, when he’d said Boyd wanted to go south to Texas or the New
Mexico Territory instead of north to Oregon like they’d planned. That oil towns
were the new gold rush.
She’d railed at him.
It wasn’t the life he’d promised her. They were supposed to go to the sea to
make their fortune in lumber. He was going to build her a grand house on a
cliff and make love to her while serenaded by thunderstorms. They’d only just escaped their desolate life on a
cattle ranch in the high desert. She didn’t want to go back to bleak sweaty days beneath the harsh, unrelenting sunshine.
She wanted pretty green hills, trees, and meadows. She wanted to live somewhere
she could wrap a shawl about her and listen to sea storms toss rain against her
windows.
Last night, she’d
been shrill, and Bennett had been cruel.
But he’d awoken his
charming self, randy as he ever was before a dangerous job. And she’d lain
beneath his thrusting body, unable to relinquish the churning of her
resentments and worries enough to appreciate his affections.
Then it was time to
wash, and dress, and commit a crime.
Bennett had promised
to revisit the issue. To make her smile again, to fulfill her dreams.
Problem was, Samantha
had already lost faith in Bennett Masters’s charming promises. A part of her
had begun to accept what she’d long feared. Bennett would never go against his
brothers, brutal and backward as they were. If Boyd decreed the family was
going south to work in stinking, desolate oil towns, then there was no other
option but to do exactly that.
Boyd had once
whispered to her in secret that, while Bennett might love her, he feared him
more, and fear was always more powerful than love.
“He’d let me fuck
you, if I wanted,” Boyd had threatened once when she’d been mouthy. He’d
grabbed her through her trousers, his fingers digging painfully against her
sex. “You’d best keep that in mind.”
She’d never forgotten
that night five months ago. Because she’d told Bennett of Boyd’s behavior.
And, as Boyd
predicted, he’d done nothing.
Now, when Bennett
held his pistol to this helpless woman’s head, and ordered Samantha to open the
door to the railcar, she’d looked into the eyes of her husband of four years.
And seen a stranger.
“You’ll let her go,”
she’d reasoned evenly. “You’ll let her go, and we’ll get out of here.”
She’d opened the
door. Bradley had the horses keeping pace with the train as it slowed around
the McCreary Pass bend. She motioned to him, and he spurred his ride faster.
They’d get off the train, and she’d figure out just what the hell had happened
before making any hasty decisions.
“She’s seen us.”
Bennett’s words had frozen
her blood as she realized that he wasn’t wearing his bandana.
“People have seen us
before,” she’d said over her shoulder.
“Not like this, Sam.
We can’t leave witnesses. She has to die—”
Samantha had reached
across her body, drawn her Colt single-action, turned, and shot him between the
eyes in the time it took him to pull back the hammer of his highercaliber,
slower-action Smith & Wesson.
Only now, while
clinging to a stranger on her knees, did she have time to think about what
she’d just done.
She’d killed a man.
Not just any man.
Her husband.
“Thank you,” Alison
said ardently against her ear. “Thank
you. I know he was your man, but I wasn’t ready to die.”
Pulling away from
Alison, Samantha noted the mark that Bennett’s recently used gun left on her
pale temple. He had to have killed before, hadn’t he? He just . . . murdered
that innocent man like it was nothing to him. He didn’t even hesitate. And then
to even consider executing a slight and lovely girl like Alison?
Her husband of four years.
God, had she ever
known him at all? Wood paneling splintered above them as a bullet pierced the
wall, and Alison screamed, lifting her arms to cover the green silk hat perched
above a wealth of mahogany curls.
Bradley.
Samantha’s head
whipped around to see that he’d gained on their car, and had witnessed the
entire thing. Luckily, of the four of them, Bradley was the weakest shot and
only the second-best rider.
The distinction as
the best, of course, belonged to her. Boyd was the gunslinger.
Samantha dimly
remembered Bennett saying that Boyd had been wounded, and with any luck, those
wounds would be fatal.
Bradley’s mount
galloped closer, and Samantha realized that if he gained on the train, he’d be
coming for her, and only one of them would survive the encounter.
She’d found her gun
where she’d dropped it, but Alison stayed her hand. “I know a way to keep your
neck out of a noose,” she said, her blueberry gaze surprisingly steady through
the tears. “But we’ll have to . . . to get rid of the body.”
Samantha’s racing heart shriveled, but she and
Alison stayed low as they rolled Bennett’s limp body the few feet to the door.
“You’re dead, Sam!”
Bradley, unable to reload his pistol on horseback, was reaching across his
saddle for his rifle. Which gave the women no time to pause. No time to
hesitate.
Together, they pushed
Bennett through the door, and the force of the train, the wind, and momentum
pulled him sideways down the iron steps. The broken sounds his body made when
he hit the earth nearly killed Samantha, but Alison slammed the door just as
Bradley’s rifle had found purchase on his shoulder.
Samantha could tell
his shot went wild, and waited a few eternal seconds for another.
Alison gathered her
wealth of skirts and knelt on a seat, peeking through the window. “He’s
stopped.” She breathed in obvious relief. “He’s stopped for your—for the body.”
It was only then that
Samantha began to shake. Great, bone-rattling tremors coursed through her. All
warmth leached out of her, and she slumped into a seat knowing her freezing
limbs wouldn’t hold her weight for much longer.
Resolutely, Alison
Ross claimed the seat across from her. A bone structure as sharp and perfect as
hers was only accentuated by pink blush and rouged, full lips. Emeralds swayed
and twinkled in her ears, catching the light as she leaned toward Samantha.
“He called you Sam,”
she noted in a sweet voice that contrasted with her sharp tone. “That’s your
name?”
“S-S-Samantha,” she
managed through rattling teeth. “H-his brothers. T-they’re going to kill me.
I’d rather hang.”
“You told me you grew
up on a cattle ranch. Was this the truth?”
Samantha nodded,
wondering if she’d ever be able to breathe again. Assaulted by the picture of
Bennett’s handsome face marred by a perfectly round hole between his eyes.
“You can shoot,
obviously. Can you ride, herd cattle, work figures?”
She nodded again,
before the absurdity of Alison’s question registered. “W-why are you being kind
to me? My—my husband almost—” She couldn’t bring herself to say it. It was too
horrible.
In spite of
everything, a corner of Alison’s painted mouth lifted at Samantha’s expression.
“Where I come from, in my country, saving a life is no small debt. Also, in my
savage part of the world, from the time we’re very, very young one law is
paramount to all others. Tha an lagh
comraich.”
“Comraich?” Samantha blinked rapidly at the lovely, obviously
wealthy woman. Either she’d gone mad, or Alison was speaking in tongues.
“It means sanctuary.”
Shaking her head, Samantha
tried to understand the woman. That word had no meaning to her. What was Alison
talking about, her country? She
didn’t look or sound at all like an immigrant. Was she not American? Had she
not said she had a fiancé in San Francisco? That her family had been wealthy
ranchers and she was forced to travel east to settle a land dispute?
“I don’t know what
you’ve been through, or what has happened to bring us to this place, but I
think we can help each other,” the elegant woman was saying.
“I’m lost,” were the
only words Samantha could conjure. Hopelessly, incredibly lost. Adrift.
Misplaced. In every conceivable way.
Alison’s gaze
gentled. “Tell me, Samantha, have you ever been to Scotland?”
Copyright © 2017 by Kerrigan Byrne and
reprinted by permission of St. Martin’s Paperbacks.
Buy Links:
Author
Bio:
Whether she’s writing about Celtic Druids,
Victorian bad boys, or brash Irish FBI Agents, Kerrigan Byrne uses her borderline-obsessive passion for history,
her extensive Celtic ancestry, and her love of Shakespeare in every book. She
lives at the base of the Rocky Mountains with her handsome husband and three
lovely teenage girls, but dreams of settling on the Pacific Coast. Her
Victorian Rebels novels include The Highwayman and The Highlander.
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