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The Princess and the Marquess 

      LUCIEN ST. MARTIN, Marquess of Heartstone, is ordered to travel to the “the uncivilized” part of the world. The untamed wilds of America. How was he to know everything was about to shift on its axis.

      CIARA MCKAY is known as “The Heart of the Mountain.” She lives near a town but chooses to remain alone up in the mountains. Her world is changed the day she encounters a man being tossed about by an enraged mother bear.

      Long winter nights lead to explosive passions. Seven years pass before they meet again. Can they overcome the “accepted” rules of society? Or will “the heart of the mountain” cease to be?

      Is it possible that Lucien can convince her to give them another chance? Will Ciara accept her destiny that together is the only way for them to be, as the…The Princess and the Marquess
 

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Excerpt

The Princess And The Marquess
By Aliyah Burke

  

Chapter One

Somewhere west of the Rockies, 1820

Ciara Malika McKay swore to herself as she fought and strained against the winds whipping through the mountains. With every struggling step forward, the winds knocked her back at least five. It was hard to catch her breath. At least it isn’t snowing yet. Regardless of that fact, it was still miserable out. Ciara hoped the woodland animals she’d befriended found shelter.

She cursed again as the wind blew off her hood. Ciara jerked it back up, squinting through rain that pelted everything with a never-ending force. The inky blackness of night made it impossible to see far. Her calculations said she might not be far from her small cabin, but a wrong direction now could be fatal. The vital herbs she set out to get were safely strapped at her waist. She’d been taught the importance of having them on hand. During the cold winter months, it was better to have an excess of medicinal herbs than need them and not have them. Unfortunately, it had taken her longer than expected to find and collect them.

The mud quickly reached her knees, sucked hard at her legs, making movement almost impossible. She growled to herself and knew anyone in her shape would find the going difficult now. A shape materialized through the driving downpour. Despite her current situation, she smiled at her friend, Faolan.

A large wolf, Faolan’s coat was blacker than the darkest night. He was her friend, almost like a dog. She had saved him from a trap when he was a pup, a little over five years ago, and he just never left. To anyone else he remained the dangerous killer his species was erroneously rumored to be.

He stood before her, close enough so Ciara could see the glow of his amber eyes. The wolf turned and moved forward a little then looked back at her. She followed as best she could, content in the knowledge he would lead her safely through the night.

Why isn’t he sinking in this mud? Ciara groaned with relief when she saw her cabin outlined in the flashes of lightning. Now back on semi-solid ground, and with a renewed energy, she hastened her step.

A push opened the door, and she stood dripping on her wooden floor. Faolan streaked past to shake dry and lay by the stove. Taking off her sodden cloak, she shivered and took Faolan’s hint as she started a fire. The dry sticks and small wood she kept inside crackled to life. The flames added some light as Ciara lit a tallow lamp. When the room felt warm, she quickly stripped and put on some dry clothes. Then turning her attention to the herbs she had gathered, she laid them out to dry as well.

Warm, dry and safe from the storm, that seemed to have worsened if that was at all possible, Ciara set to her next task. Food. A simple meal of soup and bread satisfied her hunger.

She could have died out there, she admitted if only to herself. And who would have found her, who would have cared? Instinctively she touched Faolan on the head, grateful for his companionship. Ciara kept to herself, since her parents had died ten years earlier one warm summer night. She had no wish to get close to anyone. But she did miss having someone to care whether she came home safe or who might even shed a tear at her burial.

The product of a fierce love between a migrating Irishman and a black slave woman, Ciara could take care of herself. Born in these mountains, she belonged to them. Since the age of fourteen, everything she’d learned from her parents she put into practice, surviving out here alone—for that’s what she was. Totally alone. What use was speaking English, Irish and African with no one else to speak to? But the hunting, carving and herbal healing skills she would be eternally grateful for.

No use thinking about how things used to be when her parents were alive. No point thinking how things might be with someone to share her life. She chose to be alone, having declined to move into Paradise Cove after her parents died. She knew she frightened the members of town. Perhaps it was more that she confused them, choosing to live how she did as opposed to in town. But Ciara was confident enough to know she liked it that way; it ensured she was left alone for the most part.

* * * *

Lucien St. Martin, the eighth Marquess of Heartstone, smothered a groan. Out the window of the rattling coach he looked across the endless miles of dust and dirt. This vast country was definitely not where he had wanted to be. However, his father had dictated he come here for a horse. So here he was. Turning to his companion, he asked, “How much longer? I wish to get out and get cleaned up.”

The man, presented to him as Trent Blake, looked him directly in the eye “We are almost there. The town will have a place for you to stay. In the morning, you can speak to the elders about how to find the horse.”

“Not until morning? I have had enough of this. I wish to get the horse and leave immediately. I thought this was understood.”

“With all due respect, sir, we are at the base of three mountains here in Paradise Cove, and the horse could be on any one of them. These horses don’t appear out of nowhere. You can’t just snap your fingers and get whatever you want here. The horse will be worth the wait.”

Lucien didn’t care for the tone, no respect whatsoever. “I realize that this is a big place. No doubt filled with thieves and scoundrels of the worst kind. However, I am the Marquess of Heartstone…and I have been promised the horse would be ready for me.”

The carriage jolted to a stop next to an older building, and Blake jumped down. “This is our land. We don’t have titles out here. They mean nothing special to us. You’ll get treated the same way you treat people. As for the promise, you are two weeks late. The horse was here on time. Now you need to wait. Watch your attitude, or you’ll get nowhere in this town, my lord.”

Lucien watched in silence as the rude man disappeared into the dusk then climbed out of the carriage and managed to keep his temper, despite the insolence. The purchase of the horse could not fail. His father would never forgive him, and it did not pay to upset the duke.

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