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Elisabeth Nelson brings her love of history and her narrative gift for the timeless history of love in this FREE excerpt: Chateau de la Mer

Last week we announced that Elisabeth Nelson’s CHATEAU DE LA MER is our Romance of the Week and the sponsor of thousands of great bargains in the Romance category: over 200 free titles, over 600 quality 99-centers, and thousands more that you can read for free through the Kindle Lending Library if you have Amazon Prime!

Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Romance excerpt, and if you aren’t among those who have downloaded Chateau de la Mer, you’re in for a real treat:

Chateau de la Mer

by Elisabeth Nelson

Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Luc d’Artois is ready to die. He has nothing to live for. All he has left is his name.
But his name proves more valuable than he realizes when he is approached by a
mysterious woman who offers a temporary reprieve from the gallows in exchange for his name. His contract with Gabrielle Giraud, however, turns out to be much more than he bargained for. She could be his every dream come true or the start of a nightmare from which he will never awaken.
Caught in a web of deceit and betrayal, degradation, and brutality, they are trapped in a secret and living a lie…his lie, the lie Luc demanded Gabrielle live with. But will the lie intended to afford Luc time to redeem himself rob him of the life he intends to live with Gabrielle?

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

an excerpt from

Chateau de la Mer

by Elisabeth Nelson

Copyright © 2012 by Elisabeth Nelson and published here with her permission

To my daughter and her colleagues committed to ending human trafficking (http://www.polarisproject.org.)

March 1823

Chapter One

 

“On your feet!” was the order, followed by the blow of a club against the prisoner’s ribs. The prisoner sat up. Instinctively, he swung his fists. The guard fell, regained his footing, and then proceeded to beat the prisoner into submission.
The guard, breathing heavily now, pulled Luc d’Artois to his feet. “You have a visitor, dog.”
Luc didn’t respond with anything more than a contemptuous look. “Visitor,” he thought as the guard left his cell. For his crimes, Luc d’Artois was the most despised among the despised, and his only “visitors” were the kind he would have to beat to a pulp or suffer the degradation of being the “visitor’s” bitch–all to the great entertainment of the prison guards.
Thus far, he had fought his way free of that particular degradation, but the guards were determined now to see him defeated and subjugated. He prayed his date with the hangman came before their satisfaction ever came about.
Luc began steeling himself, willing away the pain that relentlessly racked his body–pain from clubs, fists…hunger. The guard appeared again, and Luc waited for his newest opponent to appear.
Instead, the guard looked behind himself and said, “Here he is. Want me to stay with you?” Luc didn’t hear the response, but the guard turned to him, warned him to behave, and then left.

At first, Luc saw nothing but shadows in the dim lighting.
He squinted a little, anticipating some kind of surprise attack.
Then he heard, “M’sieur d’Artois?” and from those shadows, a rather diminutive woman emerged. He couldn’t see her face or figure for the dark heavy veil and shapeless black cloak concealing her, but he could smell her. Even through the stench of the prison, he could smell the delicate scent of a woman–a lady. He inhaled her like a breath of fresh air.
“You are M’sieur d’Artois?” She addressed him speaking French.
“Who are you?”
“I will know first whom I am addressing.”
With a sardonic curl on his lips, he effected an exaggerated, courtly bow and replied, “Jon Luc d’Artois at your service.”
“You have a noble name, but you are not French?”
“Virginian,” he said. “American. My English is a little better than my French.”
“They said you were French,” she replied in English, then muttered, “The English cannot be trusted,” before she said,
“And I thank you to speak poor French rather than good English for that reason.”
“As you wish,” he replied, accommodating her request.
“Now who are you, and what difference does it make to you that I’m not French?”
“My name is Gabrielle Giraud, and whether or not you are French would matter a great deal to my father.”
He almost laughed. “I beg your pardon, but I don’t understand your meaning.”
“Still, your family name is French, and you are not English,”
she said. “Tell me, m’sieur, are you being treated well?”
“Like a prince,” he replied, sweeping his arms wide to show off his castle.
“You’re a condemned man. I’m told you are to hang for raping and murdering a child.”
“You can’t trust the English, remember?”

“So you are not convicted…”
“No, I’m convicted and sentenced to hang.”
“You are innocent?” she said–a little snidely, he thought.
“The fact that you’re here tells me my guilt or innocence doesn’t matter to you. So I’ll spare you any further discussion on the matter, unless of course you want the grizzly details not told in the papers. Then I shall be happy to oblige you, as I never tire of retelling those details. But if it’s not the details you want, I ask you again, Mademoiselle Gabrielle Giraud, what do you want?”
There was a brief pause before she replied, “Your name.”
Luc’s expression mirrored his confusion. “My name? What do you mean you want my name?”
“M’sieur d’Artois, I am proposing you give me your name, and in exchange for your name, I will guarantee the rest of your life will be spent in comfort.”
For several very long moments, Luc stared at her, trying to process the turn of this conversation. “Just how can you make such a guarantee…You mean marry you?” he said, incredulous now. “Why in God’s name do you want to marry me?”
“I don’t want to marry you. I want your name, and I’m rich, m’sieur, very rich. There is very little money cannot buy.”
“Including my name it seems,” he retorted.
“What it will buy is relief for us both,” she said. “I can’t buy a pardon for your crimes, but I can buy you freedom from the misery of this place.”
“Let’s assume you can do that. Why would you do that?”
“Because if I don’t marry someone of my choosing, my father will force me to marry someone of his choosing. If I have your name, I can go home a widow instead.”
Luc started to laugh. “Well, now I know why you chose me,”
he said. “Mademoiselle, I think you’ve lost your mind. Go home, and do what your father wants. Trust me, it will spare you considerable trouble later.”

“Thank you for the counsel, M’sieur d’Artois, but I will not be sold to the highest bidder. No, m’sieur, I will do this. If not with your assistance, then with someone else. Good day.”
She started to turn away, but he called out to her. “You’re really that determined?”
“I am.”
With a tilt of his head, he said, “You can do that for me?”
“It’s already arranged for you, or someone else with perhaps enough sense not to turn up his superior nose at a mad female.”
He glowered at her before pressing on. “When and where would this marriage take place?”
“When is in a month’s time. Where does not concern you, unless you agree to my proposition.”
His expression turned thoughtful, then suspicious. “You can really do something about his place?”
“If I can’t, we have no bargain, and you have lost nothing.”
He studied her again before he said, “What’s wrong with you? Who or what are you hiding now?”
“I suppose there is much wrong with me, but at present, I am only concealing my presence here. You understand? This marriage must satisfy my father. He must have no reason to suspect trickery. There must be no one who can report I was here, so while I am here, I am Madam Rousseau looking for a little…adventure in her otherwise dull life.”
Another silent perusal, a little more contemplation for Luc before he replied with a sneering sort of cockiness he didn’t really feel. “I’ll let you marry me.”

    ***

Gabrielle Giraud took her leave without saying any more on the subject. Luc could only shake his head in wonder. Still, if she could arrange any improvement to his surroundings and situation, he would call her his Angel Gabrielle.
He looked at the dirty, damp straw that was his bed and grimaced. Clean straw would be nice…maybe a meal that didn’t crawl off the plate…a chance to look out a window and breathe into his lungs something other than the sickening odor of human filth and excrement. If she could do that…
Luc laughed at himself. “Impossible,” he thought. He wasn’t worth the bribe she’d have to pay to get him out of this English hell-hole.
Nevertheless, long after the dark of night settled over him, Luc was still thinking about Gabrielle Giraud and the proposal she made. He couldn’t help but be curious about her, if for no other reason than she was a woman, and he had not seen a woman in months. Of course, he had not actually seen Gabrielle Giraud, but he allowed his imagination to provide the details.
He was contemplating those details when he heard hushed voices outside his cell. A few moments later, a guard was fumbling with his keys. Luc sat up as the door to his cell swung open.
“Well, pretty boy, looks like you got yourself a guardian angel–or devil from what I hear,” the guard said. Another guard entered the cell. “Probably be wishing you were a bitch instead when she finishes with you,” the first guard continued. “Bet she’ll make a souvenir of what manhood you have left before she brings you back.”
“Brings me back?” Luc said. The second guard promptly punched Luc in the jaw before gagging him.
The first guard laughed and said, “You think she’s going to keep you? Aye, you’ll be back, looking like a little girl and begging to hang.”
Luc was quickly shackled, manacled, fitted for a collar, another chain, and then led out of his cell like a dog on a leash.
With only a candle to light the way, the guards shuffled Luc down a dark corridor, pushed him down some stairs, and then dragged him towards a cart. After shoving him into a sack, they tossed him into the cart, which wheeled him away.
As Luc lie there helpless and immobile, he started to feel sick inside. What new hell had he just put upon himself?

 Chapter 2

Enveloped in black, Luc didn’t know if it was day or night or how many days and nights had passed. But it felt like an eternity–jostled and bounced, manacled, fettered and chained, no food, no water, and scarcely enough air to breathe…and the silence. The damn silence. He heard nothing but the rumble of the wagon wheels and clipping of the horses’ hooves. There wasn’t even a guard sneering at him, no one to acknowledge his existence.
With every jolt of the wagon, every beat of his heart, Luc could feel his will giving way to the pain, depravation, and degradation. Misery was becoming his priority, smothering his pride and dignity…What pride? What dignity? Had he not lost both the day they said “Guilty”? What was he fighting for or against? These English bastards would never grant him a reprieve. He was going to be executed…
Abruptly all movement stopped. “The horses,” he thought.
“They’re changing the horses.” The horses must be watered and fed. He must wait on the horses…Voices? He strained to hear what was being said…muffled gibberish. The squeak of a door startled him, and within moments, he was yanked by his ankles.
With a dull thud, he hit the ground. He would have screamed in pain if he could have. But his throat was so dry no sound came forth.
Unexpectedly, the black shroud was torn away. The brightness of the sun blinded him, causing him to curl up and cringe. He heard more gibberish as he was pulled to his feet. He tried to open his eyes, but it hurt too much. Whoever was holding him up suddenly let go, and he started to fall. But he was caught and, like a sack of wheat, tossed over a shoulder and carried away.

***

“M’sieur? M’sieur d’Artois? Can you hear me, m’sieur?”

The voice filtering through the haze was unfamiliar, male, polite…French?
“M’sieur d’Artois?”
Luc opened his eyes to the canopy over him. Disoriented, he tried to force some recollection, but had none.
“M’sieur?”
He turned his head slightly and found an older, impeccably groomed man watching him closely. Swallowing, Luc managed to voice a hoarse whisper, “Where…”
“The residence of Mademoiselle Giraud,” the Frenchman replied. “You remember Mademoiselle Giraud?”
Luc shook his head, closed his eyes, and drifted off to sleep.

     ***

The aroma of warm bread roused Luc from his sleep the following morning. He opened his eyes and saw the Frenchman removing silver covers from the dishes on the table. The man glanced towards the bed, stopped, and did a double-take.
“Good day, M’sieur d’Artois.”
“Morning,” Luc said, sitting up slowly, feeling weak and every ache of his body.
The Frenchman approached, and Luc recoiled, his eyes mirroring his suspicion. The Frenchman retreated slightly, then spying a robe, he reached for it.
“May I assist you?” he said, offering the robe.
Luc snatched it from him. He covered himself, keeping a watchful eye on the too polite man.
He gestured to the table. “Breakfast, m’sieur?”
Luc positioned himself to leave the bed. With all the wariness of a trapped animal, he rose to his feet, and his weak legs almost collapsed beneath him. The Frenchman moved in, and quickly regaining his balance, Luc raised his fists in defense.
The man halted, began backing his way to the door, and said he would tend to the bath. Then he left Luc alone.
Looking around the room for the hiding place of his would be attackers, yet feeling the ache of hunger acutely with the temptation on the table, Luc didn’t know what to do. Was it some new torture? Some cruel joke? Were they lying in wait or simply watching him, amused by his predicament, waiting to see if he would take the bait?
“But where are they hiding?” he asked himself as he looked about the room again.
His eyes were drawn once more to the table and the feast that was there. He saw the bread, hesitated, then damned them as he snatched the loaf, devouring it, expecting at any moment it would be ripped from his hands. Then he caught a reflection in the mirror. The image so grotesque and disturbing, the shock of it momentarily paralyzed him. His eyes shot around the room.
He saw no one, realizing then that disgusting creature in the looking glass was Luc d’Artois.
The face of this beast was so battered and bruised, so swollen and torn–unrecognizable, barely human. A matted mass of dark hair hung like snakes from his head, and the layers of filth and waste that covered this freak from head to toe turned Luc’s stomach. His revulsion, self-loathing, and pain took over.
Throwing the bread aside, he threw his fist at himself, shattering the glass. Then holding his head, he sank to his knees.
Within moments, the door was thrown open, but Luc didn’t fear what was sure to come. He was ready to die. He wanted to die.
“M’sieur…M’sieur d’Artois!”
The Frenchman was back, but not beating him. He attempted instead to assist Luc to his feet, but stopped when Luc’s forehead fell in desolation against the older man’s chest.
“A bullet, sir,” Luc whispered. “For mercy’s sake, I beg you just put a bullet in my head.”
“But you don’t want to die now,” the Frenchman said, speaking in English instead of French.
“So I can suffer a new hell,” Luc said, choking back his tears.
“Hell is over, Luc d’Artois.”
Luc lifted his head and said, “Or has it just begun?”
The older man smiled. “Only if you are afraid of a little soap and water.”

 Chapter Three

Luc wasn’t wholly convinced that the torture had ended, but he had no choice but to trust the man he knew as Jacques. Thus far, Jacques had done nothing to raise any greater suspicion, and he kept a steady supply of hot, clean water coming while Luc scrubbed his skin nearly raw.
“I think you’re clean, m’sieur,” Jacques said, holding up a fresh robe.
Luc took the robe. His long wet hair dripped water into his eyes.
“I don’t suppose you have any scissors,” he said, pushing his hair back before tying the belt around his waist. Then his eyes rested upon the table, or rather the feast still waiting there.
“Something better. After you eat, we will attend to the rest,”
Jacques replied, allowing others to remove the bath and giving a warning look to the footman who cast a curious eye in Luc’s direction. “Sit, M’sieur d’Artois, and eat.”
Luc was happy to take that direction, and he took a chair at the table. “What’s the rest?” he said, unable to decide which dish he should attack first. Jacques decided for him, serving up a healthy slice of the perfectly prepared roast beef.
“You must be careful what you consume now. You must adjust to good food again, m’sieur,” Jacques said, buttering a roll while directing Luc to eat both the vegetables and fruit on the table.
Luc glanced up at Jacques and almost laughed. Careful? He intended to eat so much he did indeed get sick and then start all over again. What he discovered, however, was how very little it took to fill his belly. He was miserable just looking at how much he didn’t eat because he couldn’t. It wasn’t fair.
Jacques produced a pair of pants and a shirt, told Luc to dress, and said he would be back shortly. When Jacques opened the door to leave, Luc caught a glimpse of a man outside the door whom he assumed to be a guard. Once again, his suspicion was roused and defenses were up, and he dressed very quickly.
But what he put on was ridiculous. The shirt was too small and the pants too big and too short. The former he could scarcely fit into and certainly not button, and the latter he had to hold up to keep on.
When Jacques returned, saw Luc holding the bunched up waist of the pants, barefooted and barelegged from the knee down, he laughed. Luc glared at him, ready to take issue.
“Forgive me, m’sieur, it was all I could find,” Jacques said.
“But no matter. The tailor will be here soon to address the situation. Please sit, m’sieur, so the barber can attend you.”
A little man popped his head in the doorway. “Is it time?” he queried in French.
“Yes,” Jacques replied.
Luc eyed them both warily. “Did we cross the channel at some point?” he said.
“No. You are in England, m’sieur,” Jacques replied.
“But everyone’s French.”
“Because the English cannot be trusted,” Jacques said.
“I’ve heard that before.”
“Undoubtedly.”
Several hours later, Luc had survived a haircut, a shave and the annoyance of being measured and pricked with pins by the tailor–also French. But by the early evening hours, he had clothes that fit, the finest pair of boots he had ever worn on his feet, and he was no longer blinded by an unruly mass of hair.
Still, when presented with the opportunity to view his appearance, Luc declined. He never wanted to look at himself again.
Laying out supper, Jacques said, “You are much improved, m’sieur.”
“I don’t believe in miracles,” Luc replied. Jacques shrugged and started to excuse himself, but Luc stopped him. “Can’t you stay and eat with me?” he said. “There’s enough here to feed a dozen people.”

“That would be inappropriate, M’sieur d’Artois,” Jacques said.
“I appreciate the sentiment, but recognize the charade.
Besides, I have a lot of questions.” Jacques studied him silently for a moment or two, and Luc rolled his eyes. “If you’re afraid I’m plotting against you, I’m sure that guard out there will be happy to slap those iron bracelets on me again…like he will tonight.”
“And how do you know this?”
“Because I know I’m still a prisoner. Oh yes, the prison is far more pleasant, but the bars are still there.”
Jacques pondered Luc a little longer before deciding to accept the invitation. Luc watched now with some fascination as Jacques tested the wine, took the time to appreciate the efforts of the chef in the preparation and presentation of the meal; and then finally, he took his first bite, savoring every moment of it.
Luc thought Jacques may be a butler and valet, but he presented himself like an old world aristocrat.
After allowing Jacques some pleasure in the meal, Luc started his questioning. “So,” he said, “do you know why I’m here?”
Jacques, with an arch of his brow, replied, “Do you know why you are here?”
“No…well, maybe…Not really, no.”
“You don’t remember Gabrielle Giraud?”
Luc smirked. “Oh yes, I remember her all right,” he said.
Though every time he recalled her beautiful voice, remembered the alluring scent of her, he forgot for a moment his fears about her intentions. Instead, his imagination created a woman no less beautiful than her voice and as alluring as her subtle perfume. “Too long in prison,” he told himself and remembered why she was not only to be feared, but despised as well.
“Then you know why you are here,” Jacques replied.

“No. What she proposed and why I’m here are two very different things.”
“I don’t understand.”
“We had an agreement, but I didn’t agree to what she’s really got in mind for me. So what’s your role in all this? To just clean me up, or do you also participate in her sick games? Whom does she fancy herself? The Marquise de Sade?”
Jacques almost spit out his wine as he sprang to his feet. “I beg your pardon, m’sieur!”
“Spare me the theatrics. You know who I am and why I was brought here.”
“I know, M’sieur d’Artois, that you are a mistake,” Jacques said. “Just as you are mistaken about Mademoiselle Giraud. You were brought here because you agreed to the marriage, and that is the only reason you are here!”
“Oh really? Well, I think you’ve had the wool pulled over your eyes. The agreement between your Mademoiselle Giraud and me was not any of this. I only agreed to marry her, and in exchange, she was going to see to it that I got some relief from the abuse. That’s the whole of my agreement with Gabrielle Giraud.”
“Exactly,” Jacques snapped in response. “So why do you think her so despicable? Is she not keeping her word? Are you not comfortable here? You want another room, perhaps? Well, M’sieur d’Artois, take your pick! The house and the staff are at your disposal. Yes, you remain a prisoner, not of Mademoiselle Giraud, but of the English, and yet, a very comfortable one, I think.”
Throwing down his napkin, Jacques marched to the door.
Luc was on his feet as well.
“Wait!” he said. “Jacques, wait!”
Jacques drew in his breath before facing Luc again. “Yes, M’sieur d’Artois,” he replied through gritted teeth. “How can I serve you?”

Luc began searching Jacques’ eyes for the truth. “You’re telling me this is what she meant? When she said she would see me comfortable, this was what she meant? All of this just to marry me?”
“Not you, m’sieur, your name. She doesn’t want you in any way, sense, or possible fashion. She wants your name, and yes, this is what she meant when she gave you her word.” As he continued to speak, Jacques looked at Luc with a mixture of disgust and incredulity. “What did you think? That she would stand with you before a priest without all this? This is not only her promise to you, but to ensure you are able to confer what she requests from you. You have to appear to be a gentleman, or no priest will marry you.”
Luc sank back into his chair in wonder. “Well, I guess that makes sense, too,” he said, then looked at Jacques again.
Jacques recovered his composure somewhat, but he clearly still felt the insult to Gabrielle Giraud and raised his indignant chin. “Conceit,” he said, “like counsel from a fool, should be heard with a deaf ear, m’sieur.”
“That’s not what I…” Luc’s voice died as his face turned red.
“If not conceit, then what would prompt you to believe Mademoiselle Giraud has any interest in you as a man?”
The disgust in Jacques’ tone prompted Luc to turn his face away. “Not a man,” he said. “I know I’m not a man to her.”
Jacques didn’t reply, but Luc could feel the older man’s eyes upon him. He was waiting for an answer to his question. Luc felt another rush of humiliation sweep over him.
“It’s what they told me,” he said, looking every where but at Jacques.
“They?”
Luc nodded.
“They are who?” Jacques said, then paused to smirk. “Of course, the prison guards, yes?”
Luc nodded again.

“And they told you what exactly?” Luc didn’t respond, but the renewed flush of red over his face prompted Jacques to laugh. “I see,” he said. “And you believe them? Men who treat you like an animal–you believe them?”
Luc glanced up at Jacques. “I don’t know who to believe anymore,” he said. “I guess I believe the worst, though, because it hasn’t disappointed me yet.”
“You should know, too, that the English…”
“Can’t be trusted,” Luc said.
“The first sensible thing you have said all evening, m’sieur.”
Jacques smiled faintly as he continued to speak. “So you are expecting the worst now, but I’m afraid this time you will be disappointed. Mademoiselle Giraud has no wish or intention to hurt you. She doesn’t want to hurt anyone, but especially not the man who has agreed to assist her.”
Luc shook his head a little. “That still doesn’t make sense to me. I mean why she is doing this. I know her reasons, but still…”
He stopped, looked at Jacques, and said, “Her father isn’t a cruel man, is he?”
“No, M’sieur d’Artois, he is not a cruel man. He is a man who loves his daughter very much, but more than that I am not at liberty to say.”
“You don’t have to call me ‘M’sieur d’Artois.’ My name is Luc.”
“I know, but given our respective positions…”
“I should be waiting on you,” Luc replied with a grin.
“You are Mademoiselle Giraud’s fiancée, and you must be shown all due respect.”
Luc’s eyes drifted about the room, seeing his past in the rich carpets on the floor and the expensive furnishings, remembering why he wasn’t still wallowing in filth and wearing rags. He couldn’t distinguish the truth from the charades his life had become.
“Well,” he said, “that’s fine in front of everyone else, but I would appreciate it if you would just address me by my name.”

Luc fixed a steady gaze upon Jacques. “I know I’m not your friend and a mistake besides, but you’re the first person in a long time to show me any form of respect.”
“Mademoiselle Gabrielle was not respectful?” Jacques said.
“No…I mean, yes, she was, but she’s a lady. She’s always going to be respectful–even to someone like me.”
Jacques almost smiled. “Indeed?”
“She talked to me, not at me, in spite of our respective positions. That’s how I know she’s a lady,” Luc said, thinking about his mother.
Jacques studied him for a moment or two, then said, “Well, young Luc, you surprise me again. I imagined I would be slaving away for weeks trying to teach you the most basic etiquette–how to behave properly, gentlemanly. But now that the effects of prison have been washed away, I can see you are not the ignorant or lowborn man I was expecting. That earns you some respect and gratitude as well. My work here will be substantially less than I anticipated, which means I shall have to find some other way to occupy my time.” He eyed Luc with an arched brow. “Are you perhaps familiar with the rules of chess?”
Luc broke out in a smile. “I am,” he said. “But if you want to challenge me, you better be prepared for defeat.”
Jacques shook his head, clicked his tongue, and returned to his seat. “Young men,” he said. “They never learn to respect their elders until they are old men themselves.” Then he proceeded to teach Luc a lesson about respect.

 Chapter Four

In the immediate days that followed, Luc lost the pallor of prison, regained his strength and appetite, and took advantage of every opportunity for daily exercise. He had to wear the manacles outside the house, and the guards accompanied him on his walks about the peaceful grounds of the estate, but Jacques kept the men at a distance. Luc could ignore the guards as he basked in the unusually warm sun of early spring, inhaling the fresh air he would never again take for granted.
“Where exactly are we? Or is that privileged information as well?” he said. “We must be some distance from London. The air is too clean.”
Jacques smiled. “We are situated in Kent,” he said.
Luc glanced back at the grand manor house. “Your Mademoiselle Giraud must be very well off to keep such a home.”
“This is not mademoiselle’s home,” Jacques replied. “She has no use for a permanent residence in England. Mademoiselle Gabrielle let the place, not for its grandeur, but for its proximity to Dover and, more importantly, Calais.”
Luc glanced over at him. “Is that where she is now–France?”
Jacques smiled in response, and Luc let go of a frustrated sigh.
“You won’t tell me that much?” he said. “It’s not like I can do anything with the information.”
“Then what is your interest in obtaining the information?”
“Curiosity, what else?” Luc said. “This woman, whom I wouldn’t know if she were right in front of me, proposes that I marry her because she likes my name. That’s it–no other reason.
Well, that and the fact that I’ll make her a widow pretty quick.”
Luc looked at Jacques again. “Do you understand? I don’t even know what she looks like.”
“Does it matter?”
Luc scowled. “Why do you always answer my questions with another question?”

Jacques chuckled. “Why do you persist in asking questions you know I’m not at liberty to answer?”
“Fine!” Luc retorted. “Keep your damn secrets, and I’ll keep believing the worst.”
They walked in silence for another half hour before Jacques made a peace offering. “Mademoiselle Gabrielle is the chatelaine of Château de la Mer. It’s her responsibility to maintain the stature of her father’s home.”
Luc thought for a moment, then he started to laugh. “You’re telling me she’s shopping,” he said. “She’s in Paris shopping. For what? What else besides a husband is on her list? A child or two?
A lover to comfort her after her husband dies?” Jacques glowered at him, but Luc only laughed harder. “That’s cold, very practical, but cold. Calculating, really, but I guess I already knew that about her.”
Jacques came to a halt and began adjusting his shirt cuffs.
“M’sieur d’Artois, I must tend to my duties,” he said. After a curt bow, he did an about face and marched towards the house.
“Jacques–wait!” Luc said, trying to stifle his laughter. He jogged to catch up to the indignant Frenchman and attempted to apologize. “I’m not saying I’m ungrateful. I very much appreciate her…practicality.”
“M’sieur d’Artois, you cannot, nor will you ever begin to, appreciate Mademoiselle Giraud,” Jacques said. “That is your misfortune. But I am not you, and I trust you will show me the courtesy of keeping your ignorance to yourself!”
Luc watched the angry man stomp the rest of the distance back to the house. In Jacques’ absence, the guards were on Luc’s heels. Frustrated and now feeling the pangs of regret, Luc followed Jacques’ lead.
Luc didn’t see Jacques for the remainder of the day, and that evening, Jacques declined to sit with him for dinner in spite of Luc’s sincerest attempts to apologize. Alone, Luc vacillated between sullenness and anger. Mademoiselle Giraud might very well be a saint to Jacques, but Luc d’Artois was only another item on her shopping list–like another pair of gloves she would use and carelessly discard.
How did Jacques think he should feel about that? Honored?
Proud? Luc was neither of those things. He was beginning to realize that he prostituted himself for a little comfort. He was just a whore of another kind, and the only thing he felt now was shame.
Luc was wallowing in that shame the next morning, and maybe that’s why he behaved like a crazed madman when a pair of footmen appeared at his bedroom door with a cheval mirror to replace the one he shattered. When he saw it, something snapped inside, and he began swearing, demanding the vile looking glass be taken away. Every mirror in the damn house should be put away, or he would break them all!
Luc caused such a disturbance he brought the guards running with Jacques on their heels. One swing of a club, and Luc dropped to the floor, unconscious. A couple more blows were struck across his shoulders before Jacques could intervene and take control of the situation.
Regaining consciousness, Luc felt the lump forming on the back of his head. Jacques helped him to his feet, but Luc couldn’t look at him. He went to the window instead where the peaceful English countryside reminded him again of all the illusions and lies swirling around him.
“You need to send me back,” Luc said. “I’m not going through with this, so just tell them to take me back.” Jacques didn’t respond, but instead busied himself with the breakfast dishes. “Did you hear me, Jacques? I’m not doing this. Send me back.”
“I can’t, m’sieur,” Jacques replied. “You will have to inform Mademoiselle Giraud of your decision yourself.”
Luc whirled around. “Then tell her to grant me an immediate audience to do so.”
Jacques shook his head. “I can’t do that either. The mademoiselle has her own schedule and obligations to satisfy.

You will have to wait a few more weeks, but I’m sure she will grant you an immediate audience when she arrives.”
“That defeats the purpose!” Luc retorted. “If I stay here, then she will have fulfilled her part of the bargain, which then obligates me to perform under the terms of our agreement.”
“I assure you, M’sieur d’Artois, Mademoiselle Gabrielle will respect your decision and comply with your wishes. So feel free to take advantage of your good fortune and the mademoiselle’s calculating naïveté.”
“No! Damn it, no!” Luc said. “I don’t want to take advantage of anything. That’s not who I am, and I don’t want to be what I am now.” He began searching Jacques’ eyes for understanding. “Don’t you see what I did when I agreed to this?
I bartered myself for a good meal and a soft bed. I can’t live with that. Between what they did to me and the shame of what I did to myself…Jacques, I can’t even look at myself. How am I supposed to stay here and live with this until the day they do hang me?”
Jacques’ cool indifference dissipated. He began shaking his head as he settled into one of the wing-backed chairs. He poured himself a glass of wine, took a sip, and then he eyed Luc.
“M’sieur,” he said, “you are a proud and, I dare say, honorable young man. But you have a remarkable amount of selfishness in you. You only see the world as it affects you. While I can’t speak in detail about Mademoiselle Giraud, I can tell you that she doesn’t think you a…prostitute. When you agreed to her proposition, you granted her a tremendous favor for which she is very grateful. You are giving her your name, which is something she cannot ever fully compensate you for. You look around and think this is too much. She would say it is not enough. She can never begin to repay you for what you will do for her.”
Luc’s brow furrowed. “But I don’t see any sacrifice on my part. My name is worthless, and I’m going to die anyway…” He stopped short and looked to Jacques for confirmation. “It’s really that important to her?” Jacques nodded and Luc said, “Is it because she can’t suffer the thought of marrying the man her father chose for her?”
“Details, Luc. I can’t give you details, but I can assure you Mademoiselle Gabrielle is not a petulant child rebelling against an overbearing father.”
Luc turned away from Jacques. He spoke more to himself than to Jacques when he said, “I’ve never made a difference to anyone. No one is going to give a damn when they execute me–
until now maybe. It will make a difference to Mademoiselle Gabrielle when I hang. I guess that’s something, better than dying for no reason.” He turned back to Jacques, who was studying him with a somewhat pained expression. “What?” Luc said.
Jacques started to speak, then stopped. He looked away and asked if he could now replace the mirror.
“No! I may be doing a favor for the lady, but nothing else has changed.”
“Luc, that man in the mirror before was not you, and he is not in the mirror anymore.”
Luc shook his stubborn head. “He’s always going to be there staring back at me.”
“Well then, I suppose I shall have to shave your face for you,” Jacques said. “It’s time. Perhaps it is acceptable in America, but here, a gentleman can’t go so long without shaving.
Now if you sit very still for me, I will give you chocolate afterwards.”
Luc glowered in response. “I’m not a little boy to be bribed into good behavior,” he said.
“When you behave like a little boy, you will be treated like a little boy.”
Luc was about to comment further until he recognized his petulance was only proving Jacques’ point. Scowling, he said,
“I’ll do it myself.”

Jacques left him for a few minutes, then he returned with a table mirror and razor. Luc hesitated to make use of either. But Jacques got him moving when he raised the razor with a dramatically trembling hand.
“Shall I proceed, m’sieur?” Jacques said.
Snatching the razor from him, Luc allowed Jacques to place the mirror in front of him while he averted his gaze and mentally prepared himself. Then he faced the monster he remembered as himself, but the reflection he expected wasn’t in the mirror. Yes, there was still some bruising, some small cuts still healing, but this face he recognized.
“This is Luc d’Artois, I think,” Jacques said.
Luc said nothing in response as he began scraping the scruff from his face.

 Chapter Five

Other than the fact that the guards insisted on chaining Luc up at night and when he left the confines of the house, time in Kent passed pleasantly. With Jacques’ companionship, along with the smiles and admiring eyes of the maids, Luc received a much needed boost to his self-esteem and self-confidence. At the same time, however, he was counting down the days left in paradise, and now there was only one left. He wondered how it would all be concluded.
Would Gabrielle sweep into the house tomorrow, the vows quickly exchanged, and then he sent on his way? He hoped she would at least allow him a few minutes of private conversation.
“Checkmate!”
“Damn it!” Luc said, studying the board and trying to figure out where he made his first mistake.
“Another brief diversion,” Jacques observed. “But at least you kept me entertained for a quarter of an hour–a milestone for you.”
“How do you do it? How do you keep beating me?”
Jacques eyed him with the now expected arch of his brow.
“You still think I should collapse in fear of your tremendous intellect…or rather, arrogance?” He reassembled the pieces for another game, unintimidated by Luc’s glare as well. “I’ve been playing this game longer than you have been alive–maybe twice as long.”
“Granted, but still…”
“Luc, perhaps if you spent less time thinking about winning and tried instead your hand at learning, your game would improve.”
Luc felt the smile tugging at his lower lip in spite of himself.
He focused on the board again, but with each passing moment, his face became more somber in its expression. Then abruptly, he rose to his feet and left the table.

“Can we walk instead?” he said, glancing back over his shoulder at Jacques.
The older man lowered his gaze and replied. “If you prefer.”
Luc knew Jacques wasn’t keen on the idea because it meant the manacles would be brought out again. Jacques seemed to mind the iron bracelets more than Luc did. To accommodate Jacques, Luc asked that his wrists be fastened behind his back. It was more uncomfortable, and his wrists were raw because of it, but Jacques was spared the discomfort of having to look at the chains. Luc could do that much for the man.
“My days in the sun are numbered,” Luc said.

So after being properly restrained, Luc and Jacques made another tour of the grounds, but alone this time. The guards were too lazy to walk again, and in truth, they doubted their prisoner would harm the old frog (as they referred to Jacques) and attempt to escape.
They walked in silence for some time before Luc said, “It’s certain she’s arriving tomorrow?”
“Yes. I expect her quite early tomorrow morning,” Jacques replied.
“I expect then the ceremony will be brief, and this time tomorrow, I’ll be on my way…back to where I belong.”
“I don’t know what’s planned, but I know you don’t belong there,” Jacques said. He stopped walking and faced Luc. “I expected you to declare your innocence, but you say only that you are prepared to hang for the crimes you were convicted of. I know what those crimes are, and I don’t believe you capable of committing those acts.”
“I’ll hang for those acts just the same,” Luc replied, then smiled rather wistfully. “I don’t know if I’m dreading tomorrow or not. Part of me just can’t quite believe what’s happening…what’s going to happen when I leave here. The other part of me knows what’s coming and believes Gabrielle Giraud was the worst mistake I ever made. This agreement is the stupidest thing I’ve ever done. Coming here, I inflicted an entirely different torture upon myself, but torture just the same. I was prepared to die. I wanted to die. But a month away from the misery that made me ready and willing to die allowed my mind to play a cruel joke on me. It made me forget the misery and why I wanted to die.” Luc glanced over at Jacques and grinned.
“But I’m not too worried about it. I suspect once I’m back there and far away from here, I’ll remember soon enough, and I won’t be sorry to die.”
Jacques didn’t smile. His kind eyes were watering, and Luc had to look away.
“Will you do something for me?” Luc said.
“Yes,” Jacques replied, his voice sounding strained.
“There’s a letter I want you to send for me, but you have to promise to send it at least a year from now.”
“A year?”
Luc nodded. “I haven’t written it yet, but I’m going to. It’s a letter to my father that I’ve been trying to write for a couple weeks now. I was going to tell him the truth about everything. I just can’t bring myself to do it. I mean what he doesn’t know can’t hurt or shame him. So I’m just going to write, tell him I got married, and that I won’t be coming home.”
“No explanation why?”
“He’ll know why–or assume he knows why.”
“Then why wait so long to send it?” Jacques said.
“Because of my mother. She’s going to write me, and her letter has got to get to you.” Luc looked at Jacques, his gaze a bit more intense when he said, “You understand what I’m saying?”
“Not really.”
“I’m saying that she has to have some place to send her letter, and when that letter comes to you, addressed to me, that’s when you need to reply and inform her I’m dead.”
“But why me?” Jacques said, quite distressed now. “You think I want to be the one to break your mother’s heart?”
“You have to be the one because Gabrielle Giraud won’t…She doesn’t know anything about me other than my name and my crimes. Jacques, I’m not asking you to praise me or lie for me. You don’t even have to be kind to her. I just want you to tell her…Just tell her I’m dead, and I was bad at chess.
That’s it. That’s all I’m asking.” Luc searched Jacques’ eyes for a promise. “Will you do that for me…please?”
Jacques hesitated, but couldn’t refuse such a request. “Yes, M’sieur d’Artois,” he said, with a slight bow.
Luc smiled. “Just Luc will do.” He paused then said, “Any words of wisdom…for tomorrow I mean? Any advice?”
Jacques met Luc’s eyes with all seriousness and replied,
“Prepare to be shocked.”
Luc nodded his understanding, remembering the heavy veil and shapeless garment Mademoiselle Gabrielle concealed herself with. He allowed himself to imagine she was some sort of fairy princess, but he knew that was not the case. She said there was much wrong with her, and Jacques just confirmed that. But Luc would remember it was because of a generous heart, not a beautiful face that he would die with his dignity intact.

 Chapter Six

Jacques selected Luc’s clothes for what was to be his wedding day. After his bath, Luc dressed, deciding the ceremony was meant to be without much ceremony. He wasn’t wearing anything particularly special or formal–just the usual day attire.
Still, he laughed a little. Even when he was a rich man’s son, he had never worn clothes that fit him so well. Now he was a convict on the brink of execution. It would be a very well dressed convict who swung from the gallows…unless, of course, Mademoiselle Gabrielle demanded he return the clothes once the vows were spoken.
After Luc dressed, Jacques left, and a guard came to manacle and shackle him. Luc released his breath. He had hoped Jacques would be able to convince the mademoiselle that Luc d’Artois was not the animal she saw in prison. It seemed he would have to suffer the shame of being shuffled down the steps instead.
The guard warned him, “One peep from the lady, and you’ll be going to the gallows somewhat less than a man.”
Luc smirked. “So she has ordered me castrated if I don’t behave.”
“She didn’t order it, dog,” the guard said. “It’ll be all my pleasure to give you what you deserve.” Then he left Luc alone with his thoughts.
Luc caught his reflection in the mirror, wondering what Gabrielle Giraud would think when she saw him. Jacques teased him to no end about his appearance, but in a complimentary way.
“Luc,” Jacques said, “you will break every one of their hearts when you say ‘I do.’” He was referring to the maids, who became flustered and giggled whenever Luc addressed or acknowledged one of them.
Luc’s face turned a little red when he snapped in response,
“Did Mademoiselle Gabrielle tell you to toady up to me, too?”

Jacques laughed. “I’m only making a pertinent observation, m’sieur.”
Luc rolled his eyes. “Quite an accomplishment–impressing the scullery maid,” he said.
He knew better than to believe there was any truth in Jacques’ observations. His appearance never helped him win over anyone. Indeed, the only respect and admiration he ever garnished was due to his father and family, and he managed to lose that admiration and respect long before the English had their say.
As he looked at himself now, Luc wasn’t wondering if Gabrielle Giraud would think him handsome. His ambition was not so high. He only hoped that she was not put off by his appearance, that she might see he wasn’t quite the monster he appeared to be when he was in that cell. Maybe then she would allow him to speak with her before he was sent off to be executed for being a monster.
His eyes rested on the restraints, and he looked away, shaking his head. The chains would remind her he was a monster, a despicable, depraved degenerate. He almost laughed at his ridiculousness. Handsome? The finest clothes couldn’t conceal the brand he wore now, the one forever attached to his name. He was Luc d’Artois, convicted rapist and murderer of children. “Yes,” he thought, “Nothing’s changed. I’m still ready to die.”
Luc couldn’t pace, couldn’t move to do much of anything, so he dropped into a chair to wait and wonder. What was the delay?
Was she late? Had she changed her mind and thought better of this ludicrous scheme? Maybe they were readying the wagon–
wanted to be ready to whisk him away as soon as the deed was done. But she had to allow him a minute to speak to her. Before or after the vows, it didn’t matter. After all, she was safe. He was restrained.

There was a soft knock on the door, and he thought,
“They’ve come for me.” Then another even softer knock followed.
“Jacques?” he called.
“No,” was the response. “It’s Gabrielle Giraud. May I speak with you, M’sieur d’Artois?” she queried in French.
Wholly unprepared for this scenario, Luc found himself stammering as he rose from his seat. “Yes…Oui!”
The door opened only wide enough to allow Mademoiselle Giraud to enter. She closed the door behind her and faced him–
in a manner of speaking. He couldn’t see her face because of the hood and the bow of her head. And as before, her cloak hid the rest of her as well.
“Thank you, M’sieur d’Artois, for granting me audience.”
She spoke in English now, and his recollection of her beautiful voice was not exaggerated. With her accent, it was like listening to poetry…No more lyrical than that even. Her voice was like music to his ears.
“I wanted to speak with you, too,” he said, wondering if it would be appropriate to urge her to lower her “shield.”
Then the hood was pulled back, and she lifted her face to his. But the shock she sent through him was not the one he had prepared himself for. This shock took his breath away, and he couldn’t keep from staring.
It seemed they were staring at each other, for she suddenly averted her eyes and blushed with embarrassment. “Forgive me, M’sieur d’Artois,” she said. “You are…much younger than I believed.”
“You are what I believed only existed in dreams.”
She looked up at him, hesitantly. “Pardon?”
Luc could feel his face turn sanguine. He dropped his head for a moment to regroup
“Nothing,” he replied. “I didn’t know what to expect with you.”

She gave him a little smile and asked if she might remove her cloak.
“Yes! Forgive me…” he said. Forgetting the chains, Luc moved to assist her. He nearly fell on his face. Thoroughly humiliated, he looked away. “You will have to pardon me again.”
He heard the door open, and his head snapped up, a plea that she not leave so abruptly forming on his lips. But she spoke first, not to him, but to the guard outside the door.
She gave the guard an earful in French before she snapped in English, “The key, you imbecile!”
He produced the key, and she snatched it from him. Then she directed him to remove himself from the premises at once, or be prepared to explain to his superior why he received only half of what was promised. Slamming the door shut in the guard’s face, she approached Luc.
“M’sieur d’Artois, I beg your pardon. This is not…English fools never do anything right!”
Luc watched her unlock the manacles on his wrists. After helping him to remove them, she dropped to her knees to unlock the irons about his ankles.
“No!” he said, drawing her up to her feet. “I can do it.”
Luc freed himself, then offered her the key. But she was looking instead at the rawness of the flesh on his wrists. She pressed her fingers to her lips and met his eyes. Luc told himself he only imagined seeing tears sparkling in her eyes. She turned away, went to the door, and rang for a maid, who promptly appeared. She instructed that fresh water and bandages be brought at once, and with her back to Luc, she waited for the maid to return.
A few minutes of dead silence passed. Luc didn’t know what to say. The maid returned; Gabrielle took the pitcher and bandages, then dismissed the servant. She set the pitcher and bandages aside, and she faced Luc again.
“Please, m’sieur, sit.”
“May I help you with your cloak first?”

She looked down and saw she was still wearing her cloak.
“Oh!” she said, then she looked up. She bestowed upon him a disarming smile, so brilliant and engaging, he felt a lump form in his throat and his knees turn to water. Silently, he was damning himself again.
“Thank you, yes,” she said.
He stood behind her, inhaling the scent of her as she unfastened the frog on her cloak. When the cloak slipped off her shoulders, Luc found his eyes traveling from the middle of her head, where the intricate plaiting of her golden brown hair began, downward to the small of her back where the thick braid ended in a tuft of waves several inches longer. She turned around to face him again and caught him staring.
He couldn’t help but stare while he sank into her soulful eyes. In a matter of moments, every detail of her appearance was etched into his memory–the fringe of bangs that caressed her gentle, arching brows, the wisps of honey hair that escaped the braid and framed her face…And what a face he gazed upon now.
He saw her beauty in the tawny glow of her peaches and cream complexion, the rosy hue of her lips, but it was her eyes…
“Something is wrong?” she said, touching her cheek. “My face is dirty?”
He shook his head, embarrassed again. “No, I…I was…Your hair is…”
She looked away. “I know,” she said. “I’m hardly presentable. Yvette took ill crossing from Calais, and I was left to my own devices.”
“Don’t apologize. You look very well.”
From under a black fan of thick, long lashes, she looked up at him. “You are very forgiving M’sieur d’Artois. Will you sit now?” she said, reaching for a soft cloth to dip in the warm water she poured into a bowl.
Now he understood she meant to tend to his injuries, and he started to insist it wasn’t necessary, then stopped himself. He complied with her request, watching her gently push back his coat and shirt cuffs.
“You’ve just arrived from France?” he said, holding his breath a little when her tender fingers touched his skin.
“Yes.”
“From your home?”
“No…Paris.”
“What’s in Paris?”
She glanced up at him and smiled a little impishly now. “You mean other than my couturier?”
He grinned. “I should have guessed that.”
“And I admit I’m terrible. I try to justify myself by saying I don’t come to Paris so much, so I must be permitted to spoil myself. But the truth is, I’ve sailed to France several times since the wars ended. And even worse. Though I buy a new wardrobe when I come Paris, I bring home enough fabric to have two more wardrobes made. But there I can justify some of the expense. The sheer silks and lawn are necessary to withstand the warmer climate, but so delicate that dresses must be replaced.”
Luc frowned. “You sail to France?” he said. “I understood you were French.”
“I am, but home is Martinique. My father’s home, Château de la Mer, is just outside Saint-Pierre,” she said, now ever so gently wrapping the bandages about his wrists. “So you might also guess it was not just for me that I was shopping. Papa had a long list; all my friends gave me lists, the shopkeepers…wine, champagne, cheese, books, crystal, lace…goats.”
“Goats?” he said.
“For a special cheese, and the goats must come from France.
Creole goats are not quite good enough, I suppose.” Gabrielle shrugged a little. “Anyway, Jacques says I will need to charter my own ship to carry home everything I’ve collected this past year.
But it’s not really so much as that.”
Luc realized just how close he hit the nail on the head with respect to her reasons for being in Paris, but he had no inclination to be snide with Gabrielle Giraud about her shopping list. His eyes drifted over her again. This time he noted the simplicity of her chocolate silk gown. Of course, he wouldn’t ordinarily notice anything about a woman’s dress other than perhaps the color. Otherwise, a dress, any dress, was only as pretty as the woman wearing it. He took note of this dress, however, simply because it proved, in no uncertain terms, that Gabrielle Giraud needed no adornment, nor had she any reason not to be pleased with her couturier. The cut of the cloth was superior. The dress displayed with every advantage to her (and without loss of modesty) the curve of her breasts, the smallness of her waist (thank God women had a waistline again, he thought) and the slenderness of her hips.
“Am I hurting you?” she said.
“No, not at all. And I have to agree the Paris fashions are most becoming on you,” he said with a smile.
“Ah, but I did not say they were becoming on me.”
“Then I will say it. Though I suspect you could wear a sack and still turn the heads of tin soldiers.”
She blushed as she laughed. “As generous as you are forgiving, I think.” Finishing the bandaging, she looked at him and said, “Better?”
“Yes, thank you.”
She shook her head in response. “Don’t thank me, M’sieur d’Artois. I’m so sorry. I told them, and Jacques, too, you must be well cared for…shown every possible courtesy and respect.”
“Jacques has been very good to me, but did you really think the guards wouldn’t employ some form of restraint?”
“Whatever for?”
“Perhaps to make sure I didn’t escape.”
She nearly rolled her eyes. “We made a bargain,” she said.
“You gave me your word. Besides, if Jacques thought for a moment you could not be trusted, he would have sent you back to that prison.”

“He could have done that?” Luc replied, sharply, distinctly recalling Jacques saying something quite to the contrary.
“Yes. It was part of my agreement with Jacques and Yvette.
They would not assist me otherwise. Jacques said I was a poor judge of character to make this agreement with you, and he must be allowed to protect me from myself. He was certain you would try to escape or…Well, it doesn’t matter. You are still here, which means my judgment was not so poor. Jacques believes you can be trusted, so I have no reason not to trust you, too.”
Luc took in all this new information, but he didn’t try to process it all. Instead, he focused on Gabrielle.
“You aren’t even a little afraid to be left alone with me?”
“No,” she said, rising to her feet. “Tea, m’sieur, or maybe wine?”
“Wine, if it’s all the same to you,” he replied, eyeing her with increasing perplexity.
She rang for service, then idly began rearranging the flowers in the vase on a side table. “So you are an American,” she said.
“Virginian,” he replied.
“That is south, yes? I hear a difference in your English.”
“You mean my drawl,” he said with a lazy grin.
She nodded. “I’ve met Americans like you before, but I’ve never been to America. It’s much closer to Martinique, but still, I’ve never been.” She looked over her shoulder at him. “It’s beautiful–Virginia?”
“Yes.”
Gabrielle turned to him. Her eyes drifted over him, and a smile lifted the corners of her mouth. “Will you tell me about Virginia?” she said.
Gazing at her, Luc found it a little difficult to concentrate on a response to her request. There were far more pleasant thoughts to be had other than thoughts of home.
“What do you want to know?”
She shrugged lightly. “I wouldn’t know what to ask. I know so little. Still, I wonder about places like Virginia.”

“Why?”
“Because I’m curious. Do you think that’s bad?”
“Why would curiosity be bad?”
“Because I’m a woman.”
“Women aren’t supposed to be curious?”
She smiled. “I’m told women are better off ignorant.”
“I don’t agree,” he said. “Nothing is ever made better through ignorance.”
She tilted her head slightly, smiling again when she said,
“Some would say ignorance is easier, especially where women are concerned.”
He laughed and said, “That observation is open to many interpretations, but like ignorance, what’s easy isn’t always better…or right. And sometimes, easy is just lazy.”
“Does that mean what is difficult is better?”
“Not always, but I think if you have to work for something you want, you appreciate it much more. It means more because you earned it.”
“I think you are correct, but it’s very American. In Europe, what matters most is what you are given at birth–your name, your family, your station, your wealth.”
Luc grinned. “I suspect it’s because those things are what matter most in Europe that there is an America.”
Gabrielle laughed. “I think you are correct again,” she said.
“So tell me about America, your home.”
Luc thought for a moment before he replied, “My family has a couple of pretty good-sized plantations on the James River–
cash crops.” He smiled faintly. “It all started with tobacco, but my father saw the light, and now there’s more wheat, corn, and oats than tobacco growing in his fields.”
“Why does that make you smile?”
“Well, you might say my father and I don’t always agree about everything.”
Her eyes grew warm when she said, “Ah, so you are saying you convinced him to change his ways.”

Luc nodded a little sheepishly. “Guess I wanted to prove to him I learned something in spite of all expectations to the contrary.”
She waited for him to say more, but he didn’t want to explain to Gabrielle Giraud why his reputation back home was somewhat less than sterling. So he steered away from that subject.
“And just before I left home, I bought my own land,” he said.
“For another plantation?”
“No, horses,” he replied. “That’s why I came to England. I had my land, but I still needed my horses and that meant Tattersall’s.”
Gabrielle nodded in understanding, and it was then Luc wished he had not taken the conversation in this direction. He just put himself in the wretched position of explaining why he never made it to a Tattersal

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Chateau de la Mer

by Elisabeth Nelson

Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
Luc d’Artois is ready to die. He has nothing to live for. All he has left is his name.
But his name proves more valuable than he realizes when he is approached by a
mysterious woman who offers a temporary reprieve from the gallows in exchange for his name. His contract with Gabrielle Giraud, however, turns out to be much more than he bargained for. She could be his every dream come true or the start of a nightmare from which he will never awaken.
Caught in a web of deceit and betrayal, degradation, and brutality, they are trapped in a secret and living a lie…his lie, the lie Luc demanded Gabrielle live with. But will the lie intended to afford Luc time to redeem himself rob him of the life he intends to live with Gabrielle?

About The Author

Elisabeth Nelson writes about history in the context of a love story.
In her first novel, High Ground, Elisabeth combines her interst in history and law to portray the legal, political and moral conflict preceding the American Civil War; and the disillusionment and devastation of war as seen through the eyes of an idealistic army lawyer and the daughter of an American diplomat.
Elisabeth has just published her second novel, Chateau de la Mer, a love story set in 1823 on the island of Martinique. In this story, slavery is the issue when her hero, the son of a wealthy planter, finds himself enslaved.
Visit http://elisabethnelsonauthor.com for a preview of Chateau de la Mer.

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Now we’re back to offer our weekly free Romance excerpt, and if you aren’t among those who have downloaded Once Upon A Remembrance, you’re in for a real treat:

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Here’s the set-up:

Once Upon a Remembrance: Book 1 Women of Strength time travel trilogy: Photographer Isabeau Remington travels to 1894 Virgina and falls in love with a man she must ultimately leave behind when she returns to her own time…but things are not always as they seem.

Modern day photographer Isabeau is pulled from the present time and thrust back into the year 1894 in Virginia. She must help save Hawk Morgan, a man threatened by a killer, a man endangered by his own erased memories. Hawk must survive in 1894 so his present day ancestor Pierce Morgan, will be alive in Isabeau’s future.

Isabeau begins to fall in love with Hawk Morgan but with both their future’s uncertain and a killer on the loose, neither one of them may have a tomorrow to look forward to.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

ONCE UPON A REMEMBRANCE

by Grace Brannigan

Author Website: http://www.GraceBrannigan.com

Facebook: Grace Brannigan Author

Twitter: @GBranniganWritr

All characters, places and events are fictitious and are not associated or inspired by any person, living or dead. The author was not striving for historical accuracy as all places and events are purely fictional and not intended to be historically accurate.

License Notes

All rights reserved. This book is protected under the copyright laws of the United States of America. No part of this book may be reproduced by any means whatsoever, mechanical, photographic, electronic or in the form of an audio recording or stored in a retrieval system, transmitted or otherwise be copied for public or private use — other than for brief quotations in articles and reviews — without prior written consent from the publisher Questor Books.

This book is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each recipient. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Amazon Kindle and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author. Happy reading!

Questor Books, P.O. Box 100, East Jewett, New York, 12424  USA

 

Prologue

Hawks Den Plantation, Virginia

In the half-light before dawn, Pierce Morgan drove toward Hawk’s Den. He had driven all night to get here, hardly understanding the urgency that gripped him. Pierce stopped his truck and stared at the once-majestic plantation house, Hawk’s Den. Forlornly, the old home he grew up in sat before him, paint faded and worn. The house was shuttered and still as light began to break, the wrap-around veranda partially concealed by a tangle of brilliant azaleas.

He strode across the stone-lined path to the house, taking the shallow porch steps three at a time. The ornate entry door lay at a drunken angle, and he shoved it aside as if it weighed little. Stepping inside, he paused as the stench of stale air bore down upon him.

Arrows of light peered through the closed shutters, but Pierce knew where to find the staircase to the second floor. Quickly, he climbed the stairs, his flashlight beam bouncing across the walls.

On the second floor, numerous doors lined a wide, oak-beamed hallway. He walked to the last doorway and entered the chamber. Water-stained wainscoting and pieces of tin ceiling littered the floor. Furniture had been stacked willy-nilly in a corner, once prized oak and cherry pieces now stained by weather and neglect.

Shoved against the far wall was an enormous oak bed. Pierce walked through strewn mattress feathers, then knelt beside a small bedside table. His fingertips tingled as he turned the table upside down. Immediately, he saw the book lodged in the drawer track. Feeling almost lightheaded, he pried it loose and slowly sank down against the wall.

The book’s leather cover was frayed and worn, held together by a gold mesh strap and clasp. Pierce undid the clasp and very carefully opened the journal.

He flipped the pages to the first handwritten entry, the tightness in his chest almost unbearable.  1878, April 2, I fear I shall never live to see land again . . ..

Sweat beaded on his forehead. The journal confirmed that three months lost had not been a wild dream. He had loved a woman back in time, 1894, and somehow he had to find her again.

Isabeau.

 

 

Chapter One

Hawks Den Plantation, Five Years Later

 

Isabeau Remington stared in awe at the tall oak trees lining either side of the narrow dirt road to Hawk’s Den as she drove under their extended branches. The dark skies had followed her all the way from New York, the heavens erupting from time to time with thunder and incredible flashes of lightning.

She shifted restlessly in her small compact car, her legs feeling cramped after the long drive. The serpentine drive took one last curve, and finally a house came into view just as raindrops began to fall. Her friend and boss Leif Ericsson pulled up in his van beside her as she parked. Fascinated, she stared at the beautiful, two-story house. She had read about some of the restored plantations near the James River, but she had never imagined the reality would be so breathtaking. The house had been painted a soft gray, and the wrap-around verandah made her think of lazy summer nights spent drinking tea and eating pecan pie, the scent of azaleas a delicious extra to any evening. Even from inside her car, Isabeau swore she could smell their scent.

A tap at her window made her jump. Leif’s blue eyes peered in at her. Rain was already starting to drip through his long blond hair and onto his gray T-shirt. Quickly, she let the window down a crack and immediately the rain spattered inside.

“I’m going in,” he said. “Hurry up.”

“I’m coming. The house is just gorgeous, isn’t it?”

Isabeau closed the window and exited her car, quickly opening the hatchback to retrieve her pull-along case. She hurried across the stone walk to the house. The rain pelted them in earnest. She had a brief glimpse of wisteria climbing along one side of the house, further adding to the old-world charm. White balconies on the second floor graced tall, multi-paned windows with indigo blue shutters fastened on either side.

Flower gardens ran alongside the house, sculpted hedges and rows of tulips now bowing under the pressure of the rain. Time seemed suspended here, giving rise to Isabeau’s fanciful notion she’d stepped into an earlier time.

She felt almost breathless with anticipation. The house seemed at once unknown and yet somehow, dearly familiar — how intriguing!

Leif lifted the polished brass knocker on the massive, ornately carved door, the sound echoing as they huddled together under the small overhang. He shivered in his lightweight T-shirt, pulling her a bit closer as he tried to shelter her from the rain.

The door opened almost immediately. A woman somewhere in her sixties greeted them with a pleasant smile and urged them in with a sweep of her arm. She wore a knee-length pale linen dress, and her graying blonde hair was short and fashionably styled. Isabeau noticed her eyes, so dark they appeared almost black.

“Hello,” Leif said, “you must be Mrs. Cummins. Leif Ericsson. We spoke on the phone last week. This is my assistant Isabeau Remington.”

The woman nodded and smiled, quickly closing the door behind them. “Yes, hello, Mr. Ericsson — Ms. Remington. How lovely to meet both of you. My, what a miserable day you’ve arrived on.” Mrs. Cummins stepped back further as they entered the cool, marble-floored foyer. “My husband John will see to your bags, so please leave them here in the hall.”

Isabeau shook the damp hair out of her face and positioned her case behind her. “Thank you.”

Together, they moved into the entryway. Isabeau looked around the hallway’s high decorative ceilings and deeply embossed wallpaper. A beautifully refinished grandfather clock chimed out the hour three times. “The house is beautiful. The restoration must have taken some time.”

“Almost three years, miss, and it’s nearly the same as it was a century ago. Pierce is very proud of it. He did most of it himself.”

“We appreciate him allowing us to photograph the house and grounds,” Leif said. “I know it’s a wonderful honor that he’s chosen our company.”

“Yes, and we’re anxious to meet him,” Isabeau said. “The renovation of this house has fascinated both of us,” she added. “I saw the before pictures.”

Mrs. Cummins closed the door and turned toward them with a smile. “Yes, this is the first time he’s allowed anyone to photograph it. Now if you’ll come with me, I can show you to your rooms.” From the large entryway with its decoratively carved and fixed columns, Mrs. Cummins led the way up a curved staircase with a gleaming wood rail to the second floor and down a wide, carpeted hallway. “Mr. Pierce said you were to have free rein of the house while you’re here.”

Although Isabeau knew she included both of them in the invitation, the older woman’s gaze rested on her.

“Great.” Leif looked well-satisfied. “When he sees the article we’re doing on him, he won’t be sorry.”

Isabeau again experienced a surprising familiarity with her surroundings. “Déjà vu.”

Mrs. Cummins gave her a curious glance.

“Don’t mind me,” Isabeau said, “I’m feeling a bit silly and tired from the drive. We appreciate the extra work involved in having guests, so we’ll be as unobtrusive as possible.”

Mrs. Cummins laughed softly, kindly. “No trouble at all. We always have rooms ready for guests. Pierce enjoys entertaining,” she added, pushing open a tall wooden door to their right. “And he set aside some wonderful historic memorabilia for you to reference and work with if you choose. They’re in the library in the roll-top desk.”

“Really?” Leif inquired. “I’m intrigued.”

“Yes, he’s put out some family albums and historical papers in the library for you also to peruse at your leisure. I expect you’ll also find the old shipping records and there are various shipping paraphernalia stored in the sheds out back. I expect him back sometime tonight or tomorrow.”

Mrs. Cummins stood back from the doorway. “Isabeau, Pierce said this was to be your room.”

Isabeau stepped into the room, her feet sinking into the plush pale grey carpet. Her gaze roamed curiously over rich wood floors, antique furnishings and the bedroom’s subtle blending of blue, rose and vintage white. Lightly varnished wainscoting ran halfway up the walls, and a faint swirling pattern of cream-colored flowers ran rampant on the walls to the ceiling. “It takes my breath away — it’s very beautiful.”

And familiar, but she didn’t say that. They were going to think she was off her rocker if she told them everything looked like memories from an old dream. She was even starting to creep herself out a bit.

The bed was huge; old and upraised on a matching oak dais, a centerpiece for the entire room.

“If you’d like to get out of those damp clothes and take a hot bath, the bathroom with small dressing room is through that door.” Mrs. Cummins indicated a second door. “There is a warming rack and a thermostat control on the wall, and you will find towels, soaps and toiletries in the closet. Pierce had a nice selection of vegan soaps brought in, specifically lemongrass and lavender.”

Isabeau didn’t hide her astonishment. “I — I love lemongrass.”

“Yes, miss –” Mrs. Cummins smiled.

“But how would he know?” She laughed and shook her head. “Silly question, he must do that for each of his guests. I’m sure there is a selection for any taste.”

“Of course.”

Nevertheless, Isabeau was touched by Pierce’s thoughtful gesture. She found the room an absolute delight.

The older woman turned. “Mr. Ericsson –”

“Please call me Leif.” His easy grin encompassed the older woman and Isabeau.

Mrs. Cummins nodded. “Leif, your room is down the hall.”

Leif gave Isabeau a quick nod. “I’ll catch up with you later.”

The shutters outside Isabeau’s window banged as a fresh gust of wind hit the house. The storm outside seemed to be whipping into a real fury.

As Leif went with Mrs. Cummins, Isabeau closed the door and moved across the room to the one large window that looked out over the yard below. Getting her bearings, she knew it must face the renowned back gardens that in turn led to the river. However, with the lash of the rain across the glass, it was impossible to see much outside.

She turned back to the room, lifting her arms to push the hair off her forehead. Heaving a contented sigh, she explored the room which was assigned to her for the next week or so. Someone had taken great care in creating a comfortable haven. Cherished antiques were polished to a high gloss, and the bric-a-brac figure of a man and a woman on the oak bureau also spoke of an earlier time.

Fresh cut purple irises were arranged in a blue stenciled vase, residing on a small table with a rocking chair on one side and a low chaise on the other. Delicately embroidered pillows filled the seats, their colors in blue and gold.

On the wall above the bed she admired a beautifully done painting of a flowering garden with the river beyond. She could only wonder if it was Hawk’s Den’s gardens. She moved closer to the painting and could see the initials PM had been signed in the corner. Could it be that Pierce Morgan had painted the lovely scene? Was he a talented artist as well as a much sought after attorney?

#

When Isabeau and Leif entered the library following dinner at Mrs. Cummins’ suggestion, they gravitated toward the fireplace which crackled with a welcoming heat.

Leif drew Isabeau’s attention upwards. “Did you look at the scrolled, white plastered ceiling?”

“I know. It’s a wonder in artistry. I can’t wait to start photographing this place.”

She marveled at the charming collection of richly upholstered chairs and couches strategically placed around the room.

“This assignment could really put us on the map,” he mused.

Isabeau laughed. “Come on, you’re already on the map. How else do you think we got this assignment?”

“There’s lots of good photographers out there, but I’m not questioning it,” he said with a laugh.

Carved wood-paneled walls held a multitude of bookshelves. Despite the dark wood, the room had a warm, comfortable feeling. The pale yellow and orange Victorian lamps with their deep fringe emitted a mellow glow.

“I could almost think we’ve stepped back in time,” Isabeau mused.

“Yeah,” Leif agreed, “it does look picture perfect, doesn’t it? Some of this furniture is irreplaceable. I’m really excited to get started, to tell you the truth. If it wasn’t so late –”

Isabeau laughed. “Tomorrow. We start tomorrow.” She ran a hand lightly over the indigo blue upholstered loveseat with its gold embossed threads. “I wonder if Pierce spends a lot of time in this room?” she mused. “It has a well lived-in air.” A large desk stood against one wall to the right of the fireplace. Several comfortable chairs, a couch, and a matching love seat had been placed to form a cozy half-circle in the center of the room. The massive fireplace had a deep, cherry wood mantle. The love seat was piled with pillows and looked very inviting, as if someone had just moved from its newly reupholstered seat. With a sigh, she settled herself among the cushions.

“What a great place to entertain.”

Leif, an open book in his hand, moved to sit on the loveseat across from her.

Isabeau yawned, then gave a short laugh. “Sorry. That long drive is catching up with me.”

“You’re due for a break,” Leif said. “You’ve been going non-stop since Christmas. When we get back, I’m giving you some time off.”

She laughed. “Maybe you should do all the pre-shoot work for this job yourself and I’ll just go sightsee,” she joked. “Really, you know me; I love to work.” She leaned toward him. “What’s that book you’re looking at?”

“One of the family albums Pierce left out. There’s a bunch of them over there on the table. Isn’t this him — Pierce? — though I’d say it was a while ago?”

Isabeau leaned forward to grasp the heavy, cloth-covered album. Several pictures had been placed under protective plastic. The one that caught her attention showed a young man, perhaps in his late teens, astride a dark horse. He had swathe of unruly dark brown hair almost covering his left eye, a thin straight nose and dark, serious eyes. Dark blue eyes.

“Hmm, very handsome.” She frowned, running her finger over the picture.  His mouth appeared compressed, the lips in a straight line.”Though he kind of looks angry.”

Isabeau turned several pages but that seemed to be the only picture of the young man, although there were numerous shots of a woman who bore a resemblance to the young man. Perhaps his mother? She turned the pages, but the rest of the pictures appeared to be much older.

“No doubt the ancestors,” she murmured. “It almost feels like we’re snooping.” She snapped the album shut.

“No, they were left out for us, and there’s some others with old newspaper clippings inside.”

The library door opened. Isabeau lost her grip on the heavy album and it landed on the floor with a thud. Mrs. Cummins entered the room with a tray and Leif moved forward to take it from her, placing it on the coffee table next to the love seat.

Isabeau felt embarrassed by her clumsiness, and placed the heavy album on the end table. Several pieces of paper slipped from the book and fluttered to the floor.

She reached for them and saw they were newspaper clippings. Curious, she picked up the largest yellowed paper. Once again the young man looked out at her, expression serious, eyes dark and somehow vulnerable. Isabeau cleared her throat and turned the paper to Mrs. Cummins. She had to know. “Is this Pierce when he was younger?”

Mrs. Cummins gathered up the remainder of the clippings and slipped them back in the album. “Yes, that’s Pierce. He was in his late teens then.” The housekeeper sighed. “A troubling time with his father dying and the missus, Pierce’s mother, remarrying.” The older woman lowered her voice. “For a time it was touch and go. The missus was worried about that one. So wild, so angry, but he straightened himself out.”

“So I guess you’ve known the family some time?”

“I’ve been with Mrs. Morgan since she was young, then I took care of her two boys.”

“Well, everything must have come out fine,” Leif said. “He went on to achieve all this. Pierce Morgan is a self-made man, from everything I’ve heard.”

“Pierce has a one-track mind when he sets it to something.” The housekeeper paused by the door. “It’s done him well to get him where he is today.” She looked at Leif. “He called a little while ago to remind me there are also some antique cameras in the roll top desk. Pierce thought you might find them of interest.”

“Thank you, Mrs. Cummins,” Leif exclaimed happily. “It’s like a treasure trove here.”

The older woman smiled.”Well, Pierce thought you might like to use some of these items in your photographs. If you need anything else, just let me know.”

“Thank you,” Isabeau said. “You’ve really done enough, and dinner was wonderful.”

“No trouble, Isabeau.”

The housekeeper left. Isabeau looked once more at the paper clipping, then almost reluctantly slid it back in the album.

“Look at this.” Leif reached over the tray to pick up another large volume, but managed to sideswipe a coffee cup, tipping it. The dark liquid streamed across the tray, splattering the book.

“Leif!” He quickly pulled his hand back and she grabbed several napkins from the tray, carefully blotting the leather cover. “Did you get burned?” she asked.

“No. Just clumsy.” He grimaced.

“I think it should be okay,” she ran her fingers along its worn, gilt-edged binding. “It looks pretty old.” Unable to resist, she opened the heavy tome.

“I’m intrigued by what’s in the desk,” Leif confessed. The large roll top desk sat at an angle from them.

Isabeau stared at the book she held. The name “Morgan” was boldly inscribed in raised letters on the first page. The pages crackled as she carefully brushed her fingertips across the yellowed surface, her eyes scanning the crisp paper.

“It’s the Morgan family Bible.” The ink had faded to a dark brown. “This is really old,” she said reverently. The storm seemed to escalate outside. With a shiver, Isabeau took the book and settled once more into the loveseat pillows.

Leif busied himself looking through the items in the desk. “Look at this.”

Isabeau glanced up to see him holding two gleaming silver objects which were decoratively engraved with vines and leaves.

He laughed, turning the pieces over. “I’m not quite sure what they are. Almost looks like a mini dust pan. I’ll have to find out from Mrs. Cummins.”

“It’s an antique crumber and blade,” she said absently, staring at the items. “It’s for cleaning up the crumbs on the table between dinner courses.” At his incredulous look, she laughed. “You know my mom is obsessed with collecting antiques. We have a gold-plated one.”

He laughed. “I knew there was a good reason I hired you.” He held up a black box, carefully opening it to reveal the camera inside. “This is turn-of-the-century.”

“The original point and shoot camera.” She looked back at the book in her lap. “This family Bible is intriguing.” She traced down the names with a fingertip. “Marriages, 1858. Catharine Hawk to Brendon Morgan. Issue of Marriage, Hawk Morgan, born 1863. Who would name their child Hawk?”

Isabeau experienced a sharp jag of pain in her arm, then an unaccustomed weakness gripped her right hand. She shook her hand vigorously, trying to dispel the odd feeling. She turned another page, moving her finger down the parchment. “Deaths. Hawk Morgan, May 19, 1894.”

Thunder boomed outside, making her jump. Isabeau looked up at Leif as he joined her.

“That storm is getting closer.” He leaned in to read over her shoulder. Rain pelted the windows fiercely. Suddenly, a loud knocking erupted from the front entrance. “Sounds like somebody’s out in the storm.” Leif stood. The knocking continued.

“I wonder where Mrs. Cummins is?” He walked toward the library door. “I’ll be right back.”

Isabeau nodded absently, her focus on the book’s entries. “Hawk Morgan.” She felt lightheaded, almost nauseous. Standing, she put the book down, then leaned against the side of the seat as weakness pervaded her body. Not feeling well at all, she grabbed the edge of the loveseat.

“Leif.”

A crystal paperweight carved in the shape of a ship winked with light on the small side table at her elbow, wavering in and out of her focus. Vaguely, Isabeau heard footsteps.

Rushing winds echoed around and around her head. It hurt her ears. She put her hands over her ears but it didn’t stop. The volume of cascading rain became deafening as she swayed.

Isabeau felt frozen, dizzy, filled with the sensation of floating . . . a cushioned embryo in the womb. She was in a nothingness, yet strangely there was no fear. Vaguely she was aware of chanting, one voice and then more, soft and then louder.

“Power from light, power from heaven, power from thine own self, power of thine own worth. Bring the one who will cast chaos aside. Bring the one who will stay the turmoil. It is done. It is done, it is done.”

Something guided her through the rushing of air all around her and moved her into a deep, calming light.

 

 

Chapter Two

Isabeau groaned, the point of her left hip burning with pain. She lay curled in a fetal position, her head cushioned by her arms and a hard surface beneath her. She moved as the stench beneath her nose made her gag.

Jerking upright, she gasped in fresh air. With a groan, she massaged the muscles of her thighs, then the area on either side of her hips. She felt like a pulsing mass of cramped muscle.

Dark enveloped her. Was she blind? Memory was frighteningly fuzzy. She felt out of place. Groping with her hands, Isabeau felt a hard, uneven surface beneath her, then some type of coil. A rope? She drew her hands back hurriedly from a greasy surface.

Disoriented, she knelt and then rose unsteadily to her feet, the pain in her temple settling to a dull throb. The air around her hung heavy and humid. Squinting, she could see a glimmer just ahead, a flickering light. She moved toward it.

The floor seemed to tilt, then righted itself, an altogether unnerving sensation.

Isabeau stared at the light, an antique lantern hung on a wooden peg, the metal cracked and tarnished black. She sat down and rubbed her fists across her eyes. Belatedly, she recalled the greasiness on her hands, which she could now feel on her face. She tried to wipe her eyes with the sleeve of her shirt, but her lids still felt sticky.

A creaking moan caught her off guard and the floor shifted again beneath her feet. Frantically, Isabeau moved her palm along the wood floor beneath her, then pulled her hand back as something bit her. Not a bite. A splinter embedded in her flesh.

Holding her palm up to the meager light, she pried it out and felt the warm trickle of blood. As it began to throb, she pressed it to her jean clad leg.

She tried to remember something, anything, but all she could come up with was the sensation of floating. She had been at Hawk’s Den for a photo assignment, but then nothing after that.

The heavy air carried unusual odors as a brisk breeze swirled around her. Her brain churned sluggishly, unable to identify what her senses were picking up. It almost sounded like a ship on water.

Where was she? Minutes passed, foreign sounds continued to invade her senses. Isabeau put out her hands to steady herself as everything swayed. Saliva gathered at the back of her throat. With dread, she feared she would be sick. She remained perfectly still.

The floor continued to vibrate and then there came the sound of footsteps and men’s voices. A heavy clunk, something rolled… a muttered curse.

Isabeau backed up until she felt a hard surface at her back. As the lantern light swayed, she realized in front of her were a pile of crates. She began to see shadowy silhouettes as daylight played at the edge of the horizon.

She sat down, thumping the back of her head against a crate. The crate tipped and landed with a soft thud beside her.

“Uh.” Panic made her heart rate faster and her hands tremble as she attempted to absorb what she had seen. She was on a ship. A big ship with sails. Had she been kidnapped?

Quietly, she moved to the edge of the crates. Men moved cargo boxes below her, hauling on ropes, climbing up into the sails. If she hadn’t been feeling the bite of terror, she’d have been fascinated. She felt as if she’d been dropped into a period piece. The men she could see wore short coats of dull browns, gray, and black, brown and black shoes or high boots, and long, loose pants.

She pulled back into the shadows as footsteps drew near.

“Thought I heard something,” a surly voice muttered from the other side of the crates.

“Right, mate,” a second voice jeered. “Get back to work. We’ll be in port soon.” The voices receded.

Huddling against the wall, Isabeau’s confusion deepened. What was going on?

“Move your lazy arse,” a voice growled. “Malry’ll string you up in the jib nettin’ if he catches you diddling about again.”

Vigilant to every sound, Isabeau watched the sun rise fully into the sky. The ship activity increased. Now she could count at least twelve crew members. It wouldn’t be long before someone discovered her. Her thinking still felt muddled. Who had put her here? Could she trust these men or was she in danger?

Cautiously, she peeked up over her hiding space, edging forward so she could see more. Almost instantly, she felt another presence. Mumbling a hasty prayer, Isabeau stared, mesmerized, as booted feet and black trouser legs blocked her view. She shrank back into her hiding space, but there was nowhere to go. Looking up, she saw a black, jersey-clad barrel of a chest.

“What have we here?” A voice boomed, and she jumped from the man’s sheer volume.

A big, hairy hand reached down and latched onto the front of her shirt, yanking her upright in one powerful sweep.

“Ouch.”

Dangling with her toes just touching the deck, Isabeau’s cramped muscles came to immediate, screaming life. Mercilessly, pins and needles thrust barbed points into her skin.

A grizzled giant held her aloft by one meaty fist, dangling her as if she weighed little or nothing.

“Here now, boy, stowing away, eh?” the giant bellowed. “I’ll dump you in the ship’s belly and clap ye in chains.” Throwing back his shaggy black head, the man roared, “Nate!”

“Let me go, you pirate!”

The man had a knife and pistols tucked into a wide leather belt at his waist.

His expression grew even fiercer. “Insolent pup. I’m no plundering thief.” He let out an incredulous laugh and then another. “And you’re no boy.” She stared transfixed at the long puckered scar running from his left eye to the corner of his mouth. He sported a bright gold earring in one ear and his baggy pants and black jersey were none too clean. Struggling to get free, Isabeau gasped in air as she was lowered to the floor.

“Come, lass, you have explaining to do.”Without giving her time to draw a full breath of air, she was pulled forward by the giant and out into the open.

Isabeau tried to resist, setting her feet. Wildly, she looked for an escape. Sailors who had stopped to watch were returning to business and seemed less than interested in her. At best, they appeared a scruffy looking bunch. “Let me go. I demand you call the police!”

Her captor ignored her and pulled her behind him. The man was huge and not altogether clean. She wrinkled her nose, her sense of smell too acute for comfort. He smelled of day-old fish.

He turned and caught her grimace. “You might well turn up that pretty nose, me lady. It be you what stinks.” Isabeau opened her mouth, then looked down at herself, following the sweep his eyes had taken.

Her mouth snapped shut. She was a filthy mess. Black pitch covered her hands and probably part of her face. The knees of her jeans were likewise filthy.

“One as scrawny as you is unlikely to be of help on board,” her captor muttered. “‘Tis a good thing we’re about to dock.” He cocked a dark brow at her. “How the devil did you stay out of sight so long, that’s what I’m wondering?” His hand tightened on her wrist. “We’ll take care of you soon enough.”

Even in her continued confusion she understood the threat in his voice. With fear clogging her throat, Isabeau thrashed away from him, and managed a glancing blow on his whiskered cheek. The shock of impact jolted her arm from wrist to shoulder. His bellow sounded blood curdling to her. She pulled when she saw his clenched fist.

With a mutter, the man grabbed her close and in the next instant he quickly wound a cord around her wrists.

“Let me go –”

“A warning.” The seaman’s voice dropped menacingly. “Never do that again. You may be puny, but the sharks won’t be minding a snack of you.”

“Malry!” a voice barked. “What goes on there?”

Isabeau’s captor gripped her wrist and half-turned his body away from her. “A stowaway, Cap’n, that’s what I got, stowed in yonder hole behind the cargo.” The man holding her jerked his head to indicate the revealed hiding space and pulled her in front of him. “It’s a woman,” he answered. “A girl.” He released her.

“A girl?”

Isabeau stiffened in fear. The Captain’s voice put her in mind of the rasp of steel against stone. As Malry stepped aside, Isabeau could now see the man he’d addressed as Cap’n.

As the newcomer approached, she managed only to draw a shallow breath as she was consumed by visions of outlaws and pirates. His hair just swept his shoulders, the breeze sweeping it back from a wide forehead.

My God! she thought, those eyes! Dark, deep-set blue. Her palms grew damp and a wave of coldness swept over her. As the blood surged, her heart began to beat harder. Did she know him? Her brain still felt foggy. Was he to be a tormenter like the giant who’d pulled her from hiding?

The man stood with his back braced against the ship’s rail, long legs encased in dark pants that hinted at muscled legs and flowed into knee-high boots. The wind played through his partially unfastened grey shirt, revealing a strong, tanned neck and a hint of a chest liberally covered with hair. His shoulders were wide and he stood easily six feet and then some. He had a deep, strong jaw and a short cropped beard as dark as the hair on his head.

“Oh, my God. Pierce.” The name came to her lips. She had seen his picture. It was the eyes. She’d never forget them, so intense and full of life, so…knowing? She could feel the life force radiating off him. He looked so — so elemental, as if he fit perfectly with his surroundings; the ship, the rough sailors, the sea.

She took a step toward him. Dark, thick brows met almost furiously over a strong, straight nose. His eyes narrowed, then indicated a growing impatience. “You are mistaken, my lady.”

“Here now, show some respect for the Cap’n,” Malry warned, tightening his grip.

Isabeau’s confusion deepened. “What is going on? Why are you calling him Captain? You look like Pierce Morgan. Older, but definitely –”

Her captor jerked her arm.

“Where are we?” she tried to twist free of the thong binding her wrists. “Free me right now!”

“Calm yourself.” The Captain approached them, staring at her hard, as if trying to see past the dirt and grease. She sensed a certain puzzlement in him.

She attempted to swim up through her panic. “Nothing is making sense.”

“Dammit to hell, how do mothers turn out their young girls to fend for themselves?” His head dipped in disgust. “How old are you?” he demanded.

She stiffened her shoulders. Was he a threat to her? “None of your business. Let me go this second.”

He sighed. “You don’t look like you’d last long on the streets, but that’s where you’ll end up when we dock.”

“Wait a second. I’ve never lived on the street in my life. I’m a well respected –”

“Hey, Cap’n,” Malry growled, watching her closely. “Maybe we should bring her with us and put her to work. It’s better than the factories.”

She stared at him. “You’re not taking me anywhere.”

“Malry has a sound idea.” The Captain’s voice gentled, showing none of the earlier impatience. “What’s your name? Do you have anywhere to go?”

Thrown by his sudden concern, Isabeau blurted, “This is a mess. I was at Hawk’s Den earlier today — ” Both men wore a look of amazement.

She pressed on. “I’m telling you, I was there earlier. There was a terrible storm and — ”

“Ahem, Cap’n — ” Malry loudly cleared his throat.

Isabeau shifted her feet uneasily as they stared at her, clearly thinking she was out of her head. Nervously, she kneaded the flesh of her palms, well aware of a look passing between the two men.

“I need to get back to where I was,” she said. “This joke or whatever it is has gone on long enough. If you take me back now, I’ll let this whole thing go.”

“What’ll we do with her, Cap’n?” Malry acted as if she hadn’t spoken. He looked at her. “You’re acting a mite familiar, talking about Hawk’s Den and all.” He turned to the Captain. “And I think she’s off her head. God knows we haven’t seen land for near a week.”

Frustration rose in her. “Don’t you understand anything I’ve said? I was at Hawk’s Den, and somehow I was kidnapped and brought here.”

The Captain flipped open a sheath fastened to the belt at his waist. With precise movements he pulled out a small bone-handle blade and stepped closer. “Your hands, please?”

Quickly, she lifted her bound hands, watched numbly as he efficiently cut the cord binding her.

She rubbed her wrists automatically, tossing a killing glare at Malry. Surprisingly, the man cracked a semblance of a smile and shrugged his shoulders.

“Malry, find out what you can,” the Captain stated.

“Aye, Cap’n, I’ll look into this — and the girl?” Malry jerked a thumb at her. “What about her?”

Isabeau opened her mouth to retort that it wasn’t up to any of them, but Malry spoke again. “Maybe she’s a spy.”

“That’s ridiculous. I’m the one who needs the help.” Isabeau’s frustration grew.

Shrugging, the Captain said, “The world is full of spies.” His blue eyes once more bore into Isabeau. Before she could voice another protest, he turned away. “Come along with Malry. Truth to tell, I can’t leave you to fend for yourself; there are enough homeless waifs about. We’ll sort this out when we get to Hawk’s Den.”

For the first time since waking, Isabeau felt optimistic. “Great. Hawk’s Den. Then everything will get straightened out.”

The Captain looked at her with surprise. “Well, if you’ve resigned yourself to coming with us, then can I trust you not to get into trouble until we dock?”

She glared at him. “You can trust me.”

“That’s yet to be seen,” Malry growled, jabbing her on the arm.

Now that the moment of imminent danger seemed to have passed, Isabeau watched the Captain. He exuded confidence, a man secure in his world…the sea, the ship. He walked the deck as if he had been born on it. She knew he was a lawyer. There was no doubt he was the type of man who ran his own business and called his own hours, but what kind of game were they playing with her? When they got back to Hawk’s Den, first thing she planned was to pack and get the hell out of there. She could take a joke as well as the next person, but this was really beyond the limit.

The Captain looked to be in his late twenties or early thirties. She pondered Malry’s obvious respect. She had heard it in his voice, seen it in his manner. A man like Malry didn’t offer such regard, she reasoned, unless it had been earned. He struck her as someone who had seen a lot of life and couldn’t be bothered with most of it.

Isabeau wished she knew how she had arrived on this ship. That was the really frightening part. It was almost as if she had materialized out of thin air. On that thought, into her mind rushed her own mother’s story of living in another time. She bit her lip with uncertainty, then discarded that crazy idea.

She rubbed her forehead, frowning, and scrutinized her surroundings. Above her head, enormous sails flapped; half of them were pulled in. Barefooted men scurried in the rigging, as surefooted as if they were on the ground. She heard them call out to one another, each intent on their duties.

The large vessel rode the water smoothly, and she was glad she didn’t feel sick as she had earlier. Open water lay at their back, the harbor ahead of them. As they entered the harbor fully, she saw numerous piers lined with large, masted ships. Isabeau realized that even if she had tried to run, short of jumping into the water, escape would have been impossible.

As the ship maneuvered into a wide berth Isabeau was reminded of the tall ship celebration she had attended only last summer in New York City.

When they docked and the ropes were tied, Isabeau moved to the side rail to watch the Captain walk down a narrow plank to the dock below.

 Continued….

Click here to download the entire book: Grace Brannigan’s ONCE UPON A REMEMBRANCE >>>

4.7 Stars for Grace Brannigan’s ONCE UPON A REMEMBRANCE – It’s Our Brand New Romance Book of The Week & Sponsor of Free Romance Titles

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And for the next week all of these great reading choices are sponsored by our Brand New Romance of the Week, Once Upon a Remembrance (Women of Strength Time Travel), so please check it out!

4.7 stars – 3 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Once Upon a Remembrance: Book 1 Women of Strength time travel trilogy: Photographer Isabeau Remington travels to 1894 Virgina and falls in love with a man she must ultimately leave behind when she returns to her own time…but things are not always as they seem.

Modern day photographer Isabeau is pulled from the present time and thrust back into the year 1894 in Virginia. She must help save Hawk Morgan, a man threatened by a killer, a man endangered by his own erased memories. Hawk must survive in 1894 so his present day ancestor Pierce Morgan, will be alive in Isabeau’s future.

Isabeau begins to fall in love with Hawk Morgan but with both their future’s uncertain and a killer on the loose, neither one of them may have a tomorrow to look forward to.

From The Author

Isabeau and Hawk’s story is the first book in the Women of Strength time travel trilogy. The Remington family bounds through time, finding adventure and their true loves, but not without encountering crisis and tests of character along the way. But finding and growing love can sometimes be elusive. Keeping your loved ones safe can be a challenge when faced with life threatening situations. Follow Isabeau’s story as she is thrust back in time to a simpler time in America, but a time fraught with danger for the man she comes to love.

About The Author

Grace Brannigan is a prolific author who loves creating happy endings. Her stories revolve around family and strong women tested in times of crisis. Her 4 books in the Women of Character series are contemporary romances.  The Women of Strength Series is a time travel trilogy. Grace hopes you enjoy reading her stories as much as she loved creating them. Happy reading!
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5 Stars For Today’s Romance of The Week Free Excerpt: Jenna McCormick’s Caught Up In You: Once in a Blue Moon (Edgeplay Part 1)

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5.0 stars – 3 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:
BUSTED
Baily Sinclair is used to playing the cards she’s been dealt. When her only living relative falls ill, she puts her education on hold and takes over his job as head groundskeeper at the Rosemont. Her only decadence is her nightly swim, when she can shed her troubles along with her clothes, at least until a man shows up on the uninhabited estate and demands her surrender.

YOU’LL PAY FOR THAT
Held captive by a stranger, she can hardly believe when her body responds to his rough seduction. Especially when she realizes her secret lover is Connor Edge, the billionaire playboy. But there’s more to this man than makes the supermarket tabloids, a darkness he hides from the world and that Baily finds simply irresistible.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

I rise with the sun, as usual, but feel worse than before I went to bed. Memories from the night before kept me thrashing until dawn. Would my mystery security man tell Mr. Edge who I was and what I’d been doing? Would he convey my remorse for crossing the line?

My hair still smells of chlorine so I take a hot shower, wincing at the stinging along the abraded parts of my body. My knees and shins are raw from where I’d pressed them into the concrete, and the palms of my hands and the left side of my face haven’t fared much better.

Though the weatherman predicts it’ll be in the upper nineties, I pull on jeans and leave my hair down, hiding the marks from last night’s shenanigans as best I can. I rarely wear makeup. Working outside, I’d sweat it off before noon. After toasting a bagel and brewing a pot of coffee, I slather my fair face with sunscreen and pull a Yankees ball cap on, then set off to meet the landscaping crew at the front gate.

A black convertible sits in the circular drive, along with an extended edition black SUV. My stomach cramps and I regret eating the bagel when a man wearing a tight black T-shirt and black slacks emerges from the passenger’s side of the SUV. Could this be the person who caught me?

“Ms. Sinclair?” The voice is smoother, lacking the rough edges of my assailant. The fact that he turns my name into a question clinches it.

“That’s me.” I smile and try not to look nervous. Or guilty.

“Mr. Edge would like to see you in his office this afternoon.”

Crap. I started to sweat. “Okay, what time?”

“Three o’clock, Ma’am.”

“I’ll be there. Now, I’ve got to go let the landscapers in.”

He steps back and I pick up the pace, my brain scrambling for purchase. Edge is going to fire me, maybe even have me escorted from the property. Pops is my only family. I have nowhere else to go.

Serves you right. Snarkarella pipes up. You played fast and loose with his security man and the bastard told him everything.

Shoving her bile aside, I move to the gate and try to not let my anxiety get the best of me. As Pops use to say, there’s no time to fret, there’s work to be done.

A new copse of flowering shrubbery has been ordered for the estate gardens and grabbing a shovel, I literally dig right in, working up a decent sweat. Rosasharn is an easy shrub to maintain if put in properly, and it flowers in several different colors. I’ve acquired several hundred saplings from a nearby nursery as part of the landscaping budget and plan to plant two rows of them leading up to and around the dolphin fountain in the back yard.

By midday, sweat runs down my back and my jeans are filthy. I pause to take a hit from my water bottle. On the east lawn of the estate, mowers run in a telling drone, making that neat chessboard pattern on the expansive front lawn.

I will miss this place, not just because it’s the only home I’ve ever known, but also because I’ve put so much of myself into it. Even before Pops started deteriorating so quickly, he lost interest in planning the grounds, but he’d already passed the love down to me. I’m the one who arranged for the installation of the stone wall separating the east and south lawns. I winterized the gardens on the south lot and made the call to take down the tree with the fungal infection that caused it to lose its leaves last fall. I know every type of plant growing on these twelve acres.

Looking around, it hits me like a ten ton anvil from above. This might be it, my last day, my last project here. Needing to sit down, I move toward the bench by the fountain and stare at the dolphin spouting water from his blowhole.

 At first I think panic is making a buzzing sound, but soon realize the noise is coming from the cell phone stuffed deep in my pocket. “Hello?”

“Ms. Sinclair? This is Rebecca Green from Golden Oaks.”

“Is my grandfather all right?” Rising to my feet, I move away from the chatter of the lawn crew.

“I’m sorry to tell you, but he fell this morning. He’s been transferred to Vassar Hospital.”

The world spins around me and I can’t think over the roaring of my blood. “Has his doctor been called? Do we know how bad it is?”

“I’m sorry, that’s all I know.”

I disconnect the call without saying goodbye and sprint for the cottage and Pops’s rusted-out pickup that looks like hell but runs like a dream. Ten minutes later I’m on the road, heading down route 44 into Poughkeepsie. Using my handsfree device, I call the doctor who’s been treating Pops and discover he’s already been notified. His office assistant tells me he’ll meet me at the hospital.

Since I’ve lived in this area all my life, I know Vassar Hospital well. A few of my friends from the nursing program at Dutchess Community College work here now, just as I would if I hadn’t taken over for Pops at the Rosemont Estate two years ago.

The nurse at reception directs me to a waiting room on the radiology level. Too agitated to sit, I pace back and forth while I wait, figuring, better to move my body than get lost in my own head. It’s too easy to imagine a worst-case scenario. Doctor Fletcher arrives a few minutes later. “He’s all right, Baily. It’s not a break, just some bruising.”

I let out a relieved breath and sink into a nearby chair. “Do we know how it happened?”

Doctor Fletcher looks perturbed. “Someone left the door to the parking area open when they were unloading a supply truck, and he wandered out and fell down the incline leading to the main road.”

Closing my eyes, I drop my head into my hands. “He could have been hit by a car.”

“The staff has already been chastised and the orderly who propped the door open reprimanded.” The doctor places his hand on my shoulder. “Have you thought about upgrading him to a better facility? I could recommend some excellent ones that deal exclusively with Alzheimer’s patients. They’re better prepared to cater to Thomas’s particular needs.”

Of course I’ve thought about it. Problem is, I can’t afford it. “I wish I could.”

The doctor escorts me to the room where Pops is resting. His heart monitor beeps a steady reassuring rhythm. Sitting in the chair beside the bed, I take his hand. Paper thin eyelids lift. His gaze is foggy under the heavy medication. “Hiya, Pops.”

He smiles and closes his eyes again. “Tired.”

“It’s the meds,” Doctor Fletcher tells him. “Does anything hurt?”

“At my age, everything hurts,” Pops says wryly, a ghost of his old self. “Beats the alternative though.”

“We’re going to keep you overnight for observation.”

Doctor Fletcher pulls me aside.

“Thank you for getting here so quickly.” I smile up at him, my constant advocate. Doctor Fletcher has been with me throughout the downward spiral of Pops’s health and I appreciate everything he’s done.

His gaze fixes on my face. “Is everything all right with you, Baily? You sleeping okay?”

I think about my moonlight swims, about being pleasured the night before by a total stranger and how it was such a relief from the nonstop heartache and worry of my daily life. Except that by letting it happen, I inadvertently made things worse.

Glancing at the clock on the wall, I gasp at the time. “Shoot, I was supposed to be at a meeting forty five minutes ago! I’ll be back later.”

“Drive safe,” Doctor Fletcher calls out as I hurry toward the nearest bank of elevators.

Snarkarella is in fine form the entire thirty-seven minute drive back to the estate, mentally flagellating me for standing up my boss. Soon to be ex-boss.

“It was a family emergency,” I reason aloud as I turn up the drive. It’s ten to five. I’m almost two hours late for my meeting with Mr. Edge. “I’m sure he’ll understand.”

Actually, I’m sure of nothing. I’m unable to decide if I ought to duck into the cottage and change out of my grubby clothes, or if that will only compound the problem.

In the end, I decide that my extreme tardiness is more offensive than my bedraggled physical state. As head groundskeeper, Mr. Edge must be aware that I work for a living. Doubtful a clean pair of jeans or even a dress would change the outcome of today’s meeting.

I take the stone steps two at a time and enter the cool foyer. Marble tiles and a vaulted ceiling give the entrance to the house that grandiose feel. An antique mahogany table and a gilded mirror sit to the right of the double doors. A curving staircase straight out of Gone with the Wind leads to the second story, eye level with the crystal chandelier. Pausing by the mirror, I do my best to scrape my out-of-control hair away from my face. Humidity wreaks havoc with the natural curls, giving me that wild Man of Borneo effect.

Snarkarella snorts in derision.

Just as I recognize that I might have to search the entire house for Mr. Edge, the click of heels comes from the back hallway.

“May I help you?” A beautiful brunette raises one sculpted eyebrow in my direction. She’s wearing a gray checked sheath dress, with a wide cherry red belt. Her waist is about the size of one of my thighs. Red four inch heels and a red beret perched jauntily on her head match the belt. Her accent is distinctly French, and her tone implies she believes me to be beyond help.

“I have an appointment with Mr. Edge.” I offer a pleasant smile which she does not return.

“And you are…?”

“Head groundskeeper.”

Lined brown eyes grow bigger until they almost pop from her head. “You’re Thomas Sinclair?”

“Baily Sinclair. His granddaughter.” That is all this snooty pill will get from me. Edge sure has plenty of guard dogs, the Rottweiler from last night and now a perfectly coiffed French Poodle. Who is this guy?

“Wait here.” She pivots on her heel and sashays to the back of the house. I deliberately refuse to look in the mirror again, not wanting to acknowledge the world of difference between myself and the poodle. At least I’m not a condescending troll in disguise.

“Ms. Sinclair, I presume.”

My heart stutters in my chest at his voice. The man from last night. Slowly, I drag my attention up his body, which is just as broad and solid as I imagined it to be, until I reach his face.

One I recognize from supermarket tabloids. How many times have I stood staring at that same face, believing he couldn’t be half as handsome in person as the magazine portrayed? I was wrong—he’s even better in the flesh, more compelling, those blue eyes piercing, the aquiline nose and perfectly set cheekbones a work of art. His smoothly shaven chin is at odds with the stubble scrape I experienced against my skin last night. And his mouth….

My brain shorts out as I look at his mouth, remembering all the things he did to me last night.

Holly hell, I’m working for Connor Edge, the billionaire playboy!

Enjoy it while it lasts, Snarkarella pipes up.

 

~*~

I’m not sure which fact is keeping me frozen. Maybe that the elusive Mr. Edge is a well-known celebrity? Or more likely, that he’s the same man who bent me over the edge of the pool and pleasured me until I came all over his face last night. Thinking about the specifics of that makes my sex squeeze with longing.

“Excuse us, Ms. Dupree. This won’t take long.”

The waif smirks at me knowingly and saunters off. Gripping my elbow, Connor Edge steers me into the nearby parlor and closes the door behind us. Releasing me, he gestures toward an antique beverage service cart. “Care for a drink?”

Despite being named after an Irish whiskey and cream based liqueur, I’m not much of a drinker, but decide I’ll make an exception under the circumstances. “Whatever you’re having.”

He pours a few fingers of amber liquid from a crystal decanter into a snifter and hands it to me. His movements are steady, unhurried, his mood impossible to read. Will he apologize for last night, or get right on with the canning?

I take a whiff of the alcohol, wondering is it’s a sip or slug drink.

“Cognac,” he murmurs, startling me. I didn’t realize he was watching me. “I usually reserve it for after dinner, but I’m not eating until much later.”

“Thank you.” I shift in my seat and bring the glass to my lips. The small sip has a sweet flavor, but burns as it slides down my throat. Okay, I can now scratch sipping brandy off my bucket list.

He sits down in a leather wingback chair directly across from me. It’s hard not to feel grubby in comparison to his perfectly pressed slacks. I take another fortifying sip and wait for the inevitable.

“Ms. Sinclair, I do not like to be kept waiting.”

My gaze flies to his. That’s it? Not a word about last night? “I’m sorry, I had a family emergency.”

The way his blue black hair falls across his forehead, those piercing eyes and the snifter of cognac, his shoes that probably cost more than my truck, all scream Masterpiece Theatre. The Andersons have money, anyone would have to in order to own Rosemont, but their fortune is nothing compared to Connor Edge’s.

“Does this emergency have anything to do with why Thomas Sinclair is nowhere to be found?” His voice is smoother than it was last night, more refined and lacking the distilled sexual heat that burned me to a crisp. Today he’s all business.

“Yes,” I say.

His blue eyes narrow. “Are you playing some sort of game, Ms. Sinclair?”
How can he ask me that after what he did the night before, turning me on to prove a point? “No, Sir.”
A small smile toys with the corners of his lips, but disappears so quickly I think it must be my imagination. “Then tell me why you are here, doing his job for him?”

In all the photographs I’ve seen, I never imagined Connor Edge to be so…intense. Part of me wants to tell him everything. Another part wants to lash out over his tactics. Why did he refer to himself in the third person, instead of simply telling me who he is? “With all due respect, it’s a private matter. I’ve been doing this job for the past two years for peanuts, and I do it better than anyone else in three counties. Now, I apologize for the pool incident—”

“Pool incident?” Dark slashing eyebrows draw down.

Enough is enough already. If he isn’t going to cut to the chase, then I sure as hell will. “Yes, you and me in the pool last night, like an erotic game of clue. Ring any bells?”

He goes very still. “What are you talking about? I’ve never seen you before a few moments ago.”

My mouth falls open. “You seriously don’t remember?” Was that even possible?

Slowly he shakes his head. “I arrived shortly after midnight and went to bed.”

“No,” I state carefully, wary of contradicting him. “You came down to the pool and caught me swimming. Naked.” Snarkarella gives me a mental forehead slap for tagging on that last part.

Setting aside his drink, Conner stands and moves toward the window. “You are sure it was me?”

I didn’t see his face, but the strong build and the rough voice, along with the air of command, were spot-on. “Unless there’s someone else around here who sounds exactly like you.”

“Sounds?” One eyebrow goes up. I’d never thought of a man’s eyebrows being sexy before, but the jet hair along Connor Edge’s brow ridge has me rethinking my stance.

“It was dark, and you kind of snuck up on me. Grabbed me from behind.”

“And?”

“And what?” I ask.

“What happened next? I must have said something, since you recognize my voice.”

This has to be the most bizarre conversation I’ve ever had. “You asked who I was, didn’t believe me when I told you. You accused me of trying to seduce Mr. Edge.”

He turns to face me at that. “Is that exactly how I phrased it? Referring to myself in the third person?”

I nod. “Yes.”

“What happened next?”

My teeth sink into my lower lip as I relive the ecstasy of his rough pleasuring. “You, uh, did some stuff. To me.”

Way to be articulate, Snarkarella hisses.

Edge is also unimpressed, considering the blank look he shoots at me. “Define, ‘stuff’.’”

“Sexual stuff.” My face grows hot. Would he just fire me already and get it over with?

Turning back to face the window, he asks, “Did I hurt you? Do anything against your will?” Though the questions are fired off in a nonchalant way, his hands ball into fists at his sides.

“No, nothing like that.”

His relief is palpable. His posture relaxes, shoulders sagging a bit as though a heavy burden has been lifted. Good lord, does he actually think he goes around raping women and forgetting about it?

“So it was consensual.”

Oh, now he’s just rubbing it in. “Yes.”

He nods as if it’s perfectly acceptable to fuck with his groundskeeper. Or more aptly, the groundskeeper’s granddaughter. “Tell me about it.”

I’ve had enough. “No.”

Both eyebrows shoot towards his hairline. “No?”

Placing my empty snifter on the end table, I rise to my feet. “Look, you can fire me if you want, but no way will I sit here and let you embarrass me first. Now, I’ve had a lousy day, and I want to go home and take a hot shower and veg out. So am I fired?”

“No.”

“No?” It’s my shot to turn the word into a question.

Standing with his feet shoulder-width apart, Edge clasps his hands behind his back at standard parade rest. “Technically I can’t fire you, since I don’t employ you.”

“Oh.” Somehow, that doesn’t reassure me.

“You find talking about sex unsettling?”

I blink, surprised by his shift back to that topic. “Not as much as the fact that you don’t remember it. And it wasn’t sex sex, it was more…” I wave my hand in a circular pattern while looking for the right words.

He finds them first. “Oral sex?”

Sure my face is the color of my hair by this point, I bite my lip and nod.

“Stop that,” he snaps.

“I’m sorry?”

Edge gestures to my mouth. “Biting your lip. Don’t do that.”

“Why not?”

“Because it makes me want to slide my cock between your lips and fuck your mouth.”

Said mouth falls open, but I snap it shut just as fast. Here’s the man I met the night before, rude, demanding, and barely leashing a wave of liquid lust.

Heat rises in me, embarrassment morphing into desire. It’s beyond ridiculous, me and him, but it’s already happened. He made it happen. I wait for him to make a move, though I don’t know how I will respond if he does.

“I apologize for my crudeness,” he says after a time.

“But not the intent?” My mouth waters, imagining the force of his hands holding my head in place while he uses me to pleasure himself. I barely suppress a shiver. That kind of roughness has never appealed to me before, but last night he awakened something in me, something wild that only he could tame.

If he even wants to. This whole conversation has a surreal quality to it. He’s my boss, but he’s not, my lover, but not.

Slowly, he shakes his head. We stare at each other for a beat, his gaze locked on mine. I can read nothing from, him, like he’s hiding behind some kind of wall. Can he be telling the truth about not remembering what he did, like some sort of selective amnesia? Or is he just setting me up for a huge fall?

I remember the way his knuckles turned white when asking if the sex was consensual. My gut tells me he’s not playing with me, and I’ve always trusted my instincts before.

A knock sounds on the outer door, and the poodle calls out, “Your ride is here, Mr. Edge.”

Edge closes his eyes, breaking the spell between us. “I have to go.” Straightening his tie, he moves toward the door.

“What about the job?” I ask his retreating back.

He pauses with the door cracked open. “You’ve been less than forthcoming with me, Ms. Sinclair. You may keep filling in for your grandfather until his return. As for the other…” He looks at me over his shoulder, the intensity of his navy irises pinning me in place. “We will speak of it again soon.”

Striding out into the hall, he says something briefly to the poodle before heading out. I move to the window and watch him descend the steps, to a waiting limousine. An elegant blonde woman wearing a slinky silver cocktail dress steps out. I can’t see anything beyond her slim figure and the back of an updo. She wears silver spike heels and a hand with polished red fingertips, which she splays on Edge’s chest when he  bends down for a  kiss.

I want to look away but can’t. Even with a belly full of what feels like oiled snakes slithering around. What are their evening plans? I wonder about it, about the woman’s relationship to him, while watching the limo pull out of the drive. What must it be like to live so elegantly, to have a reason to own a cocktail dress and someplace to wear it?

“They are probably doing it right now,” the poodle speaks up from behind me. Her voice is soft with misery. I can tell she and Edge have had a sexual encounter. Women usually go nuts because of a man, and after spending time with him, I can easily envision Connor Edge driving a woman past the point of sanity. Her possessiveness is more cloying than her perfume.

Stowing my hurt, I say, “It’s none of my business if they are.” Other than the remark about fucking my mouth, he’s given no indication that he’s attracted to me. Connor Edge probably seduces women in droves and throws them back just as quickly. “I got what I came for.”

A reprieve. More time to figure out what to do about myself and Pops. Connor Edge and his dirty, alluring mouth are not part of my grand scheme.

I tell myself that, all the way back to the cottage.

 Continued….

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5.0 stars – 3 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled

Here’s the set-up:

BUSTED
Baily Sinclair is used to playing the cards she’s been dealt. When her only living relative falls ill, she puts her education on hold and takes over his job as head groundskeeper at the Rosemont. Her only decadence is her nightly swim, when she can shed her troubles along with her clothes, at least until a man shows up on the uninhabited estate and demands her surrender.

YOU’LL PAY FOR THAT
Held captive by a stranger, she can hardly believe when her body responds to his rough seduction. Especially when she realizes her secret lover is Connor Edge, the billionaire playboy. But there’s more to this man than makes the supermarket tabloids, a darkness he hides from the world and that Baily finds simply irresistible.

One Reviewer Notes

“… All the fun of being swept off your feet by the dashing, yet tortured billionaire, and the sex. Oh my GOD, the sex is just fantastic. What I love about McCormick’s writing is that every story takes you on a roller coaster ride and pulls no punches. She doesn’t hesitate to go in for the kill. And this delicious introduction to the Edgeplay universe doesn’t disappoint. I’m on the edge of my seat waiting for the next installment. No pun intended, Mr. Edge.” – Amazon Reviewer, 5 Stars

About The Author

A little fantasy goes a long way….
Born on Sanibel Island somewhere between the fifth and seventh bottle of Rosa Regale, Jenna McCormick writes big girl romance with a touch of out of this world fantasy. Her hobbies include scouring the Internet for the perfect pair of boots and stirring up trouble, much to the dismay of her alter ego. To learn more about Jenna, Please visit her website. http://www.authorjennamac.com/
(This is a sponsored post.)

Enjoy This Free Excerpt From KND Romance of The Week: Edenmary Black’s Sanctum Angels Shadow Havens Book 1

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4.4 stars – 8 Reviews
Text-to-Speech and Lending: Enabled
Here’s the set-up:

Warning: The following work contains descriptive material and scenes of explicit sexual encounters between consenting male and female adults. It is intended for adult readers only.

When Priana Grey walks into a bank, she isn’t expecting to be taken hostage by a violent thief; nor, is she expecting Detective Joe Cafaris to offer his life for hers. The stepdaughter of fallen angels of the Sanctum, she has concealed her true nature to move among humans for years, but Joe’s courage astounds her. Although she knows that falling in love with a human is a disaster, she just can’t ignore what she feels.

Joe is a tough loner, cool in the most dangerous situations, but he’s not ready for the scorching desire he feels for Priana. He has a million logical reasons to walk away, but his heart wants something else.

Priana’s stepbrother, Keirc, warns that she’ll find only misery with Joe, yet he guards a perilous secret of his own. His lover, Iridea, is the daughter of Sebastien Galaurus, a ruthless vampire who leads the Demesne, a powerful supernatural haven quite unlike the Sanctum.

When a stunning crisis forces Priana into the heart of the Demesne, a maelstrom explodes in the shadow of supernatural havens on the brink of war, where fallen angels, vampires, weres and daemons call the shots and humans are viewed as critically frail – a place where men and supernaturals can die.

And here, for your reading pleasure, is our free excerpt:

Chapter One

 

Four years later…

 

Priana Grey’s hands and feet were freezing. Her arms felt like wood and a thin trail of blood was snaking its way down her palm from the fine wire binding her wrists. She wiggled her fingertips but couldn’t risk moving more. The man with his fist in her hair would only yank her backward again and the gun at the end of his other hand looked as long as a bowling alley. He would use it, she knew, but she tried to stay calm by telling herself that every breath was a blessing to take her closer to surviving. Even though she was only wearing a wine-colored slip and the guy with the gun kept yanking at her head, she struggled to ignore the knot twisting her gut. The fact that she had a fifty / fifty shot at dying in her underwear in front of total strangers meant nothing now.

Less than two hours earlier, Priana had come to the First Bank of Saint Rushton to make a deposit. Her only thought had been to go to the bank before the oppressive heat and humidity that often bakes southwestern Pennsylvania in early September took hold for the day. Five other people had been in the bank, including two tellers. As she had turned away from the tellers’ counter, a young man with unkempt blond hair had entered the bank, shoved a crowbar through the handles of the glass doors and pulled a gun from the back of his jeans, before ordering everyone to stand in front of the tellers’ counter.

In that instant, she had gone from bank customer to hostage. Priana’s heart had begun hammering in her chest. The guy was strung out and rough looking, in ragged jeans and an oversized plaid jacket. The bitter disgust and hatred in his eyes frightened Pria as much as the gun he kept waving around like some kind of baton. She drew a fast, deep breath and did a quick assessment of her companions. There were two older men, both of whom were very pale. The tellers, both middle-aged women, seemed to be holding themselves together, but a pretty, dark haired girl, who couldn’t be out of her teens, had a bad case of the shakes that caught her attention.

Pria turned her options over in her mind. As the child of a pureblood vampire and an angel who’d chosen to fall, she had skills to end the situation, but putting a human life at risk was unacceptable. Unless there was a direct threat to life, she would not take the life of even someone like the man with the gun. She could try to get close enough to the thief to pull a glamour, which wouldn’t kill him, but given his agitated state, it might not work. If she were close enough to even try a glamour, she could do much more, yet she was reluctant to compromise his life if all he wanted was money. Cursing inwardly, she decided to see where the situation went. Hopefully, he’d just take the money and leave.

The robber pulled two heavy laundry sacks from his long jacket, tossing them at the tellers, with orders to empty the bank’s cash into the bags. As the tellers took the sacks and the thief’s attention followed them, Pria grabbed at the man standing next to her and whispered, “Change places with me,” so she would be next to the young girl, who was almost panting. The girl looked at Pria, eyes wide with terror.

“Cooperate,” Pria whispered. “Keep breathing.”

The tellers didn’t speak to each other as they moved from cash drawer to cash drawer, as one held the sack and the other stuffed bills into the opening. Having worked together for many years, they didn’t need to speak as they both depressed small square buttons beneath the counter. After emptying the cash drawer, they took the sacks to the vault at the left of the tellers’ area.

At the Saint Rushton Police Department Dispatch Center, a light began blinking on the black console of a rookie dispatcher, who wasn’t too sure if he was right about what he thought the light meant. Although still learning the ropes, he knew he wasn’t supposed to leave his console unless someone else covered it. Standing, he looked around a bit frantically before his supervisor saw him from her glass-fronted office. He motioned to her with his arm. She had a kid the same age and she’d already taken a liking to him.

“Shit,” she said when she saw the square red light. “How long’s that been blinkin’? That’s the First Bank of Saint Rushton.”

“Just started,” the rookie answered, a little breathless and a little proud of himself for knowing the light meant that serious shit was going down at the First Bank of Saint Rushton.

“Well, let’s wake up SWAT,” she said looking at her watch. “Christ! It’s not even nine in the morning. Today should be a real kick in the ass, kid!”

By the time the tellers were dragging cash-filled sacks across the floor toward the thief, two SWAT teams, three snipers and two paramedic units were headed for the bank. One SWAT team and the snipers entered the bank through a rarely-used side entrance the thief knew nothing about. The shooters slipped further into interior areas of the bank, normally closed off from the public, including a small employee lounge to the thief’s left side.

 

When the tellers had dragged the cash-filled bags to the gunman’s feet, he motioned them back in line, yelling, “Now, everyone get your clothes off! Shoes off, too. Throw everything in a pile here,” he ordered, gesturing to the floor with the gun.

Pria heard a sharp intake of breath next to her that alarmed her more than removing her red dress, which was little more than a long tee shirt. She whipped the dress over her head and kicked her flip flops to the center of the floor. Down to her slip, she glanced at the girl, who was sliding a pair of cut offs down thin, tan legs. She wore a simple pink top with buttons and white cotton panties. Her fingers fluttered over the shirt’s buttons, unable to make herself undo them.

“Honey…” Pria whispered.

“I’m not wearing a bra,” the girl hissed, in a panicky voice.

“It’ll be okay. Keep the shirt on. Just don’t say a word, no matter what.”

In a moment, the thief’s eye came to rest on the girl, as the other hostages continued disrobing. He strode forward until he was inches of her face.

“Get your shirt off, bitch!” he screamed.

The girls squeezed her eyes closed as if to protect herself from his fury. She turned her head away, expecting to be hit.

Pria noted the thief’s hot breath and dirty, blond hair. His pale skin was specked with acne scarring. Spittle gathered at the corners of his thin lips.

Pria’s hand flew upward in front of the man’s face. “She won’t run,” she said firmly. “That’s why you want us to take our shoes and clothes off…so we won’t run for the door. She won’t run.”

The gunman looked down at Pria, as if aware of her for the first time.

Pria slipped an arm around the girl’s shoulders to pull her closer. It was a small glamour, but the most she could hope for given the thief’s almost-frenzied mental state. “She won’t run,” she repeated. “She knows you’re powerful…and strong. She doesn’t want to die, so she won’t run. You’re strong and powerful and you can allow her to keep the shirt on,” Pria insisted. “The shirt means nothing. She won’t run. Because you’re powerful”

In the thief’s mind, Pria’s voice had an odd lilting quality. It calmed him and somehow he felt her words to be truth. The girl wouldn’t run, he realized. She knew he’d kill her. Closing his eyes, he saw the girl running; saw himself shooting her in the back as she got closer to the bank’s glass doors.

“She will not run,” Pria repeated firmly.

Then, the thief knew she was right. No one would want to die with a bullet in the back. The shirt wasn’t important. He could allow her to keep it.

“Yeah… I don’t have time to fuck around with this,” he said under his breath and moved away.

The girl clutched Pria’s hand, like the lifeline it had become.

“Be still,” Pria whispered. “Don’t make a sound.”

“Everyone on the floor!” the thief bellowed, still waving the gun like a riding crop “Cells, purses, wallets…right here…at my feet!”

Purses, wallets and cell phones quickly became a small mound in front of the thief, who pulled a spool of thin wire from a back pocket. Moving quickly from hostage to hostage, he bound their hands in front of them with the wire, which was meant to hurt as much as restrain.

The next two events told Pria a teller had somehow managed to alert the police. First, the power went out, killing most of the lights, air conditioning and several computers, plunging the bank into an oddly quiet state. Within a few minutes, a phone on a corner desk began ringing. The sound brought a look of triumph to the thief’s face, as he shoved a teller to answer it.

The tiny, gray-haired teller, bright-eyed with fear, snatched at the phone, which seemed deafening. “It’s for you,” she said in a whispery croak, as if her vocal chords weren’t cooperating.

Pria felt genuine fear punch a hook into her stomach, as the thief snatched the phone’s receiver and grinned. Reports of this kind of thing were plentiful and news images often showed live hostages being taken away by cops after the fireworks were over. Until she’d seen the sick grin, she’d hoped the guy would take the cash and bolt. This wasn’t just a bank robber, but a psychotic, who was far more dangerous than someone looking for money. She also realized, with a horrible sense of dread, the bank robber hadn’t covered his face. Since everyone in the bank could easily identify him, Pria recognized their chances for getting out alive were dwindling. Although the thief kept his voice low on the phone, Pria had the sense that he was asking for someone named Joe.

“Yeah, you get Joe in here,” he said smugly, leaving Pria to wonder who Joe was.

The thief concluded the conversation quickly, slamming the phone’s receiver back into its cradle. Three long strides brought him to Pria, with her legs tucked under her on the floor. Grabbing a fistful of her long, dark hair, he pulled her upright.

“Do what you’re told, bitch,” he hissed, spinning her to face the door. “Understand?”

Grimacing, Pria nodded, causing him to yank her hair harder. “You will not hurt me,” she whispered. The glamour wouldn’t work, she realized. He was too wired and she couldn’t make eye contact with her back to his chest. With one hand still fisted in her hair, he pulled her forward with him, yanked the bar out of the door handles and dragged her back to the middle of the floor. He propped his other arm over her shoulder to point the gun at the bank’s front door.

Pria couldn’t see police or anything else through the glass doors, but within minutes, they parted and a tall, dark-haired guy stepped through. He was wearing a dark suit, a pale blue shirt and a Kevlar vest. A badge was clipped to his belt, but he didn’t appear to be armed. His face showed no emotion, as he spread his hands wide in front of him.

“Hi Marcus,” the cop said calmly. “You could’ve called or sent me a text if you’d wanted to talk.”

“Wasn’t sure you’d wanna’ talk, Joe,” Marcus Whitwater, thief, gunman and ex-con answered, grinning again. He was enormously pleased to see Joe Cafaris. In fact, he almost had to stifle a chuckle because this was the cop who’d taken his freedom more than ten years ago to put him in jail. In hell, actually, but today, Joe would be the one to walk him out the door with all the cash in the bank. The situation was a delicious irony to Whitwater, who had every intention of killing the cop after they were away from the bank and perhaps not too quickly.

Joe noted the presence and position of the woman Whitwater was hanging onto. Dark, red slip, lots of dark hair, no shoes and …breathing. Her position would make the sniper’s job tougher. Had to hurt, being held by the hair, but he prayed she’d remain still and not fucking lose it now.

“Well, we’re talking now,” Joe said evenly, beginning his approach to Whitwater and Pria. “You’ve got my undivided attention, but you need to let the woman go, Marcus. I’ll take her place. That’s what you want, right?” If Joe could keep the bastard’s attention focused on him, the hostages stood a decent chance of getting out alive. Well, some kind of chance, he thought, taking another step forward. From the corner of his eye, he saw the door to the employee lounge open a crack, but he kept his face toward Whitwater. Behind the black slit, between the door and its frame, a police sniper waited anxiously.

“I can get you out of here,” Joe said, still moving toward Whitwater and Pria. “You were right about that. I’m probably one of the few people who could get you out of here, Marcus. The hostages…the woman you’re hanging onto …they’re a liability now. They’ll be too hard to move once you’re through the doors. But you already know the cops outside won’t shoot me…won’t even risk shooting at me. I’m your ticket out, Marcus. You’re too smart to blow it, right?”

Pria grimaced as Whitwater tightened his grip in her hair again. She watched Joe moving forward with a strange, powerful grace that spoke volumes to her. She sensed his anger…his determination… his intimate knowledge that death was possible for all of them, yet his approach was relentless and steady. Like the gun meant nothing.

Roughly a yard separated them. Joe knew time was disappearing fast. If the woman screamed or moved suddenly, Whitwater would start shooting. Or he’d start shooting whether she moved or not.

“Take the bag, Marcus,” Joe said, taking three slow steps forward. “Take the money and let’s go for a walk. Let me change places with her” Very slowly, he started to reach for Pria, who eyed him with horror.

For a single moment, Joe allowed himself to take his eyes away from Whitwater’s face to look down at Pria. She was breathtakingly beautiful, he realized. And utterly terrified. White hot rage flared in his chest, but he reined it. This was no time for an emotional response. He raised his hand very slowly, inching his palm forward toward her shoulder.

Pria turned her eyes toward Joe, seeing that he meant to ease her free of Whitwater’s grasp. What flooded her senses now was the intuitive knowledge that Whitwater wanted desperately to blow the cop’s head off and the robbery, the hostages and everything else revolved around that single desire. If Joe changed places with her, he would die.

“No,” she whispered. As a loud popping sound deafened her, a searing burn ignited Pria’s bicep. She raised her bound hands to her chest, squeezed her eyes closed and brought all of her energies to a tight, hot ball in her chest. She held the mental picture of Whitwater’s face as he’d screamed at the dark-haired teenager a short time ago and shot her energies outward at his image.

Standing behind her, Marcus Whitwater instantly felt like a lightning bolt had sliced through his chest as a hot pain grabbed at the very center of his body. His heart sputtered and seized causing a horrible grinding sensation to take root behind his sternum. Every nerve cell in his body tingled with electricity like he’d shoved both hands into an outlet. The gun slipped from his fingers and thudded on the floor in front of Pria. He gasped as if trying to suck a breath beneath twenty feet of water.

Pria felt Whitwater’s body cave into itself, as he released his hold on her hair. As his struggling heart sent his blood on one final lap through his veins and arteries, she stepped forward to Joe, who caught her shoulders and pulled her close. She grabbed at the pain in her arm awkwardly, but her knees were suddenly loose and the floor seemed to be on its way up to her face. Hot, thick liquid was running down her arm over her fingers. As Joe’s arms closed around her, two more shots were fired, but Pria couldn’t tell where they were coming from. She moved into Joe’s chest, letting him break her fall. Someone was screaming.

Still clutching Pria, Joe saw Whitwater hit the floor and an ocean of blood forming beneath him. He yanked his jacket off to wrap her in it. The sleeve went wet and warm in his hands. “You’re going to be okay…we’re going to get you out of here…,” Joe reassured her. “What’s your name?”

“Pria…my name’s Pria,” she replied.

Within moments, they were engulfed in a swarm of cops and paramedics. Still clutching her to his chest on the floor, Joe picked up Pria’s bloody, discolored hands. He yelled for something to cut the wire with.

“I’m Joe,” he said quickly. “You were very brave, Pria. Stay with me. We’re gonna get you out of here

Pria looked up at the stranger who had offered his life for her own. The man Whitwater would have happily killed. Even frowning and more than a little pissed, he was gorgeous. She had the strangest thought that, she would come to know him in the ways a female knows a man. And would struggle with all that would bring, but faces began swimming before her eyes, pulling her away from the thought. Someone was tugging her from Joe’s arms to lift her. She was being plopped on something hard, flanked by several enormous paramedics. Her legs were being covered. Someone was asking her name. One of the paramedics, a woman with a kind, round face, asked her about medical problems. Did she take any medications? Was she allergic to anything? Pria shook her head. Loud voices and the sound of at least one woman weeping clogged her ears but it all seemed to be moving away from her now. She struggled to keep her eyes open. Someone was cutting the wires around her wrists, which stung like hell. A paramedic in a blue uniform was wrapping something thick and white around one of her wrists.

“Sorry we have to hurt ya’, sweetheart,” a rusty-haired paramedic said, lifting her hand. “We’re gonna put an IV line in, honey, so we can give ya’ fluids and other stuff.” The paramedic raised one of Pria’s hands, eyed her discolored fingers and shook his head. He pulled her right arm straight at her side, wrapping a tourniquet in place and shoving a needle into a vein, which burned a trail down to her mottled hand. Pria jerked away involuntarily. And jerked again as her wounded arm was maneuvered and wrapped.

“Easy with the fucking needle, Mike” Joe said tightly, across her body.

“Sorry Joe. I gotta put a line in,” the paramedic said apologetically.

“No…no hospitals,” Pria whispered to no one particular. “No hospital…” Her voice was literally falling on deaf ears, but Joe’s face filled her eyes for a moment. His eyes seemed endless and so filled with concern, as he frowned.

“You’re going to be okay,” he promised. “You’re going to be fine.”

“Hospital…no…,” Pria replied, trying in vain to sit up.

“Yeah, you’re going to the hospital,” Joe assured her, pressing her shoulder gently to the gurney. “We’re going to take care of you.”

“We’re ready to go, Joe,” the rusty-haired paramedic said. “The gunshot wound…we just stabilized her. It’s best if the docs deal with it at the hospital.”

“Where’s she headed?” Joe asked, as the paramedic adjusted a thick belt across Pria’s middle to keep her from falling as they moved her.

“Saint Rushton University General. They’re prepped and waitin’,” the paramedic said, without looking up.

Joe looked down at Pria. God, she was really gorgeous, even bloody and half conscious.

Pria’s eyelids were so heavy, so hard to keep open, yet she knew he was staring at her, needed to say something more. He touched her shoulder through the white sheet the paramedics had wrapped her in. His jacket was somewhere under it with her.

“I’ll see you again, Pria,” he said. “Just lie back. Try to relax. Let these guys do what they do best.”

“Fuck…,” Pria murmured although the surrounding noise prevented anyone from hearing her. The gurney was moving and she was suddenly dizzy, moving past so many faces turned in her direction. As she slid into darkness, she wondered when Joe would find her.

 

For the first moments Pria was awake, she didn’t understand why the lights were so blinding or where so many loud voices could be coming from. For that brief time, she remained still and flat in the hospital bed, unsure of where she was. With a blinding speed, the details overtook her, jolting her into brutal reality. Launching herself upright, she saw the pale, yellow privacy curtains around her bed…a bed with safety bars, which could only mean she was in a hospital for humans, probably an emergency department with lots of doctors and nurses who were completely used to treating humans. And she’d probably been there for hours. Her red slip had been replaced with a hospital gown and her bicep was bandaged. Her wrists were covered with white dressings as well. Prodding the bandage on her upper arm she felt a tingling sensation A bag of clear fluid hung over her on a stand connected to the needle in her hand. What she knew almost instantly was what she didn’t have.

 

No cell… no purse… no clothes…no car.

 

“Relax,” Joe said quietly. “You’re okay now. You’re in the ER at Saint Rushton University General Hospital.”

Joe’s voice startled Pria, as he’d been sitting almost behind her, on a hard plastic chair that felt like it had become part of his ass. He’d planted himself there about an hour ago, simply waiting for her to wake up. He’d used the time to talk to his supervisor, Cy Kent, and learned that Marcus Whitwater had died, although it would take a coroner to figure out exactly why. The thief had taken the second and third shots fired in the bank; one had fractured his hip and the other had traveled through his ass. Neither should have killed him, but Whitwater was parked in the morgue.

The first shot fired had wounded Pria, a fact likely to cause a massive problem for the Saint Rushton Police Department. As a result Cy had ordered Joe to remain with her, promising to stay in touch, but orders were only one reason he’d remained. Something had just annoyed the hell out of him about her being alone there, even though the ER was a place he knew as well as a staff member. Of course, he’d tried not to stare at her, but he couldn’t seem to pull his eye away from the fall of dark waves framing her too-pale face. He’d had time to notice that although tiny and wrapped in the ugliest garment in the universe, commonly called a hospital gown, her curves were impossible to miss. He’d also had plenty of time to call himself a bastard for thinking like this about a woman who had survived being a hostage and a gun shot.

“I’m sorry I frightened you. You’re safe now,” he said, rising to move to the upright bed rail.

“You were at the bank,” Pria said. “I remember… you offered to change places with me.”

“Yeah, I was in the bank. I’m Joe Cafaris,” Joe said, taking in her eyes, which were the same wild green as the ocean just before a storm.

“I’m glad you were there. I’m grateful for what you did,” Pria said, amazed at his courage. She knew she was staring. Staring kind of hard, but damn, he was breathtaking, with his wide shoulders and dark eyes. Mentally she slapped herself for going in that direction.

“Your name’s Pria, right? Can I get you anything? I should get a doctor or a nurse. They told me you’re going to be fine in a couple of days,” he said, aware that he was talking too fast. “A doctor should really tell you…whatever you need to know. I think they’re admitting you for the night anyway.”

Being admitted to a hospital for humans was so not going to happen, as far as Pria was concerned, but she knew she’d have to move cautiously. She really didn’t want to have to glamour Joe or black him out entirely.

“Looks like they already took care of my arm,” Pria said, lifting her bandaged limb, as if offering proof. “I don’t need to see a doctor really. Do you know where my clothing might be? I had a slip on, but when I got to the bank, I had a dress… shoes.”

“Your clothing is evidence for now actually, but you can’t leave yet,” Joe replied, surprised she’d think of doing so.

“Damn,” she swore, looking at the hospital gown. “I really do have to leave. I mean, I am all right.”

Joe’s face showed the amazement he felt. Usually people who had been shot weren’t in a dizzy rush to leave a hospital. And although her eyes were…well…spectacular, he couldn’t tell her that leaving was a great idea. “You were wounded in a rather traumatic event and it would be kind of foolish…crazy really…. to leave the hospital so soon afterwards. The other hostages are being checked out here too.”

“Are you calling me crazy or just foolish Officer Cafaris?” Pria asked, smiling

Joe had seen bigger people than this little brunette insist they were utterly fine, just before they kissed the floor. “Neither,” he said, instantly regretting his choice of words. “You displayed a lot of courage in the bank. Everyone got out okay, but if you had started screaming or struggling with Whitwater, he’d have started shooting. Frankly, leaving here is a bad idea,” he insisted. “You should stay for your own good. And, it’s detective, by the way.”

“Whitwater? That’s the guy’s name…that had me?”

Joe nodded. “He was taken down.”

“You mean dead?” Pria asked, feigning a lack of knowledge. Damn, she hated lying, when she knew the bastard had been dead before he hit the floor, even before he’d been shot.

“Yeah, dead.”

“He wanted to kill you,” Pria said, before she could stop herself.

Joe wondered how she could know that, but maybe Whitwater had said something to her about it. He nodded again. “We think that was the idea. He was definitely looking for revenge.”

“For what?”

Man, this woman had a lot of questions, but then she had a weird right to know. “Several years ago, he committed a crime a lot like what happened today at the bank and I arrested him,” Joe explained. “He went to jail for about ten years. While he was there, his wife divorced him. He basically lost everything and I guess he had a lot of time to think it all over and come up with me as the reason for his troubles. Then, he got out. Turned out, life on the outside wasn’t to his liking either. In his mind, I guess it all came back to me and so this stuff that went down at the bank. This was his insane idea of revenge. Getting me to walk him out of there with all the money was like some crazy symbolic way for him to turn me into a criminal. People like Whitwater aren’t usually too smart. He was operating on straight emotion and probably a dose of a few recreational chemicals so he didn’t think about the bank’s cameras or the back entrance we used to get in after the panic buttons were pushed. As I said, I think the idea was to kill me. And as many other people…cops…as possible.”

“And you walked in anyway,” Pria pointed out.

“When the tellers hit the panic buttons, we had to assume it was a hostage situation, since it was happening during the bank’s business hours. Walking in wasn’t a choice,” he said calmly.

“How did you know he wanted you to come into the bank?” Pria asked.

Joe smiled. “He asked for me. Said he’d start shooting people if I didn’t.” He rubbed a hand over his face. “You were remarkably brave at the bank. I want you to know that. It’s unfortunate you were wounded, but… ”

“I can’t say I feel particularly brave just now, but I appreciate what you’re saying,” Pria said, interrupting him. “It must have taken a lot of courage for you to do what you did, knowing about this guy already. Offering to take my place. That was pretty amazing.”

“Well, the point is that you’re gonna be okay and everyone else is okay,” he replied, deflecting the praise he didn’t feel he deserved anyway. “I apologize for the fact that you were accidentally wounded. It’s very unfortunate when hostage situations sometimes go this way.” In truth, she was lucky she hadn’t been killed, something Joe didn’t mention.

“I really have to go now,” Pria said again. Although she wouldn’t have objected to staring at Joe for a few more hours, the realities of the situation were intruding. “I forgive you for calling me crazy and foolish and I will swear you tried to prevent me from leaving the hospital, but I need to find some kind of clothing.”

Silence hung between them, giving Pria time to notice again that Joe had really wide shoulders and probably had a gorgeous chest to go with them. And beautiful dark eyes that looked tired in the harsh glare of the fluorescent lights hanging overhead.

“So, what’s the rush?” Joe asked after a moment. “Do you need to be somewhere? I mean…can someone bring you clothing at least?”

“I just don’t like hospitals,” Pria admitted. The fact that she’d ended up in one was going to be problematic enough. In ways the detective could not even begin to imagine. “Do you think I could borrow a set of scrubs or something?”

“Look, let me find a doctor to look you over. Just wait here,” Joe ordered. “If one of the docs say you’re okay, I’ll drive you home myself.” Joe’s plan was to find some sane nurse or doctor to tell Pria that she needed to remain in the hospital. He could not quite get her need to go, but the hospital had no authority to hold her against her will. As he whipped the curtain aside, he found himself face to face with a group clearly headed for Pria.

A tall man dressed in black, with wavy, blond hair that brushed his shoulders was right behind an enormous, dark haired guy, dressed in denim and a tall, elegant blond woman in dark glasses moved past Joe to Pria. The blond immediately lowered the bed bar, pulled her dark glasses off and drew Pria into a loose hug.

“We’re taking you home, Pria,” she said, plopping a gold tote bag on the bed. “I brought you something to wear.” Holding Pria at arm’s length, the woman looked her over critically. “Are you in pain?” she asked.

“No, Miri, no pain,” Pria answered. “This is the police officer…detective…from the bank,” she said, nodding in Joe’s direction. “He came into the bank to save me.”

The woman and both men turned to Joe. The blond man shook hands with him quickly, as the woman moved to the other side of Pria’s bed to disconnect the IV line and remove the needle from her arm. Joe noticed that she seemed to know what she was doing.

“We are extremely grateful for what you did,” the blond guy said. “We’re Pria’s family. We’ll care for her now.”

“She seems very eager to leave the hospital,” Joe said. “Maybe it would be best if….”

“No,” the woman called Miri said firmly. “We will care for her, but I thank you for saving her life. Everyone out now, so I can help Pria dress,” she said shooing the men, who walked out into a busy corridor within the emergency department.

“I’m Keircnan,” the blond man told Joe. “This is Monroe,” he said gesturing to the other man. “What happened to the man who was holding Pria? Was he killed?”

“Yes, he died at the scene,” Joe answered, without going into the details of an apparent lack of a cause of death for Whitwater. Plunging ahead, he said, “In fact, Marcus Whitwater…the guy that took Pria as a hostage… didn’t shoot her. She was accidentally wounded by a police sniper, who was aiming for Whitwater.” Joe paused to let that one sink in, before continuing. “The department apologizes for the fact that she was wounded in what went down at the bank and the medical bill….”

“Arrangements have already been made for the bill to be paid,” Keirc said quickly. “I was simply curious about this man, Whitwater. I can assure you, Pria will not be interested in suing the police department or speaking to the media about any of this. She has no wish to embarrass the police department. Her privacy is important as she will be recovering at home.”

“I didn’t know she’d spoken with her family,” Joe said, surprised again. She’d been out cold when he’d been with her and the hospital personnel had not contacted them, because they hadn’t known exactly who to call. “I wasn’t aware the hospital had called anyone. Are you her attorney?”

“Pria is my stepsister, but we are close,” Keirc replied. “I can assure you, her desires are as I have told you. Will the police department need to speak with her, do you think?”

For a fraction of a second, Joe thought he saw Keirc’s palm up near his face, but when he blinked, he saw the man’s hands at his sides. “The district attorney’s office…,” he said, struggling for a moment to recall the question.

“I see,” Keirc said. “She will be with us for a few days. I think I can convince her to stay with us that long, before she insists on returning to her business. If you need to reach her, leave a message at the Maidenheart Bakery. Pria is the owner.”

The sound of a cell phone interrupted the conversation. Monroe pulled the phone from his jacket to answer.

“Miri and Pria are in the car,” Monroe advised Keirc, ending the call. He shook Joe’s hand quickly, murmuring, “Thanks,” before turning to leave.

As the men left, Joe wondered about the odd conversation. A family that appeared from nowhere to take a woman with a gunshot wound home from a hospital that hadn’t officially discharged her. A beautiful victim who couldn’t get out of the hospital fast enough. A stepbrother who seemed to be doing the talking for her and nobody seemed to have any desire to hang the cop who’d shot her. And how in the hell had the women gotten out of the ER so fast? Without him seeing them?

Joe was still thinking about Pria as he headed through the hospital’s exit to his car. Jogging for the parking lot, he walked directly into Georgia Hudsis, TV anchor and professional pain in the ass. Seeing him, she whipped a hand through her blond bob, pulled her dark glasses off and moved in like the predator she was.

“Hey, gorgeous, “she breathed, standing a little too close. “Miss me?”

“Not really, Georgia, but how are you anyway?” Joe lifted a hand toward the reporter’s cameraman, who was already hoisting the large camera to his shoulder to start shooting in Joe’s direction. “No pictures,” he said firmly.

“You look camera-ready to me.”

Joe fixed Georgia in a hard stare, as her cameraman dropped the bulky camera to his side again.

“So, what happened at the bank?” she asked.

“Talk to Cy Kent yet?” Joe asked, referring to his supervising officer. With any luck he could dump the reporter in his lap and move on from Georgia’s relentless clutch. Looking around he saw no other news teams had appeared at the hospital, a good thing for the other hostages who were still being checked over inside.

“What would Cy know anyway? You were there,” the reporter said, moving a little closer to Joe.

“Yeah, I was there but you know how it goes. Can’t release any information that might compromise any investigation .blah…blah…blah. I’m not who you need Georgia. Talk to Cy.” he advised.

“What investigation, Joe? The guy went into the bank. He took hostages. He wanted money. You guys shot him and he’s dead.” Georgia put her hand on a cocked hip.

“Not much of a story, when you put it like that, huh?” Joe pointed out, beginning to move away from the blond.

“I heard there was bad blood between the two of you,” she said keeping pace with his long strides. “You and the guy at the bank, I mean. Any truth there?”

“Really? That’s what you heard?” Joe said, dodging the question.

“How are the hostages?”

“Well, probably happy they’re not hostages any more, Georgia, but do humanity a favor and give them some space huh?” Joe stopped walking to nail her squarely in her big blue eyes. “They’ve been through something traumatic. Your questions and the whole camera thing won’t help them.”

“Killjoy,” Georgia accused. “What about the woman who was shot? She’s still in there?” she asked, realizing she wasn’t going to get anything worth broadcasting from Joe.

“A woman was shot?” Joe knew this tactic of firing questions, as she shot her own in his direction, was especially annoying to her, but he considered it entertaining as hell.

“Yeah, that’s what I heard. One of the hostages was shot. She was wearing a cute red slip.”

“Well, Georgia, I think you could be right about her still being inside,” Joe said, lifting a dark eyebrow and looking over his shoulder at the hospital exit. As odd as his conversation with Pria’s family had been, he was suddenly glad they’d taken her from the hospital, even if he had no idea how they’d managed to do it so damned quickly.

Georgia’s interest in Joe evaporated like a tiny puddle on a suffocating afternoon. She started moving back toward the hospital exit as if she’d never seen him before in her life.

Free again, Joe jogged to his car. Once inside, he placed a call to the hospital to talk with the ER’s charge nurse, a guy Joe respected for his ability to get things done quickly. After explaining his conversation with Georgia Hudsis to the nurse, Joe suggested that any hostages leaving the hospital should be escorted out by hospital security or cops and taken through a back exit from the ER to the parking garage. He’d already arranged for each of them to be driven home by cops if no family members showed up to get them.

 

As Joe was dumping Georgia and hopefully preventing her from wreaking emotional havoc with ex-hostages, Pria dropped her head on the backseat of Keirc’s SUV, looking forward to reaching the Sanctum, a haven for supernaturals a little less than a hundred miles from Saint Rushton, where she’d been raised with Keirc by her step-parents, Miri and Andrieu. Keirc was behind the wheel, with Monroe riding shotgun. Miri was next to Pria in the back seat.

“So, Whitwater’s dead,” Keirc said breaking the silence. “Your kill?” he asked Pria.

“Yes,” she answered. “My kill.” The thought nauseated her slightly even though she’d killed before. As her mother had been a fallen angel, she had the abilities to preserve life or end it. In some circumstances, ending life was a noble calling, but she wouldn’t have taken Whitwater’s life had there been an option. With Joe Cafaris facing a certain death if he’d taken her place, she’d had no choice. If Whitwater had only wanted money, she’d have done nothing to prevent him from taking it. “How did you know what happened?”

“Monroe heard a news report at the bakery. The initial report said a number of police vehicles were at the bank, but he knew that was where you’d gone, so he called Keircnan,” Miri answered. “Keirc tracked police scanners and then hit the hospital databases. That’s how we knew where you’d been taken. All of the hostages went to Saint Rushton University General.” Miri covered Pria’s hand with her own. Knowing her stepdaughter, she could sense Pria’s uneasiness as well as the pain in her arm. Miri also knew that if Pria had killed, there had been no alternative. “Tell us what happened,” she said.

Pria outlined the events at the bank, including the fact that Joe would have died if he had taken her place as Whitwater’s shield.

“Well, I think the humans should be thanking you, although I still can’t for the life of me see why the hell you want to live or work among them,” Keirc said, unearthing a conflict that had existed since Pria had made the decision to move from the Sanctum years ago. “The Sanctum is your home, Pria. You’re safe there. Much as you might wish otherwise, you are not a human and humans…”

“Keirc, please don’t start…,” Pria said, trying to cut her stepbrother’s rant before he really got rolling.

“You descend from an angel and a vampire, for Christ’s sake, and what happened today could prove to be a risk for everyone at the Sanctum, which is where you belong, Pria.”

“Keirc, the Sanctum…”

“Is a safe haven for all supernaturals, Pria,” Keirc continued. “Your own mother was a founder with your father. And, now, I’m going to have to do a hack and scrub on a lot of records to prevent problems.”

The sound of Keirc’s voice was becoming unbearable to Pria, as she cut him off again. “Keirc just shut the hell up!”

“What of this detective, Pria? What did you tell him?” Miri asked.

“Nothing,” Pria answered.

“I told him that Pria owns the Maidenheart Bakery,” Keirc said. “He would’ve ended up knowing that anyway, if he doesn’t already. He’s very bright, Pria, and very strong willed. It was tough to glamour him, while you were leaving the hospital.”

“He offered his life for mine,” Pria said. “I know we may be facing problems but he deserves respect for that.”

Problems? Ya’ think?” Keirc said sarcastically. “We do all we can to avoid anything that would reveal who and what we are to humans, Pria, and when something like this goes down, it’s a headache. Still, it was a very righteous kill. You should be proud of that at least.”

“Thanks Keirc. I’m so glad you’re proud of me,” Pria replied, her voice oozing sarcasm to equal his.

“Keirc complains about your choices but he loves you Pria. He’ll do what needs to be done once we reach home,” Miri said. Her voice was firm but soft, an order for Keirc in disguise. “You should stay at our home until you are healed, of course.”

Pria agreed wearily and closed her eyes against the fading warmth of the afternoon landscape moving past the car windows. The sound of Miri’s cell broke her light doze briefly, but she only listened to Miri’s voice relating the details of her ordeal to her stepfather, Andrieu, for a moment before letting her thoughts coast. She knew Andrieu would be waiting when they arrived at the Sanctum.

“Don’t worry about anything Pria. I’ll take care of things at the bakery, Keirc will do what he does and you’ll get better,” Monroe said.

A werewolf of few words, her business partner and best friend, his advice warmed her heart. “Thanks Monroe,” Pria said smiling. As the conversation died, she put her head back against the leather seat and thought about what Joe’s hair would feel like against her fingertips. His dark, soft curls had brushed his collar but his eyes had really drawn her. He might be human, but walking into the damned bank had taken balls, she thought. His arms felt so strong as she’d collapsed against him. The thought drifted as she fell into a light sleep.

 Continued….

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