Monday, 13 January 2020

Joy V Sheridan - Charity Amour and No Gentle Bondage. 2 Historical Novels with excerpts



Charity Amour.

Blurb 
This novel, set in the time of the French Revolution, concerns the destiny of Charity Cottrell - extraordinarily beautiful and talented. Early in life she was deprived of her secure home base because of an eviction. She had to become a live-in domestic to keep a roof over her head. In desperate self-defence, she attacked one of her employers, the lecherous aristocrat Lord Rispian, and had to go 'on the run'. In the course of her adventures, Charity encountered the attentions of Lord Clover, a passionate admirer, who became a patron. He built her up as an Opera Star, and she received massive ovations.
Later, she was kidnapped and taken to a French brothel, where she was 'groomed' by the proprietress, Madame d'Esprit, to be a supremely desirable Lady of Pleasure. She developed some Sapphic feelings for the proprietress. She was eventually rescued, and spirited away - in the nick of time before the brothel was destroyed by a Revolutionary mob. She did an 'anvil' marriage with Lord Clover. Shortly after this, the villainous Lord Rispian did a vendetta on Clover, his deadly rival. Charity had felt she was happily married, and was devastated at the news. But having established the validity of her marriage certificate, she came to inherit Clover's estate. After her bitter struggles through life, she emerged with status, strength and power - to rename herself 'Charity Renegade'.

Excerpt
How would she fare? Would they both be acclaimed at the conclusion, or thrown into the refuse pit of obscurity? She could hear the chords of instruments as musicians in the pit orchestra tuned their instruments to the right pitch. She glanced, almost hysterically, to the left and right of her, searching for Lord Seyton Clover’s form, trying to thrust from her, the murk of shadows and apprehensions which threatened to stultify her into perpetual somnambulism. He was nowhere in evidence and she knew that very soon she should have to walk the boards.

Panic threatened to overwhelm her again. What was her cue?
What her words? Would she remember the actions, attitudes she must adopt? Was it also a fact that the King and various members of his family, were this very night, in the audience? Charity fiddled with the strands of pearls and jewels hanging about her slender, white throat, her own reflection staring vividly ashen white, back from a mirror. The snowy powder, lit with minute garlands and butterflies of gems, sparkled in the dappled density of her wig.
Her low-cut gown was spangled with subtle designs; the cloak and high collar - reminiscent of the Elizabethan age - forming a rising backdrop for the stark alabaster beauty of her bared throat, her shoulders. Her beautiful full bosom had been hauled, so it seemed to Charity, so that it looked twice its normal size: large, luscious fruits they were, and not many to the pound at that!
The stage had been hung in luxuriant fantasies of drapes and curtainings: all in medieval richness. The raised dais which supported the gold brocaded and tasselled couch (upon which she must pose), was surmounted by a black urn standing on a pedestal, whereon was displayed a cluster of pure white orchids and lilies.
There was the whisper of a curtain being hastily pushed to one side and Lord Seyton Clover was in front of her. She chewed nervously upon the vermillion painted lips, looking bewildered: she stared with intensity into his strangely transfigured face.
“I, I, I am ..................... nervous, Your Lordship.”
“And with good reason, my fair damsel, for there are royal personages upon the premises tonight. Do not worry, for I feel utterly confident that you will be superb. SUPERB!”
Charity found herself further at a loss, for the first half of the sentence he breathed upon her, he was saying she had good reason to fear and with the remainder, he was encouraging her, as only he could. She stared, deep into the velvety depths of his shimmering eyes. Dare she ever pull her own stare away from his gaze?
“You...will not....be...far... away, Your Lordship?”
“Not indeed! For do not forget: I shall be conducting the orchestra. It will be after all, Charity, only a performance of a few minutes. But, believe me, you shall bring the house down!”
The audience was becoming increasingly impatient, judging from the hullaballoo they were creating. Obviously they considered that they were being asked to wait an inordinately long stretch of time for what was, after all, only a Bill Filler.
“Who in hell’s teeth,” had hissed Lord Fitzroy Rispian, “Was this ‘Hélène de Noir' anyhow?”
None, as far as he could construe, had ever heard of her before. He had some familiarity with the theatres of Paree and it was not a name which fell with seasoned ease from his lips. Lord Rispian was all set for heckling. That surely, was half the enjoyment of attending the theatre, the opera house. What! What an excuse, also, for a roughing-up of those you didn’t like, or couldn't stomach! Yes, a chap had to enjoy himself the best he could and if blooding the noses of a few jumped-up worthies added to the entertainments, then that was the sort of work he was set about enjoying! Not to mention the pinching of a few ample bottoms, nipping a flowing bosom here and there.
At length, silence was called for by the owner of the theatre and an uneasy quiet it was which enshrouded the playing house.

The curtains rose slowly upon a darkened stage. Some devilishly clever technician had been to work: for a subtle spot-light of candle flames transfused the wispy silhouetted figure who stood to the left of centre stage, back turned towards the audience. The conductor’s baton rose and hauntingly beautiful yet melancholic music flooded from the pit into the auditorium.
The figure turned slowly to face the audience, a domino of some black material - with the hint of rainbow-coloured gems flashing along the upper rim, - covering the eyes. The singer opened her mouth, the words were low at first, then rose to an incredible soprano, soaring high into indescribable crescendos.
The song was a tale of love and abandonment, of disaster and death. All eyes were fixed upon the tragic figure as she swayed and moved about amidst the shadows and rays which kaleidoscoped the stage.
Abandoning her cape, she cast herself into the pool of its luxuriant mystery, pulling the fabric closer about herself. Rising it fell into fluidic drifts away from her. Her monumental bosom heaving, she sank to the dais, singing like a nightingale – rising to dance like a swan, - before sinking again into a swoon upon the couch, imitating death upon the golden brocade of that support.
As though to add an extra dimension to the performance, the air was heavy, redolent with the scents of flowers. The audience was startled into awed silence. Then, as the heavy curtains rolled down, thunderous applause flooded throughout the theatre. An emotion, hitherto unknown, came to Lord Rispian, filling his breast with desire of the enchantress. He was filled with the yearning to possess that enigmatic and entrancing dame - completely to hold her in the breech of his own sturdy arms, to savour her complete fantasy, to know her in total!


UK 

No Gentle Bondage


Blurb

This is a powerful Interracial Romance, set in 18th Century Jamaica. Plantations, buried treasure, piracy and attempted vendettas lurk in the background; also initiation into Obeah. Some reference to runaway slaves wreaking vengeance on soldiers; black desires white, white desires black. In this Caribbean melting pot, there is En Jon Dow, a half-caste, with possibly Indian mother and Caucasian father, who is often taken for an oriental, but in terms of his demeanour is in most respects a cultured European, his father having provided him with an Oxford-educated tutor. There is one slave women, Eboinée, who had been something of an aristocrat before her abduction from Africa, and retains some of her lofty attitudes. She loses a child who had been with her on her transportation voyage, and after her ‘resettlement’ is double-named Jezebel; she becomes a threat to the status quo, partly because of her magical powers. The array of strong characters includes the black slave Abu/Eli, who sustains a remarkable level of moral integrity in view of his (lack of) status, combined with his exceptional looks – he is forced to pose as a life-drawing model. Lovely bathing scene leading to a failed seduction! A fascination also develops between Eboinée and Abu.
Captain Kate Goshawke, who radiates fascination, is the ‘macho woman’ heroine. Widowed when very young, she had been left to fend for, and prove, herself in the hard world of mariners. Because of her sometimes wearing man’s attire, there is some speculation about her real gender, and she attracts obsession from both sexes. En Jon, a successful philanderer, meets his match in Kate. They play elaborate, flirtatious mind-games together.
Another forceful character is Mara, daughter of ageing plantation owner Bartholomew Sadler, who has a bitter rival in the form of fellow plantation owner Esmé Durrance. Esmé has quite a close attachment to En Jon Dow on account of a shared love of literature. In parallel with Ebionée, Esmé has lost a child, and is also credited with magical powers.
In the novel here is no explicit sex, which for the reader, heightens the intensity of the desire, and the impassioned approaches which go with it. These make an important counterpoint with the politics of half-arranged marriage, integral to the novel’s structure. The love interest is counterpointed with the proprietorial and matrimonial designs of other plantation owners. There is also an adulterous relationship and concern about illegitimate pregnancy. In the case of Mara Sadler, there is a clear conflict between her inner desires and the matrimonial role expected of her. There is some conflict between Abu and Eboinée; Abu thinks she was responsible for the death of his wife. Bartholomew Sadler takes a shine to Eboinée.
Later, Bartholomew Sadler collapses and dies. This may have been the work of Eboinée’s spirits. The decease will suit daughter Mara’s plans to take over the property, so Eboinée bargains with Mara to obtain her freedom. Mara then plots Eboinée’s assassination, at the hands of Abu/Eli. Eboinée gets wind of the scheme, and tries to cultivate En Jon Dow to help thwart Mara. The assassination is faked, with Eboinées’s ingenuity in engineering a ‘decoy’ of bogus bloodstained remains; Eboinée escapes. Eboinée approaches Esmé Durrance, with the bait of being able to lead to buried treasure.
For Tsunami-aware readers, there is a superb description of a tropical storm towards the end. There is speculation about whether Eboinée’s magic brought about the storm. Love is unrequited for En Jon and Kate, but there is a suggestion that it may prevail with Mara and Abu/Eli.
I think Shiva Naipaul would have approved of this story.



Excerpt

With a peremptory gesture she had fitted her hand over his right arm, and he, realising her intention, 

gave way to a commencement of their languorous perambulations along the quay. En Jon was 

impressed to see what a fine lady Kate looked, once removed from her nautical raiment. She was 

now attired in a lavishly tinted gown of violet silk, cut in a style which pre-empted the post French 

Revolutionary mode, low upon the bosom with tuckers beneath so that the main shift fell fluidly to 

the hem, under which was exposed a froth of mauve petticoat. The scarf tied over her shoulders and 

concealing in part, the bosom, was but the flimsiest excuse and even in En Jon’s brief visual 

reconnoitre he could see that even this part of her anatomy was toasted a becoming, light golden hue. 

Upon her head, she wore a cocked hat of light coloured straw, with a large white ostrich plume 

bowing to her left shoulder.
Her hair had been piled up and away from her forehead, but a few stray curls had been allowed to fan over her brow. He had found it difficult to assess her age previously, for she seemed to have an aura of perpetual youthfulness and even as he stole occasional glances at her, on this morning, she appeared at times to be no more than seventeen and at others, a woman of mature years.

Abu had been some few minutes swirling the cooling waters about his body, when the urge to submerge himself and his scorching, fire-tingling back into the river, became even more immediately demanding. Slipping the trousers from his body, he placed them to one side.
He was in, not caring about all the ugly rumours he had heard concerning the fate of shirking slaves, nor mindful particularly of the myriad legends he had heard, concerning the venomous, dangerous creatures said to inhabit the river and its banks The mood he was in just then, should he be bitten and the bite prove fatal, so much the more would he like it. Anything would be preferable to the life he had inherited, standing, toiling, day after day, from dawn until dusk, in the broiling heat of the plantation fields. He smiled as he floated upon the cool waters, looking at the blue perfection of the cloudless sky overhead. He saw the shaking murmur of foliage, the lifting of a cloud of butterflies, the darting of bright plumaged birds. Love for Nature in all her aspects and guises, flooded upon him in a wave of irrepressible emotion. Tears formed and fell down to unite with the waters which supported him. He would be nigh on willing to barter his soul for a measure more of freedom.
Little did Abu/Eli know it then, but solutions can be found to most problems, prayers answered, one way or another. Yet, for everything there has to be a price.
He did not see the shadow falling beside his discarded clothing by the water’s edge, nor hear the gentle swish of clothes as they were dropped to the ground. The first he was aware that he was not alone, was a sudden movement behind him in the waters. Fearful now, that some crocodile or other carnivorous reptile or beast might be about to devour him, he flipped over onto his stomach, his eyes for a fraction, blinded by the shaded green of the river’s surface.
“What? You afraid of something, slave? Not of a white lady surely?” Mara Sadler, striking out, was headed, sleek and white like a shark, to where he paddled water. Although he was by no means conversant with the English language, he knew enough, coupled with the picture which was here being presented, to know that this scenario could mean certain, painful death to him. He began to swim away from his pursuer. But she was having none of it.
“You're a shirking slave, big black boy, and the penalty for shirking can be mighty tough – it  could, for instance,” she sought a fresh intake of air, “have you whipped within an inch or so of your life.”
Her tawny, tiger's eyes, were following his movements with a greedy malevolence. With a thrust, she had propelled herself through the water and clasped her naked arms about his powerful neck.
“Missy; Mistress! I beg of you to let me go, do not do this thing. Yes Missy, you must not!”
“Why not slave, blackmail, why not? No one here is going to see, and if they does, what of it? They don't want to tell an’ git trouble for theyselves.”
Abu/Eli, fascinated by her wanton disregard, and likewise the fluorescent sheen to her yellow eyes, was backing towards the gentle incline up the river bank. Mara Sadler stopped her pursuit of the errant slave and stood, hands on hips, laughing with a low, guttural sound, at his actions. Embarrassed, Abu/Eli tried to cover his nakedness, then with fleet footsteps, he scooped his trousers from the ground and pushed his torso into them. He began to run from the scene. He glimpsed Mara as she emerged, stark naked, from the river, still laughing, tossing her unbound hair in a silent red-gold frenzy about her face. He was quite convinced that the white missy was crazy.
For her part, Mara thought that the black slave was himself, crazy for having refused her invitation. Others, as she recalled, hadn’t been so reticent. The remembrance irked her. She’d bring him to heel yet, so she would. Swiftly, she redonned her clothes, squashing the hat over her hair. She retraced her footsteps to where she had hidden her pony. Her thoughts as she made her way, genuinely this time, towards her home, were upon her sister Ann’s sudden betrothal. Well, that was two ‘grand’ occasions her Papa had cheated her of. She wondered if she should get a chance to see her sister before Ann sailed for England.


UK
https://www.amazon.co.uk/No-Gentle-Bondage-Joy-Sheridan-ebook/dp/B079WKXRDC/ref=sr_1_5?keywords=joy+v+sheridan&qid=1578933717&s=digital-text&sr=1-5

Posted on behalf and request of David Russell.

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