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Tuesday, September 26, 2017
Blurb Blitz + #Giveaway: THE LAIRD TAKES A BRIDE by Lisa Berne @LisaBerne @GoddessFish
THE LAIRD TAKES A BRIDE
by Lisa
Berne
GENRE: Historical Romance
BLURB:
Alasdair
Penhallow, laird of his clan and master of Castle Tadgh, is forced to end his
carefree bachelorhood, thanks to an ancient decree that requires him to marry.
But Alasdair’s search for a biddable wife comes to a screeching halt when Fate
serves up Fiona Douglass. Prickly as a thistle, Fiona challenges him at every
turn, rendering herself surprisingly irresistible. Her love would be a prize indeed
. . . if Alasdair could accept it.
Fiona gave her heart
once, and doesn’t plan to repeat that folly. Yet she finds herself drawn to
Alasdair’s intelligence and strength, and the passion he incites goes well
beyond her expectations for what’s only a marriage of expedience. Despite
herself, she’s falling in love with her husband.
But there’s a high
wall between them—and Fiona’s not sure it can ever be torn down.
Excerpt:
Wondering where his shoes had gone,
Alasdair looked down to see his wolfhound Cuilean at his feet. Intelligent dark
eyes were looking up at him inquiringly, shaggy ears were pricked: a hint,
Alasdair knew, that breakfast was long overdue. He reached down a hand to
caress that rough head, and as he did so Cuilean sharply turned it, toward an
archway leading off toward the kitchens.
Fervently did Alasdair hope it was a
servant, bearing a refreshing tankard of ale (or even a silver pot filled to
the brim with blisteringly hot coffee), but no, it was Dame Margery, quite
possibly the oldest member of the clan, hunched over her gnarled stick and
stumping into the Hall. Trailing behind was her little granddaughter Sheila,
who viewed the dissolute scene before her with blasé indifference, her
expression, distinguished by eyes which seemed to gaze in two different
directions at once, seeming more focused on something immaterial and inward —
and for that Alasdair could only be thankful, as uneasily he wondered if a
seven-year-old really ought to be in the Great Hall at this particular moment.
As Dame Margery drew near, she
noisily banged her stick on the marble floor, causing people nearby to stir,
moan, rouse. She passed by Uncle Duff, insensate, draped sideways on a chair
and his long beard dangling perpendicularly, and muttered audibly, “Ach, the
old wastrel!” before turning her piercing and unblinking stare to Alasdair.
Finally she stopped before the dais on which the two great chairs — one for the
laird, one (long unoccupied) for his lady — stood. Her silence, Alasdair
noticed, had a heavy, expectant, rather ominous sort of quality, and he groaned
under his breath. He wasn’t in the mood for drama. Still, he was the laird, and
one must be polite, so he cleared his throat and said:
“Good day to you, madam.”
“And to you, laird,” she answered
with an awful, punctilious politeness. “May I tender my congratulations to you
on your birthday.”
“I thank you.”
“I believe I am correct, laird, that
as of yesterday you turned thirty-five?”
“Aye, madam.”
“Not thirty-four, laird?”
“Nay, thirty-five, madam.”
“Not married, are you, laird?”
Alasdair looked narrowly at Dame
Margery. Had she gone soft in her aged head? Everyone knew he was unmarried
and, in fact, happily so. But courteously he replied: “Nay, madam, I’m not.”
“Well then, laird, perhaps you are
not aware of the ancient clan decree which dictates that any chieftain of
Castle Tadgh who remains unmarried by his thirty-fifth birthday must
immediately invite the eligible highborn maidens of the Eight Clans of Killaly
to stay within the castle, and within thirty-five days choose one to be his
bride?”
Dame Margery issued this
disconcerting pronouncement in stentorian tones and with a single breath,
leaving her gasping a little by the end. She breathed in deeply, then added
sternly:
“The wedding to follow within
thirty-five days.”
A sufficient number of people had
woken up by now to create a stunned, openmouthed audience for Dame Margery, who
seemed well satisfied by the effect of her words. Alasdair sat upright, jostling
the black-haired lass who let out a choked snore but remained blissfully
asleep. He stared balefully at her and then at Dame Margery as the unpleasant
import of her proclamation sank in.
“And if I don’t obey?” he said,
losing a little of his earlier politeness.
“Death to you, I fear,” the old
crone replied with annoying promptitude. “Hanged and quartered, laird, and your
head displayed in the courtyard as a warning to all who leave off their sacred
duty to the clan.”
AUTHOR Bio and Links:
Lisa
Berne read her first Georgette Heyer book at fourteen, and was instantly
captivated. Later, she was a graduate student, a grantwriter, and an investment
banker, but is thrilled to be returning to her roots and writing her own
historical-romance novels! She lives with her family in the Pacific Northwest.
HarperCollins ~ Website ~ Facebook ~ Twitter ~ Goodreads
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2 comments:
congrats on the tour and thanks for the chance to win :)
Thank you for featuring my LAIRD TAKES A BRIDE! Appreciate it. :)
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