Blurb:
Honor. Truth. Loyalty.
Love. All of these matter most to Sir Gerald. To avenge his love's death, he
challenges her murderer to a duel. Her twin, however, feels that Alice never
loved Gerald and gives him a tea. Alice had also given him teas, which enhanced
his love for her, but this tea is different. This tea sends him to into the
future, to the Regency era.
Lady Vanessa seeks a
Christmas treat when she hears something outside the manor. Upon investigation,
she sees a man dressed in armor. Unwilling to turn away a confused man with the
approaching holiday, she convinces her parents to house Gerald until the new
year.
Scandal has forced her
parents to accept William as their daughter's best chance at marriage. Although
rich, he does not understand her or her love of books and only sees her for her
looks, whereas Gerald listens to her, confides in her and she him. With the
approaching holiday, nothing is certain – not whether Gerald can discover a way
back to his duel, whether he can move on from Alice, and not whether this
Christmas will be a happy one for either Gerald or Vanessa.
Author:
Nicole Zoltack loves
to write in many genres, especially romance, whether fantasy, paranormal, or
regency. When she’s not writing about knights, superheroes, or zombies, she
loves to spend time with her loving husband and three energetic young boys. She
enjoys riding horses (pretending they’re unicorns, of course!) and going to the
PA Renaissance Faire, dressed in garb. She’ll also read anything she can get
her hands on. Her current favorite TV show is The Walking Dead. To learn more
about Nicole and her writing, vis-it http://NicoleZoltack.blogspot.com.
Excerpt:
Chapter One
Honor. Truth. Loyalty.
All noble. All good.
Most of the time.
Sir Gerald sharpened
his blade, the clashing sound of metal on metal, the sparks flying pleasing
him. He had never dueled before, but a few hours' time and that would change.
Blood pounded through
him, hot and steady, a constant reminder of all he still had and all his love
had lost.
"I can do
that," Edwin said. Shadows from the flickering flames within the smithy
covered his hand that reached toward the sword.
Gerald merely glared
at his squire. Competent, yes, if a tad overeager. "I do believe I told ye
several times now that your services are not required this day."
"I will not leave
ye." Edwin lifted his chin. A gesture of both defiance and loyalty at the
same moment.
He grunted.
"The blade willna
sharpen more." The blacksmith picked up a hammer. Evidently some aspect in
the fire told him the temperature now burned hot enough to temper new weapons.
With a great deal of
reluctance, Gerald handed the fourteen-year-old his sword.
The blacksmith nodded
and returned to his work.
The smithy felt like
the gate to Hell, the heat immense and growing ever hotter. Still, Gerald did
not move, mesmerized by the licking, greedy flames. It had been a fiery night
when he first met her. Ever since, he stopped by the smithy daily, paused
whenever he saw a flame, and lingered by the dying embers of his campfires.
It was she who
necessitated his duel.
"Are ye certain
about this?" Edwin asked.
A question the boy had
asked many a time after Gerald laid down the gauntlet.
"Quite."
Ever his reply. How could he not? As a knight, duty dictated his actions.
"But…" Edwin
shifted his weight from side to side. Always boundless energy. His tongue never
stopped wagging. It could cause him trouble down the cobbled road if never did
he learn to appreciate silence.
For now, at least,
Gerald would humor him. "Go on."
"Ye and she… Ye
were not even promised to one another."
True, but in their
hearts they were. The problem lay with that, that and jealousy.
Gerald filled his
broad chest with a strong inhale. "One day, ye will understand. Honor,
truth, and loyalty will only get ye so far. Love, though, it lifts ye up,
alters your very outlook on life, changes your life itself. Love is all that
matters."
The hammering stopped.
Although the smithy was loud and prone to echo, Gerald and Edwin had long ago
learned how close to be, how loud to speak to be heard despite it. The silence
now prevailing in the smithy unnerved Gerald far more than the prospect of
dying that late afternoon.
Almis the blacksmith
grunted. "Love be not so grand. Love be trouble." His dark eyes fixed
on Gerald. "Love be death."
"Death is
release," Gerald countered. Perhaps death would be best. Not that Victor
would grant him a merciful one.
"Sir Gerald will
not fall."
Edwin's confidence
lifted a small smile to Gerald's lips. "Is my armor ready?"
The red-haired boy
jumped up. "A-almost!" He scampered away, out of the smithy faster
than a hare chasing its supper.
The redness of the
flames only served to remind Gerald of blood, and he turned away, for once
finding no comfort here, wishing for mead to swallow instead of his sorrows.
The dings and clangs
resumed, its steady beat almost matching his steady heartbeat. No matter what
the outcome, he would do all he could. She, and her memory, deserved that much.
She who never should
have felt the sharp end of a blade. She who never stepped near such a place as
this. With its burning stove and already forged weapons hanging on the walls,
the smithy proved as dangerous as any duel ground. Mayhap a second weapon would
not be remiss. Bow and arrows would be less than worthless. A spear or lance,
though...
No comments:
Post a Comment