Synopsis
In the third in Katharine Ashe's Prince Catchers series, the eldest of three very different sisters must fulfill a prophecy to discover their birthright. But if Eleanor is destined to marry a prince, why can't she resist the scoundrel who seduced her?
She can pour tea, manage a household, and sew a modest gown. In short, Eleanor Caulfield is the perfect vicar's daughter. Yet there was a time when she'd risked everything for a black-eyed gypsy who left her brokenhearted. Now he stands before her—dark, virile, and ready to escort her on a journey to find the truth about her heritage.
Leaving eleven years ago should have given Taliesin freedom. Instead he's returned to Eleanor, determined to have her all to himself, tempting her with kisses and promising her a passion she's so long denied herself. But if he was infatuated before, he's utterly unprepared for what will happen when Eleanor decides to abandon convention—and truly live . . .
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Excerpt
Eleanor held the porcelain cup to her lips and inhaled until
she felt it in her toes.
Mrs. Hodges plunked her hands on her hips. “Well, aren’t you
going to drink it?”
“I am reveling.” Her lips could nearly taste it. Nearly.
Temptation. The waiting teased. Deliciously.
“You’re an odd duck, aren’t you, miss?”
“Not usually.” She tilted the cup upward. “Usually I am
entirely predictable. Reserved. Modest.” Her words were muffled by the rich
liquid so close, heating her flesh. Heady sensation. “Usually I am very”—she
let the chocolate wash against her lips—“very”—and a ripple of pleasure went
through her—“good.” It stole around her tongue. Decadent. Sinful.
She sighed.
Taliesin appeared in the kitchen door.
She choked.
“Well now, sir,” Mrs. Hodges said, wiping her hands on her
apron. “Miss was just teaching me here how to make chocolate like they do at
all the big houses.”
He leaned a shoulder into the doorpost and crossed his arms.
His shadowy eyes scanned her from toe tips to brow, finally coming to rest on
her lips. “Was she?”
A thick droplet of chocolate clung to her bottom lip.
Eleanor felt it there like a beacon. She should wipe it with her kerchief.
The tip of her tongue stole between her lips and licked up
the droplet. Another shiver wiggled through her.
What was she doing?
“Now then, miss,” Mrs. Hodges said, “you’d best go and leave
the kitchen to me, and I’ll fix up a nice dinner for you.”
Clutching the cup in both palms, Eleanor went to the door.
Taliesin stepped back but with so little space she had to shift sideways to
move past him. She darted a glance upward.
Immobility. His. Hers. She could see every line, every
whisker that had not been on his face eleven years ago. Not the same boy she’d
known. A man now. Her pulse fluttered. Then it fluttered harder as his scent
mingled with the flavor of chocolate upon her tongue. Horse. Leather. Him. The
same. It tangled in her nose, in her head, a memory barreling through her,
while he watched her eyes from inches away.
She slipped past him.
The taproom was empty now. Mr. Treadwell was probably in the
stable seeing to his Arthurian characters and Betsy must be in their room
seeing to mundane tasks Eleanor was accustomed to seeing to herself.
“Chocolate?” the incubus behind her said. “Missing the
luxuries of the ducal mansion so soon, are you?”
She swung around to him and the chocolate sloshed in the
cup. “Is that what you think? That I have grown spoiled by my sisters’ good fortune?”
“No.” His black eyes hooded.
“No? Is that all you can say?” Her tongue, it seemed, was an
unbridled thing. Too much prison. Too much feeling to swallow again and again.
“We’ve not seen each other in eleven years, and now for four days you have said
nothing to me.”
Again he leaned his shoulder against the doorpost in an
attitude of sublime nonchalance. “You made it clear you did not wish my escort.
I am respecting that.”
She didn’t believe it. He had never respected her. He had
teased her endlessly. “You could at least speak to me.”
“What would you have me say?”
“Anything. How do you go along these days, Eleanor? How is
the parish? Is it still the same as eleven years ago when I departed so
precipitously, without warning, without word?”
His face grew still, planes of dark beauty like hewn marble.
“Ah,” he said in a low voice. “You wish for empty pleasantries. Or perhaps an
apology? I regret that neither is in my lexicon.”
“I don’t wish for pleasantries or apologies. I don’t care
why you left as you did. But you hurt Papa. Do you even know how deeply you
hurt him?”
His lips were an unbreakable line.
“He wouldn’t even speak of you.” Locked behind bars for
years, Eleanor’s words now tumbled forth. “He said nothing except when Ravenna
mentioned you. She did not understand why you left either, but she accepted it
in her way. She always thought you would return. But Papa didn’t. And it
wounded him.”
“I wrote to him,” he said after a moment.
“Rarely. So few letters that the pages grew thin from
folding and unfolding. He never said a word about them or read a line to us,
but do you know where he kept them? In his Bible, tucked in Luke, chapter
fifteen. The story of the prodigal son.”
His eyes had become hard obsidian. But he remained silent.
Her hands clenched around the cup. “Why won’t you speak?”
she exclaimed.
“Seems like you’re speaking enough for the both of us.” His
perfect lips barely moved.
“Can’t you even be civil? Or did you leave those lessons
behind too when you left St. Petroc?”
“Listen to you. As righteous as you always were.”
She threw the chocolate at him.
She didn’t know quite how it happened. One moment strange,
frantic panic coursed through her, straight from her heels to her throat. The
next moment a demon possessed her, seizing her arm and forcing it to jut
forward and disgorge the contents of her cup at him. Chocolate spattered
everywhere—on the wall, the doorpost, and on the dark, handsome man from her
past for whom she had wept months of tears.
“What in the—” But he didn’t finish. Instead he came at her.
Her foot dropped back but he grabbed her wrist and jerked her hand with the cup
up between them. “What do you think you’re doing?” Chocolate dripped down her
wrist and along his cheeks and lips. He stared down at her in astonishment.
“Wasting my chocolate.” She tugged. His grip tightened. Arm
to arm, he held her close, and he did not look into her eyes. He looked at her
lips. The shadows in his eyes were deeper, but now limned with fever
brightness, so bright that she could see the flecks of brown there that she had
discovered as a girl.
“How do you go along these days, Eleanor?” His voice was
rough.
“Wh-what?”
“How is the parish?” His gaze never left her lips, his
fingers strong around her wrist. “Is it still the same as eleven years ago when
I departed?”
“Precipitously,” she whispered. “Without warning. Without
word.” The syllables trailed into the silence of her raucous heartbeat.
“Precipitously. Without warning.”
Through his hand she felt him. Her skin, her bones, her
blood felt him.
“You are poking fun at me,” she said. “Don’t.”
“What will it be, Eleanor? You demanded my attention. You
have it now. Do you want it or not?”
She wanted to taste the chocolate on his lips. She wanted to
remember the danger and delirium she’d felt the last time she had been entirely
alive. …
About the Author
Katharine Ashe is the award-winning author of historical romances that reviewers call “intensely lush” and “sensationally intelligent,” including How to Be a Proper Lady, an Amazon Editors’ Choice for the 10 Best Romances of the Year, and How to Marry a Highlander, a 2014 RITA® Award finalist. She lives in the wonderfully warm southeast with her beloved husband, son, dog and a garden she likes to call romantic rather than unkempt. A professor of History, she writes romance because she thinks modern readers deserve grand adventures and breathtaking sensuality too. Please write to her at PO Box 51702, Durham, NC 27717-1702 or visit www.katharineashe.com
https://www.facebook.com/KatharineAsheAuthor
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