No Quarter Asked, Book 1 of the Cord & Stacy series, was about Stacy Adams, a New York "city girl", and Cord Harris, a rich Texas cowboy.
After losing her father, twenty-year-old Stacy decided she needed time away from the big city to reflect on where her life was going. Her late father, the world-famous freelance photographer, Joshua Adams, had taken her on his travels after her mother died refusing to leave her to be raised by other people. They would return to New York City for respites, but then they would begin their travels anew when his next foreign assignment took place. Unable to face their home without him, she had chosen a cabin in Texas where she could gather her courage to face life without him.
When Stacy arrived in the small town she would be staying in, she almost immediately ran into Cord Harris, and for reasons unknown to her, he took an instant dislike to her. Not long later, she learned that the cabin in which she would be staying belonged to him and that he would only be a short distance from her.
Cord, for his part, had a past that did not bode well for a city girl like Stacy. With a mother who couldn't handle the ranch life and an ex-fiancee who ran from him because she wanted more than living in the country where there were no social functions other than a country dance and a barbecue here and there.
This was definitely old school Harlequin story, where the big macho-male dominated the poor little rich girl who didn't know how to live it rough. There were misconceptions, misunderstandings, and fights galore, with hardly any romance and very little chemistry between the two main characters. They rarely were in the same spot for any length of time, and definitely never enough for a romance to have bloomed.
While the author never stated Cord's age, it was hinted at several times that he was much older than Stacy's 20 years, so the way he treated her was mostly understandable if there were that many years between them. He was a rough and tumble cowboy, through and through, and did not give her any quarter (no quarter asked, right?) for making mistakes.
Stacy, though she was young, had already seen a great deal in her life, having traveled the globe with her father. She was a very head-strong young lady who did not like to be bossed around. However, she had no issue learning new things, or admitting when she was wrong.
It was a decent book...but there was no great passion or chemistry, though. It really didn't make sense, what with their interaction being so little. They didn't take time to get to know one another. They didn't have long conversations where they told each other about their pasts, their likes, dislikes, etc. There was no relationship whatsoever, so how does the author expect the reader to see a romance bloom from that? Definitely not a five-star worthy book.