Susan Paul - The Prisoner Bride

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All Women Just Naturally Loved Him–at least until now, Kiernan FitzAllen noted, bemused. Mistress Glenys Seymour seemed immune to his roguish charms. Granted, he had kidnapped her, which could be somewhat off-putting. But ensorcellment had to be afoot for such a master thief to be so completely enchanted by this very practical maiden fair!Were she truly able to cast a spell, Glenys Seymour would whisk away any trace of the confusing yet compelling passion she felt for Kiernan FitzAllen. The man was an outlaw, an adventurer, a roué–and yet the fabled Chosen One who would help her gain her secret heart's desire!

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“Not very mild,” Jean-Marc retorted. “Her hair’s as bright as a sunrise.”

“Nay, ’tis softer, more like a sunset,” Kieran corrected, “though the rest of her appears to be more formidable. I have a great deal of difficulty imagining a soft fellow like Sir Anton scaling that particular fortress, even for love.”

Jean-Marc snorted. “What you mean,” he said, “is that you can’t imagine such a female letting a simpering fool like Sir Anton make the attempt.”

“Nay,” Kieran murmured thoughtfully, “I doubt that, too. She’s not beautiful, of a certainty, but neither is she painful to gaze upon. And her figure is pleasing, i’faith, despite her height. S’truth, Mistress Glenys could do far better for a lover than so delicate a lordling as Sir Anton.”

“I little doubt he cares what she looks like,” Jean-Marc stated, “or whether her figure is pleasing or no. She’s wealthy—that’s what the scoundrel’s thinking of.” When his master made no reply, Jean-Marc glanced up at him and asked, “You didn’t believe Sir Anton’s foolish tale any more than I, did you?”

Kieran shook his head. “I didn’t believe a word of it. He was as clear a liar as I’ve ever set eyes upon.”

“Yet you’re still determined to take Mistress Glenys away and hold her prisoner in York, waiting for Sir Anton to fetch her?”

“Aye.”

Jean-Marc spat on the ground and uttered a sound of unhappiness. “’Tis a fool you are, by God! You risk your neck—and mine—only to spite Sir Daman. And to what purpose? Naught that you do to him can give your sister back all that she’s lost because of him, or return the joy he took from her.”

“Mayhap not,” Kieran said softly, his gaze held fast to Mistress Glenys’s carriage, most specifically on the coachman and lone manservant, who already began to look weary and bored with their waiting, “but I can make him know misery, as he made Elizabet know it, and I can make him know what ’tis like for his beloved sister to be in the power of another. But never fear, Jean-Marc,” he added, glancing at his companion, “I mean Mistress Glenys no harm, and well you know it. Her heart and person will remain untouched and pure—at least until Sir Anton comes to take her away. After that, Daman must worry anew.”

Jean-Marc uttered a loud snort. “You? Turn a woman over to a knave who might do her harm?” He laughed. “Never. Not even a woman like that who’s tall enough and surely strong enough to bash Sir Anton on his puny head. Gawd’s mercy. Tell me another tale, m’lord.”

Kieran scowled at his grinning manservant, but said nothing. The truth of it was that Jean-Marc knew him too well. The thought of leaving Mistress Glenys prey to whatever Sir Anton desired—her fortune, gained through forced marriage, most likely—tickled at the edges of what there was of Kieran’s small conscience. Not enough, howbeit, to keep him from carrying out the plan Sir Anton had laid before him. The chance at having revenge on Daman Seymour was far too compelling to make Kieran change his mind.

There were few people that he had loved in his life, but among those dear few, and assuredly most prominent, were his parents and brothers and sisters. He was, he supposed, a fortunate bastard, if any man basely born might be called thus. His parents—both mother and father—openly acknowledged him, as did his various grandparents, aunts, uncles and half siblings. Indeed, he knew himself to be well loved by all sides of his family, and had been raised by his stepfather as if he were his natural child. Aye, Kieran was fortunate, especially after his many years of wandering and troublemaking. Time and again his family had rescued him from imprisonment, hanging or worse. Time and again they’d pleaded with him to put his restlessness aside and settle down at the small estate that had been provided for him. And time and again, when he disappointed them, they continued to wait with open arms. He didn’t deserve such a family, and certainly not such a long-suffering one. There was only one way in which he was able to make himself worthy, and that was by his loyalty and his own love for them.

This was what drove him to seek revenge against Daman Seymour. Sir Daman, so handsome and celebrated, had caused Kieran’s youngest sister, Elizabet, to fall so deeply in love that she had set all of her usual good sense aside. She had believed that Daman would wed her; Kieran knew full well how easy it was to make a sheltered young maiden believe such as that. In her innocence, love and trust, Elizabet had given herself to Daman, and Daman, the accursed knave, had soon thereafter abandoned her, despite knowing that she had conceived his child. Not even the fear of Kieran’s powerful stepfather, Lord Randall, had kept the fool from so ignoble a deed, though perhaps Daman had known, and rightly so, that Elizabet’s pleading would keep her father from having Daman run to ground and thrown in prison. Shame had done its equal share in convincing Lord Randall to leave the matter be. Elizabet’s pregnancy had been well hidden, though that, in the end, hadn’t been necessary. Grief over the abandonment of her faithless lover had driven her to illness, and she’d lost the child but a few months after it had been conceived.

That had been five months ago, yet Elizabet remained inconsolable. During the few days Kieran had spent with her at his stepfather’s estate, she’d done naught but weep, so wretchedly miserable that Kieran’s own heart had felt riven. He’d sworn then that he would repay Daman Seymour for what he’d done to the dearest, sweetest girl on God’s earth, and had been searching for a way to fulfill that vow since. Sir Anton and his offer of employ had fallen like a gift into Kieran’s lap.

“Aye, you’ll never let Sir Anton take Mistress Seymour away,” Jean-Marc said with surety. “Especially not once she’s fallen in love with you and pleads with you not to abandon her.”

“I’ve abandoned a great many others, despite their pleading,” Kieran replied evenly, not contesting the fact that Mistress Glenys Seymour, and her little maid, Dina, as well, would fall in love with him. Women—no matter their age, birth or status—always fell in love with him, and had been doing so since before he’d turned fifteen. It couldn’t be helped, only acknowledged and dealt with. He had known when he’d accepted Sir Anton’s task that Mistress Glenys’s certain passion for him would complicate things. Just as Jean-Marc had said, she would most likely do as others before her and plead with Kieran not to leave her, especially if he held her prisoner in York for more than a few months. But his heart, despite his intense admiration of females in general, had never been swayed by any woman’s words, except perhaps for those spoken by his mother and sisters. He was well used to gently turning ardent females aside. It would be an outright falsehood to say that he’d avoided breaking more than a few hearts during his years of wandering, but Kieran had been careful never to leave a woman as Sir Daman Seymour had done, either with child or in such despair that death seemed preferable to life. And Daman’s sister was no exception.

Nay, Kieran’s revenge must be upon Daman alone, else it was of no value. As to Mistress Glenys, he would keep her safe and comfortable while she was imprisoned in Sir Anton’s keep in York, and he would make certain that Sir Anton treated her well afterward, neither forcing her into marriage nor keeping her from her family. As for himself, Kieran would rebuff her declarations of love as gently as he might and do whatever he could to discourage such feelings from the very start.

Fortunately, Mistress Glenys herself would make the task easier. If he’d been attracted to her, Kieran would have found it difficult indeed to keep from seducing her. He’d never fallen in love, but women were assuredly his weakness. Mistress Glenys, however, had the look of a safe woman, which was to say that she wasn’t the kind of female Kieran usually preferred. She was…square, he supposed one might say. Angular. It was an odd way to describe a woman, but very apt for Mistress Glenys. And despite the evidence of delightful curves beneath her surcoat, she was also too thin. Unless her clothing possessed some kind of magical powers in hiding what lay beneath, Kieran could detect none of the sweet, soft plumpness that he best loved in his women. Nay, Mistress Glenys was all tallness and bones and strength, a stout, healthy female who looked as if she could put the fear of God into a great many men—though Kieran didn’t count himself among them.

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