The Knight's Pledge
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- £4.49
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- £4.49
Publisher Description
The destiny of three proud sons—and one courageous daughter—of a notorious criminal is revealed at last in medieval Scotland.
The evil legacy of a cursed Northumberland manor ensnares Effie Annesley when her young son is kidnapped from ravaged Darlyrede House. To save him, Effie must fulfill a King’s decree: bring in her fugitive father, Thomas Annesley, to face execution for his alleged crimes. It’s a search fraught with emotion as Effie races to Scotland, homeland of her warrior half-brothers, accompanied by a colorful band of thieves—and one determined knight . . .
Sir Lucan Montague has never been closer to delivering Annesley and reclaiming his inheritance. But his victory turns hollow as he comes to see strong, resilient Effie for who she truly is—and as distrust turns to healing passion. Returning to court to make the ultimate sacrifice, will love and loyalty conquer a maze of lies and treachery that threatens to destroy them all?
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Grothaus's gripping fourth Sons of Scotland medieval romance (after The Scot's Oath) unites a knight with the daughter of an alleged criminal. Sir Lucan Montague's steward, Rolf, entreats him to help his acquaintance Effie Annesley, after her son, George, is kidnapped. Despite his past violent run-ins with Effie, who's spent 15 years living in the woods among a band of outlaws, Lucan reluctantly agrees, and a ransom note leads the unlikely duo to London. All is not as it seems, however, as they learn that King Henry's own forces kidnapped George, and the king threatens to make the boy a ward of the crown if Effie and Lucan fail to deliver Effie's outlaw father, Thomas, to justice. The pair travel to Scotland in search of him, but as Lucan gets to know Effie, he stops thinking his mission is to capture a wanted man and begins to view it as a quest to help the woman who's captured his heart—whatever the cost. Grothaus packs in the intrigue as her nicely developed characters navigate a world where the line between right and wrong is often blurred in pursuit of survival. Readers won't want to put this down.