Blurb: Twelfth Knight
Isobel De Lacy’s guardian, Baron Roger De Lacy, is set to join King Richard in
Outremer directly after the winter Solstice. Before he leaves he wants to make sure his
niece is married. His groom of choice is Sir Guy of Gisborne, henchman to the Sheriff of
Nottingham, and notorious for being heavy-fisted.
Isobel would rather sacrifice herself to the Great Horned God before that
happened.
While gathering holly in the woods, she stumbles across an injured knight and
takes him back to the castle to be looked after. He turns out to be Sir William of
Barnsdale, nephew to the Earl of Huntingdon. Isobel hatches a plan. The powerful earl
can keep her safe from Gisborne and, when Sir William chivalrously agrees to help her
escape, she decides perhaps the auld gods have sent her a Yuletide gift.
But as they ride through Sherwood Forest, she finds that “gift” to be much more
than she had anticipated.
Excerpt: OneYuletide
Knight
Twelfth Knight
Nottinghamshire
1191
Twelve nights
until the Winter Solstice. That meant
Isobel de Lacy had eleven days to find a way to avoid marriage to Sir Guy of
Gisborne, the man her guardian cousin had decided she would marry on December
22 before he left on Crusade.
She would
sacrifice herself to the Great Horned God before that happened.
“Lady Isobel,” one
of kitchen maids who’d accompanied her on the outing to gather holly this
morning said, “how much farther into the forest do ye want to go?”
Isobel glanced at
the near-empty aprons of the three maids who trailed after her. None of them
looked especially pleased to be out of doors on a chilly morning, but the pages
that would normally be gathering the boughs were busy helping her cousin
Roger’s squires prepare armor and weapons for the journey to Outremer.
“We have hardly
gathered enough to cover one mantel,” she replied, “and you know Lord de Lacy
expects the entire Great Hall to be decorated for Yule.”
“I hope his lordship
is nae expecting us to be bringing in the big log as well,” a second girl
grumbled.
“I suspect the
knights will vie for that honor.”
The third maid
sniggered. “I’d rather have them knights vie
for the honor of leaping o’re the bonfires with me.”
“Aye!” the other
two agreed and burst into giggles.
Isobel smiled at
their youthful thinking and wished the only thing she had to be concerned with
was whether a virile young man would choose her as his partner on the twelfth
night Solstice celebration. Not that she would have been allowed to participate
in the thoroughly pagan ritual that most lords still allowed the servants to
hold. Even growing up in Wales
where the goddess Bridgid was still worshipped, her parents—may their souls
rest in peace—had plans for her to marry a proper English lord.
But then, they’d
had no idea that lord would turn out to be Sir Guy of Gisborne. Her first
impression of him had left her shaken.
When he’d bowed over her hand the night they’d been introduced, the
touch had chilled her blood. His smile had looked more like a wolf baring its
teeth and his eyes had a steely glint.
The two subsequent meetings had only deepened her conviction that the
man was heartless. On the one occasion, he’d ridden ruthlessly into the bailey,
scattering playing children and on the other, he’d kicked a hapless puppy that had wandered into
his path.
What had her
cousin been thinking? Isobel sighed as
she led her still-chortling helpers deeper into the woods. She knew what he had been thinking. Roger de Lacy, recently become Seventh Baron
Halton and Lord of Bowland, had only taken her in two months ago because she
had no other living relatives when her parents were killed in a carriage
accident in Conwy. Her cousin had already been preparing to join King Richard
in the Holy Land . His immediate reaction to
her arrival was to see her married before he left. Sir Guy was in need of a
wife and, as the right-hand man to the Sherriff of Nottingham, would offer her
protection.
From what, Isobel was not sure. In the short time she had been in
Nottinghamshire, she’d heard nothing but horrific reports on its sheriff…that
he was cruel, calculating and cold. He
sounded like someone a person needed protecting from. It also seemed to
Isobel that being the cousin of a titled lord and living in the castle of his
huge estate would offer protection enough, but Roger had been adamant. She was
to be married before he left.
“My lady.” One of
the maids interrupted her thinking. “Where are ye leading us?”
Isobel stopped and
looked around. The relatively worn path they’d been on had turned into nothing
more than a deer trail. The forestation
was denser as well, leaving little light filtering through the pines to
encourage anything except bracken to grow. Certainly, there were no holly
bushes. She sighed again. She should have been paying more attention to
what she was doing.
“I must have taken
a wrong turn.” Since she had not ventured this far before, she hoped they were
not lost. The maids were already looking
at her skeptically so Isobel glanced at the ground. ‘You might as well pick up
the cones while we head back to the road.
Lord de Lacy likes the crackling sounds they make in the fire.”
At least that
would keep them occupied. Isobel swept back strands of her auburn hair that
seemed to constantly be escaping her barbette and tried to get a sense of
direction. As a child in Wales ,
she’d spent enough time playing along mountain sides and foraging among the
trees to know that the best worn animal trails usually led to water. Roger’s
castle was near the River Erewash. If
she could find a stream, they could follow its natural flow toward the
river. She looked at the ground again. Not too far away, a slightly wider path led
toward the right.
“This way,” she said,
sounding more confident than she felt.
The
maids, who had invented a quick game of whom could find the largest cones,
seemed content to follow her lead.
Isobel glanced up as they walked. At least the trees were becoming
sparser. Sunlight cast a mottled glow through the leaves. And, to her relief, a
few minutes later she heard the sound of water tumbling over rock.
“This
way,” she said again, heading for the sound. As they started to round several
large boulders, she saw what looked like a small, grassy glade and then she
stopped.
A
young man was lying face down on the ground.
Strands of long, brown hair and a part of his red cape floated in the
stream bed, but he was not moving.
Cynthia's website
5 comments:
I have always enjoyed Cindy's eye for historical detail and what make a romance "spark" Congrats on the new story!!
Great excerpt, Cindy! I was right there in the woods with them. Can't wait to read your story.
Why does a ride through the woods always end at a body? ;-) Great excerpt, Cindy. I love this story.
Cindy, I look forward to reading the rest of this one. I love the descriptions and detail you use. I too, was right there the entire time. I hope over time I'll be able to include at least half as much details as you do. Wishing you the best. Happy Yuletide.
Cindy, I loved your story. I was so surprised by the ending. Loved it!
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