Medieval Monday with Ashley York

by | Mar 21, 2016 | Medieval Monday, romance | 2 comments

Happy
Medieval Monday! Today I’m hosting Ashley York. Tisa looks forward to her
marriage to the man of her heart, betrothed to him since childhood. Betrayed by
her own father, Tisa’s dreams are dashed when she’s forced into a marriage of
political convenience. Here is an excerpt from The Seventh Son.  
Excerpt from The Seventh Son:
“Tisa. Yer betrothal to the MacNaughton has been severed. Ye’ll
marry into the Meic Lochlainn clan of Inishowen. They’ll be here in two days
time.”
The pain in her chest intensified with every word he spoke, like nails
hammering into her heart, but her brain refused to understand his meaning
beyond his first statement.
Your betrothal to the MacNaughton
has been severed.
Her betrothal to Tadhg? They’d been betrothed forever. They grew up
knowing they would one day be wed. Tadhg was all she wanted in a husband.
Her father’s eyes never wavered from her face. Surely he measured her
reaction as if he cared.
“Ronan came here to make the agreement on their behalf. He has
been a great help to our clan.”
The kind eyes seemed familiar but no. Those would have been the eyes of
her father that loved her. A father that wanted her to be happy. A father that
wanted her settled nearby. This? This was a man that cared nothing for her. A
man that would rip away her future dreams of happiness. A man that would send
her away from him. A man that would give her to strangers. Strangers that saw
her as nothing more than…breeding stock.
No. She was more than that. She would not stand here and be handed off
to a stranger and not even a word of protest.
“Why?” Damn her eyes. The tears swelled and her father became
a blurry figure. “How?”
He looked away. “The MacNaughton broke our agreement.”
Her jaw dropped. A slap to the face would have hurt less.
“No!”
“After Moira died, Padraig sent word he would not see his son
married to an O’Brien.”
“And ye did not think to tell me this?”
Her head reeled with the implications.
“And Moira? Tadhg’s mother is dead?” Her breath hitched.
Moira had been like a mother to her. “When was she buried? I wish to pay
my resp—”
“Ye will not! Padraig would not allow us to come. None of
us.” Her father finally faced her. “We are no longer welcome on his
land. He wants nothing to do with us.”
“Nothing to do with us? They are our kinsmen.”
“No longer.”
“Ye canna just let him cut us off like this.”
“I was given little choice in the matter.”
“Then go to him! Beg his forgiveness for whatever you have
done!”
“I have done nothing wrong! ‘Twas Padraig’s doing. He chose to
give me no reason. I will abide by his decree.”
Tisa’s mind struggled to make sense of what her father was saying.
There must be something he was not saying. “Why would Padraig treat us
like this?”
He looked past her. “It matters not. What does matter is that the
O’Neill threatens us to the west.”
“When will Seamus and Ian return?” Her only unwed brothers
had been away going on two years now.
Her father’s eyes rounded in pain. “I dinna wish to upset ye but
yer brothers will not be returning. They died in battle against the
O’Neill.”
Tisa cried out. “When?”
“We received the news spring last.”
“Again ye decide to keep this from me? Do ye think I am a child?
If that is the way of it, ’tis because my own father kept me from the truths in
life, shielding me as if I would break.”
“Ye brothers went against my wishes. My anger was at them, not
ye.”
“Be angry then. Be sad. Be devastated! But dunna keep me from the
truth.”
“A great loss.” Her father closed his eyes against the pain.
Her own heart cried out. They were much older than her as were her
sisters. The MacNaughton’s were closer in age and felt more like family.
Brighit was like her own little sister.
“I must make decisions that ye may not wish to abide by—but ye
will. The O’Neill will not back down. We need an alliance with a strong clan. I
need men I can count on, who will fight with me against them.”
“The MacNau—”
“They will not fight for us now. ‘Tis not their land that is
threatened.” He shouted the words, his nostrils flaring. “They have
broken our agreement, daughter. We are defenseless. Ronan was good enough to
make a new alliance for us.”
“At what cost to us?” Tisa knew the answer as soon as she
asked the question. The way Ronan had looked at her, assessing her worth as a
mate.
“You will marry their tanist.”
“So I am to be exchanged for the promise of protection?”
“Ye will have a place of prominence in their clan.”
“I do not care about prominence! I want the life I had always been
promised. The life I was raised for.”
“That life is gone, Tisa. This is the life ye will have.”
“I do not accept this…betrayal.”
“Ye have no choice.”
Buy Link The Seventh Son: Available for pre-order with March 30th
release only on Amazon
Back Cover Copy The Seventh Son:
Drogheda,
Ireland 1076
The sixth son
bears a curse as certain as the seventh son bears a blessing. When Tadhg
MacNaughton’s betrothed is ripped from his arms and married to another, he
believes the legend is true.
Tisa O’Brien’s
life slams into a downward spiral at the news she is no longer betrothed to the
love of her life but married to the tanist of a warring, prideful clan with
dangerous political aspirations—the Meic Lochlainn. She faces her destiny with
all the strength and dignity of her Irish heritage despite dealing with a
husband who resents her, fighting off the lustful advances of her father-in-law,
Aodh, and longing for the husband of her heart.
Tadhg
MacNaughton makes a deal with the devil to ensure the survival of his clan as
he is commanded to fight with Aodh who envisions himself the new Brian Boru,
High King of Eire. Up close and personal, Tadhg must witness his true love’s
marriage and remain silent even as it rips him apart. When a sinister plot to
over throw King William of England led by the exiled Leofrid Godwin and Clan
Meic Lochlainn comes to light, Tadhg is faced with saving his clan or
endangering his sister and her Norman husband.
An Irish
beauty and a warrior betrayed—doomed in love from the start or does fate have
something else in store for them?

2 Comments

  1. Sounds like a great story! Intense and wrenching. Best wishes on sales.

    Reply
  2. Oh my gosh!!! I can't wait to read this!!! SOUNDS SO GOOD!!!

    Reply

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