USA Today bestselling author, Tracy Sumner, crafts her
signature sizzling style into an emotional, witty, standalone romance. An
American scoundrel falls for his etiquette teacher in this steamy Regency romp!
In the frosty heart of Regency London, American engineer
Weston Whitaker has arrived with a singular purpose: to perfect his
steam-powered inventions. But his reckless disregard for England’s stifling
social codes earns him a notorious reputation as “Tall, Dark, and December”,
putting his project—and his prospects—in jeopardy. Bound by blood to a powerful
duke, West is reluctantly drawn into society’s gilded web, where every glance
and rumor can make or break him.
Tasked with taming this brooding American is Lady
Penelope, London’s sharpest etiquette tutor and a woman who embodies the very
aristocracy West disdains. Yet, beneath her proper exterior, Penelope is as
fierce and unconventional as he is, and West finds himself captivated by her
bold mind and dangerous wit. As sparks fly between them, Penelope battles to
remain detached, unwilling to fall for a man who could so easily unravel her
carefully constructed life.
When West’s secrets threaten to shatter their budding love, he must decide to confront the family he never wanted or leave England—and the woman he’s falling for—forever. In a city where every scandal and secret counts, can this iron-willed inventor win the heart of the woman who’s turned his world upside down?
Excerpt
Copyright 2024, Tracy Sumner
Where a lady recalls what desire feels like.
He was a mess. A grand, gorgeous
mess.
One she’d been hired to clean up.
Penelope stood in the entryway of
the warehouse’s sprawling main room, the box she’d brought for their lessons
filling her arms. She’d agreed to this location without initial consideration
of the fact that none of the items she needed for instruction would be housed
in a working space. Place settings, cutlery, and the like. Hence, her arrival a
day early to ensure they were prepared to start tomorrow.
Plus, she’d been too bloody
curious to stay away another minute.
Her breath slowed as she sighted
her erstwhile pupil leaning over a partially disassembled engine, a wrench in
his hand as he adjusted a part. He was dressed more carelessly than any man
she’d seen since her downfall, thin cotton stained with sweat clinging
wonderfully to the straining muscles of his arms and shoulders. His midnight
hair disheveled, his trousers rumpled and being held on his lean form by braces
that cut a sharp, incongruent crease down the center of his back. Light blazed
from an assortment of lamps and fixtures, a brilliant burst raining over him.
It was quite the presentation.
Pulling her attention away before
she was too taken by the scene, Penelope lifted her gaze to the detailed
sketches and calculations tacked to the wall, and the books tumbled around his
feet, pencils jammed in the open folds as if the reader had taken flight during
the browsing. The collection spoke of intellect and industry, passion and
progress, a life being led without
compromise.
For the first time in years,
Penelope Anstruther-Colbrook seized temptation simply because…
…she wanted to.
Leaning against the scarred
doorjamb, the sounds and scents of Weston Whitaker’s world flowed through her.
In Limehouse, of all places, a realm she’d never seen and certainly never been
invited to, this time purely due to commerce. The acrid odor of heated oil
mixing with a salty brine straight off the Thames danced across her nose, the
thrum of spinning cylinders and the soft burst of steam presenting a strangely
calming murmur. In the distance, shouts from the dock and the bang of goods
being unloaded whistled through gaps in the warehouse’s planks.
Nothing was as it should be here,
and she’d be lying if she said she wanted it to be.
She shifted the box in her arms
with a shiver of expectation, the penny in her skirt pocket warm against her
thigh. Her life had become incredibly staid by design while the man across from
her was more vibrant than a post-squall sunset—bursts of color like those she
spilled across repurposed canvases in an effort to save her purse and calm her
mind.
The moment spoke of revelation,
one she couldn’t define.
Stretching to reach a section of
the engine, Mr. Whitaker’s untucked shirttail rode high, revealing a sliver of
skin above his waistband—a moment’s view, quickly lost. The leanness of his
body wasn’t a surprise, nor was the sight of firm muscle at his hip. It was the
contrast with Neville’s flaccid outline that had her sighing in regret.
And appreciation.
For a brief summer, she’d
investigated the male form in all its glory. Shocking to some, perhaps, but
she’d liked her research. Memories, new and old, swept past. She feared her
spectacle lenses fogging from her rapid breaths if she didn’t calm herself.
Startled by a sound, Mr. Whitaker
looked up as the wrench twisted in his hand. Muttering a curse, he let the tool
slide free and brought his curled fist to his chest.
Then, she noticed the blood
trailing down his wrist.
Penelope was across the room
before either of them had time to utter a syllable. Placing her box atop a
crate, she dug around until she came up with a napkin. Starched linen with her
family’s initials embroidered in the corner, but it would do.
“It’s just a scratch,” he said,
though he winced when he flexed his hand.
Rolling her eyes, she pointed to
the barrel at his side. “Sit.”
Her firm tone prompted a flashing
grin that only made him more attractive, she was vexed to note. Nonetheless, he
complied, perching his bottom on the rusted iron rim, his hand cradled between
his spread legs. “Do your worst, then, Penny, me gal.”
Sighing, she stepped gingerly over
strips of leather, an errant nail, and various tools she had no name for. “Lady
Penelope if you please.”
His penetrating gaze cut her way, taking her apart and putting her together again like one of his mechanisms as the seconds ticked away. “What if I don’t please? Has any Englishman in history ever been courageous enough to ask?”
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