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This is the first edition of our new Saturday feature post, Bring It Back(list). Every Saturday a Here Be Magic author will post one their backlist stories. Come join us and get reacquainted with an old favorite or find a new story we know you'll love, after all, that's what we write!
The Here Be Magic Authors
The Story Behind:
Knight of Runes was published in 2011. I didn't plan to write. I always had stories in my head, but I never thought to write them down. A friend of mine mentioned she was writing a romance story. I offered to help, brainstorm or beta read, whatever she needed. We brainstormed and I kept coming up with ideas for a historical time travel. She was writing an erotic fantasy. While the stories didn't quite work together the brainstorming and writing got me started. While she went off visiting colleges with her daughter and training for the New York marathon, I wrote my story. A year later I sold it to Carina Press. Arik and Rebeka are the hero and heroine of my heart.
Back Cover Copy:
When Lord Arik, a druid knight, finds Rebeka Tyler
wandering his lands without protection, he swears to keep her safe. But Rebeka
can take care of herself. When Arik sees her clash with a group of attackers
using a strange fighting style, he's intrigued.
Rebeka is no ordinary
seventeenth-century woman—she's travelled back from the year 2011, and she
desperately wants to return to her own time. She poses as a scholar sent by the
king to find out what's killing Arik's land. But as she works to decode the
ancient runes that are the key to solving this mystery and sending her home,
she finds herself drawn to the charismatic and powerful Arik.
As Arik and Rebeka fall in love,
someone in Arik's household schemes to keep them apart, and a dark druid with a
grudge prepares his revenge. Soon Rebeka will have to decide whether to return
to the future or trust Arik with the secret of her time travel and her heart.
Excerpt:
England ~ May, 1605
I should not have stayed away from the Manor so
long. Something stirs. Lord Arik’s eyes swept the surrounding area as he and
his three riders escorted the wagon with the old tinker and the woman. They
sped through the forest as fast as the rain-slicked trail would allow. Unable
to shake the ominous feeling of being watched, Arik remained alert. At length,
the horses winded, he slowed the pace as they neared the Stone River.
“The forest is flooded. I suspect the Stone will be
as well. Willem, ride on ahead and let me know what we face at the crossing.”
Willem did his lord’s bidding and quickly returned
with his report. “The river ahead runs fast, m’lord. The bridge is in disrepair
and cannot be crossed.”
Arik raised his hand and brought the group to a
halt. “Doward,” he said to the old tinker. “We must make repairs. There’s no
room for the wagon at the river’s edge. You and the woman stay here and set up
camp. Be ready to join us at the bridge when I send word.”
Logan, Arik’s brother, spoke up. “I’ll keep watch
here and help Doward and Rebeka.”
Arik nodded and, with the others, continued the half
mile to the bridge.
“I am not pleased with this new delay.”
“It can’t be helped, m’lord. We would make better
time without the wagon,” said Simon.
“I’ll not leave Doward and the woman unescorted
through the forest, not with what we’ve heard lately. We’ll have to drive hard
to make up the lost time.”
The frame of the bridge stood solid, the planks
scattered everywhere, clogging the banks and shallows. Arik leaped from his
horse onto the frame to begin the repairs.
“Hand me that planking.” Arik pointed to the nearest
board.
Simon grabbed the plank and examined it. “Sir, these boards have been deliberately removed.”
Simon grabbed the plank and examined it. “Sir, these boards have been deliberately removed.”
Arik took the board and lifted it before him. An
arrow whooshed out of the trees, and slammed into the plank’s edge. Willem
pulled his axe from his belt as Arik and Simon drew their swords. In a fluid,
practiced movement, Willem spun and found his mark. He sent his axe flying. The
archer fell into the river and was swept downstream, Willem’s axe still lodged
in his forehead. A dozen or more attackers broke through the stand of trees.
Arik tossed the board into the river and readied his
sword. The enemy was poorly dressed carrying clubs and knives. There was only
one sword among them. The leader. Arik’s target.
“They plan to pin us here at the river’s edge. Come,
we’ll take the offensive before they form up.” They moved forward, driving a
wedge through the enemy’s ragged line, forcing what little formation they had
to scatter and fight, each man for himself.
A man, club in hand, rushed at Arik. Before the
attacker could bring his weapon into play, Arik pivoted around him. He raised
his sword high, and slammed the hilt’s steel pommel squarely on the man’s head.
Arik moved on before the man’s lifeless body dropped to the ground.
Willem and Simon, on either side of Arik, advanced
through the melee. Their swift continuous swordplay moved smoothly from one
stroke to the next, whipping through the air. They slashed on the downswing and
again on the backswing, sweeping their weapons back into position to repeat the
killing sequence. The knight and his soldiers steadily advanced, punishing any
man who dared to come near them.
“For Honor!” Logan’s war cry carried from the small
camp to Arik’s ears.
Arik stiffened. Both camps were now under attack. He
pulled his blade from an attacker’s chest. The body crumpled to the
blood-soaked ground. Arik breathed deeply, the coppery taste of blood in the
air. “For Honor!” he bellowed in answer. His men echoed his call, arms thrown
wide, muscles quivering, the berserker’s rage overtaking them.
The remaining attackers paled and fled headlong into
the forest.
Motioning to his men to follow, Arik raced toward
the camp. He could hear the shouts, and cursed himself for not seeing the
danger. He crested the hill and came to an abrupt halt.
Logan’s sword ripped through the air as he protected
Doward. The tinker drew his short blade and did as much damage as he could. But
it was the woman Arik noticed. Her skirt hiked up, she twirled her walking
stick like a weapon with an expertise that left him slack-jawed. She dispatched
the attackers, one by one, in a deadly well-practiced dance. A man rushed
toward her, knife in hand. The sneer on his face didn’t match the fear in his
eyes. She stepped out of his line of attack, extended her stick to her side,
and holding it with both hands swept the weapon forward, striking the attacker
across the bridge of his nose. Blood exploded from his face in an arc of fine
spray as his head snapped back. Droplets dusted her face creating an illusion
of bright red freckles. As he fell, she reversed her swing and caught him hard
behind his knees. He went down on his back, spread-eagled. She swung her stick
over her head and landed a precise and disabling blow to his forehead that
knocked him unconscious.
As she spun to face the next threat her eyes
captured Arik’s and held. In the space of an instant, time slowed to a crawl.
Her hair slowly loosened from its pins and swirled out around her. His breath
caught and his heartbeat quickened as a rapturous surge raced through his body.
Something eternal and familiar, with a sense of longing, unsettled him. In the
next heartbeat, she tore her eyes away, leaving him empty. Time resumed its
normal pace. Another attacker lay at her feet.
Arik joined the fight.
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