Showing posts with label marriage of convenience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label marriage of convenience. Show all posts

Monday, June 3, 2019

Marriage of Convenience by Paty Jager


I've never been a romance reader who had to have certain tropes in the romance books I read. One of my least favorite is marriage of convenience.

Yet, that was the trope I used in my very first book in the Letters of Fate series historical western romance series. Davis, the book,  starts out with Davis Weston riding on an Army freight wagon headed to his wedding to a woman he's never met.

The premise of my Letters of Fate series deals with men receiving letters that change their lives and helps them find their wives.

In the case of Davis, he has lost a wife and child and wishes to leave the area where his neighbors look at him as if he didn't do enough to save them. His sister, who is friends with the woman he is marrying, suggested he come west and help out her friend who has two children and a cattle ranch.

Here is a scene from the wedding:


Davis knew the man who walked through the door must be the Justice of the Peace. On the ride from Roaring Springs Ranch to J.P.’s ranch, his brother-in-law had told Davis the man was meeting them here.
Mariella wasn’t unpleasant to look at. She had light brown, curly hair. He knew it was curly because of the wisps curling around her face, otherwise it was pulled up in a bun. The smattering of freckles across her nose and cheeks gave her a youthful appearance. Talking with Mariella, her hazel eyes changed with her mood. His first sight of her had pleased him. She was nothing like his dainty Sarah. There was no comparison to his late wife. The dress Mariella wore showed off her wide child-baring hips, ample breasts, small waist, and broad shoulders. And her height. She stood a good two inches taller than his five-ten.
What did concern him was her riding and working cattle like a man. Granted she was as big as many men and no doubt strong, but a mother should care for the children.
“Davis, this is Mr. Cline, the Justice of the Peace, I was telling you about,” J.P. said, leading the man over to Davis.
Davis stood, shook hands with the man, and wondered if he should go through with this.
After they shook hands, Mr. Cline turned to Mariella. “Mrs. Swanson, are you sure you’re ready to remarry?”
Mariella shook her head. “I’m not sure. But Peter French has given me no choice.”
The venom as she said the other rancher’s name, caught Davis’s attention. He felt there was more to the feud than she was telling. Her indecision about marrying after meeting him was a bit of a blow to his ego. He hadn’t expected her eyes to light up with interest when they met, but her having second thoughts after talking with him didn’t give him hope of an easy marriage.
Ernestine moved to put an arm around Mariella’s waist. “Mr. Cline, I’m sure you’ve heard how Mr. French is pushing squatters and homesteaders out of Blitzen Valley. He’s now trying to take Blitzen Canyon. That is Mariella and her children’s home. She needs a husband to keep her land. My brother needed a change in his life. This is a good thing.”
Davis stared at his sister. She didn’t need to tell a stranger his problems. This matter was between him and Mariella. He held out a hand to Mariella. “We need to talk alone.”
Mariella ignored his outstretched hand, but headed for the door of the house. He followed, tossing over his shoulder. “We’ll be back in a few minutes.”
Outside, standing in the warm May sunshine, Davis walked over to where Mariella stood stroking a harnessed horse’s neck.
“Mariella, I understand this marriage is being forced on you. That you’d rather deal with it on your own but can’t. I didn’t want to remarry. Ever. It’s too painful to lose someone you love. You know this, having lost your husband brutally.”
She nodded and wiped at her tears with her fingers.
“What we have to decide isn’t if we will ever love one another, but can we get along. Do you think we can work together to keep your ranch?” Davis leaned against the wagon wheel behind the horse she pet.
Mariella cleared her throat. “I don’t know about getting along. You seem a bit citified to help on the ranch, but if you can help me keep this ranch, I’m willing to give it a try. I’m running out of choices.”
“All I can tell you is I will do my best to help you keep the ranch. My goal in coming here was to change my life and leave memories behind. Helping you may just be my only salvation.” Davis didn’t know why, but since seeing the woman, he wanted to help her keep a ranch he’d never seen.
“You seem to be a reasonable man and with some intelligence. I’d be a fool to turn down someone willing to help.” Mariella held out her hand.
Davis felt stung a bit by the ‘man of some intelligence’ comment but he understood her desperation. He clasped her hand and they shook.
“Come on. Let’s make this legal so you can explain all the problems on the way to the ranch.”
Mariella smiled. The first one he’d witnessed since meeting her. Her eyes turned a golden brown and her face glowed with youthfulness. That smile took his breath away.
He motioned for her to precede him into the house so they could get the legalities of this out of the way.
Mr. Cline read the official wedding narrative, had them sign a paper, and they all sat down to a delicious dinner prepared by Ernestine.
Davis was pleased to see that his new bride didn’t eat huge helpings like a man, but she also didn’t pick and push her food around.
After the meal, they hugged Ernestine, and Davis shook hands with J.P. and Mr. Cline.
“Come see me soon!” Ernestine called as Mariella drove the horses and wagon out of the Mulligan’s yard and out to the road he and J.P. had taken to get to the homestead from Roaring Springs.
“How far is the ranch from here?” Davis asked as the horses settled into a lengthened walk.
“About an hour. Depending on how many times we get stopped.”
The venom he’d heard in her voice earlier when mentioning Mr. French stung her words.
“What do you mean by stopped?” He wasn’t understanding a lot of things this woman said.
“We have to cross land Mr. French uses for his cattle. He has riders who stop anyone crossing his land.” Mariella glanced at him. “He’s fenced in land he doesn’t own. His cattle graze it, and he keeps everyone else off.”
“How can he fence land he doesn’t own?”
“I don’t know, but he has, and he’s keeping people from their land because of it.”
Davis had never heard of this. “Have you talked to a law official about the legality of his fencing?”
“The closest one is Canyon City. That’s four days from here. I can’t spare the time to ride up there.” Mariella sighed. “I couldn’t really spare the time to meet and marry you.” She glanced over. “I’m sorry. That didn’t sound like I appreciate a complete stranger marrying me to help me save the ranch. I do appreciate you coming all this way to help me. Ernestine and I have been good friends since they arrived in the Blitzen Valley. When she said she’d asked you to come out here and marry me…I was mad at her. She’d aired my troubles to a complete stranger.” Mariella turned her gaze on him. The golden brown of her eyes had turned to a sobering brown. “I couldn’t believe when you’d accepted her offer.” Her cheeks reddened. “To be honest, I didn’t expect—” she waved her hand up and down, “—this.”
Davis smiled. Probably the first genuine smile in over a year. “You aren’t what I expected either.”


This book is available alone on in a box set that just released.

Letters of Fate Trilogy


Three historical western novels filled with steamy romance and the rawness of a growing country.
Davis
Davis Weston receives a letter from his sister asking him to marry a friend. Widowed with two small children and a ranch to run, Mariella Swanson knows she needs help, but isn’t sure her heart, or neighbors, will accept her marrying a stranger. Can the two compromise or will fate once again leave them alone?

Brody
After receiving a letter, Brody Yates finds himself escorted across the country to work on a ranch rather than entering prison. However, a revenge driven criminal, the Oregon high desert, and his grandfather’s beautiful ward may prove more dangerous than anything he’d faced on the New York docks.

Isaac
The last thing Isaac Corum needs or wants is a snooty woman. Dang it all, the woman doesn’t do a single blasted thing she’s told, and Isaac can’t just sit back and let her go traipsing off into the mountains alone…
Universal buy link: https://books2read.com/u/47zp6R


Paty Jager is an award-winning author of 40 novels, 8 novellas, and numerous anthologies of murder mystery and western romance. All her work has Western or Native American elements in them along with hints of humor and engaging characters. Paty and her husband raise alfalfa hay in rural eastern Oregon. Riding horses and battling rattlesnakes, she not only writes the western lifestyle, she lives it.

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Thursday, November 6, 2014

It's Not What I Have...

Dear Readers

This month brings us Thanks Giving in the USA. Here in New Zealand, we don’t celebrate Thanks Giving but I like the idea. You’d think being a romance writer that I’d constantly remember to spread the love and not take anyone for granted. But we all need a reminder of what life is about. It’s about those we love and the achievements and battles we go through.

I’ve had a pretty tough year this year. I lost a family member to cancer in July after a ten-month ferocious battle. I also have three friends currently battling cancer, and I’m praying for great outcomes for each of them.

During this time I had to write. I had publishing commitments and unfortunately I was late delivering my book. Sometimes it’s hard to write when life gets in the way. However, my editor and agent were so supportive. I’m thankful for that.

I have just finished writing my latest book, A Touch of Passion, book #3 in my Disgraced Lords series, due for release 24 March 2015.  I’ve had to write it during a terrible time but I think it’s made the book stronger. It really focused me on love and loss, just what the book is about.

My hero, Grayson, has experienced loss and is now scared to love. Lucky for him, my heroine, Portia, shows him loss is nothing to fear, for the fabulous memories stay with us and we are much better for having known those we lose. 

Here is the blurb:

In the latest Disgraced Lords novel from USA Today bestselling author Bronwen Evans, a vivacious thrill seeker clashes with her dutiful defender—causing irresistible sparks to fly.

Independent and high-spirited, Lady Portia Flagstaff has never been afraid to take a risk, especially if it involves excitement and danger. But this time, being kidnapped and sold into an Arab harem is the outcome of one risk too many. Now, in order to regain her freedom, she has to rely on the deliciously packaged Grayson Devlin, Viscount Blackwood, a man who despises her reckless ways—and stirs in her a thirst for passion.

After losing his mother and two siblings in a carriage accident years ago, Grayson Devlin promised Portia’s dying brother that he’d always watch over his wayward sister. But having to travel to Egypt to rescue the foolhardy girl has made his blood boil. Grayson already has his hands full trying to clear his best friend and fellow Libertine Scholar of a crime he didn’t commit. Worse still, his dashing rescue has unleashed an unforeseen and undesired consequence: marriage. Now it’s more than Portia he has to protect . . . it’s his battered heart.

Learn more about the book and Pre-Order here:

This year has made me even more conscious of remembering to take the time to speak and share time with those I love. Don’t take anyone for granted.  I’m grateful for the time I had with my family and they are all in my heart.

Here’s a little picture that sums it up nicely.



Happy Thanks Giving to you all.

Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Romance Novel Tropes

by Madelle Morgan

In my teens I devoured Harlequin category romances, so I knew exactly what I wanted to write about for this month's topic: Favorite Romantic Clichés

In the Muskoka series of contemporary romance novellas I'm writing, I will incorporate several of the familiar tropes listed below. 

Although, honestly, none of my books will have titles like The Bad Boy Billionaire's Secret Bride so as not to be confused with category romance!


Types of Hero

Protector (Military, Cop, Secret Agent, Firefighter, Bodyguard, etc.)
Sheikh
Billionaire/Tycoon/Developer
Royalty (King, Prince, Earl, Lord, Count, etc.)
Medical doctor/Surgeon
Cowboy
Boy Next Door
Bad Boy

Who Are You Again?

Amnesia
Mistaken Identity
One Night Stand
Reunited Lovers

With Friends Like These...

Friends to Lovers
Enemies to Lovers

Marriage

Marriage of Convenience
Bride

Babies
Baby on Doorstep
Secret Baby
Accidental Pregnancy



Literary Tales of Love
Beauty and the Beast (damaged Hero)

Cinderella (Heroine is transformed)

Upstairs/Downstairs (Heroine falls for Hero in higher social class or vice-versa; e.g. Wuthering Heights)


Have I left out any of your favorite tropes?

Which are your favorites?

www.madellemorgan.com


Thursday, July 4, 2013

Using our Environment for Story and Character Ideas


Dear readers

One of the questions I’m frequently asked when people learn I’m a writer is, ‘How do you come up with your story ideas.’

Ideas flow thick and fast for me, however writing the story is the hard work.

The environment we live in is my inspiration. I use songs, movies, television programs, celebrities, and people I meet or know.

I use movies and TV to see what themes are popular. I love looking at modern day issues and then thinking what would that scenario be like in the Regency era.
Movies of course often look at classics like Shakespeare and put a modern twist on it.

In addition, a movie I love I’ll try and put my own twist on it and set it in the Regency period. For instance, I am looking at writing a Regency story a bit like No Mercy. I find the idea of a ‘lady’ virtually sold as a child an interesting concept and how she’d rise above that.

In my contemporaries, I like using themes that are a bit deeper.  In THE RELUCTANT WIFE, RomCon Readers' Crown 2013 Best Short Contemporary, I
selected a topic close to my heart; endometriosis and the impact this can have on a woman’s life.

A lyric in a song can also trigger an idea. Country songs in particular as they are often filled with heartache.

I guess, because my mind is always filled with stories, I tend to look at the world around me as a potential story. I’m one of these people that would be quite content sitting at a railway station, or the airport, watching people interacting and trying to imagine their stories.  I find it sad, for instance, when I see couples out for dinner and they spend the whole meal not saying a word to each other. Is it comfortable silence, or have they simply nothing to share with each other anymore? I find my imagination working overtime when I see this. I try to write a story that would see them find their spark again.

With my over-active imagination I never feel lonely. Characters are always popping in to say hello and keep me company.

How about you? Are you a people watcher? What’s your favorite place for people watching?