Wednesday, 11 February 2026

Set in a world of seafaring warriors, political alliances, and ancient magic, the novel invites readers into a bold and dangerous age shaped by fate and ambition.

 


Dragon of Denmark (Valiant Vikings, Book 1) by Jennifer Ivy Walker launches an epic Viking saga that blends history, myth, and romance. Set in a world of seafaring warriors, political alliances, and ancient magic, the novel invites readers into a bold and dangerous age shaped by fate and ambition. Awarded the Bronze Medal for Yarde Book Promotions Book of the Year 2025 in the Romance category, Dragon of Denmark stands as a powerful opening to the Valiant Vikings series and a standout Viking romance.



✔️ Historical Viking romance

✔️ Norse mythology and magic

✔️ Powerful warlord hero

✔️ Prophecy, fate, and forbidden desire

✔️ Paranormal and fantasy elements








Check out the blurb:

Skårde the Scourge, bastard son of the Danish king
Harald Bluetooth, is a fierce Viking warlord who earned the prestigious title Dragon of Denmark through victorious battles and lucrative Viking raids. When his royal father announces that Skårde will forge a Viking alliance through an arranged marriage to the daughter of Richard the Fearless, the Dragon of Denmark considers the voyage to Normandy an infuriating banishment.

Illegitimate daughter of Richard the Fearless, the Viking Duke of Normandy, Ylva is a Druid priestess and Celtic healer with the otherworldly gift of sight. She learns that she must leave her Breton village behind and travel to Normandy, where she will marry the Viking brute that she has foreseen in a terrifying vision.

When the Frankish king, determined to drive the Vikings from Normandy, attacks and seizes Richard’s clifftop fortress, the Dragon of Denmark must ally with Ljósálfar Light Elves, a Viking völva with powerful seiðr magic, and a vitki-- a shapeshifting sorcerer who can assume the form of a falcon--to reclaim the ducal palace.

Dragon of Denmark is a sizzling, scintillating blend of historical fiction, Norse mythology, paranormal fantasy, and steamy Viking romance!


Step into an epic Viking romance today. Dragon of Denmark is only £0.99 on Kindle for a limited time, also available in paperback, and free to read with Kindle Unlimited. Pick up your copy HERE.


Enthralled with legends of medieval knights and ladies, dark fairy tales and fantasies about Druids, wizards and magic, Jennifer Ivy Walker always dreamed of becoming a writer. She fell in love with French in junior high school, continuing her study of the language throughout college, spending summers in France as a foreign exchange student, exploring medieval castles and troglodyte caves in the Loire Valley, sites of pilgrimage such as le Mont-Saint-Michel, eventually becoming a high school teacher and college professor of French.

As a high school teacher, she took her students every year to the annual French competition, where they performed a play she had written, "Yseult la Belle et Tristan la Bête"--an imaginative blend of the medieval French legend of "Tristan et Yseult" and the fairy tale "Beauty and the Beast", enhanced with fantasy elements of a Celtic fairy and a wicked witch.

Her debut novel, "The Wild Rose and the Sea Raven"--the first of a trilogy-- is a blend of her love for medieval legends, the romantic French language, and paranormal fantasy. It is a retelling of the medieval French romance of "Tristan et Yseult", interwoven with Arthurian myth, dark fairy tales from the enchanted Forest of Brocéliande, and otherworldly elements such as Avalonian Elves, Druids, forest fairies and magic.

Explore her realm of Medieval French Fantasy. She hopes her novels will enchant you.

Connect with Jennifer:


Apollo’s Raven is for readers who believe the most powerful romances are the ones that should never exist.

 


Valentine’s Day is often wrapped in roses and promises, yet some love stories are born in defiance—shaped by danger, secrecy, and impossible choices.

Apollo’s Raven is for readers who believe the most powerful romances are the ones that should never exist. It explores the quiet intensity of forbidden love, where the heart refuses to bend to duty, loyalty, or the lines drawn by war.


✔️ A love story shaped by danger and longing


✔️ Romance that grows in secrecy and sacrifice


✔️ When the heart chooses what the world forbids


✔️ Ideal for Valentine’s Day readers who want more than a fairytale






Check out the blurb:

A Celtic warrior princess is torn between her
forbidden love for the enemy and duty to her people.

AWARD-WINNING APOLLO'S RAVEN sweeps you into an epic Celtic tale of forbidden love, mythological adventure, and political intrigue in Ancient Rome and Britannia. In 24 AD British kings hand-picked by Rome to rule are fighting each other for power. King Amren's former queen, a powerful Druid, has cast a curse that Blood Wolf and the Raven will rise and destroy him. The king's daughter, Catrin, learns to her dismay that she is the Raven and her banished half-brother is Blood Wolf. Trained as a warrior, Catrin must find a way to break the curse, but she is torn between her forbidden love for her father's enemy, Marcellus, and loyalty to her people. She must summon the magic of the Ancient Druids to alter the dark prophecy that threatens the fates of everyone in her kingdom.

Will Catrin overcome and eradicate the ancient curse? Will she be able to embrace her forbidden love for Marcellus? Will she cease the war between Blood Wolf and King Amren and save her kingdom?


This Valentine’s Day, lose yourself in a love story that dares to defy fate. Apollo’s Raven is available for just 0.99 on #Kindle for a limited time. Also available in audiobook, paperback, and hardback. Pick up your copy HERE.



Award-winning author, Linnea Tanner, weaves Celtic tales of love, magical adventure, and political intrigue in Ancient Rome and Britannia. Since childhood, she has passionately read about ancient civilizations and mythology. She is particularly interested in the enigmatic Celts, who were reputed as fierce warriors and mystical Druids.

Linnea has extensively researched ancient and medieval history, mythology, and archaeology and has traveled to sites described within each of her books in the Curse of Clansmen and Kings series. Books released in her series include Apollo’s Raven (Book 1), Dagger’s Destiny (Book 2), Amulet’s Rapture (Book 3), and Skull’s Vengeance (Book 4). She has also released the historical fiction short story Two Faces of Janus.  

A Colorado native, Linnea attended the University of Colorado and earned both her bachelor’s and master’s degrees in chemistry. She lives in Fort Collins with her husband and has two children and six grandchildren.



When the Circus Comes to Town...




Set during the sweltering summer of 1936, The Muleskinner and the King by J. D. Porter is a historical novel that places spectacle alongside suspicion. Framed by the arrival of a travelling circus, the story engages with themes of fear, prejudice, and the search for scapegoats during a period of social and economic strain. This post explores the historical context of the novel and the role the circus plays within it.


✔️ Historical fiction set in 1930s America

✔️ A travelling circus backdrop

✔️ Mystery woven into a period setting

✔️ Themes of prejudice and injustice

✔️ A story told from the margins of society







Check out the blurb:

In the blistering summer of 1936, the traveling circus rolls into Atlanta, dazzling the city with brilliant lights, exotic animals, and the promise of escape. But beneath the spectacle, something sinister stalks the shadows. A string of brutal murders has shaken the city, and the authorities-hungry for quick answers-fix their sights on an innocent young man.

Buddy Griffith, the circus's horse wrangler and elephant man, prefers the steady company of animals to the chaos of people. Yet when fear threatens to shutter the circus and injustice looms, he's drawn into the mystery against his will. Navigating the uneasy divide between circus life and a city simmering with tension, Buddy must confront both the real killer and the dangerous prejudice rising around them.

As the crowds thin, the threats mount, and the noose tightens, Buddy races to uncover the truth-before the circus loses its future, and an innocent man loses his life.


Step into a gripping historical mystery set beneath the lights of a travelling circus. The Muleskinner and the King is available now in ebook and paperback, offering a compelling blend of suspense, atmosphere, and period detail. If you enjoy historical fiction with dark undertones and high stakes, you won’t want to miss this one. Pick up your copy HERE.



J. D. (Doug) Porter
developed his love of nature growing up in the piney woods and mangrove swamps of Florida’s gulf coast. He nurtured that passion for more than forty years as he managed parks, zoos, and museums while traveling to such places as the Amazon rain-forest, the Galapagos Islands, the African savanna, and the Arctic tundra. He retired at the end of 2015 to pursue his passion as a writer. He is a zoologist and educator who has a bachelor’s degree in zoology and a master’s in adult education. Doug blogs on a range of subjects related to animals, nature, and the environment and has been a regular guest columnist for the Albany Herald newspaper. Doug’s wife, Karen, is an artist and a professional librarian who works as a library media specialist for an elementary school.



Tuesday, 10 February 2026

An interview with Heather Walrath



In this interview, Heather Walrath, author of The Diva’s Daughter, reflects on her long-standing interest in history, music, and the moral complexities of the interwar years. Set against the cultural worlds of Vienna and Munich in the early 1930s, the novel explores art, identity, and conscience at a moment of rising political extremism. The conversation that follows considers the historical research behind the book, the challenges of writing about the rise of Nazism, and the enduring responsibility of artists during times of social and political upheaval.


Mary Anne: What first drew you to historical fiction, and how did that interest eventually lead you to write The Diva’s Daughter?


My love of reading, writing and history began during elementary school. Whenever a new American Girl book was released, the school librarian would diligently set it aside for me. I quickly discovered that historical fiction can bring the past to life in a way that is both engaging and emotionally compelling. My high school history teacher also played a significant role in encouraging my dream to one day become a historical author.

While there are many historical novels that focus on World War II, there are fewer that specifically focus on the volatile interwar period during which the Nazis rose to power. In writing The Diva’s Daughter, I wanted to shed light upon the dark realities of this era in a way that is accessible to both regular readers of historical fiction and those who might not usually read this genre, or who may feel intimidated by dense works of non-fiction.


Mary Anne: Your novel vividly portrays the dangers artists faced under the rising Nazi regime. What research or historical sources most influenced the way you imagined those threats and pressures?


My novel is inspired in part by the true story of renowned opera singer Lotte Lehmann, who mentors my fictional heroine Angelika in The Diva’s Daughter. During the Nazi era, party officials pressured Madame Lehmann and other performers to form alliances with them. Through the eyes of Angelika, I was able to explore the dangers and decisions these artists faced, including questions about what constitutes complicity or resistance. 

Firsthand accounts from the time, along with later assessments by historians, played a key role in my research, and I took care to accurately reflect the fractious society these artists were forced to navigate. In some cases, there are differing opinions as to whether certain artists truly opposed the Nazis’ hateful ideology at the time or whether they later attempted to alter their stories. In these instances, I’ve presented elements from the historical record in a way that allows readers to draw their own conclusions. 


Mary Anne: Angelika grows up in the shadow of a famous opera singer. How did you approach writing about inherited talent, expectation, and the struggle to form one’s own identity?


Angelika’s struggle to honor her late mother’s memory while simultaneously forging her own path as a singer is shown in part through her musical selections and artistic choices. Readers initially see Angelika as a broken shell of her former self, lost without the guidance of her mother, mentor and dearest friend. Angelika doesn’t believe she has the ability to live up to her mother’s example, and struggles to find her voice. I worked to identify musical pieces that would suit Angelika’s self-discovery and skill as she grows throughout the book. For those interested, there is a playlist available on my website featuring songs from The Diva’s Daughter.

The novel’s love story also helps highlight differences and similarities between Angelika and her mother. In the end, Angelika must decide whether her own romantic journey and response to societal expectations will mirror her mother’s, or whether she will ultimately choose to follow her heart in a different way.  

Music plays a powerful role in the story, both as a source of beauty and as a tool others try to control. How does music function symbolically within the novel?

I wanted to celebrate the ways in which music and opera reflect time-honored traditions while also adapting and evolving. For instance, one of my characters makes a predication that the rise of cinema might lead to an increased focus on acting and movement in opera. Angelika additionally performs in an opera that is made more widely accessible over the radio, while today, live broadcasts in movie theaters help bring opera to fans around the world. 

Contrasting tradition and progress within the operatic world helped shed light upon Angelika’s larger journey to find a proper balance between honoring her late mother’s legacy and forging her own path toward the future. The Nazis’ desire to use Angelika’s voice as propaganda also reflects the sad reality that art can be weaponized and used for evil, as seen in the case of filmmaker Leni Riefenstahl and others from the era. 


Mary Anne: Vienna and Munich are depicted very differently, culturally and politically. What drew you to these two cities as settings, and how did they help shape Angelika’s journey?


As readers have noted, The Diva’s Daughter explores the “juxtaposition of Vienna’s cultural vibrancy with Munich’s growing political tension” during the early 1930s. The violent and chaotic Munich beer garden in which Angelika is seen singing during the novel’s opening scene represents the tragic loss of not only her beloved mother, but also the refined life and promising future she enjoyed in Vienna. 

It also symbolizes the temptation of a quick and easy path to success. She receives applause and praise at the beer garden without having to put forth a significant effort or challenge herself. As the novel continues and Angelika faces her past in Vienna, readers can see the Nazis’ influence begin to infiltrate that world, as well, and can experience the horrors of these realizations alongside Angelika. 


Mary Anne: Was there anything in Angelika’s fear, determination, or moral conflict that resonated personally with you while writing her story?


Angelika’s resiliency as she journeys from grief to hope resonated strongly with me as an author, and I hope it will also resonate with my readers. From the mental health challenges and public condemnation Angelika’s mother faces to the questions of art and politics that impact Angelika, the issues addressed in this novel are still relevant today. I hope Angelika’s journey will inspire others to never stop searching for love and hope in the face of darkness.   

The legacy of Angelika’s mother continues to influence her long after her death. How did you balance a powerful off-page character with Angelika’s need to step into her own voice?

While Angelika’s mother is indeed an off-page character in the 1932 setting, I chose to include a series of journal entries and flashbacks throughout the book. Within these vignettes, Angelika recalls pivotal moments and allows readers to see her famous mother in a deeply personal light. As Angelika relives key memories, readers can also discover the way their shared mother-daughter experiences helped influence Angelika’s beliefs. For example, the exploration of other cultures’ languages and artwork, along with their travels to Paris during the boisterous 1920s, likely helped Angelika become particularly accepting and open-minded during a time in which a great many people instead chose hatred.


Mary Anne: Writing about the rise of Nazism can be emotionally demanding. How did you protect your own creative process while engaging with such dark material?


Even as The Diva’s Daughter reflects messages of heart and hope amidst the darkness, there were indeed times I had to step back during the writing process. My writing mentor and community of peers provided an endless array of support as I completed the earlier drafts that eventually became the published novel. As difficult as it can be to face the realities of this era, it is also important to remember and preserve the history.  

What do you hope modern readers will take away from Angelika’s struggle to protect her integrity in the face of political coercion, and did the story change the way you think about the responsibility of artists—and writers—during times of moral crisis?

I hope this book will inspire readers to remain true to their inner voices, and strive to champion love and acceptance in our modern society. In a world which is again seeing an alarming rise in antisemitism, we must all use our voices to fight back. As we have recently seen, issues of art and politics are also still relevant. For example, here in the United States, Donald Trump’s removal of a bipartisan board of trustees at national arts venue The Kennedy Center has sparked debate about censorship, whether art is political in nature, and how artists and patrons alike can stand up for their beliefs.  


Mary Anne: Thank you for sharing such thoughtful insight into The Diva’s Daughter. Your reflections on history, music, and moral responsibility offer much to consider, particularly at a time when questions about art, power, and integrity feel especially urgent. It has been a pleasure speaking with you about Angelika’s journey and the real histories that inspired it.


Check out the blurb:

Munich & Vienna, 1932

Aspiring opera singer Angelika Eder thought she had
it all — a cultured life in Vienna, along with the guidance of her glamorous mother, a world-famous soprano. But when tragedy strikes and her mother dies amidst a swirling family scandal, eighteen-year-old Angelika finds herself uprooted to Munich, where civil unrest is rife and leaders of the increasingly powerful Nazi Party seek to use her voice as propaganda.

When a figure from her mother’s past offers Angelika the chance to study and sing at an elite Viennese university, she decides to fight for her dream while evading the vile Nazis she despises. But the Nazis aren’t relenting in their demand that Angelika support their party and sing for Hitler himself. Can Angelika find her voice and stand against evil, even if it means risking not only her dreams of fame, but also the safety of herself and everyone she loves?


Step into a powerful story of history, resilience, and survival. Available now in ebook and paperback, this compelling novel brings a turbulent era vividly to life through unforgettable characters and real historical events. If you enjoy immersive historical fiction that doesn’t shy away from difficult truths, this is a book not to miss. You can find your copy HERE.


Heather Walrath is an author crafting new stories while celebrating the release of her debut historical novel, The Diva’s Daughter. Whether they are standing against evil in fractious 1930s Europe or solving a sticky bootlegging mystery in Prohibition-era America, Heather’s relatable heroines make the past accessible and engaging for modern readers. She has a master’s degree in publishing from George Washington University and a bachelor’s degree in journalism from California State University, Northridge.

Connect with Heather Walrath:



History often records events, but fiction has the power to reveal their human cost,

 



History often records events, but fiction has the power to reveal their human cost. Cobblestones – A New Orleans Tragedy by S. R. Perricone is a novel that steps into the shadows of a turbulent era and asks the reader to look closely at what is usually left unsaid.


✔️ Historical fiction rooted in real events

✔️ Post-Reconstruction New Orleans setting

✔️ Immigration, identity, and prejudice

✔️ Inspired by a true and tragic chapter of history

✔️ Gritty, atmospheric storytelling







Check out the blurb:

The turbulent history of Post-Reconstruction New
Orleans collides with the plight of Sicilian immigrants seeking refuge in America.

Antonio, a young man fleeing Sicily after avenging his father's murder, embarks on a harrowing journey to New Orleans with the help of Jesuit priests expelled from his homeland. However, the promise of a fresh start quickly sours as Antonio becomes entangled in a volatile clash of cultures, corruption, and crime.

In the late 19th century, Italian immigrants in New Orleans faced hostility, exploitation, and a brutal system of indentured servitude. Antonio becomes a witness to history as a bitter feud over the docks spirals into violence, culminating in the assassination of Irish police chief David C. Hennessy. The ensuing trial of nine Italians and the shocking lynching of eleven innocent men ignited international outrage, threatening to sever ties between the United States and Italy.

Caught in the crossfire of prejudice and power struggles, Antonio fights to survive while grappling with his own past and future. His journey weaves a gripping tale of resilience, betrayal, and the enduring hope for justice. Cobblestones: A New Orleans Tragedy is a poignant reminder of the human cost of intolerance and the courage it takes to rebuild a life from ashes.


Discover Cobblestones – A New Orleans Tragedy, available in ebook, paperback, and hardcover. The #Kindle edition is currently priced at only £0.99.
You can pick up your copy HERE.


Sal Perricone, a graduate of Loyola University of New Orleans with a BA (1975) and JD (1979), has dedicated his career to law enforcement, legal practice, and public service. Beginning as a sergeant with the Jefferson Parish Sheriff’s Department, he progressed to detective with the New Orleans Police Department before practicing law privately in New Orleans. In 1985, he joined the Federal Bureau of Investigation as a Supervisory Special Agent, specializing in financial crime investigations and organized crime.

In 1991, Sal Perricone transitioned to the U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Eastern District of Louisiana, where he served as Chief of the Organized Crime Strike Force and Senior Litigation Counsel until retiring in 2012. Over his illustrious career, he prosecuted significant cases involving La Cosa Nostra, public corruption, and white-collar crime. He earned numerous accolades, including multiple Director’s Awards and the Attorney General’s Award for his role in establishing the Katrina Fraud Task Force.

An adjunct professor at Tulane University and the University of New Orleans, Sal Perricone has trained law enforcement professionals across the nation. Post-retirement, he has authored two novels with positive Catholic themes, Blue Steel Crucifix and The Shadows of Nazareth. A Brother Martin alumnus, he continues to inspire with his dedication to justice and ethics.

Highland romance perfect for Valentine’s Day


Valentine’s Day is the perfect excuse to indulge in a love story that smoulders, challenges the heart, and promises passion against a dramatic backdrop — and The Scoundrel Scot by Vanda Vadas delivers all that and more.

Set amid the rugged beauty of the Scottish Highlands, this new historical romance brings together desire, duty, and deception in a story where love is anything but simple. With strong-willed characters, simmering tension, and emotional stakes as high as the castle walls themselves, The Scoundrel Scot is ideal for readers who enjoy slow-burning attraction, honour-bound heroes, and romances forged under pressure.

As Valentine’s Day approaches, this novel offers a delicious escape into a world of secrets, longing, and hard-won trust — proving that sometimes the fiercest loves are born where hearts are most guarded.

 

✔️ A sweeping Highland romance perfect for Valentine’s Day

✔️ A guarded Scottish laird with a rake’s reputation

✔️ A spirited heroine caught between duty and desire

✔️ Slow-burn attraction with emotional depth

✔️ Secrets, honour, and love tested by betrayal






Check out the blurb:

In the Highlands, love is forged in fire—and
bound by home.

Her agenda is deception. His vow is protection. However, fate has other plans.

Lachlan MacLanoch is a Scottish laird with a rake's reputation, yet his past has left him embittered, untrusting of women, and unwilling to marry. When an English aristocratic lass arrives at his Highland estate, he is pledged to protect her virtue—at all costs. But the spirited and beautiful Sassenach is so very, very tempting…

To atone for one sin, Lady Helene Beckett is forced to commit another. She undertakes to dupe and seduce the Laird of Drumocher Castle as part of a desperate mission to save her young sister's life. Complications arise when the laird's honourable code of conduct proves impenetrable—and her feelings begin to soften towards him.

Outside forces conspire against them—meddling families, secret wagers—forcing Lachlan and Helene to rethink their long-held beliefs. Will it be enough to mend hearts broken by betrayal, heal souls scarred by secrets, and discover a love brave enough to forgive?


The Scoundrel Scot is available now in ebook and paperback. If you’re ready to escape to the Highlands and lose yourself in a story of passion, honour, and hard-won love, you can pick up your copy HERE💕


Born in Papua New Guinea and raised under the canopy of the rainforest, I found my first love in the stories hidden within the ancient stones of England’s Warwick Castle. My childhood adventures across the globe—from the bluebell woods of England to the traditional parades in Canada—ignited a passion for history and storytelling that has never faded.

Today, I’m delighted to be hosting Gradarius (Roman Equestrian II) by A. M. Swink as part of The Coffee Pot Book Club tour.

 


Today, I’m delighted to be hosting Gradarius (Roman Equestrian II) by A. M. Swink as part of The Coffee Pot Book Club tour.

This tour offers readers the chance to step directly into the world of Gradarius through a featured excerpt, giving a taste of the rich historical atmosphere and the tensions simmering beneath the surface of Roman Britain. Blending political intrigue, loyalty, and personal conflict, the novel continues a compelling journey set against the looming threat of war.

Below, you’ll find an exclusive excerpt shared by the author — an opportunity to experience the tone, stakes, and storytelling first-hand.

But first, let's check out the blurb:

WAR IS ON THE HORIZON

Sworn enemies turned lovers, Decimus and Luciana face new challenges that put their love to the test. Decimus, haunted by his past, struggles with his feelings in the present. Luciana, when confronted with her old friend Boudicca’s struggles, questions which of her loyalties is more important: her loyalty to Decimus, or her loyalty to her people? When sent to investigate a Roman traitor in Decimus’s legion, both will have to decide which side of the coming battle they’ll be on. 

Rome and Britannia are hurtling toward a reckoning. Will Decimus and Luciana find a way forward together before war tears them apart?


Excerpt

The fresh air did little to improve Decimus’s
brooding humour. He stalked down the dim street, forcing Luciana to hasten to keep pace. She skirted around a timber drain dividing the roughly cobbled path and followed the centurion’s hulking shadow towards the quay. He turned to avoid the singing and laughter emanating from one of the nearby warehouses and made his way to the bridge spanning the Tamesis. Luciana, catching her breath, halted alongside him. 

She gazed at him curiously. Decimus’s flinty blue-green eyes took in the collection of homes and businesses built up on the islands dotting the river’s far side. She touched his arm and felt him stiffen. She lowered her eyes to the bridge and took in the dark waves lapping beneath them.

‘Strange place to build a town,’ he murmured, shaking his head. ‘It’s nothing but a swamp.’

‘The waters here are sacred. Their boundary between the living and the dead is thin.’ Luciana folded her arms, shuddering within the folds of her wolfskin cloak. ‘It is too powerful for any one tribe to claim. But of course, you Romans have the hubris to believe you can.’

Decimus ruefully shook his head. ‘It was just a ford and an earthen fort when I visited last.’

She cocked her head at him. ‘I didn’t know you’d visited Londinium before.’

His expression hardened. ‘During the invasion.’

She heard finality in his tone and let the matter drop. She picked up one of his broad palms in both her own, twining her fingers through his. ‘Has the air cleared your head?’

He didn’t answer, eyes still locked upon the far side of the bridge. His grasp tightened as he squeezed her hands. 

She felt the cool breeze whipping up from the quay and rested her head on his shoulder. A few pins fell free of her tresses, dropping into the inky waters below. 

‘I’m sure you’d celebrate…if we were to withdraw from Britannia and leave you be,’ he finally said.

She clung tighter to his side and sighed. ‘I wouldn’t be unhappy, if that’s what you mean. Though I wouldn’t have any freedom to enjoy.’ She glanced up at him. ‘I’m your property, remember? I go where you bid me.’

He wound his free arm about her, drawing her into his chest. ‘You know I want nothing more than to go back to Rome.’ A lump rose in his throat. ‘But I can’t go yet. The legions can’t go yet. Not after everything…everything that’s been done.’

She gazed up at him. ‘You realise that everything that’s been done is precisely why we want you to leave?’

He lowered his head, brushing his whiskers against her brow. ‘Do you?’

‘Oh, Decimus.’ She closed her eyes. ‘I don’t know what I want anymore.’

She tore herself away and shuffled along the pier, tightly clasping her cloak to her. The thought of her mother and the Cornovii women huddled in their prison cell sprang to her mind and she shuddered. I have failed them. I've already turned traitor…and for what?

The wheel of Taranis burned against her skin. She squeezed her eyes shut. This is Gaius Nerfinius all over again. You’ve learned nothing, Luciana. Nothing. Do you think he loves you? Do you really love him so much that you would throw your freedom away? He is a Roman, after all…

The wind whipped about her, freeing the rest of her locks. They tumbled across her shoulders in a golden cascade, ends pulled like a flag by the gust.

‘Luciana.’

She turned to see Decimus still rooted to his spot, gazing after her. The moon peeked from behind the heavy clouds darkening the sky, illuminating all the emotion in his eyes that his stern face belied. Her pulse quickened, renewing the bond that drew her irresistibly to him. She tucked a fluttering strand behind her ear and smiled. I suppose many have turned traitor for worse.

She took a step towards him, though he stayed her with a hand. ‘Let me watch you a moment longer.’

Luciana straightened, tossing her head. She gazed at the water, letting the wind buffet her about. Decimus slowly walked to her. She glowed under the admiration shining from his eyes.

He tentatively reached out and brushed her cheek. ‘How can you be real?’

She warmed at his touch and stepped into his embrace. She took his grizzled cheeks in her hands and kissed him. Her thumb brushed the angry scar curving out of his beard, ignoring the way he winced and shifted away from her touch. Luciana recaptured his lips, savouring his hot breath and the aroma of spiced stew that clung to him. Decimus responded warmly, pressing her to him and cradling her slim form as it melded into his.

When they finally broke off to catch their breath, Luciana met his eyes. ‘It matters not what policy your emperor decides. For as long as I am yours, I go wherever you go.’

Gradarius (Roman Equestrian II) is available now in ebook, paperback, and hardback. If today’s excerpt has caught your interest, pick up your copy HERE and continue the journey.


A.M. Swink
, the author of the award-winning Roman Equestrian series, grew up in Dayton, Ohio, obsessed with two things: books and horses. After a childhood of reading, writing, showing, and riding, she moved to Lexington, Kentucky to complete three degrees and work as a college professor of reading and writing. 

She’s travelled extensively around Europe, exploring ancient sites and artefacts relating to the Iron Age and Roman era. She is fascinated by our connection to the past and the ancestral tether that draws us back into the mists of time.


If you’re enjoying this glimpse into Gradarius (Roman Equestrian II) and would like to follow the tour, be sure to head over to The Coffee Pot Book Club. You’ll find the full tour schedule there, and you can follow along as the book makes its way around the blogosphere — it’s well worth a look!