Date Published: March 03, 2021
Publisher: DCL Publications
Forced into a political marriage with a man she terms “a half mad half Viking,” Catherine Broussard is caught up in her father’s malice, her husband’s ambition and the Norman Conquest of Anglo-Saxon England.
She rode up the shoreline with Hugo,
past driftwood, with the water lapping at their horses’ hooves. It was the same
rhythmic sound she had always heard, always on a good horse, always riding in
the morning. Her heart lifted. She did enjoy a good ride. So, apparently, did
her husband. They were still feeling their way around each other, but this—like
their bedding—was something they could enjoy together.
At the end of the open beach, where it elevated to
more rocky land, he helped her off her horse and into a little cove the sea had
once carved into the rock. It was dry now, sufficiently above sea level to stay
that way for the most part.
“Look inside,” he said, tethering the horses to
bushes. “This is worth seeing.”
Someone had driven a torch holder into the wall of the
cave. Once he lit the torch and her eyes
adjusted, she could see the outline of paintings on the rocks. Paintings? How
could that be? It was red and ochre and white paint of some sort, very old and
faded, but recognizably of horses.
“Some ancient people made these,” he said, guiding her
hand. She felt the stone beneath her hand, timeless, and the touch of his hand
on hers. His arm curved around her shoulder while his chest braced her. She
wasn’t entirely sorry in the uncertain footing of a cave, where sand and rocks
rolled beneath the feet. She had tiny ankles that turned easily, but Hugo was a
rock. “I don’t know who they were. Do you see the horses?”
“I do.” She was awed in spite of herself. “How old do
you think they are?”
“I can’t even guess. But this…” He pressed her fingers
on the surface. “This is very, very old. These people were here before us,
perhaps they were even our ancestors. No one knows. But they lived, and we
live. This is what I’ve been fighting for, not for my pride. This is what I
want a child to inherit, so that it goes on. And you’re a part of it now. Do
you understand?”
He was deeper than she had thought.
“Yes,” she said.
He turned her within the circle of his arms, raising
her chin. He was not quite sauvage,
after all. He pressed his lips to hers, and she opened to him. After long
moments of exploring her, he lifted his face.
“This is what I fight for, Catherine,” he said
She understood. This was going to be the price of her
marriage to him and if she wanted any sort of life, she would have to give it
to him—no matter how hard it came. He would accept nothing less.
About The Author
Miriam spent many years working in Social Services, and after retirement, she found herself working part-time in local government. Currently, she lives in rural Pennsylvania with a “motley crew” of rescue animals. Her passion for animal rescue and fostering has included a number of fur babies, from horses to dogs to a pig that appeared on her porch one morning. Also a lover of great books, the one that she finds most responsible for her venture into fantasy and recommends is 'The Once and Future King' by T.H. White.
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Thanks, Momma, for hosting my book today. I hope readers can't put it down, either!
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