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The Third Son of a Duke
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WE needed a central character
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So, in writing the outline, I came up with a premise that might change, but it seems a likely scenario, given that the title of the book is The Third Son of a Duke. It means that he is like having a spare tyre, or in the same position as the younger brother who is heir to the throne.
Here, it’s nothing quite so radical, just that he will inherit the title or the estate, which goes to the eldest son, yes, no equality, because I set it to start in the year 1913, that is, the Christmas before the First World War. Remember, I was going to wrap something big around the story, and you can’t get any bigger than a world war.
It’s a time when the classes were starting to break down and the aristocracy was becoming less relevant to everyone else. It’s the Edwardian Era, and everyone is clinging to the last vestiges of the ruling class and the working class. What was eminently workable in the 1800s is no longer viable. Nobility is finding it harder or impossible to maintain their lifestyles, fortunes are being lost, and a new class of wealthy people are emerging.
In 1913, there were still first class, second class, and third class. On ships, on trains, and in life. And something else is in the air, the coming of the Suffragette. Women no longer want to stay at home, do as they were told and have no say over their lives.
We are going to start in that small world of classes, travelling together on a ship, one of the biggest for that time, with over 1300 passengers.
Soon.
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Today, 1235 words, for a total of 3025 words.