Midnight Rose

Home > Other > Midnight Rose > Page 42
Midnight Rose Page 42

by Patricia Hagan


  Holly was struggling to restrain her temper. This was, after all, her mother, and she loved and respected her. No matter that she was weak, and, yes, selfish. No matter that Claudia was the daughter of a dirt-poor sharecropper and had used her beauty to marry into one of the richest and most prominent families in all of Mississippi. Maybe she had married her father for his money and social position, but she had loved him later and made him happy, Holly knew that. She bit her tongue to keep from saying anything she shouldn’t say.

  “How is it you know Mr. Bonham so well?” she asked.

  Claudia averted her gaze, then forced a nervous smile. “I…I do go into town a good bit, dear. You know how I hate that wretched shack. I have tea with old friends, and…and…they tell me things. I’m told Mr. Bonham is becoming the social leader of Vicksburg.”

  “How did you meet him?”

  Claudia’s answer was quick, almost defensive. “I went to a tea one afternoon and he was there. I liked him. He’s quite charming.”

  Instinctively, Holly knew it was more than that. It had been two years since Papa’s death. It was only natural that her mother would be thinking about her future, the company of men. “He’s a widower?”

  Claudia nodded. “A fever. Some years ago.”

  “Children?”

  “A son. Several years older than you.” She stared at Holly, desperate for some morsel of understanding, and cried, “Oh, Holly darling, please understand. I’ve been so lonely. It’s been a terrible time. I don’t want to wither away out here in squalor and poverty. Don’t condemn me.”

  Holly saw a glimmer of tears in her mother’s eyes and felt a true sympathy for her misery. “I don’t condemn you, Mother. I want you to be happy. It’s just that I can’t forget as easily as you can. Or forgive. I won’t interfere with your life if you show me the same respect.”

  Claudia brightened. “Oh, I will,” she said, “but if you’d just come to the party, Holly, and give yourself a chance to meet new people, you’d make me so happy. I’m having a gorgeous gown made for you. Green satin. It will be so lovely with your hair.”

  Holly shook her head. She did not want to go.

  Claudia persisted. “Jarvis is having the party to welcome the new officer assigned to command the Reconstruction army. It can be sort of a debut for you into Vicksburg society. Please?”

  Holly hated the desperation in her mother’s eyes. “I have no interest in meeting men, particularly Yankees. I’ve heard of Jarvis Bonham. He’s a carpetbagger. He came to Mississippi like a vulture after carrion, taking advantage of the starving. You do what you feel is right for you, Mother, and give me the same privilege, please.”

  Claudia shook her head fiercely. “I won’t let you have that opinion of Jarvis. It isn’t fair. He didn’t come here to get wealthy. He’s wealthy already from his many businesses. He wants to be my friend…our friend. He’s brought money to the South, not taken it out.” She paused, pushed a strand of hair back from her face, and gathered a little more nerve. “Very well. Perhaps it’s best I tell you now. Jarvis is buying Magnolia Hall for the taxes owed on it—taxes we can’t pay. He’s going to rebuild it, create a house even more magnificent than the original. He understands how much it means to me to know I won’t be losing my home to a stranger. Why, he’s even agreed to pay me a small sum so I won’t feel that I’ve lost everything.”

  Holly saw the hope in her mother’s eyes and knew Claudia was begging for understanding, but she couldn’t stand any more. “Mother, you can’t let him take our home. He’s nothing but a dirty, greedy carpetbagger!”

  “I have no choice. What else can I do? You should be grateful to Jarvis. He doesn’t have to give me anything. All he has to do is pay the taxes and he can take over the title to this property. There is nothing I can do about it.”

  Holly trembled with her rage. “He’s not taking Grandpa’s place! It’s mine! Grandpa left it to me. I promised him I’d never give it up, and I won’t. Maybe I can’t do anything about this place, but I’ll fight with everything I’ve got to keep what’s rightfully mine.”

  Claudia stiffened. “Can you pay the taxes, Holly? Jarvis says he’s willing to take that parcel as well, so he’ll have the entire estate.”

  “He’ll be damned to hell, and so will I, before I let that happen.”

  With burning, defiant glares, they turned away from each other. Finally, Holly was able to speak calmly. “There is no point in our discussing this any further. I’m not moving to Vicksburg, and I will find a way to pay the taxes on my land. I’m staying.”

  She started away, but Claudia caught her arm and spun her around. Never had Holly seen her mother so angry.

  “How do you propose to do that?” Claudia demanded furiously, but her daughter refused to say. She shook loose of Claudia and kept on going, outside, across the lawn, through the woods. Damn the Yankees, and damn Jarvis Bonham and his money.

  A king’s duty has never been so sweet…

  Maiden of the Winds

  © 2012 Janeen O’Kerry

  In order to please her oppressive parents and gain some freedom, Keavy agrees to marry a man she does not love, though it is to be in name only. She makes the journey to the neighboring kingdom and goes through with the ceremony—only to find that in this place it is considered the duty of the king to spend the wedding night with the bride. If she refuses, she will be sent home with her marriage declared invalid.

  Although shocked by this unknown custom, Keavy finds herself drawn to King Aengus, a powerful and handsome man with the eyes of an eagle. Now she has to make the choice of either returning home—husbandless—to her very troublesome family, or submitting to the First Night attentions of the king.

  Enjoy the following excerpt for Maiden of the Winds:

  The first winds of spring blew cold and fresh over the forests of eastern Eire, lifting a soaring golden eagle high on outstretched wings. The bird could see all of his kingdom and more from up there, and he took the time to inspect his every wheat field, beehive, and farmer’s house, every apple tree and glittering stream, and every grassy, flowering meadow. It was an annual task after the long, cold nights of winter.

  Reveling in his power, the eagle soared through the sky examining his kingly domain.

  A motion far below caught his sharp eye. There, running and dancing along a sunlit brook and weaving in and out of a row of silvery birch trees, was a group of young women. Each wore a soft linen gown of yellow or green or blue, and each carried a small basket. Their feet were bare in the soft new grass, and their hair streamed long and loose down slender backs.

  The eagle circled once above them and then flew down to perch high in one of the birches. The young women did not notice him as he watched and listened.

  Their laughter reached him first. They were five in number, all young, all tall, all slender, all beautiful—yet one of them stood out among even such a gathering as this.

  “Keavy! Keavy!” called the others, laughing as they tried to keep up with the long-legged girl who led them in their playful dance. “Wait for us! How will we ever find any primrose or watercress when you go so fast?”

  The one called Keavy stopped at last and turned to face them, her long fair hair shining with silvery light like a river in bright sunshine. She set down her basket in the grass and waited for them with her hands on her hips, frowning in mock impatience.

  “How can I stay still on a day like this?” she asked, then burst out giggling. She caught up her basket and dashed away again, her simple green gown swinging around her legs and billowing out behind her in the wind.

  The rest of the girls squealed with laughter and raced in pursuit. All of them ran until they reached an open, sunny spot by the edge of the stream, where they dropped down to sit breathless in the grass, surrounded by the calling and singing of the wrens and the larks.

  “The servants will be waiting for their watercress,” said one girl.

  “And the healers did ask for more primrose,” wa
rned another.

  “We said we would bring these things for them if only we might be allowed outside the fortress gates for a little while, so we’d better fetch them back if we ever want to go beyond the walls of Dun Mor again!”

  “They will have them, they will have them,” Keavy said with a laugh. “Though I’d have said I’d bring them all the gold in Eire if it meant being outside on a day such as this, after staying inside all winter!” She threw back her head so that her hair formed a shining pool in the grass behind her, and closed her eyes as the warmth of the spring sun caressed her face.

  The eagle spread his wings and flew to another birch tree, just above the place where the young women rested. None of them noticed he was there.

  “Are you ready to go on yet?” Keavy asked, reaching for her empty basket.

  But her companions only moaned in protest and stayed where they were. “It is not fair, Keavy—you are older than the rest of us and can go farther than we can!”

  Keavy only laughed again. “I have only just reached seventeen years. The rest of you are all sixteen, are you not? I am not so much older.”

  “But you are taller and stronger, no matter what your age, and you have tired me out!” complained another of the girls. All of them laughed.

  Still smiling, Keavy caught up her basket and got to her feet. “Stay here, then, and rest. I cannot sit still! I’ll get the watercress, and perhaps by the time I do that you will be ready to go on and look for primrose.”

  “Go, go!” they agreed. “But not too far.”

  “Not too far,” Keavy promised.

  As she started along the stream, her hair flowing down nearly to her ankles as she walked, the eagle left his perch and followed, wheeling high above, the trees in the bright blue sky. Even with his sharp eyes, it was sometimes difficult to see her as she walked. Through the sunlit trees far below, her skin was nearly as white as the bark of the birches, her gown nearly the same shade of green as the leaves and grass. Yet he could easily find her pale golden hair with its silvery highlights, and when at last she stopped to search out some watercress at the edge of the stream, the eagle flew down to a branch just above her.

  The sound of his great wings made her look up.

  Keavy nearly dropped her basket. “Oh,” she whispered, and took a step forward.

  The eagle folded his wings and remained very still.

  “Well, beautiful eagle,” Keavy said, also standing still. “I am happy to share this day with you. I find that I am often followed by wild birds, who seem to like my company for some reason—but they are usually wrens or larks or sparrows. Never have I been in the company of a golden eagle.”

  She took another careful step forward, and another, until she stood just in front of the low branch. The kingly bird was almost near enough to reach up and touch.

  The eagle watched her closely as she approached, tilting his head and fixing her with his deep amber stare. She was even more beautiful up close than she had been from the sky: tall and slender, graceful and fair, with light green eyes and her long hair streaming in the fresh spring winds. And she was still young enough to fly from him like the maiden she was if he were to show himself to her in his true form. But a creature of nature, even one as powerful as a golden eagle, would not frighten the maid at all.

  “I hope we have not intruded on your territory,” Keavy was saying. “My friends and I simply could not stay in any longer on a day such as this, the first day to bring a little of the warmth and sunlight of spring with it.” She smiled. “You seem to have felt the same way.”

  The bird drew himself up and ruffled his feathers, never taking his fierce gaze from her. Keavy took one last step forward. “I want to remember this,” she said, lifting one hand a little, as though she longed to reach out for him but dared not. “Already this was a special day, and now it is even more so…”

  Then Keavy did raise her hand, slowly and cautiously, clearly hoping to touch his soft golden-brown feathers. Yet she did not have to reach far. The eagle raised himself up and stretched out, extending the tip of one great wing straight toward Keavy’s face.

  She closed her eyes as the smooth dark gold feathers brushed gently over her cheek and the surface of her hair. Then the bird settled back onto his branch, still watching her.

  Keavy could not speak for a moment. She could only gaze back with a look of wonder in her green eyes, clearly understanding that she stood in the presence of something magical. “All my life I have heard the tales of such things as this,” she whispered. “Tales of those who had the power to change their shape if they chose—into a hunting wolf or a leaping salmon or even a great golden eagle. I can only believe that this must be what you are.”

  The bird ruffled his feathers again and opened and closed his sharp, curving beak, though he made no sound. “And if you have power enough to take the form of one so magnificent as the eagle, you must be a great druid—or maybe even a king.”

  The bird gave a short cry and cocked his head.

  “Always I will remember this,” Keavy said, her eyes shining, and took a step back.

  The eagle raised his wings as though ready to take flight; but instead he carefully preened the feathers of his right wing and then dropped one golden-brown feather to the fresh new grass below the birch tree. As Keavy watched, entranced, the eagle did the same with his left wing, and a second gold-brown feather fell to earth. At last the great bird ducked his head and ran his curving black beak through the plumage over his heart, and dropped a third and final feather to the grass.

  Then, with a loud cry, the eagle leaped up from his branch and climbed into the air on great strokes of his powerful wings. Keavy swung her head to follow his flight, her pale hair heavy as it swept behind her. The eagle circled overhead, waiting until she picked up the three feathers from the grass; and then, with a last cry of farewell, he soared away on the currents of the sky until he was lost from sight.

  Midnight Rose

  Patricia Hagan

  A mysterious beauty…a determined man…and the forbidden passion that unites them.

  Erin Sterling is a breathtakingly beautiful debutante of Virginia. The stepdaughter of a despised slave trader, Erin’s sympathies lie with those in bondage.

  From the moment Ryan Youngblood spies the raven-haired beauty at the annual Rose Ball, he knows he must have her. When his offer of protection is declined, Ryan does the unthinkable—he offers marriage.

  From the sweeping plantations of Virginia to the Underground Railroad movement in Philadelphia, Erin and Ryan succumb to their passions while fighting the evil forces determined to separate them at any cost.

  This Retro Romance reprint was originally published in April 1991 by HarperCollins.

  eBooks are not transferable.

  They cannot be sold, shared or given away as it is an infringement on the copyright of this work.

  This book is a work of fiction. The names, characters, places, and incidents are products of the writer’s imagination or have been used fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to persons, living or dead, actual events, locale or organizations is entirely coincidental.

  Samhain Publishing, Ltd.

  11821 Mason Montgomery Road Suite 4B

  Cincinnati OH 45249

  Midnight Rose

  Copyright © 2013 by Patricia Hagan

  ISBN: 978-1-61921-018-9

  Edited by Heather Osborn

  Cover by Valerie Tibbs

  All Rights Are Reserved. No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles and reviews.

  Originally Published by HarperCollins: April 1991

  First Samhain Publishing, Ltd. electronic publication: January 2013

  www.samhainpublishing.com

  Table of Contents

  Author’s Note

  Chapter One

  Chapter Two

  C
hapter Three

  Chapter Four

  Chapter Five

  Chapter Six

  Chapter Seven

  Chapter Eight

  Chapter Nine

  Chapter Ten

  Chapter Eleven

  Chapter Twelve

  Chapter Thirteen

  Chapter Fourteen

  Chapter Fifteen

  Chapter Sixteen

  Chapter Seventeen

  Chapter Eighteen

  Chapter Nineteen

  Chapter Twenty

  Chapter Twenty-One

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  Chapter Twenty-Four

  Chapter Twenty-Five

  Chapter Twenty-Six

  Chapter Twenty-Seven

  Chapter Twenty-Eight

  Chapter Twenty-Nine

  Chapter Thirty

  Chapter Thirty-One

  Chapter Thirty-Two

  Chapter Thirty-Three

  Chapter Thirty-Four

  About the Author

  Look for these titles by Patricia Hagan

  Also Available from Samhain Publishing, Ltd.

  Copyright Page

 

 

 


‹ Prev