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THE LEGEND OF NIMWAY HALL: 1750 - JACQUELINE by STEPHANIE LAURENS (13)

Chapter 12

They were married in July, with the fields green, Balesboro Wood in full leaf, and the summer sun beaming in benediction.

The ceremony was celebrated in the household chapel by no less an august personage than the Bishop of Bath and Wells. His Grace had insisted, claiming it as his right given Richard had been on his way to visit him when Cupid had struck.

That Cupid had struck was evident to all.

When, gowned in ivory silk trimmed with summer green, a circlet of white rosebuds atop her upswept hair, Jacqueline stepped into the chapel with Freddie steering Hugh in his chair beside her, the chamber was packed. People stood shoulder to shoulder on either side, all the way to the walls, leaving only a central aisle running from the door to the altar for her and her companions to pace down.

To her right, she saw her people—all the Hall’s household and the tenant farmers and their families—as well as their closest neighbors all smiling fit to burst; the men bowed their heads and the women bobbed curtsies, and she beamed upon them all.

As the harpsichordist labored and the music swelled, she looked ahead, down the aisle—to where Richard, resplendent in a perfectly cut blue coat, waited. Watching. Her smile deepened with love, and she stepped out, walking with all due sobriety to his side; inside, she felt like dancing with joy, but that wouldn’t do—not there, not yet.

The press of people to her left was comprised of Richard’s family—which had proved to be quite enormous—as well as several of his friends from London. His friends she’d met, but she’d yet to meet all his relatives.

Of those she had met… She hadn’t been sure how his noble family would react to the news that Lord Richard Devries had chosen to ally himself with a relative nonentity who lived buried in deepest Somerset. She’d anticipated some degree of disapproval, possibly even discouragement, although Richard had smiled and assured her it wouldn’t be so and that his entire family would welcome her with open arms.

He’d been right, but for reasons that, she suspected, were not quite as he’d imagined.

Nevertheless, as she walked forward to join him before the altar, she sensed the wave of sincere goodwill that rolled toward her from his side of the church.

She halted at the step before the altar, by Richard’s side.

The bishop smiled benevolently upon her, then commenced the service. The formal phrases rolled through the hushed chapel, sonorous and solemn. Both Richard and she responded to the age-old questions, stating “I do” in calm, clear voices, then the bishop turned and asked Hugh whether he gave her into Richard’s keeping.

After a snuffling huff, Hugh growled that he did.

Her smile one of burgeoning joy, she turned to Richard and formally bestowed her hand on him, placing her fingers across his offered palm.

The bishop beamed and continued.

Held by the love in Richard’s eyes, anchored by his touch, she listened as he spoke his vows, his deep voice laden with commitment, with love and pride and hope, and she spoke her complementary vows in a clear voice that rang through the chapel.

Richard’s heart swelled as his uncle pronounced them man and wife. Some of his friends at the rear of the chapel sent up a cheer—they knew of his long fight against falling victim to a marriage devoid of love, so in their eyes, this figured as his victory—then others among those on the other side of the church added their voices to the chorus.

The bishop—still smiling—looked out on his rowdy congregation, laughed, then nodded to Richard and Jacqueline. In an encouraging tone, His Grace suggested they make it official and that Richard really ought to kiss his bride.

He waited for no further invitation, but drew her into his arms. She raised her face and lifted her eyes to his. Love and more shone in their depths.

He bent his head, set his lips to hers, and felt a swell of joy rush at them from all around, a wave of emotion that surrounded him and her and held them, cradled and secure—as if Nimway Hall itself was bestowing its blessing.

Caught by a sense of fated rightness, Jacqueline kissed her husband, and he kissed her, and distantly, faint and low, at the very edge of awareness, she heard voices chanting. Not in song, not as angels might, but in the cool measured tones…of a spell?

When Richard raised his head, she opened her eyes and saw his were slightly widened; he’d heard that unearthly benediction, too.

Their gazes collided and locked, and acceptance flashed between them, then, simultaneously, they smiled, and joy suffused them.

Together, they turned and, smiling radiantly, stepped forward as man and wife to face their world.

Their well-wishers poured in from all sides, engulfing them. Congratulations were called, Richard’s hand was wrung, and Jacqueline’s cheek was kissed times beyond number.

Eventually, Richard’s mother, a lady none present would dare gainsay, aided by Hugh and Freddie, Elinor, Cruickshank, and Mrs. Patrick, succeeded in moving the crowd down the stairs to the great hall below.

Jacqueline had barely glimpsed the preparations—she’d been banished by general decree. Now, she discovered that the hall had been draped in summer flowers and green branches, a rose-draped, leafy bower forming an arch above where she and Richard were instructed to sit, behind a table raised on the rarely used dais set before the fireplace.

Then the wedding breakfast began.

Succulent roasted meats, fishes and fowls in aspic, vegetables of all descriptions prepared in myriad ways. Pastries, breads, pies with intricately woven lids and rich, gravy-filled interiors. Haunches of venison and several stuffed pigs. All were carried in on heaped platters and were promptly devoured. Later came cheeses, nuts, and fruits in compotes, tarts, and syllabubs, each course accompanied by wine and ale.

Those in charge of the Hall’s kitchen as well as the kitchens of the farms had, apparently, run amok.

Speeches and toasts punctuated the courses, and laughter echoed from the coffered ceiling.

Later, once the covers were drawn, Jacqueline moved around the room, thanking all those she knew must have contributed to the amazing feast. If she hadn’t known her people, she might have thought they’d put on the show to impress their highborn guests. Instead, she wasn’t surprised when Mrs. Patrick confided, “We don’t see this often—our guardian being wed. Once or twice in a lifetime, if we’re lucky. So we were all determined to make the most of it.” The housekeeper grinned. “And we did!”

Jacqueline laughed and turned to find Richard beside her. He’d heard, and smiling as widely as she was, he nodded his thanks to Mrs. Patrick. “You and all those who helped have done Nimway Hall proud.”

After parting from the delighted housekeeper, Jacqueline glanced up and met Richard’s eyes. “You’re very good at that—knowing just what to say.”

Pleased, he shrugged. And steered her on to a group of his friends, who, he informed her, she ought to thank for aiding him to escape the last violent attempt on his honor, thus allowing him to flee London and subsequently find his way there. “To Balesboro Wood and Nimway Hall and you.”

Their eyes met, love and a connection born of the partnership they’d already forged shining, then they looked ahead, and she said, “I do, indeed, owe your friends my heartfelt thanks.”

Smiling, she looped her arm in his and set off to speak with the friends in question.

She was now entirely at ease among his set—family, connections, friends, and all—thanks, in large part, to his mother.

A formidable lady of determined character, the Marchioness of Harwich had arrived within a week of Richard dispatching to his parents’ Essex home the news of his betrothal. Not having anticipated such a rapid response, Richard had ridden to Wells to speak with his uncle, and Jacqueline had been busy in the kitchen garden when she’d been summoned with the news that a grand carriage had come bowling up the drive. Consequently, she’d found herself meeting her prospective mother-in-law with her sleeves rolled up and, it had turned out, a smudge on her cheek.

Realizing at the last minute—as she’d walked into the great hall—who her unexpected visitor must be, she’d frozen, uncertain.

The marchioness had turned from studying the coat of arms above the mantelpiece, taken one long look at her, then arched a finely drawn brow. “Blood turnip?”

Jacqueline had blinked. “I was just pulling some, yes.” She’d frowned. “How did you know?”

The marchioness had pointed. “That smudge on your cheek. Not the right color for blood, really, and it’s the season, isn’t it? I pulled our first crop a few days before I left.”

Stunned, Jacqueline had stared. “You garden? Yourself?”

The marchioness had grinned. “Why, yes. It gets me out of the house and away from all those wanting me to make decisions.” Her hazel eyes, very like Richard’s, had twinkled. “I run away and hide amid the vegetables whenever my steward gets too pushy.”

That had been the start of a relationship the like of which Jacqueline had never imagined. She’d learned that, with Richard’s father so deeply mired in running the country and therefore often absent from home, his mother ran the family’s vast estates, much as Jacqueline ran the Hall. They’d bonded over that and over Richard.

After a day of observing Jacqueline and her son, as Jacqueline and the marchioness had strolled around the lake, the marchioness had confided, “The truth is, my dear, that while Richard enjoys the puzzle of understanding people and identifying what drives them—an innocent yet highly useful skill for any of our station, and one both I and my husband have encouraged and at which Richard quite excels—the one person he, time and again, fails woefully to correctly perceive, especially as to what drives him, is, of course, himself.”

The marchioness had met Jacqueline’s eyes, the comprehension of a mother very clear in hers. “He needs to be needed, you see. Not just in the simple sense, but for all he can give. You”—the marchioness had looked ahead and waved at the house, then toward the fields on the Levels below—“and all this, all that is Nimway Hall, have offered him that—a position that will take and use all he has to offer—and for that, my dear, you have my eternal gratitude.”

In similar vein, when Richard’s father had arrived, only the day before the wedding, he’d beamed delightedly at Jacqueline, patted her hand in avuncular fashion, and thanked her most sincerely for giving his second son the right sort of place to put down his roots.

Richard’s great-aunt Dulcimea—she who had recently declared him her heir—had been even more forthright, declaring to Jacqueline in the strident tones of one partially deaf that the entire family was simply thrilled that their wandering sheep had finally found a home with a loving wife who wasn’t averse to putting him to use.

Overhearing the comment, the marchioness had added that, indeed, Jacqueline should not be backward in requesting aid of the wider Devries family whenever required. “There have to be some benefits to my husband being forever at court.”

To the household’s and those on the wider estate’s abiding surprise, Richard’s family and friends had proved to be as easygoing and lacking in arrogance as he. His cousins had ridden out with Richard to help when Higgs had lost a fence, and when Richard had mentioned to his friends his idea of linking the lake to the stream via a series of ponds fitted with sluice gates, the group had declared that, before they departed, they would construct the system as a wedding gift, not just for Richard and Jacqueline but for Nimway Hall.

Everyone who had come for their wedding had been prepared to enjoy themselves and had.

Then the musicians in the gallery started playing, and the dancing began, raising the level of enjoyment yet another notch.

At one point, when Jacqueline had insisted she needed a moment to catch her breath, Richard found them glasses of punch, then steered her to where Crawley, Hopkins, and Ned Ostley were gathered in one corner of the hall.

The three men beamed and bobbed, then Ostley said, “I heard tell that Wallace closed up the Lydford house, and they say he’s fled the country.”

“That’s excellent news.” Richard smiled and raised his glass to the men. “So he won’t be hanging around like an evil spirit waiting to cast a shadow over the Hall’s future.”

“I’ll drink to that,” Crawley growled, and Hopkins nodded.

Jacqueline simply continued to smile.

But when they moved away from the trio, she paused by the wall, looked out at the crowd, then glanced at Richard, who had halted beside her. “You suspected Wallace would leave the country, didn’t you? That’s why you didn’t push more decisively to be rid of him.”

He didn’t try to hide his satisfaction. “It occurred to me that with friends like Dashwood, getting rid of Wallace wouldn’t need further action from me. Having disappointed his mentor, had he remained, Wallace’s life—at least in his eyes—would have been worthless. On the Continent, as a gentleman not well known, he might, perhaps, start afresh.” He shrugged and met her eyes. “I didn’t need to do more.”

She studied his face, then smiled. “In personality, you seem more like your mother, but you do have some of your father’s traits.”

His lips twitched, but he humphed and steered her on.

Eventually, the sun slid down the western sky, and the fading light prompted the estate families and their neighbors to reluctantly take their leave.

They were followed soon after by the bulk of Richard’s relatives and friends. Some were putting up at nearby inns before journeying on; others, like his great-aunt Dulcimea, were traveling back to Wells with the bishop.

Only his parents and his two closest friends were remaining at Nimway Hall, and as Richard and Jacqueline walked out with those departing, those remaining few beat a considerate retreat, leaving the great hall to the ministrations of the staff. Elinor and Hugh, escorted by Freddie, had retired earlier, all three worn out by their efforts and the unaccustomed excitement.

That left Jacqueline and Richard, once they’d waved their guests away, to turn and, hand in hand, cross the threshold and walk into the welcoming shadows of Nimway Hall effectively alone.

With smiles and thank-yous to the staff busily setting the great hall to rights, Richard led Jacqueline to the stairs. Her hand in his, feeling the strange peace of the household, that from the very first, had touched him, enfold them again, he ascended the long flight beside her. When they stepped into the gallery, he paused, and when she faced him, brows rising in query, he raised her hand to his lips and kissed the backs of her slender fingers. Holding her brilliantly shining blue-green gaze, he smiled. “I understand we have new quarters.”

Since their betrothal, they’d been sharing her chamber, but he’d heard whispers and had seen Hugh, Elinor, Cruickshank, and Mrs. Patrick conferring, then the maids scurrying hither and yon on the first floor.

Jacqueline’s smile—an expression of serene joy that hadn’t left her face all day—brightened. “Yes, indeed.” Her fingers curled about his, and she tugged. “It’s this way.”

She led him along a corridor into a wing down which he hadn’t previously ventured. She halted before the door at its end. “This has always been the chamber of the guardian and her husband, at least in our memory.” She released his hand, opened the door, and walked inside.

Richard followed. He looked around, then closed the door and walked forward to join her where she’d paused a few paces inside the door. The chamber spread to either side, spanning the width of the wing. To his right stood a massive four-poster bed hung with heavy brocade curtains presently looped back to display a thick featherbed covered with silk sheets beneath a silk-brocade counterpane. A small mountain of lace-trimmed pillows was temptingly piled at the head of the bed.

Armoires in dark wood and clothes chests were set against the walls, along with Jacqueline’s dressing table, with the orb placed as Richard had last seen it, to one side of the central mirror. For a wonder, the orb hadn’t been taken downstairs for the day but had, as far as he knew, remained on this level; presumably the maids had brought it there when the footmen had carried Jacqueline’s dressing table in.

He glanced to his left, to where two armchairs, each with its own footstool, were angled before the hearth, with cushions in the same brocade as on the bed; the arrangement suggested gentle moments of relaxing exchanges, personal moments of sharing.

Jacqueline had drifted across the room. Richard raised his gaze. The chamber filled the end of the wing, and wide windows were set in all three outer walls. The window to his right looked out over the side lawn to the arm of Balesboro Wood that protected the house to the east. The window directly ahead looked toward the lake, while the window to the left framed a vista to the west, encompassing a wide view of the edge of the escarpment and the fields and farms stretching away on the Levels below. On the horizon to the northwest stood the singular outline of Glastonbury Tor.

It was to that third window that Jacqueline had gone, drawn, no doubt, to the view of her lands. He was still coming to grips with the ineffable connection she, as guardian, felt toward both lands and people, to the Hall itself, and the wood as well, and the purpose that connection bestowed was something he had already come to value.

He halted behind her and looked over her head at the lands he would help her protect. He reached forward, slid his hands about her waist, and drew her back against him. She relaxed into his hold. He bent his head and pressed a soft kiss to her temple. His voice low, he said, “My mother told me that this is my place—to stand here, beside and behind you as the husband of the guardian of Nimway Hall. I gather you explained your position to her.”

Jacqueline gave a ladylike snort. “I didn’t have to explain anything—she saw, listened, and learned. Your mother is an exceedingly astute lady.”

He grinned. “True.” He sobered. “But she was right. I feel it. To my bones, I know that this is where I was always destined to be. Marriage to any other was never in my cards. I had to find my way to your side to find my future.” He pressed another kiss to her curls. “Because you embody that future, and you always will.”

Jacqueline reached up with one hand and stroked his cheek. “Sweet words, husband.”

“For you, always, my one and only wife.”

She sighed, giving sound to the happiness that filled her soul. She turned in his hold and looked into his face, a face she’d already grown used to seeing every night and every morning and for a good part of every day. She met his gaze, then allowed a smile that held all her love to light her face. “There are no fine words I can give you in return, for there simply are no words sufficient to the task of encompassing all I feel for you. All that I see and value in you. I know you will be my and Nimway Hall’s defender for the rest of your days.”

His lips curved, his hazel eyes shining, affirming that truth. “I love you beyond life itself. You who have given me the life I need to live.” His eyes held hers, his voice deepening as he said, “If you weren’t in my life, I would be running still, evading the snares.” His lips twisted wryly. “If Balesboro Wood hadn’t rendered me lost—as the power inhabiting it definitely did—I wouldn’t have found my way to your side. To life and love and a future filled with promise.” He arched his brows. “I have to admit I don’t know what to make of that. Bale means an evil force, yet for me and, I hope, for you and Nimway Hall, my getting lost in Balesboro Wood has brought nothing but good.”

She tipped her head, her eyes locked with his. “Beyond the boundaries of Nimway Hall, the local people have always been suspicious and wary of…things not readily explained.”

He nodded. “I have to wonder if this is one of those instances, and they used the term ‘bale’ as the only one they knew for an old and powerful force, despite that force not being evil.”

She lightly shrugged. She studied his eyes, then softly said, “There’s no point thinking too much about such things—we’re not supposed to know. Life and love are abiding mysteries and will remain so, no matter the striving of mortal men.”

Richard’s arms were firm about her. He held her gaze, then let his lips quirk upward. “Is that your way of suggesting we’ve spoken enough of what led us to this point?”

She laughed. “Indeed.” Over his shoulder, she scanned the room. “The household worked hard to refurnish this chamber—they polished and cleaned and painted so that all was made new for us. It’s their wedding gift, intending this to be the one place that’s solely ours for the rest of our days.” Her gaze returned to his face, and her lips lifted, a seductively teasing light twinkling in her eyes. “I believe it’s incumbent on us to appropriately lay claim to it.”

He laughed and swept her into his arms. He whirled her about, then made for the bed.

They fell onto the brocade coverlet. With laughter and smiles and joyous abandon, they shed their clothes, then fell on each other—fell into each other, both surrendering, without hesitation or restraint, to the power that linked them, now and forever.

With gasps and shudders, with moans and bone-deep groans of pleasure, they worshipped at the altar of what linked them.

They now knew the ways—the pathways of love—and followed them with devotion and reverence. They took, and gave, seized, and surrendered.

Through the searing heat of passion, through the fires of desire, they rode hand in hand, body to body, heart to heart, and reached—certain and sure—for all they wanted of life. Of love.

Unchecked, desire raged, fed by them both, and passion soared, then reached its zenith, fracturing their senses, and ecstasy claimed them.

For one instant, they hung, linked by destiny and a power beyond reckoning, souls fused beyond reclaiming…and they wanted it all, together they embraced it all, then they fell.

Slowly circling through the void.

Back to earth, to the comfort of silken sheets and the soul-deep pleasure of being in each other’s arms.

* * *

It seemed like, and might have been, hours before Richard stirred. Jacqueline lay boneless beneath him, deeply asleep. He lifted from her, disengaged, then slumped beside her.

For a moment, he simply lay on his back beside his sleeping wife and marveled at how his life had played out. He was, finally, whole and content—enough to know that he had never before been content at all. Yet in that moment of suspended connection with the world, the revelation that hung at the forefront of his mind was that tonight and the day that would soon dawn was and would be their true beginning.

All that had come before was their past. Tomorrow’s dawn would see their future start.

Emotions far more active than contentment poured through him at the prospect—eager anticipation, determination, and a joyful happiness. A readiness to engage and make their shared life all it could possibly be.

Beyond all doubt, he had finally found his way to where he belonged.

Smiling to himself, he came up on his elbow to reach for the sheets lying tangled at their feet—and his gaze fell on the orb.

As before, it sat on Jacqueline’s dressing table, placed, as it always seemed to be, in a spot where the moonlight would reach it. But now, the moon had sailed across the sky far enough for the shaft of silvery light that struck through the window to have moved well beyond the orb.

It sat on the dressing table, untouched by moonlight. And still, it glowed.

Richard stared at the unearthly radiance lighting the moonstone. Steady and sure, it was strong enough to cast faint light across the room all the way to where he and Jacqueline lay abed.

Hardly daring to breathe, he stared.

Then he forced his lungs to expand, drew in a long, deep breath, and made a mental note to have someone who understood such things examine the moonstone. It was a stone, a physical entity—there had to be some explanation.

He drew up the sheet and lay down; beneath the silk, he drew Jacqueline to him, smiling again as she murmured incoherently, then snuggled against his side.

The warmth of her body sank into his, drawing his thoughts from the orb. He closed his eyes as sleep again reached for him, and he allowed himself to sink into Morpheus’s arms.

* * *

The trill of birdcall woke Jacqueline and Richard the next morn. Their new apartment lay closer to the wood than her old chamber, and as they blinked their eyes wide, they discovered the day had long ago dawned in all its glory.

Jacqueline glanced at Richard, now her husband in all ways, and met his eyes.

He smiled and lifted his head to kiss her, and for several minutes, they lay, relaxed and at peace, and swapped murmured observations from the previous day—of his family, her people, and their perfect celebration.

Both were so deeply happy, it was a wrench to yield to the beckoning of duty, yet they could hear the odd clatter and clang from downstairs.

Eventually, reluctantly, they rose.

Jacqueline headed for her armoire, beside her dressing table, then halted and stared at the dressing table’s top. She frowned, then glanced at Richard. “I thought the orb was here.”

His head whipped around. His gaze went beyond her, and he, too, stared at the orb-less expanse.

After a moment—a very long moment—he raised his eyes and met her gaze. “I saw it there last night—or early this morning. I can’t be certain of the hour.” He stepped toward her, then came to stand beside her. His fingers tangled with hers as they both stared at where the orb had been. He drew in a tight breath, then said, “When I saw it, it was glowing.”

“In the moonlight?”

“No. The moon had passed. It was…glowing on its own.”

After a moment, she reached out with her free hand and ran her fingers over the spot where the orb had stood.

“No one came into the room and took it,” Richard murmured. “I can swear to that.”

She believed him. Tentatively, she suggested, “I suppose we could hunt for it. It must be somewhere in the house, don’t you think?”

“Perhaps.” Richard closed his hand about hers and gently squeezed. “But I predict that, even though we might hunt high and low, we’ll never find it.” He released her hand, put his arm around her shoulders, drew her against him, and pressed a kiss to her temple.

She sighed and leaned into him. “I suppose that, as it did for me—for us—it’ll turn up when it wants to be found.”

Their evolving understanding of the orb and what its appearance and disappearance meant hung between them, unstated.

“Very likely.” Hugging her to him, Richard repeated her words of the night. “There’s no point thinking too much about such things—we’re not supposed to know. Life and love are abiding mysteries and will remain so, no matter the striving of mortal men.”

She held still, savoring the words, then turned her head and, at close quarters, met his eyes.

The look they exchanged carried acceptance and commitment.

“My lady? M’lady?” A scratching sounded at the door, then Young Willie’s voice rose more certainly, “The mare’s foaling. Hopkins said as you and his lordship would want to know.”

Jacqueline laughed. “Thank you, Young Willie, and thank Hopkins for sending word—his lordship and I will be there shortly.”

“Aye, miss—I mean, my lady.”

She chuckled; her household was determined to make all due use of her new station.

As Young Willie’s clattering footsteps receded, she brought her gaze back to Richard’s face.

“Clearly,” he said, smiling down at her, “our joint life has begun, and we need to catch up.”

“Indeed.” She stretched upward and lightly touched her lips to his, then drew back, and he let her go. “We’d better get dressed and go down.”

Richard saw no reason to argue. Smiling, he reached for his clothes and felt a glow of expectation spread through him.

He was looking forward to the day.

To this day and all that would follow—all the days he would spend by Jacqueline’s side as the defender of the guardian of Nimway Hall.

THE END

* * *

* * *

Dear Reader,

The Legend of Nimway Hall is something different—six authors telling tales-through-the-ages of generations of women in one particular family born to magic, each fated to find their one true love. I hope you’ve enjoyed the first in the series—1750: Jacqueline. If you feel inclined to leave a review on , I would greatly appreciate it.

And now for the fun part—the first four volumes in the series are to be released a week apart, commencing with this book, to be followed a week later by 1794: Charlotte by Karen Hawkins, which in turn will be followed by 1818: Isabel by Suzanne Enoch, and 1940: Jocelyn by Linda Needham. Expect further volumes in the series, including 1888: Alexandra by Victoria Alexander and 1926: Maddie Rose by Susan Andersen.

See below for descriptions of the installments to come, and plunge deeper into The Legend of Nimway Hall to learn more of the strange powers of Balesboro Wood, the mysterious orb, and of Nimway Hall, the house itself. Finding love was never so much fun as the unexpected twists and turns that steer, guide, and prod the descendants of Merlin and Nimue into the arms of their one true loves.

Enjoy!

Stephanie.

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COMING NEXT IN THE LEGEND OF NIMWAY HALL:

The second installment

1794: CHARLOTTE by Karen Hawkins

To be released on March 22, 2018.

New York Times bestselling author Karen Hawkins writes a ravishing addition to an exciting series of romances touched by magic as old as time.

A properly raised young lady rebels against the restrictions of both society and family when she meets a dark, dangerous, and wildly passionate man as they both fight to resist their forbidden love…and the seductive pull of an ancient magic.

Miss Charlotte Harrington knows what’s expected of her. Properly raised and newly reminded of her duties after the unexpected death of her far-more-perfect twin sister, Charlotte is resigned to wedding the son of a neighboring land owner and live a sedate and proper life. But Charlotte’s high spirits will not be contained and she yearns deeply for a life of adventure, excitement, and love.

When wild and untamed Marco di Rossi arrives at Nimway Hall, commissioned to carve a masterpiece for the family home, he finds himself instantly drawn to the far-from-subdued Charlotte. Despite the potential ruin to his own brilliant career, he cannot resist her spirit and beauty, nor the call of the deep, wild magic that resides within a mysterious and magical orb hidden deep in the walls of the ancient house of Nimway

A historical novel of 57,000 words interweaving romance, mystery, and magic.

Pre-order/Buy & Read

AND THE LEGEND OF NIMWAY HALL CONTINUES WITH:

The third installment

1818: ISABEL by Suzanne Enoch

To be released on March 29, 2018.

New York Times bestselling author Suzanne Enoch spins a Regency-era tale at Nimway Hall, in a book series centered on a house where love and magic entwine to bring romance to all who dwell there.

A passionate, determined young lady trying to prove herself worthy of a timeless, magic-touched legacy and a steadfast gentleman looking for his own place in the world join forces to restore an abandoned estate to its former glory.

The moment Isabel de Rossi turns eighteen, she insists on taking charge of Nimway Hall, which has stood empty for the past ten years. Well-aware that all her female forebears found true love at Nimway, she can’t wait to discover her own destined match. Instead she’s faced with Adam Driscoll, the infuriatingly practical estate manager whose presence is a constant, insulting reminder that her own grandmother thinks she has no idea what she’s doing.

Adam thought the recent offer of a position at Nimway Hall a godsend. After spending six years managing his elderly uncle’s estate he is at a crossroads, facing either a dreary career in the army or the church. At Nimway he can continue working with his hands, his feet firmly on the ground and his mind on practical matters of crops, millstones, and irrigation. He revels in the chance to restore this estate to its former glory as the well-run marvel of Somerset—even though several mysterious setbacks have befallen his efforts.

The last complication he needs is a quirky, foreign-raised heiress intent on finding a magical orb and interfering with his well-laid plans; but practical Adam can’t help noticing that in her presence the repairs are suddenly going well, and that the pretty mistress of the Hall is clever, amusing, and genuinely interested in improving her estate and the lives of her tenants.

Despite their conflicting sensibilities he finds it hard to resist their simmering attraction. At the same time Adam is keenly aware that the more he helps Isabel with the estate the closer he is to assisting himself out of his position—and away from her.

Despite herself, Isabel is reluctantly drawn to Adam’s quiet strength and dedication, but has begun to wonder if she somehow isn’t worthy of becoming the property’s guardian; though she searches everywhere for evidence of magic, the famous orb—the artifact reputedly responsible for every love match made at Nimway Hall, including her own parents’—is nowhere to be found…until dreamy Lord Alton from the neighboring estate arrives and starts to pursue Isabel. The pesky orb suddenly appears, though it seems to have a preference for Adam’s room.

For a young lady in need of some polish, the choice between a charming viscount and a headstrong, interfering employee should be a simple one, but magic is a stubborn thing—and the heart is even more headstrong.

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AND

The fourth installment

1940: JOCELYN by Linda Needham

To be released on April 5, 2018.

USA Today bestselling author Linda Needham brings you the fourth story in a series of romances touched by magic as old as time.

     A courageous young woman is just managing to keep up with her family's vast, wartime farm when a handsome Lt. Colonel and his staff of officers take command of her home. A private war ensues between them, and the couple soon learns that resistance is futile when it comes to love in the heat of battle.

     World War II has come to Nimway Hall, and with it an endless series of wartime challenges that its lady and guardian, Josie Stirling, must overcome.  As passionate and courageous as each of the guardians who have come before her, Josie is fiercely determined to defend her family’s ancient estate from all possible threats. But with the recent evacuation of Dunkirk and the bombs of the Blitz raining random terror all across Britain, even the once-pastoral manor farm of Nimway has become as dangerous as any battlefield.  

    Loved and respected by everyone in her circle of care, Josie is knee-deep in evacuee children, Land Girls, the local Home Guard, a much-reduced estate staff, two cranky tractors and her widowed father she has just rescued from the London Blitz. Her days and nights, and even her dreams are chock-full of wartime charity fund raisers, meeting the strict requirements of the Ministries of Agriculture and Food, organizing knitting circles, leading her local WVS, tending the acres of orchards, the mill, and fields of grain and defending her beloved Baleswood from the Timber Commission

     To add to her problems, not only has the military requisitioned an entire wing of Nimway Hall, they’ve sent the most arrogant officer in the entire army to command the unit and impose his orders on the finely-tuned workings of the estate. A man as arrogant as he is handsome. Not that Josie has time in her life to notice!

     The very last post Lt. Colonel Gideon Fletchard ever wanted was to be holed up in the wilds of Somerset, in an old manor house, far from the front line.  But he was seriously injured on a secret mission early in the war and has recovered just enough to command a team of Royal Engineers, commissioned to build operational bases for Churchill’s new Secret Army.  Once a highly respected intelligence officer, Gideon resents his demotion to the “Home Front” and has little respect for the so-called civilian army he’s been assigned to recruit and train. War is waged by soldiers in the field, not by farmers and factory workers.  

     A sentiment the contentious lady of Nimway Hall disputes at every turn.  She seems to believe that her work for the war effort is as critical as his. Though the woman’s opinions are seriously wrong-headed, she is as beautiful as she is devoted to her people and he can’t help admiring the firm and resourceful way she manages the estate. Can’t help noticing her fiercely green eyes and the sun-blush of her cheek.  Not that he should be noticing such distractions.  Not now. Not with a war to win and contact to make with a secret agent named Arcturus.

     As the war between the sexes heats up, so does the ancient magic of romance. Josie and Gideon may not be looking for love, but at Nimway Hall they’ll soon discover that love has come looking for them.

A historical novel of 55,000 words, entwining romance, mystery and the magic of love.

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Further installments will appear in due course!

COMING NEXT FROM STEPHANIE:

The first volume in THE CAVANAUGHS

THE DESIGNS OF LORD RANDOLPH CAVANAUGH

To be released by MIRA on April 24, 2018

#1 New York Times bestselling author Stephanie Laurens returns with a new series that captures the simmering desires and intrigues of early Victorians as only she can. Ryder Cavanaugh’s step-siblings are determined to make their own marks in London society. Seeking fortune and passion, THE CAVANAUGHS will delight readers with their bold exploits.

An independent nobleman

Lord Randolph Cavanaugh is loyal and devoted—but only to family. To the rest of the world he’s aloof and untouchable, a respected and driven entrepreneur. But Rand yearns for more in life, and when he travels to Buckinghamshire to review a recent investment, he discovers a passionate woman who will challenge his ruthless self-control

A determined lady

Felicia Throgmorton intends to keep her family afloat. For decades, her father was consumed by his inventions and now, months after his death, with their finances in ruins, her brother insists on continuing their father’s tinkering. Felicia is desperate to hold together what’s left of the estate. Then she discovers she must help persuade their latest investor that her father’s follies are a risk worth taking… 

Together—the perfect team

Rand arrives at Throgmorton Hall to discover the invention on which he’s staked his reputation has exploded, the inventor is not who he expected, and a fiercely intelligent woman now holds the key to his future success. But unflinching courage in the face of dismaying hurdles is a trait they share, and Rand and Felicia are forced to act together against relentless foes to protect everything they hold dear.

Click to read an excerpt.

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ALSO COMING SOON:

The sixth volume in

The Casebook of Barnaby Adair mystery-romances

THE CONFOUNDING CASE OF THE CARISBROOK EMERALDS

To be released on June 14, 2018

#1 NYT-bestselling author Stephanie Laurens brings you a tale of emerging and also established loves and the many facets of family, interwoven with mystery and murder.

A young lady accused of theft and the gentleman who elects himself her champion enlist the aid of Stokes, Barnaby, Penelope, and friends in pursuing justice, only to find themselves tangled in a web of inter-family tensions and secrets.

When Miss Cara Di Abaccio is accused of stealing the Carisbrook emeralds by the infamously arrogant Lady Carisbrook and marched out of her guardian’s house by Scotland Yard’s finest, Hugo Adair, Barnaby Adair’s cousin, takes umbrage and descends on Scotland Yard, breathing fire in Cara’s defense.

Hugo discovers Inspector Stokes has been assigned to the case, and after surveying the evidence thus far, Stokes calls in his big guns when it comes to dealing with investigations in the ton—namely, the Honorable Barnaby Adair and his wife, Penelope.

Soon convinced of Cara’s innocence and—given Hugo’s apparent tendre for Cara—the need to clear her name, Penelope and Barnaby join Stokes and his team in pursuing the emeralds and, most importantly, who stole them.

But the deeper our intrepid investigators delve into the Carisbrook household, the more certain they become that all is not as it seems. Lady Carisbrook is a harpy, Franklin Carisbrook is secretive, Julia Carisbrook is overly timid, and Lord Carisbrook, otherwise a genial and honorable gentleman, holds himself distant from his family. More, his lordship attempts to shut down the investigation. And Stokes, Barnaby, and Penelope are convinced the Carisbrooks’ staff are not sharing all they know.

Meanwhile, having been appointed Cara’s watchdog until the mystery is resolved, Hugo, fascinated by Cara as he’s been with no other young lady, seeks to entertain and amuse her…and, increasingly intently, to discover the way to her heart. Consequently, Penelope finds herself juggling the attractions of the investigation against the demands of the Adair family for her to actively encourage the budding romance.

What would her mentors advise? On that, Penelope is crystal clear.

Regardless, aided by Griselda, Violet, and Montague and calling on contacts in business, the underworld, and ton society, Penelope, Barnaby, and Stokes battle to peel back each layer of subterfuge and, step by step, eliminate the innocent and follow the emeralds’ trail

Yet instead of becoming clearer, the veils and shadows shrouding the Carisbrooks only grow murkier…until, abruptly, our investigators find themselves facing an inexplicable death, with a potential murderer whose conviction would shake society to its back teeth.

A historical novel of 78,000 words interweaving mystery, romance, and social intrigue.

Available for e-book pre-order after March 15, 2018

Click for further details.

TO BE FOLLOWED BY:

The seventh volume in

The Casebook of Barnaby Adair mystery-romances

THE MURDER AT MANDEVILLE HALL

To be released on August 16, 2018

Click for further details

RECENTLY RELEASED:

The first volume in Lady Osbaldestone’s Christmas Chronicles

LADY OSBALDESTONE’S CHRISTMAS GOOSE

A lighthearted tale of Christmas long ago with a grandmother and three of her grandchildren, one lost soul, a lady driven to distraction, a recalcitrant donkey, and a flock of determined geese.

Three years after being widowed, Therese, Lady Osbaldestone finally settles into her dower property of Hartington Manor in the village of Little Moseley in Hampshire. She is in two minds as to whether life in the small village will generate sufficient interest to keep her amused over the months when she is not in London or visiting friends around the country. But she will see.

It’s December, 1810, and Therese is looking forward to her usual Christmas with her family at Winslow Abbey, her youngest daughter, Celia’s home. But then a carriage rolls up and disgorges Celia’s three oldest children. Their father has contracted mumps, and their mother has sent the three—Jamie, George, and Lottie—to spend this Christmas with their grandmama in Little Moseley.

Therese has never had to manage small children, not even her own. She assumes the children will keep themselves amused, but quickly learns that what amuses three inquisitive, curious, and confident youngsters isn’t compatible with village peace. Just when it seems she will have to set her mind to inventing something, she and the children learn that with only twelve days to go before Christmas, the village flock of geese has vanished.

Every household in the village is now missing the centerpiece of their Christmas feast. But how could an entire flock go missing without the slightest trace? The children are as mystified and as curious as Therese—and she seizes on the mystery as the perfect distraction for the three children as well as herself.

But while searching for the geese, she and her three helpers stumble on two locals who, it is clear, are in dire need of assistance in sorting out their lives. Never one to shy from a little matchmaking, Therese undertakes to guide Miss Eugenia Fitzgibbon into the arms of the determinedly reclusive Lord Longfellow. To her considerable surprise, she discovers that her grandchildren have inherited skills and talents from both her late husband as well as herself. And with all the customary village events held in the lead up to Christmas, she and her three helpers have opportunities galore in which to subtly nudge and steer.

Yet while their matchmaking appears to be succeeding, neither they nor anyone else have found so much as a feather from the village’s geese. Larceny is ruled out; a flock of that size could not have been taken from the area without someone noticing. So where could the birds be? And with the days passing and Christmas inexorably approaching, will they find the blasted birds in time?

First in series. A novel of 60,000 words. A Christmas tale of romance and geese.

Click to read an excerpt

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ALSO RELEASED IN 2017:

All three exciting instalments in THE DEVIL’S BROOD TRILOGY

The first volume of the Devil’s Brood Trilogy

THE LADY BY HIS SIDE

A marquess in need of the right bride. An earl’s daughter in search of a purpose. A betrayal that ends in murder and balloons into a threat to the realm.

Sebastian Cynster knows time is running out. If he doesn’t choose a wife soon, his female relatives will line up to assist him. Yet the current debutantes do not appeal. Where is he to find the right lady to be his marchioness? Then Drake Varisey, eldest son of the Duke of Wolverstone, asks for Sebastian’s aid.

Having assumed his father’s mantle in protecting queen and country, Drake must go to Ireland in pursuit of a dangerous plot. But he’s received an urgent missive from Lord Ennis, an Irish peer—Ennis has heard something Drake needs to know. Ennis insists Drake attends an upcoming house party at Ennis’s Kent estate so Ennis can reveal his information face-to-face. Sebastian has assisted Drake before and, long ago, had a liaison with Lady Ennis. Drake insists Sebastian is just the man to be Drake’s surrogate at the house party—the guests will imagine all manner of possibilities and be blind to Sebastian’s true purpose. Unsurprisingly, Sebastian is reluctant, but Drake’s need is real. With only more debutantes on his horizon, Sebastian allows himself to be persuaded. His first task is to inveigle Antonia Rawlings, a lady he has known all her life, to include him as her escort to the house party. Although he’s seen little of Antonia in recent years, Sebastian is confident of gaining her support.

Eldest daughter of the Earl of Chillingworth, Antonia has abandoned the search for a husband and plans to use the week of the house party to decide what to do with her life. There has to be some purpose, some role, she can claim for her own. Consequently, on hearing Sebastian’s request and an explanation of what lies behind it, she seizes on the call to action. Suppressing her senses’ idiotic reaction to Sebastian’s nearness, she agrees to be his partner-in-intrigue.

But while joining the house party proves easy, the gathering is thrown into chaos when Lord Ennis is murdered—just before he was to speak with Sebastian. Worse, Ennis’s last words, gasped to Sebastian, are: Gunpowder. Here.

Gunpowder? And here, where? With a killer continuing to stalk the halls, side by side, Sebastian and Antonia search for answers and, all the while, the childhood connection that had always existed between them strengthens and blooms…into something so much more.

First volume in a trilogy. A historical romance with gothic overtones layered over a continuing intrigue. A full length novel of 99,000 words.

Click to read an excerpt.

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The second volume of the Devil’s Brood Trilogy

AN IRRESISTIBLE ALLIANCE

A duke’s second son with no responsibilities and a lady starved of the excitement her soul craves join forces to unravel a deadly, potentially catastrophic threat to the realm - that only continues to grow.

With his older brother’s betrothal announced, Lord Michael Cynster is freed from the pressure of familial expectations. However, the allure of his previous hedonistic pursuits has paled. Then he learns of the mission his brother, Sebastian, and Lady Antonia Rawlings have been assisting with and volunteers to help by hunting down the hoard of gunpowder now secreted somewhere in London.

Michael sets out to trace the carters who transported the gunpowder from Kent to London. His quest leads him to the Hendon Shipping Company, where he discovers his sole source of information is the only daughter of Jack and Kit Hendon, Miss Cleome Hendon, who although a fetchingly attractive lady, firmly holds the reins of the office in her small hands.

Cleo has fought to achieve her position in the company. Initially, managing the office was a challenge, but she now conquers all in just a few hours a week. With her three brothers all adventuring in America, she’s been driven to the realization that she craves adventure, too.

When Michael Cynster walks in and asks about carters, Cleo’s instincts leap. She wrings from him the full tale of his mission—and offers him a bargain. She will lead him to the carters he seeks if he agrees to include her as an equal partner in the mission.

Horrified, Michael attempts to resist, but ultimately finds himself agreeing—a sequence of events he quickly learns is common around Cleo. Then she delivers on her part of the bargain, and he finds there are benefits to allowing her to continue to investigate beside him—not least being that if she’s there, then he knows she’s safe.

But the further they go in tracing the gunpowder, the more deaths they uncover. And when they finally locate the barrels, they find themselves tangled in a fight to the death—one that forces them to face what has grown between them, to seize and defend what they both see as their path to the greatest adventure of all. A shared life. A shared future. A shared love.

Second volume in a trilogy. A historical romance with gothic overtones layered over a continuing intrigue. A full length novel of 101,000 words.

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The thrilling third and final volume in the Devil’s Brood Trilogy

THE GREATEST CHALLENGE OF THEM ALL

A nobleman devoted to defending queen and country and a noblewoman wild enough to match his every step race to disrupt the plans of a malignant intelligence intent on shaking England to its very foundations.

Lord Drake Varisey, Marquess of Winchelsea, eldest son and heir of the Duke of Wolverstone, must foil a plot that threatens to shake the foundations of the realm, but the very last lady—nay, noblewoman—he needs assisting him is Lady Louisa Cynster, known throughout the ton as Lady Wild.

For the past nine years, Louisa has suspected that Drake might well be the ideal husband for her, even though he’s assiduous in avoiding her. But she’s now twenty-seven and enough is enough. She believes propinquity will elucidate exactly what it is that lies between them, and what better opportunity to work closely with Drake than his latest mission, with which he patently needs her help?

Unable to deny Louisa’s abilities or the value of her assistance and powerless to curb her willfulness, Drake is forced to grit his teeth and acquiesce to her sticking by his side, if only to ensure her safety. But all too soon, his true feelings for her show enough for her, perspicacious as she is, to see through his denials, which she then interprets as a challenge.

Even while they gather information, tease out clues, increasingly desperately search for the missing gunpowder, and doggedly pursue the killer responsible for an ever-escalating tally of dead men, thrown together through the hours, he and she learn to trust and appreciate each other. And fed by constant exposure—and blatantly encouraged by her—their desires and hungers swell and grow

As the barriers between them crumble, the attraction he has for so long restrained burgeons and swells, until, goaded by her near-death, it erupts, and he seizes her—only to be seized in return.

Linked irrevocably and with their wills melded and merged by passion’s fire, with time running out and the evil mastermind’s deadline looming, together, they focus their considerable talents and make one last push to learn the critical truths—to find the gunpowder and unmask the villain behind this far-reaching plot. Only to discover that they have significantly less time than they’d thought, that the villain’s target is even more crucially fundamental to the realm than they’d imagined, and it’s going to take all that Drake is—as well as all that Louisa as Lady Wild can bring to bear—to defuse the threat, capture the villain, and make all safe and right again. As they race to the ultimate confrontation, the future of all England rests on their shoulders.

Third volume in the trilogy. A historical romance with gothic overtones layered over an intrigue. A full length novel of 129,000 words.

Click here to read an .

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