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Kingsley, Katherine Song from the Sea ISBN 13: 9780440237440

Song from the Sea - Softcover

 
9780440237440: Song from the Sea
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In a spellbinding tale that sweeps from a rugged Greek island to the scandal and intrigue of Regency England, bestselling author Katherine Kingsley gives us a man haunted by the past, a woman without a future--and a seduction that begins amid the howling winds of a storm-tossed sea.

Grown to womanhood on the lush Greek island of Corfu, Callista Melbourne reluctantly sails to England to honor part of her father’s dying wish, but is also determined to defy his final request and escape the dreaded fate of an arranged marriage. Before she reaches the shores of England a fierce storm blows her from the deck of the ship and into the sea to face seemingly certain death. Yet here she was now, ensconced in a bedroom in Stanton Abbey, staring into the eyes of a mesmerizing stranger--without the slightest idea of where he’d come from...or of who she was.

To Adam Carlyle, Fifth Marquess of Vale, she was the most captivating creature he had ever pulled from the sea. She called herself Calliope, but he soon uncovered her true identity. To save her from marrying a scheming fortune hunter, the widowed nobleman broke his own sacred vow never to risk his heart again. But how could he protect his new bride from the dangers of his own past...or himself from a scandalous passion that would tempt him to risk everything to answer the call of Callie’s love?

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Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.:
April 20, 1818

Hythe

Kent, England


Adam Carlyle, fifth Marquess of Vale, seventh earl of Stanton, and ninth Viscount of Redlynsdale was determined to kill himself, and he wasn't about to let a little foul weather get in his way. Indeed, he'd waited for a day when the wind would be blowing from the northeast. What he hadn't planned on was having the wind suddenly pick up into near-gale conditions, nor had he planned on having to fight the angry, churning sea.

Wiping the fierce salt spray off his face with his forearm, he shielded his eyes and glared through the gray haze, trying to work out the best way to navigate the next deep trough ahead. He'd gladly have let the sea swamp the rowboat then and there and put him out of his misery, for his back and shoulders burned painfully from the effort of pulling at the oars, but he had his reasons for forging on: namely, his cousin Harold. His hatred for Harold was second only to his desire to die, and he'd be damned if he was going to make it easy for Harold to inherit the marquessate after Adam was gone.

Therefore, despite the inconvenience, Adam was going to make good and sure that when he drowned he would do so as far from England as possible. He intended the rowboat to sink to the bottom of the Channel and his body to wash up on the shores of France as another nameless victim of the capricious sea. Harold would be a long time waiting for a final declaration of his cousin's death and the chance to get his grasping, greedy fingers on the twenty thousand acres of Stanton Abbey and the fortune that went along with it.

Smiling grimly, Adam relished the thought of how irked Harold would be. But then Adam had spent nearly an entire lifetime doing everything he possibly could to irk Harold, and for the most part succeeding at it.

Just the thought of Harold and his smug fat face gave Adam renewed vigor. He wrapped his hands more tightly around the handles of the oars and dug the blades back into the water, pulling then forward with all his strength. His only regret about dying was that he wouldn't be around to see that smug fat face when Harold received word from Adam's solicitor that Adam had not vanished for good, which would be everyone's initial assumption, but merely gone on a prolonged trip around the world. By God, Adam had put enough time and effort into planning the ruse so that Harold would be many years chasing down false leads before Adam was officially declared dead and Harold finally got his hands on Stanton.

Adam snorted with disgust at the thought, then renewed his grip on the handles of the oars and pulled again, turning the boat slightly sideways to pitch over the crest of yet another wave, getting a cold slap of water in the face for his trouble.

Peace, he thought, gritting his teeth against the strain and willing his aching arms to dig harder. Peace. A complete absence of pain awaited him, no more guilt; no more sleepless nights spent cursing a God he didn't even believe in. He might just as well have blamed the barn cat for all the good that had done him.

Suddenly exhausted, he slowly laid the oars down inside the rowboat and carefully unclenched his numb hands, lowering his head and wrapping his sore arms around his knees as he struggled to catch his labored breath. He had finished his job. The rest was up to the sea--the sea, and the God he didn't believe in. Maybe for once, mercy would prevail. He counted on it.

The little boat bobbed and rolled as if freed to go where it would. Adam hardly cared as long as it didn't go backward, but there was little chance of that given the strength of the current that pulled them out toward France and toward welcome oblivion, for sooner or later a large enough wave would come along and sink the boat, taking its grateful passenger down with it.

His breathing finally slowed and he gingerly lowered himself into the nest of the hull, leaned his back against the seat, closed his eyes, and prepared to die. That wasn't difficult. He'd been as good as dead these two interminable years past and so had no emotional preparation to make. His last conscious thought was that he rather liked the idea of his mortal remains becoming fish food. As the vicar was so fond of saying, one should always give back. With a little luck the fish would make a feast of his flesh and there would be little left to make possible any identification of his body.

Something jolted Adam out of the deep slumber he'd fallen into. A song, that's what it was: a faint, lovely, high-pitched song that sounded like a soprano solo in a heavenly choir. Disoriented, he rubbed his eyes, wondering if this was the heaven he'd scoffed for the last two years and now found himself residing in. Just as quickly he banished that notion, for he was wet, cold, and thirsty, and every muscle in his body ached. Worse, he was still in the blasted rowboat, which was proving most annoyingly to be unsinkable. At least the wind had somewhat abated, so he wasn't being blasted on top of everything else.

Rubbing his sore, swollen eyes again, he peered through the fog, looking for the source of this song, and then somewhere in the dim recesses of his blurred mind he remembered the Sirens, the sea nymphs whose song lured sailors to shipwreck. As he recalled, Odysseus escaped them by tying himself to a mast and stopping up his men's ears. Well, he had no intention of stopping up his ears. Here at last was his undoing, and he was going for it hell-bent. He might be an atheist, but he had no arguments with the ancient Greeks. He was just about to settle back to be lulled peacefully to his death when he bolted upright, unable to believe the sight before him.

To his utter astonishment, a clipper ship appeared out of the fog, not thirty feet away from him. In one clear moment he registered not only the source of the song but the singer herself, who balanced precariously on the stern of the ship, hands outstretched as if entreating the sea to take her.

That he understood well enough, but what he couldn't comprehend was why she was singing so joyously.

He didn't have the same feeling about his own impending suicide, but then he didn't really have any feelings about it at all other than sheer relief. Or maybe, he mused, she was leaping to her death to avoid marriage to some overweight windbag like Harold. Yes, that must be it, he decided. An albatross, or a bird large enough to make the image appropriate, winged directly over her head. It was probably a Great Black-backed Gull, but still, he thought it a perfect harbinger of doom, a fitting touch to complete the picture. His Classics tutor would have been most impressed.

What a fine woman, Adam thought, settling lazily back to watch the spectacle of her grand finale. No nonsense with her. A quick leap into the sea and the deed would be done. Of course, she probably didn't have to deal with the complicated problems of trying to keep a large estate from a pesky cousin for as long as possible.

Suddenly the ship lurched as a wave buffeted it from its starboard side and the object of his admiration went flying straight off the stern. The dive was not the swanlike affair that he'd anticipated, but a great business of arms and legs flapping, skirts flying overhead, all punctuated by a loud, prolonged shriek. She struck the side of the ship on her plummet downward, and the force of the impact threw her sideways and out like a rag doll flung carelessly into space. Only a moment later her limp body plopped into the sea.

She surfaced about twenty seconds later, long strands of hair streaming around her face like seaweed, her mouth open and gasping soundlessly like a landed fish, the bird diving around her, making enough noise to rouse an army.

Adam heaved himself to his feet, balancing himself against the rocking of his little boat, wondering if he hadn't been mistaken in her intent. She didn't look like someone who was happy to be consigned to the depths. Instead, the pathetic cries for help she'd started bleating, combined with the wave of her hands over her head toward the direction of the disappearing ship, made him wonder if she meant to be in the water at all.

With a sinking heart he decided probably not, which left him in a most awkward and unpleasant position. Since no one on the ship had noticed the woman's plunge over the stern, that left solely him in the position of rescuer, and he knew he'd better rescue her fast.

"Why can't anything ever go right?" he muttered through parched lips as he picked up the oars and dug in, rowing as fast as he could toward the woman whom he'd decided was no more than an utter idiot.

Clearly he'd have to postpone his death. Adam had never been so annoyed in his life.

"Home, sweet bloody home." Adam had never expected to see Stanton again, but he felt an enormous relief when he finally spotted the lights of the house shining like a beacon from the dark stretch of coastline and guiding him safely to shore.

He groaned as he lifted the limp body of his bedraggled passenger from the rowboat. The bird that had made a complete nuisance of itself for the three full hours it had taken to get back to the Stanton boathouse made one last low circle, emitted a loud series of piercing cries, and headed back to the sea, as if now that it had seen its charge safely on land it had consigned her to Adam's care.

"Don't count on it, you mangy excuse for feathers," he muttered. He didn't know what he was going to do with the girl, since she couldn't be bothered to wake up and tell him who she was or where she belonged, but he reckoned his housekeeper could deal with the immediate situation. After that, he'd send her on her way and wash his hands of the creature. The last thing he needed was someone making any sort of demands on him. He'd rescued her from certain death and owed her nothing else.

His position now clear in his head, he readjusted her weight, threw her over his shoulder, and hauled her up to the main house.

The lights shon...

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  • PublisherDell
  • Publication date2003
  • ISBN 10 0440237440
  • ISBN 13 9780440237440
  • BindingPaperback
  • Number of pages352
  • Rating

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