Diamonds Are Forever
Outrageous Confessions of Lady
Deborah, my latest release, is what I would call a Regency with a
definite twist. My heroine writes hugely popular erotic novels for a
living. I know, I know but I had the idea for this book long before
THAT book went viral. Elliot, my hero, is a soldier turned
housebreaker. They meet when Elliot falls off a drainpipe while
making his escape after robbing a country house, and lands on Deborah
who is wandering the grounds in the middle of the night. If you want
to know why she is doing this I’m afraid you’ll have to read the
book. Anyway, the loot that Elliot has snaffled is a blue diamond,
rectangular in shape and strangely faceted, at about one hundred
carats, half the size of the original from which it was cut. Elliot’s
ill-gotten booty is in fact part of the stolen French crown jewels.
Louis XIV acquired the French Blue
stone in 1678. He had the diamond cut and set in gold, and wore it
around his neck. The next Louis had the diamond reset again and
turned it into the Order of the Golden Fleece, which the next Louis,
the unfortunate XVI wore only occasionally. In 1792, while Louis and
Marie-Antoinette were awaiting their fate, the French crown jewels
were stolen. Most of the pieces were recovered, but the French Blue
disappeared without trace.
I first read about this diamond when I
was researching for my last book, Rake with a Frozen Heart. I
abandoned the overly-complex crime caper which was originally at the
centre of that story, but I filed away my research. Then Elliot, my
housebreaker hero, popped into my mind, and I remembered the French
Blue story. Waste not, want not, as my gran was fond of saying
(usually when trying to make me clear my plate!).
According to legend, the French Blue
turned up in England in the early part of the Nineteenth century.
Some say it was cut into two before it left France, some that it was
never stolen but appropriated by the revolutionary Danton, who used
it to bribe the Duke of Brunswick, and that it was he who had it cut.
Caroline, Brunswick’s daughter, was the despised wife of the Prince
Regent. So appalled was Prinny by her lack of personal hygiene that
he managed to force himself to do his marital duty just the once.
The prince was not generous to poor
Caroline, who was forced to sell many of her jewels in order to
support herself, and it has been argued that the French Blue was one
of them. In 1812, there is evidence that a jeweller called Daniel
Eliason owned a diamond which resembled the French Blue. Did he buy
it from Caroline, or from one of the original thieves? Strangely
enough, there is evidence that Caroline’s husband, the Prince
Regent, also had a diamond very similar to the French Blue. Was this
the other half or the original? What we do know is that diamond
disappeared when the prince, by this time King George IV, died.
Outrageous Confessions of Lady
Deborah is set in 1817. I have chosen to believe that the
original French Blue diamond was cut in half by the French thieves,
and that Deborah’s relative from whom Elliot steals it, acquired it
by nefarious means from them. The ‘real’ French Blue, which is
known as the Hope Diamond, has had a chequered path through history,
with a reputation for bringing death or tragedy to its wearer.
Tavernier, who sold it to Louis XIV was reputed to have been torn to
pieces by wild dogs. Louis himself died of a festering wound. Louis
XVI, as we know, ended up on the guillotine. Various owners have been
murdered, died in freak accidents, or committed suicide, though since
it was donated to the Smithsonian, where it now resides, the curse
has lain dormant. For Elliot, it’s a lucky stone, because it brings
him Deborah. The path of true love is by no means straightforward for
my hero and heroine, but it’s fun, sexy, and ultimately rewarding
journey.
Outrageous Confessions of Lady
Deborah is out now in the UK, US and Canada. Here is the blurb:
JUST WHO IS LADY
DEBORAH? I am the Dowager Countess of Kinsail, and I have enough
secrets to scandalise you for life. I will never reveal the truth of
my soul-destroying marriage – some things are too dark to be told.
But at least no one can guess that I, a famously icy-hearted widow,
am also the authoress of the shamelessly voluptuous romances
currently shocking the ton…! Only now I have a new secret identity,
one that I will risk my life to keep – accomplice to Elliot
Marchmont, gentleman, ex-solider and notorious London thief. This
adventurer’s expert touch ignites in me a passion so intoxicating
that surviving our blistering affair unscathed will be near
impossible…
And here’s what the Romantic Times
said about it when they gave it four stars:
Daring.
Dangerous. Delightful. Kaye’s new Regency romance is a riveting and
thrilling adventure between a writer and a thief, both bent on
revenge, and neither expecting to find love at last. Kaye has another
winner on her hands, with an original plot, lots of sizzling passion
and enough nail-biting action to satisfy every fan.
There’s excerpts, background and more
about my books on www.margueritekaye.com.
I do believe in lucky charms, but have never had one.
ReplyDeletekscathy@yahoo.com
Yes, I do believe in lucky charms. My son is my lucky charm. For example while I was pregnant with him I went to play Bunko and I won $40. The next time, I was still pregnant with my boy I won at Bingo 5 times.
ReplyDeletecountessofmar@yahoo.com
I believe in lucky charms, I mean it can't hurt to believe right? I have a little pewter elf riding a snail that is suppose to be for safe travels. I keep it in my change purse and always carry it with me. So far so good!
ReplyDeleteYes I believe. I have a celtic pendant I wear. Its for protection.
ReplyDeleteWhat a great premise, Marguerite!
ReplyDeleteAnd welcome to the Riskies!!
Your book sounds wonderful! Can't wait to get my hands on it :) As to lucky charms I do believe in them but I don't personally have one.
ReplyDeleteI LOVED Rake With a Frozen Heart! What a great book. And the research you did on the diamond is fascinating.
ReplyDeleteI do believe in lucky charms. I mean, what can it hurt? I have a gris gris bag given to me by a very renowned lwa in New Orleans. It is made from the foot of a 100 plus year old snapping turtle and has all sorts of odd little things in it. She told me it would keep me safe.
My grandmother collected elephants with raised trunks as they are considered good luck. I have one from her collection on my desk.
I don't really believe in lucky charms, so I don't have any. If I ran across something that seemed to bring me luck, then I'd make sure to keep it around though. :D
ReplyDeleteBarbed1951 at aol dot com
I do believe in lucky charms! I have a silver four leaf clover pendant that I always wear.
ReplyDeleteFabulous idea, Marguerite - and it shows the value of never throwing an idea away! I look forward to reading it.
ReplyDeleteHi, Marguerite!
ReplyDeleteI would say the lucky charm I have is my wonderful husband. He has been my rock for nearly 50 years. While that's not the traditional lucky charm, he's still the one who brings me happiness and security AND luck!
I want everyone to know how wonderful Lady's Deborah's story is. I thoroughly enjoyed reading it! I hope you will check out my review at Goodreads and Amazon. Whether you are the lucky winner of a copy or not, you must get a copy and read it. A fabulous story with strong and charming characters.
Connie Fischer
conniecape@aol.com
Thank you all for sharing, and for the lovely comments. What a variety of charms - Louisa, I think yours should definitely feature in a book. I have a lucky pen that I use to sign contracts and books, but like Connie I'd say my real lucky charm is my lovely man.
ReplyDeleteI believe in lucky charms, but I don't own one of my own, unless you count my cat Lola. She knows when a person has evil intentions, and in the past has tried to protect me from a boyfriend (now ex) who wasn't good for me.
ReplyDeleteI have a penny from england that was given to me years ago that i carry with me.
ReplyDeleteI totally believe in lucky charms! Mine is a sliver cross I've had since I was 15. Years later I put a amethyst quartz pendant on the chain with it. That necklace has been with me through a lot. :)
ReplyDeleteSnowWhite258(at)hotmail(dot)com
I believe in lucky charms but my luckiest ever was the jewellery that the nurses gave me on the night of my daughters accident. they removed the jewellery from her and called a priest for the last rites. whilst he was saying the rites I pushed the brown envelope towards the bible of the priest. the envelope had my daughters jewellery in it. She survived the accident. I still believe in the events of that night 24 years ago. yes I believe the jewellery were my daughter's lucky charms.
ReplyDeleteI believe in lucky charms, but don't really have one.
ReplyDeletebn100candg(at)hotmail(dot)com
I do believe in lucky charms, I always carry a little stone for luck.
ReplyDeletejoylynne66(at)hotmail(dot)com
Love it when sort of true stuff is incorporated into stories. Looking forward to this one.
ReplyDeleteJust stopping by to say hi to everyone again, and thank you all for your lovely comments.
ReplyDeleteSara, I think cats are brilliant at detecting the 'baddies' in our lives, they have excellent instincts.
Eileen, that is the most lovely story, no-one would ever forget a night like that.
Interesting plot line for this story. A bit different with enough intrigue and spice to make for an enjoyable read. I haven read "that other book" and really have no plans to. This one sounds much more interesting.
ReplyDeleteNo real lucky charms. However, I do tend to wear my celtic or native american jewelry when I feel a need for some special connection/help.