Read an extract from Reclaimed by her rebel knight by Jenni Fletcher.
It is my pleasure to be able to present an extract from the recent release from Jenni Fletcher, Reclaimed by her rebel knight. Many thanks to Rachel’s Random Resources, the author and publisher for this opportunity.
About the book
Married to a perfect stranger - Reunited with her warrior husband
When Constance inherited her father’s lands she had no choice but to marry cold-hearted Matthew Wintour. He left her for the battlefield without even a wedding night. Five years later Matthew has returned—a valiant knight! But Constance is no longer a frightened girl. And this time she must reach out to discover the honourable man behind the armour and what pleasures await them in the marriage bed…
Author Bio
Jenni Fletcher is Scottish by birth, but now lives in Yorkshire where she writes Medieval, Roman, Victorian and Regency romance novels. She studied English at Cambridge and Hull University and now teaches Creative Writing at a small university in the north of England. Her favourite Jane Austen novel is Persuasion and her favourite Brontë is Anne. If she had to choose a romantic hero it would be John Thornton, but maybe that’s just because she’s northern.
Extract
Lincoln, England—November 1214
Constance crouched down beside her cousin, pressing her eye
to a gap in the slats of the gallery railing above the great hall. In the gauzy
light of the fireside below, she studied each of the new arrivals in turn,
waiting for some flash of recognition or long-distant memory to stir. None did.
‘So?’ Isabella nudged her in the ribs. ‘Which one of them
is he?’
‘I don’t know.’
‘But he’s your husband! How can you not know?’
‘Because I only met him once five years ago and I was only
fourteen at the time! It was before I came to live here, remember?’
‘Oh, so it was…’ Isabella giggled. ‘I couldn’t believe that
you were only a year older than me and already married. And to Matthew Wintour
of all people!’
‘Sir Matthew now, Uncle says.’
‘Whoever he is, I’ve been pestering Father to find me a
husband ever since.’
‘I know.’ Constance threw her cousin a half-affectionate,
half-exasperated look. ‘I’ve had to listen, but at least you’re betrothed now.’
‘Finally. You know, he might not be as well connected or
important as your husband, but I think I’d recognise Tristan anywhere, even
after five years.’
‘Maybe because you want to be married. I don’t.’
‘Well, it’s a little late to do anything about that, but
you must remember something about him. What about his hair? His eyes? Was he
dark or fair?’
‘Fair… I think.’
‘You think? Didn’t you spend any time alone with him?’
‘No. There was a short ceremony and then he and his father
left. I never saw either of them again.’
She lifted a hand to her mouth, chewing nervously on her
fingernails. As far as she recalled, she and her so-called husband hadn’t
exchanged a single private word on their wedding day. They’d barely even looked
at each other, except for one brief, disconcerting moment when he’d slipped the
gold band over her finger. Of course he’d been older than she was, around the
same age she was now at the time, but he’d barely acknowledged her existence
while she’d been too nervous to throw more than a few tentative glances in his
direction. They’d simply stood side by side, reciting their vows like the
strangers they were. It was no wonder she didn’t recognise him!
Even so, Isabella’s questions were making her feel more and
more uncomfortable. Maybe she ought to remember more about the man she’d vowed
to spend the rest of her life with, but then she hadn’t particularly wanted to.
Truth be told, she’d done almost everything she could to put him out of her
mind since their wedding day, as if by doing so she could somehow forget the
fact it had ever happened. The only thing she’d never been able to forget was
the icy, almost glacial impression he’d left behind. Of all the men her uncle
might have chosen for her to marry, why had it had to be him? She’d regretted
her vows ever since, dreading the day when he’d come back to claim her.
But now he had and her nails were already chewed down to
stubs.
‘That was really all that happened?’ Isabella sounded as if
she didn’t believe her. ‘He never wrote or sent gifts?’
‘No, you know that he didn’t.’ She glanced over her shoulder
quizzically. After sharing a bedchamber for five years, surely they both knew
it would have been impossible to hide any gifts?
‘Not necessarily.’ Isabella shrugged. ‘I know that you
don’t like to talk about him. I thought maybe you were just being secretive.
Either that or you’d thrown them away.’
‘Well, I wasn’t and I didn’t. I haven’t heard anything from
him since our wedding day. All I know is that he’s been away fighting for the
King in Normandy. Uncle says this is the first time that he’s set foot in
England in five years.’
‘He still could have sent a few messages.’ Isabella sounded
offended on her behalf. ‘How strange.’
‘Mmm…’
Constance made a non-committal murmur. Strictly speaking,
Isabella was right, he ought to have sent word occasionally. Not that she’d
wanted him to, but since he apparently hadn’t forgotten about her existence
then he could at least have sent a few gentle reminders of his own, some token
attempts at gallantry at least, instead of turning up at her uncle’s manor with
barely a week’s worth of notice and simply expecting her to be ready. Then she
might have accustomed herself to the idea of being a wife again, as much as she
ever could anyway. The only good thing about his return was that it meant she
could finally go home… Five years away from Lacelby was far too long.
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