Heartstoppingly romantic and filled with the vivid period details that bring an era to life, Suzanne Robinson’s captivating novels have made her one of the reigning stars of historical romance. In this enticing love story, a willful beauty and a vengeful knight cross swords.
The day he was banished from England, his fellow knights thought they’d seen the last of Gray de Valence. But the ruthless, emerald-eyed warrior had done more than survive in a world of barbaric dangers, he’d triumphed. Now, eager to pay back his betrayers, de Valence has come home only to find his plans threatened, not by another man but by a volatile, unpredictable, ravishingly beautiful woman. Vowing her own brand of vengeance against the high-handed, impossibly handsome knight, Juliana Welles will do her best to thwart him, to tempt and taunt him . . . until all Gray sees—and all he wants—is her. Yet when a ruthless enemy puts their lives in peril, the fearless knight will have to choose between his perfect revenge and the passion of a lifetime.
Release date:
August 24, 2011
Publisher:
Bantam
Print pages:
352
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STEALING OUT OF A CASTLE WASN’T EASY. JULIANA Welles shoved open her chamber door in the Maiden’s Tower of the old square keep and found the landing deserted. Then she motioned for her maid, Alice, to follow. She clutched a sack in one hand and lifted the skirt of her overrobe in the other as she glided down the circular stair. Alice came after her holding a basket that clattered with each step. The basket slipped, and pottery jars shifted, causing a loud clink.
Juliana halted on the stairs. “Shhhh! Thunder of heaven, you’ll wake my sisters and then we’re undone.”
Alice nodded vigorously, then gave Juliana a horrified stare. Her nose twitched; her head tilted back. She sneezed. Jars clacked as the noise resounded off the stone walls.
Juliana started, then glared at Alice. The woman was widowed, had borne seven children, and sometimes lacked the sense of a day-old lamb. Setting down her sack, Juliana held out her arms. Alice gave her the basket and picked up the sack while casting apologetic glances at her mistress. With their burdens redistributed, Juliana resumed her progress down the tower stair and soon led the way to an arcade that stretched the length of the great hall.
Light was streaming through the high, arched windows, giving the cavernous room an early morning glow of silver. As she entered the arcade, Juliana stopped abruptly and took shelter behind one of a line of thick columns decorated with spiral designs and carved garlands. Alice stumbled into her, then skittered into a shadow.
In the middle of the hall, near the great central fireplace, stood her parents, cousin Richard, her father’s chaplain, steward, and several squires and clerks. The group was silent, which was unusual for any group that included her father. Juliana followed the direction of their stares and saw a herald’s retreating figure. He passed near her on his way out, and she glimpsed armorial bearings—a rearing animal, the dragon rampant fashioned in gold on a field of green.
Juliana muttered the heraldic description to herself. “Vert, a dragon rampant or. Now who owns those bearings?” She couldn’t remember. Dismissing the mystery from her thoughts, she was tiptoeing down the arcade when her father’s bellow made her gasp and shrink against the wall.
Hugo Welles broke from the group at the fireplace and swept up and down in front of them, his thumbs stuck in his belt. “Him!”
Her heart had stopped bouncing against the walls of her chest, so Juliana gave her father an irritated look and resumed her tiptoeing. Alice hugged the wall and came after her.
“Did you hear what that smirking catamite said?” Hugo roared. “Gray de Valence in my tournament, for God’s pity. He’s come for vengeance, that’s what. To make mischief and evil, that’s what.”
Cousin Richard’s voice broke the tirade. “Forbid him.”
Hugo’s wide girth swung in his nephew’s direction.
“Forbid him? How? Who would have thought that he’d come back after all these years, and as the de Valence heir? He had four older brothers, four. And they’re all dead of disease, battle, or accidents.”
Juliana paused upon hearing the name of this new visitor. Gray de Valence. An infamous name. She remembered her mother’s whispered stories. Nine years ago, when she’d been but eleven, de Valence had been a new-made knight of eighteen years in the same household as Richard. Both had been sent to be fostered with a relative of Hugo Welles. A penniless youngest son, de Valence had achieved knighthood early by his skill and the favor of his liege, only to betray him. He’d seduced his lord’s wife.
The liege lord raged and nearly killed his wife, but for de Valence he reserved a special penalty. Biding his time, he denounced the youth before a tournament crowd and took him prisoner. This measure ruined de Valence before the entire kingdom. Then, realizing that condemning the youth to live in shame was his greatest revenge, the lord ordered de Valence taken from England by his fellow knights. Richard had been their leader.
They returned a few months later with harrowing news of an attack at sea by pirates. De Valence had been taken prisoner, and vanished. Years passed during which rumors drifted from the Holy Land and beyond of a tall green-eyed slave of a heathen general in Egypt, a slave with the same hair of silken silver as the vanished Gray de Valence. Then, without warning, de Valence reappeared out of nowhere with a French title, a riding household of over two hundred, and a desire to destroy the knights who had turned against him.
That was only a few years ago. In that short time de Valence had befriended the powerful William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke. After the battle of Lincoln in which the invading French dauphin was driven from England, rumors again flew like black bats across England. The Sieur de Valence had fought with a skill that rivaled both Richard Coeur de Lion and Saladin. The great barons of the kingdom stirred uneasily and muttered among themselves, sensing a rival who threatened to surpass them in skill and ruthlessness. No wonder Father was disturbed.
Juliana had reached the end of the arcade. “Gray de Valence,” she whispered to Alice as she waited for her father to look in another direction so that she could leave unseen. “A phoenix risen from ashes. This miserable tournament may afford some amusement after all.”
“Aye, mistress. He be heir to Stratfield now. Imagine that evil one inheriting the Stratfield castles and riches.”
“Quiet,” Juliana whispered, staring at her father. “Now, he’s looked away. Hurry.”
Clutching her basket, Juliana hurried for the doors that could be seen through an archway.
“Juliana!”
She jumped at the bellow that echoed from the roof beams. Jars clinked inside the basket, and Alice squeaked and scurried behind her, as she turned to face the striding figure of Hugo Welles. Lord Welles was a man whose body could have been made of stacked tree trunks—thick, gnarled, and dense of muscle. His ruddy face had grown even more red at the sight of his daughter. Havisia, his wife, trailed after him like a midge fluttering after a dragonfly.
Hugo halted his charge in front of Juliana, who set her jaw and squared her shoulders. Hugo’s thick black brows lowered until they nearly hid his gray eyes. He almost shouted.
“Where are you going, daughter?”
“To Vyne Hill, Father.”
Hugo threw up his arms and turned to Havisia. “We’re to give a tournament tomorrow, and she’s off to that ruined manor of hers.”
“You said I could go, Father.”
“When?”
“Last night.” She’d asked him then because he’d had two flagons of ale.
“Last night? Last night? I don’t remember.”
“You did, my lord,” said Havisia.
Hugo waved his hand impatiently. “No matter. I mistook myself. There’s too much to do. What of the food, the linens, the—Now don’t you try to dazzle me with your glares and glowers, Juliana Welles.”
“Mother has Laudine and Bertrade to help her.” She began to stomp back and forth. With each step her heels snapped against the floorboards, calling attention to the men’s boots she wore beneath her rough woolen robe.
Her voice rose as she spoke. “Thunder of God! I’ve Vyne Hill to look after and no time for another tournament. The castle fills up with strutting rooster knights and simpering women. I’ve much work to do if I’m ever to get the manor in condition for me to occupy it.”
By now her voice rivaled Hugo’s roar. Her father winced and glanced back at the group around the fireplace while her mother rolled her eyes and sighed. Waving his hands at Juliana, Hugo lowered his own voice.
“Peace, peace, daughter.”
Juliana’s boots pounded a drumlike rhythm. Her basket clattered in time with her steps and she waved her free arm as she uttered a stream of oaths.
“Holy saints, scourge and pestilence!”
Juliana whirled on her father, her face a darkening pink. Her gray eyes might as well have flashed small bolts of lightning. If her hair hadn’t been caught in a net at the base of her neck, it would have flowed about her like a black storm cloud.
She thought of another oath. “By our blessed Lady of Mercies—”
Hugo threw up his hands again in the face of his daughter’s colorful and intemperate display. The whole of Wellesbrooke castle knew he could face battle with the French king’s army with better fortitude than he could withstand Juliana’s temper. Now he blustered and grumbled as he turned away from his oldest daughter.
“The lot of the damned, that’s what I have, the lot of the damned to be cursed with so evil-tempered a daughter. I don’t wonder she’s without suitors. Her humor is as black as her color. And no doubt that devil’s whelp of a stripping bandit will return to plague my tournament and make my suffering unendurable.” Hugo turned to his wife. “He’ll swoop down on one of my most important guests and take his clothes, I know it. He’s done it before. An impudent thief and a black-natured, willful daughter. I must have the fortitude of a saint.”
Havisia placed her hand on Hugo’s arm and murmured words of comfort. A beauty in the accepted mode of white skin and golden hair, Mother had always pitied her eldest daughter for her coloring. Juliana watched her parents turn away, Hugo complaining, Havisia consoling. Her booted foot tapped against the floor. Slanting black brows drew together and her fingers drummed against the basket. She turned abruptly on her heel without another word and stomped out of the hall with Alice in her wake.
Holding her skirt high, Juliana charged down the keep stairs and out into the icy morning air. Winter had stayed late this year and hurled cold winds across Wellesbrooke in an attempt to forestall spring. The sun was floating up over the battlements now, and the castle was awake.
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