Once a Cavalier
Excerpt
I have owned Cavalier King Charles
Spaniels for many years, and I am delighted to finally feature them in a
book!

Click here to visit my
Cavalier King Charles Spaniels page.
Larryn had learned over the years that many old, herbal cures had genuine
merit in application, though none replaced medical breakthroughs like
antibiotics and vaccines.
She could learn a lot here, she was certain, if she remained long
enough.
But did she want to stay? Her mind immediately focused--yet again--on
the Duke of Seldrake.
So what if she was turned on by the man? She wouldn’t
act on it. That, at least, she could prevent.
But she also didn’t want to like him. Or care about
him. Or admire his courage, or enjoy his sense of humor the few times he
had let it show.
But despite herself, she realized that the man was
infinitely more appealing than his portrait that had drawn her in the
first place. Sure, she had to get her libido under control around him.
Worse, her emotions had become even more entangled than they had been
when the man’s ghost had pleaded for help....
His ghost. The thought brought her up abruptly. "He’s
going to die," she told herself softly, looking at her earth-covered
hands. There was nothing she could do about that. Everyone died. But
this brave, arrogant, appealing man, who had so captivated her
imagination... and, she was beginning to fear, was beginning to capture
her heart--he was going to die centuries before she would ever be born.
"Oh, Seldrake," she whispered. "I can’t care for you.
I simply can’t."
But seeing the logic did not make it so.
She heard an excited bark, followed by another. When
she looked up, she saw Caddie and Augie hurtling themselves through the
open gate.
Open? But it had been closed. And Larryn heard the
rumble of a carriage, the clopping of horses’ hooves.
"Oh, no!" She ran toward where the dogs had
disappeared, her long skirts in her way. "Augie! Caddie! Come back!"
From the corner of her eye, she saw a movement at the
front of the house. She didn’t stop to see who had come out. She
strained to hear the dogs. If they were barking, they were still all
right.
Was that just one bark? In her mind, she could see a
small red and white form crushed beneath a horse’s hooves. "No!" she
screamed. She had reached the gate. She threw it open farther and raced
through.
Outside was the hard dirt road. Across from it were
fields of wheat tended by Seldrake’s tenants. She saw no one there.
"Caddie!" Larryn cried. She looked up the curving
road, then down. No dogs. At least neither had become road kill. But
where were they?
She heard a voice she couldn’t quite make out, the
crack of a whip, the creak of a carriage. A large brown horse appeared
from the side road. It plunged around the stone wall. "Dogs!" she
called, terrified. Were they around the corner? Had she missed them
because they were already lost? She ran toward the carriage--and froze.
The horse galloped straight toward her.
She waved her hands. "Hey!" She tried to dive off the
road. The stone wall was in the way. She had nowhere to go. The horse
kept coming....
Could she get to the far side of the road in time,
fling herself into its ditch?
The horse was nearly upon her.
And then... a bark sounded at her side, and then
another. Two small red and white shapes hurtled themselves toward the
horse, yapping and nipping at the hooves.
The horse reared. The small carriage it pulled nearly
toppled. The dogs’ diversion gave Larryn enough time to throw herself
across the road and into the ditch.
The driver got the horse under control. Gathering
speed, the carriage continued down the road. It wasn’t large, but horse
and vehicle could have done one unprotected person a lot of damage.
Larryn hadn’t made out the driver, who was hidden beneath a cloak.
"Larryn!" A deep, masculine voice shouted from the
gate. In moments, Seldrake knelt beside her. He wore soft, shapeless
leather shoes with no stockings beneath his breeches, and his billowing
white shirt was open at the throat. "Are you injured?" His hands ran
down her arms, still sheathed in her borrowed shift. She knew he was
examining her for broken bones, yet again his touch electrified her.
"I’m fine," she tried to say calmly, but her voice
quivered. "The dogs--"
"I shall flog them for placing you in such danger."
The anger in his voice made her shudder.
"No. No, they saved me. They scared the horse, and it
hesitated enough for me to get out of the way."
"Who was the driver? Did he not stop to ensure your
safety?"
Larryn shook her head. "No. In fact..." She hesitated.
"What?" he demanded.
"I’m probably wrong, but I had a feeling that... that
the driver intended to run me down. There was no hesitation, and I heard
a whip crack, and--"
"Describe the carriage." Seldrake spoke through
gritted teeth. "I arrived too late to see, with that bend in the road."
"It was smaller than the one we rode in yesterday. It
had only one horse."
"Was it a carrier’s cart, a post coach or a private
coach?"
"I... I’m sorry. I don’t know."
The Duke’s blue eyes blazed, as though his fury was
turned on her. "Where in Hades are you from, Larryn Maeller, that you do
not even recognize the type of coach that nearly killed you? Do not tell
me ‘Scotland.’ You have admitted that is a lie."
She laughed bitterly. "Maybe I really am from Hades."
Tears filled her eyes, and she looked away.
She felt his hand beneath her chin. Firmly, her face
was turned so that she faced him.
"You are truly unhurt?" This time, Seldrake’s voice
was quiet, yet there was a tremor in it as well.
"I’m all right." But she was crying nonetheless.
In moments, she was lifted to her feet and snugged
close against Seldrake’s hard chest, the top of her head resting beneath
his chin. He held her tightly until her crying stopped.
"I’m sorry," she whispered.
"As am I, that you should be so endangered while in my
charge." Her chest was still against his, and the vibration of his voice
sang through her entire body.
"I’m not in your charge," she contradicted, pulling
back. "I’m--"
But she did not finish, for her mouth was suddenly
occupied as Seldrake kissed her.
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