Jane Feather - The Emerald Swan

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The Emerald Swan: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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Dear Reader,
My new story begins on a terror-filled night when two babies-identical twin girls of noble birth-are separated. One grows to womanhood as the frail, manipulative ward of the handsome young earl of Harcourt. The other becomes an enchanting, street-smart urchin who earns her way as a traveling player on the streets of England and France.
The two girls' paths might never again have crossed if Harcourt hadn't run into Miranda in the midst of an exuberant performance. The resemblance to his ward is unmistakable-uncanny, in fact…and an ambitious plot begins to take shape in Harcourt's mind.
His ward, Maude, will commit herself to a convent rather than marry the love-struck king of France, who will soon be traveling to London to claim her. What if Miranda were to take Maude's place? Harcourt is confident that with the right training, the right clothes, and the right attitude, the lithe, carefree Miranda will captivate society-and the king.
So begins Harcourt's breathtaking scheme to turn an ugly duckling into a gorgeous swan. But if he succeeds too well, Miranda may become something irresistible-even to Harcourt….
It's a delicious dilemma and a dangerous deception…and the twists and turns surprised even me.
Warmest wishes,
Jane Feather

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"So you'll be making another advantageous connection for the d'Albards," the queen said. "Do you have an alliance in mind, my lord?"

"Not as yet, madam. Lady Miranda is still very new to the world outside the convent. I had thought to give her some time to become accustomed to her new life before looking for a suitable husband."

"I see." Elizabeth's mouth was very small, her eyes still flashing displeasure. "And on that subject, I understand from Lady Mary Abernathy that your engagement is broken."

Gareth bowed again. "To my regret, madam. But Lady Mary felt that we would not suit."

"I see," Elizabeth said again. "I find that passing strange, my lord. Such an advantageous connection will not come her way again."

Gareth said nothing. Miranda held her breath, aware that Maude was doing the same. Then the queen said, "Well, I'll have to see if I can't find someone for her. She's been languishing at court for too long." She waved a hand in irritable dismissal and Gareth backed to the door. Miranda and Maude needed no encouragement to follow suit and finally they were safely on the far side of the door.

Gareth exhaled slowly. "Christ and his saints! May I never go through anything like that again."

"But it was all right?" Miranda asked. "She did accept the story."

Gareth smiled down at her and brushed the curve of her cheek with his knuckles. "Yes, she did, love. But what she will do when she hears that you and I are to be wed, I daren't imagine."

"I doubt it'll be as bad as when she discovers that the duke of Roissy is really Henry of France," Maude said.

"Oh, she'll get over that," Gareth said definitely. "Her Majesty is a very pragmatic sovereign. The advantages to herself in such a connection will soon outweigh any annoyance she may feel at being deceived. And you may be assured she'll understand absolutely why Henry felt it necessary to disguise his presence in England… Come, let's return to the garden, I find this atmosphere a trifle oppressive." He laughed and he didn't sound in the least oppressed as he swept them ahead of him back outside to where Henry was waiting for them.

"You seem a trifle abstracted, my lord duke," Miranda observed as they rejoined Henry.

He shook his head in disclaimer, but his eyes were still speculative as he looked between the two sisters. "I am just wondering," he said slowly, "if I have ever met you before, Lady Miranda."

This king of France was far too sharp for anyone's good, Miranda thought, even as she smiled and said, "I assure you, sir, that if you have, it was without my knowledge."

"Mmm." He sounded unconvinced. "Maude, let us take a walk." He took her hand abruptly and marched away with her, Maude having to skip to keep up with his long stride.

In the seclusion of a quiet arbor, dominated by an ancient oak tree, Henry stopped. He turned Maude to face him and looked gravely into her eyes. "Now, tell me the truth. Has it always been you?"

Maude's cerulean blue gaze met his steadily. "Always, my lord. How could you doubt it?"

"I require convincing," Henry said, and pinpricks of light began to flicker behind the gravity in his black eyes.

"In this fashion, my lord duke?" Maude inquired as she reached up to hold his face between her hands and then stood on tiptoe to kiss him. She had intended a light, brushing kiss but Henry gathered her to him, crushing her against his broad chest, his tongue against her lips demanding entrance, and Maude opened her mouth to him with a little sigh of pleasure. This kiss was like none that had gone before. Henry was demanding something from her, a commitment, a promise, a declaration of her own passion. For a fleeting moment, Maude thought of the Benedictine convent. It was the last time she ever gave the religious life a second thought.

Henry drew her down onto a stone bench, pulling her onto his lap with hands both rough and yet curiously tender. Maude nuzzled his beard, inhaling the earthy scent of his hair and skin. She thought of Miranda-Miranda who knew all about this business of loving and clearly found it good. With a little sigh, she yielded to arousal, moving her body against Henry's, aware of the hard ridge of flesh growing beneath her thighs, aware of the heat of his skin, the urgency of his touch, as his hands slipped inside her bodice. Her breasts tingled with delight at the caress of his warm palms, her nipples hardening beneath his fingers. Maude's last coherent thought was that her sister had been keeping these delights to herself for all too long, Henry made a valiant effort to rein himself in, but Maude's passionate response was too much for control. She fitted her body to his as easily and readily as if it was meant to be, thrusting aside her skirts with careless haste. Amid the heated tangle of limbs and skirts and petticoats their bodies fused and Maude's initial cry was more of surprise than pain. Neither of them noticed when the clasp on the serpentine bracelet broke open, as Maude rose and fell with the wondrous rhythm of loving.

"Do you think Henry knows?" Miranda asked as her sister was borne off by the king of France toward the seclusion of the arbor.

"Maybe," Gareth replied. "But at the moment, I couldn't give a damn. Come, we're going home."

"Just leaving, milord!" Miranda exclaimed in mock horror. "Just like that!"

"Just like that," Gareth said firmly. "We'll take a wherry and leave-the barge for the others."

"But what of Chip? He's waiting in the barge."

"You don't really believe he won't find us?" Gareth's eyebrows rose in mock astonishment. "As it happens, I'm perfectly resigned to his company." He took her hand and taking a leaf from Henry's book began to walk swiftly toward the river.

"Fortunately, Chip seems perfectly resigned to you, milord," Miranda said sweetly, hanging back with a mischievous gleam in her eye.

"Oh, believe me, I'm aware of how fortunate that is. Now, march! I grow impatient." Miranda chuckled and marched.

A shaft of moonlight piercing the interwoven leaves of the ancient oak in the now-deserted arbor caught the glow of pearl, the glitter of gold, the luster of emerald, amid the oak's moss-encrusted roots.

In the Beginning…

The alchemist watched the liquefied gold swirl like mercury in the flat iron skillet. He tilted the pan over the flames of the hearth and the precious metal rolled in on itself to form a tube. He drew the pan off the fire and plunged it into the tub of water beside his stool. The water hissed and boiled as if it would spit out the thing that it had engulfed. When the alchemist raised the pan the gold was solidifying.

He took the pan to the table and dropped the gold onto its surface. A ray of sunlight fell through the chimney hole in the roof of the wattle-and-daub hut and the gold glittered. The alchemist took up his tools: the fine needle, sharp as a dagger point, the flat file. He began to shape the gold, using his fingers to begin with, and the serpentine coils appeared in rough form. Then with needle and file he created the serpent. Within each sinuous curve he embedded a pearl and the living gold, "took the gem into itself, hardening around it, enclosing it with its shape.

The serpent's head, its mouth, took form beneath the alchemist's tools. He worked deftly but quickly, before the gold could harden. And when the head was formed to his satisfaction, he took the one pearl that was left… a great, glowing, translucent, living gem… and inserted it into the serpent's mouth.

Then the alchemist surveyed his work. Day had given way to night and the light of the evening star now filled the chimney hole. He held the bracelet in the palm of his hand. It was a gift of love. A gift worthy of Eve. A gift to bind a woman for eternity.

So enraptured was he, he didn't hear the shouts from beyond the hut, the screams from the beach. He was aware of nothing until the first burning brands were thrown through the doorway. He ran from the conflagration. The Norsemen surrounded the village, their longboats pulled up on the sand. Flames leaped into the sky. The screams of women, the weeping of babies, the moans of the dying, filled his ears before the ax brought his own death.

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