Pamela Clare is DEFIANT (And there’s a cool giveaway, too!) Back to Blog

Update: The winner of the $15 Amazon.com gift card is…Chelsea Rafferty!

Congratulations, Cynthia, on the release of Angel Betrayed, and thanks for hosting this rockin’ party!

I’ve got some celebrating to do as well. Exactly one week from today, the waiting will be over for MacKinnon’s Rangers fans. They’ve been (not-so-patiently) holding on since November 2008 for the third book in my MacKinnon’s Rangers series, and on July 3, Defiant, which tells Connor MacKinnon’s story, will finally be out!

 

To celebrate, I am holding a unique live video chat via Shindig Events. The event is free, and I will be giving away five copies of Defiant to five lucky participants. I will also be reading an exclusive excerpt from the book and answering your questions — live. To reserve your place, just click here: http://pamelaclare.eventbrite.com/ . And be sure to invite your friends!

Then on July 3, the day the book comes out, I’ll be having a party on my blog that will include release of the live-action trailer for Defiant, complete with a sexy shirtless musket-toting model in the role of Connor. I’ve seen the rough cut of the trailer, and I love it! I can’t wait to share it with you all.

If you’re new to the MacKinnon’s Rangers series, here’s a bit about Defiant, together with an excerpt.

 

DEFIANT

Charged with a crime they didn’t commit, the MacKinnon Brothers face a death sentence until they agreed to serve the British Crown in the colonies and take up arms against the French. Allied with the Indian tribes who live beside them in the wilderness, the Scottish Highland warriors forged a new breed of soldier…

Mackinnon’s Rangers

Major Connor MacKinnon despises his commander, Lord William Wentworth, beyond all other men. Ordered to rescue Wentworth’s niece after the Shawnee take her captive, he expects Lady Sarah Woodville to be every bit as contemptible as her uncle. Instead, he finds a brave and beautiful lass in desperate peril. But the only way to free Sarah is for Connor to defeat the Shawnee warrior who kidnapped her—and claim her himself.

Torn by tragedy from her sheltered life in London, Lady Sarah is unprepared for the harshness of the frontier—or for the attraction she feels toward Connor. When they reach civilization, however, it is she who must protect him. For if her uncle knew all that Connor had done to save her, he would surely kill him.

But the flames of passion, once kindled, are difficult to deny. As desire transforms into love, Connor will have to defy an empire to keep Sarah at his side.

 

Here’s an excerpt. Enjoy!

Sarah was still lying down, facing away from the door, when she heard him enter. She lay there unmoving, childishly feigning sleep, as if refusing to open her eyes would somehow keep the world at bay.

Major MacKinnon called to her softly. “My lady?”

Do not behave like a witless girl, Sarah. Where is your courage?

She wiped the tears off her cheeks, then slowly sat up, the dread in her heart seeming to weigh her down. “Major MacKinnon.”

“’Tis sorry I am to disturb your sleep, but I must speak wi’ you.”

She stood, turned to face him, whatever she’d been about to say momentarily forgotten as she took in the sight of him. His jaw was clean-shaven, his face startlingly handsome. His chest and belly were smooth now, the dark curls she’d seen before gone, his skin oiled to a fine sheen, the cut she’d stitched and the other smaller cuts he’d gotten during the fight giving him a dangerous air. His hair was damp, a striped brown feather tied at the end of one of his braids. His leather breeches rode low on his hips, a knife sheathed at his side.

But what she noticed most was the anguish in his eyes. It was a match for the anguish she’d heard in his voice when he’d spoke to Joseph outside.

“Please… Please sit, major.” She reached down out of habit to shift her skirts before she sat, only to feel doeskin against her hands. “I wish to apologize for my fit of temper earlier. You have risked much for me. It was wrong of me to—”

“Shhh, lady.” He pressed a finger to her lips and sat facing her. “You’re far beyond the world you ken, aye? ’Tis natural for you to be feelin’ afraid and angry about what has befallen you, but you must trust me if we’re to reach Albany alive.”

He looked away for a moment, his face growing more troubled as he seemed to consider what to say next, his brow furrowed. “I fear I have failed you, for it is on that same troublin’ matter that we must speak.”

She watched him struggle to find the words to tell her what he’d just told Joseph, something inside her touched by his obvious turmoil. “I… I overheard you speaking with Joseph just now.”

His head came up, his gaze meeting hers, seeming to study her. “That’s why you’ve been weepin’. I see the tearstains on your cheeks.”

She raised her palms to her face to wipe the telltale sign of weakness away.

“You understand the choice that lies before you, aye?”

She nodded, folding her hands in her lap. “I must decide whether to chance escape, knowing that you and Joseph will die terribly should we fail, or whether to marry you after the Indian fashion and spend tonight as … as your wife.”

“Aye, that’s the way of it. ’Tis a hard choice you’re bein’ asked to make, but life is no’ always fair.”

Sarah knew that only too well.

Major MacKinnon went on. “Is there augh’ you would ask me afore you decide? There is little time, I fear.”

She shook her head. “No, sir.”

She’d made up her mind before he’d entered the lodge.

She met his gaze, tried to keep the fear from her voice. “I cannot ask you to chance being burnt at the stake, major. You’ve already risked your life once for my sake. As highly as I value my virtue, it is not worth two men’s lives.”

What an irony that her father’s decision to send her away had led her to this — her true undoing. No doubt there were many in London who believed she had no virtue, yet she had left London as a virgin. She would not return as one.

He watched her through dark eyes. “Are you certain, my lady? For I willna take you by force. You must come to me as willingly as I come to you — each of us for the sake of the other.”

She hadn’t thought about it in quite that way, but when he spoke the words, some of the dread lifted from her heart. “Aye, major, I am certain. But…”

“You’re afraid.” He closed one big hand over both of hers, his thumb stroking her knuckles. “I promise I shall treat you this night wi’ the same care and devotion I would if you truly were my bride.”

Then to her astonishment, he cupped her cheek, lowered his lips to hers — and kissed her.

Softly, so softly he kissed her, brushing her lips with his again and again, the mere whisper of a touch making her shiver. She might have objected had the sensation not been so… enthralling. Slowly, his touch became more insistent, his lips caressing hers, nibbling them, her lips tingling, going pliant, yielding to his exploration, her eyes drifting shut. Then his tongue traced the outline of her lower lip.

Startled, she gasped, and her eyes flew open.

He was watching her, his blue eyes dark, his voice a whisper. “My lady.”

And she thought it was over.

But then one big hand slid into her hair to cradle her head, and he drew her against his bare chest, his mouth closing over hers. There were almost too many new sensations to take in all at once, her girlish notions of what it would feel like to be kissed by a man vanishing in a heartbeat. The iron-hard feel of his body surrounding her. The warm scent of his oiled skin. The firm pressure of his lips against hers as he tasted her, his tongue teasing its way inside her mouth with silken strokes.

Then his tongue touched hers, his lungs stealing her surprised intake of breath as he sealed her mouth with his. Her body seemed to melt, and she sank boneless against him, her hands sliding up the smooth skin of his chest, her lips parting to accommodate him, her tongue meeting his. She felt something pound against her palm, and realized that his heart was beating every bit as hard as hers.

Slowly, his kiss stilled, his lips brushing her cheek, her temple. “My lady.”

Breathless and amazed, she looked up into his eyes.

He drew back slightly, his arm still encircling her. “Now you ken the taste of my kiss. Think on that, and dinnae be afraid of what is to come, aye?”

© 2012 Pamela Clare

 

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100 responses to “Pamela Clare is DEFIANT (And there’s a cool giveaway, too!)”

  1. May says:

    I love reading about different times and places…. Historical times just seem a bit simpler and a great escape from modern reality….

  2. Cris says:

    Ummm, can it be July 3 now? And can I please have that gorgeous model playing Connor MacKinnon? I promise to be nice to him… maybe 😛

    As anyone who knows me knows, I’m a total travel whore and I love learning about new cultures, languages, social mores, etc. (being culturally & linguistically confused myself, haha). Well-researched historicals let me get those experiences for places I can’t actually travel to nowadays, and I always learn loads of tidbits that prove useful at the most random times!

  3. Julia - Yen says:

    I love the clothing people worn in history times. And the many places they lives and how they live. I love to see the inside of the building of house they live in too 🙂

  4. winnie says:

    What I like most about historical romances is being immersed in a totally different time and place and seeing how courtships play out during times of different social customs.

  5. bn100 says:

    I like the fashion and the aristocracy.

  6. JenM says:

    I just love the clothes. Also, although I wouldn’t want to live back then, I do like to imagine a time when there weren’t so many gadgets keeping us walled off away from the natural world.

  7. JessS says:

    All the rules and traditions of society, and when people break them! There’s also just something really sexy about a gentleman in those suit-type outfits.

  8. Fedora says:

    I think one of the things I love most is that historical romance makes a whole different time/place come alive for me in a very real way. I don’t connect very well with textbook descriptions or even travelogues, but a well-written story will bring me there to the time/place it’s set in. After reading a WWII romance, our visit to a real-life Liberty ship was all the more poignant. Other eras come to life in the same way through stories 🙂

  9. Hilleary Peterson says:

    I love the Scotland men. They were really men that worked hard and played hard. None of that metrosexual crap or whatever it is now. I like men that will hold me when I cry, not cry with me. I like there protectiveness, the strength, and the providing. I like the men being men but still being able to love

  10. I like historical romances that show a different side of a mans character. I know its silly and we women like equal rights and all that but there’s something about dominant/alpha men in historicals that seduce your senses because you sit there questioning life and were the men in historicals really like that in the past? How about a toop? In the kitchen in some medieval kitchen? Or out in the barn or in the wild? There’s just something risque with them 😉

  11. Annie says:

    I love that there’s this sense of decorum. Men and woman have to stay within this level of appropraiteness and keeps their passion leashed and when it’s romances, it’s always nice to see when characters allow that side of them to show.

  12. Dina says:

    the sceens that describe the look, clothes, decorations and different things going on in those times

  13. Spav says:

    I like the setting and all the different rules of conduct.