THE
HERO AS PURSUER
If there is any unifying concept in the romances I have written,
this is it. My critique partner noticed years ago that every one
of my heroes want their heroine the instant they set eyes on her.
Want her sexually, that is. This fact is simply a reflection of
my experience of how the male of the species reacts on seeing a
desirable female. It's not logic that rears its head.
I didn't intend to specifically create books on this theme--it simply
happened--but looking back over the 23 romances I've had published,
plus the 3 works in various stages of production, I have to admit
that "the hero as pursuer" is a feature of every last
one. And very likely will be in all the ones to come.
Why? Because I write Regency-era historicals, and all my heroes
are a certain type of man. They are powerful men in all senses of
the word--physically and mentally, socially and sexually. They see--they
want--they take. Which means all my heroines must be a certain sort
of woman, meaning the sort of woman strong enough to stand up to,
and wring concessions from, that type of man.
To my mind, a strong, more-than-alpha hero necessitates an equally
strong heroine--if she's not sufficiently confident in herself,
she'll never be a convincing match for the hero. If she wasn't willful
and headstrong and far too independent, the hero would probably
lose interest within a few weeks. It's the very fact that she doesn't
simply fall in with his masterful plans, but digs in her pretty
heels and refuses to tamely play by his rules--because she argues,
sticks her nose in the air, haughtily dismisses him, and--worst
of all--dares to walk away from him--that forces the hero to focus
his attention on her sufficiently to let Cupid slip under his guard
and mount a sneak attack.
Unwittingly, the heroine becomes the first and only woman who has,
in his adult life, forced the hero to really look at her. Consider
her. Think about what she is thinking, what she feels, how she reacts
in various situations. Because he's looking, albeit with a view
to conquest, he sees her character, and all the admirable, and sometimes
vulnerable, aspects of her--which fascinates him even more. Her
hoity behavior powerfully prods his possessive instincts, while
her vulnerabilities call forth his innate protectiveness. He is,
after all, a warrior whose civilized mask is but wafer-thin. For
him, possessiveness and protectiveness are the outward expressions
of love. But without the need to focus on the heroine, which need
is brought about by the heroine's character, there is little opportunity
for this type of hero to fall victim to love.
He's far too canny, guards his heart far too well, to be an easy
conquest--it needs a very strong woman to distract him enough for
love to weave its spell.
I should perhaps emphasize that my heroes never fall in love with
my heroines at first sight. They fall in lust at first sight,
something quite different. The distinction is important--especially
in the heroes' minds--because lust is something they can immediately
and openly admit to, while falling in love is something they will
move heaven and earth to avoid admitting, even when they
finally wake up to the fact that this is what has occurred.
Because the setting is Regency England, and my heroines are all
indisputably ladies, and my heroes, despite their rakish tendencies,
equally indisputably gentlemen, then marriage quickly becomes the
hero's object, that being the only way he can legitimately get the
heroine into his bed. And keep her there. His and only his. His
mind, at the beginning of the story, is pretty much one-track.
All my heroes are over-the-top arrogant, domineering, too-handsome-for-their-own-good
rakes, too old and too experienced to be anything but deeply cynical
of the notion of love, especially within marriage. They've slept
with too many married ladies for that. So when they wake up one
day and discover that--dear God!--they have fallen victim themselves
and fallen in love with their wife/betrothed/intended/neighbor/ward/whatever,
this, to them, makes them hideously vulnerable, a situation they
instinctively hide.
But accepting the fact that they love the heroine, and admitting
it, acknowledging it, at least to the heroine, is a battle all my
heroes must wage and win. All strong men, they are required to become--challenged
to become--even stronger, strong enough to admit they love.
My heroines, of course, help them overcome their little problem
by ensuring they can't slide around it, or ignore it, or
Regardless
of whether they have already been steamrollered into marriage, or
have managed to hold the hero off thus far, my heroines demand their
due. They are not going to admit that they love the hero, that they
would treasure his love and would never betray it, not until the
damned man realizes and acknowledges that he loves them.
Of course, the slight difficulty there is that, until he does admit
it, she cannot be 100% certain that she's read him aright and that
he does, in fact, love her.
Which leaves me, the author, with all manner of tangled emotional
webs to exploit.
I love working with the "hero as pursuer" theme because
it plays to two of the most basic, enduring fantasies of women--that
of being the object of pursuit by a dominant male, and that of seeing
that same dominant male bend the knee to love--for her.
It also incorporates one of the all-time biggest difficulties strong
men face--that of accepting love and the accompanying vulnerability.
It's also my favorite theme because it creates natural opportunities
and strong motivation for the heroine to take the initiative, to
wrest the direction of the relationship from the otherwise all-powerful
hero, who is equally strongly motivated to keep the reins in his
hands. I adore refereeing the tug-of-war that usually ensues. And
I have to admit that I love to see dominant, arrogant, overbearing
males, not just stymied, but close to helpless at the hands of supposedly
weak females--females empowered by only one thing--love.
Basically, I'm a sucker for any story that demonstrates the power
of love. For me, "the hero as pursuer" in the Regency
does it every time.
Although the theme is a constant, it never gets dull, because there's
as many variations on the basic theme as there are characters and
personalities in human nature. In AN UNWILLING CONQUEST, the hero
mounts a desperate fight against his instinctive urge to pursue--and
loses. On waking with the heroine in his arms, he naturally uses
their compromising position as the reason for making the wedding
arrangements. The heroine throws him out--literally--and he's not
even fully dressed. In the most aptly titled DEVIL'S BRIDE, Devil
immediately casts Honoria as his duchess, having decided she'll
fill the position nicely, and keep him amused in bed as well. But
Honoria has no intention of bowing to the dictates of a tyrant--she's
off to seek adventure in Africa--and says so. I've even, in FOUR
IN HAND, used the scenario of a heroine who thinks she's the pursuer,
while the hero is actually pulling her strings--once she finds out,
she demands retribution, in the form of his abject surrender.
I find "the hero as pursuer", at least within the Regency,
a great deal of fun to write--and I believe that translates to a
great deal of fun to read. And that's my stated aim as an author:
to leave my readers with a silly grin on their faces. And a twinkle
in their eyes!
I imagine I'll be writing "the hero as pursuer" for many
years yet.
---Stephanie Laurens |

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