The Captive Heart

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Authors: Bertrice Small

Tags: #Fiction, #Romance, #Historical, #General

BOOK: The Captive Heart
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Praise for Bertrice Small, “THE REIGNING QUEEN OF THE HISTORICAL GENRE”* and her novels
“Bertrice Small creates cover-to-cover passion, a keen sense of history, and suspense.”—
Publishers Weekly
 
“Small’s fans . . . know what to expect . . . a good story.”

Library Journa
l
 
“The name Bertrice Small is synonymous with passionate historical romance. [She] doesn’t just push the limits—she reinvents them.”—
The Literary Times
 
“Ms. Small delights and thrills.”—
Rendezvous
 
“An insatiable delight for the senses. [Small’s] amazing historical detail . . . will captivate the reader. . . . Potent sensuality.”
—*Romance Junkies
 
“[Her novels] tell an intriguing story, they are rich in detail, and they are all so very hard to put down.”—The Best Reviews
 
“Intriguing . . . fascinating.”—
Affaire de Coeur
 
“[A] captivating blend of sensuality and rich historical drama.”
—Rosemary Rogers
 
“Brimming with colorful characters and rich in historical detail, Small’s boldly sensual love story is certain to please her many devoted readers.”—
Booklist
BOOKS BY BERTRICE SMALL
THE BORDER CHRONICLES
A Dangerous Love
The Border Lord’s Bride
The Captive Heart
THE FRIARSGATE INHERITANCE
Rosamund
Until You
Philippa
The Last Heiress
CONTEMPORARY EROTICA
Private Pleasures
Forbidden Pleasures
Sudden Pleasures
Dangerous Pleasures
THE O’MALLEY SAGA
Skye O’Malley
All the Sweet Tomorrows
A Love for All Time
The Heart of Mine
Lost Love Found
Wild Jasmine
SKYE’S LEGACY
Darling Jasmine
Bedazzled
Besieged
Intrigued
Just Beyond Tomorrow
Vixens
THE WORLD OF HETAR
Lara
A Distant Tomorrow
The Twilight Lord
The Sorceress of Belmir
MORE BY BERTRICE SMALL
The Kadin
Love Wild and Fair
Adora
Unconquered
Beloved
Enchantress Mine
Blaze Wyndham
The Spitfire
A Moment in Time
To Love Again
Love, Remember Me
The Love Slave
Hellion
Betrayed
Deceived
The Innocent
A Memory of Love
The Duchess
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First published by New American Library,
a division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
First Printing, October 2008
Copyright © Bertrice Small, 2008
All rights reserved
REGISTERED TRADEMARK—MARCA REGISTRADA 
LIBRARY OF CONGRESS CATALOGING-IN-PUBLICATION DATA:
Small, Bertrice.
The captive heart / Bertrice Small.
p. cm.
eISBN : 978-1-436-28138-6
Without limiting the rights under copyright reserved above, no part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in or introduced into a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form, or by any means (electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise), without the prior written permission of both the copyright owner and the above publisher of this book.
PUBLISHER’S NOTE
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
The publisher does not have any control over and does not assume any responsibility for author or third-party Web sites or their content.
The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of the author’s rights is appreciated.

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This book is dedicated with love and great respect to the two women who unknowingly started me on my career. The late Ivy Bolton, aka Sister Mercedes from the Anglican community of Saint Mary’s, a wonderful author of children’s historical novels, who encouraged my passion for history; and the late Miss Frances Anderson, the best English teacher any girl ever had. God bless you both and thank you!
Prologue
MARCH 29, 1461
 
 
 
The screams of the dying men could hardly be heard over the howling wind. Foe was indistinguishable from friend amid the heavily falling snow that swirled about the combatants. It was bitterly cold as only an early spring in Northumbria could be. The king and his few remaining advisers huddled on the edge of the battlefield until one, braver than the others, reached out to take the bridle of the king’s horse and lead it away. Then those who were with them followed. It was the end of an era. The end of a reign.
The wiser among them knew it. Understood it. They considered now how best to retain their heads as well as their fortunes with a new king in a Yorkist regime. They thought of the enemies and the friends that they had among the now favored. Which of those men would have influence enough to save or destroy them? The loyalists, however, were painfully aware that they now faced exile. They silently prayed for the safety of their own families, whom they might never see again in this life.
“Is it over?” the king asked softly. His eyes were beginning to lose their focus. It was a sure indication that one of his attacks of madness was approaching.
“Yes, my liege, it is over” came the quiet reply.
“Have we won?” the king inquired hesitantly.
“I think not, my liege, but until the snow stops we cannot really tell,” the man said candidly as they rode away.
“Where is the queen? The queen will know if we have won. The queen always knows what is happening,” the king said anxiously. He was still with great effort managing to cling to his sanity.
“I am taking you to her now, my liege,” the man responded, “but we must hurry lest the Yorkists catch us.”
And before one of us decides to turn you over to them to save his own skin
, the king’s companion thought to himself. He noticed three or four of their party had already disappeared. Well, good riddance to them, the traitors!
“They will kill me,” the king said fatalistically. “They have to in order to justify what they have done. And they must kill my son though he be just a lad, for he is the true heir to England’s throne after me. But if I know my wife, Margaret will fight like a tigress to protect our child.” Henry VI had not yet released his hold on his sanity. But the few men left to accompany him knew it was but a matter of time before he was once more hurled into his private hell. His mind was simply not strong enough to manage this terrible change in his fortunes.
They hurried through the fierce storm to reach Queen Margaret and the little prince, who were sheltering in a nearby farmhouse. They would have to get deep into the borderlands before the storm ceased. Only then would their king and his family be truly safe, and then only temporarily. Sir Udolf Watteson, who now rode with them, would give them all shelter. At least for the few days it would take for the outcome of the battle to be known down in London, where the new king resided. Until the order was given, and came north for the arrest of Henry Plantagenet, his wife, and his son. The Lancasters were done. At least for now. Perhaps forever.
Chapter 1
The queen knew all was lost. At least for now. Perhaps forever, but no! Not while there was breath in their bodies and their son remained healthy and strong.
They
would not steal Edward Plantagenet’s inheritance from him. Not while she lived. No! It was unthinkable that Edward of York would supplant them.
“Madame, we must go now,” Sir Udolf Watteson said to the queen.
Margaret of Anjou nodded.
“Oui”
was all she said. She did not look about her. The others would be ready because it was their duty to anticipate what was to come. It would not do to be caught now, and besides, if they were, what was to become of their few remaining retainers? Their loyalty to her deserved better than to be caught and murdered by a pack of Yorkist traitors. The queen drew her heavy fur-lined cloak about her and pulled up its hood.
“Allez!”
she said as she stepped through the farmhouse door.
It was still snowing steadily. Fifteen-year-old Alix Givet followed her mistress, her arm about her physician father. “Are you certain you are warm enough, Papa?” she asked him softly, her hazel eyes concerned.
“I am fine,
mignon
,” he told her. “You worry too much.”
“You are all I have left, Papa,” Alix said as a man-at-arms helped first her father to mount his horse and then boosted her into her saddle. The girl rode astride, for it was easier for her in their flight.
“We will have at least several days of rest before we must move on again,” Alexander Givet replied. “I just need a little time to be dry and warm to recover,
ma petite
. This ride will be the worst of it, I promise.”
“Where will we go then, Papa?” Alix asked him as she gathered her reins into her gloved hands. “We are being driven from England.”
“The queen will ask sanctuary from her distant relation Marie of Gueldres, who is Scotland’s queen. It will be granted, and then we shall probably take flight for France. You will finally see Anjou,
ma petite
,” he told her. “We still have family there, and I shall make a good match for you, Alix, so you will be safe after I am gone.”
“I do not want to marry, Papa. I want to remain with you,” the girl told him.
The physician chuckled as they began to move north into the storm. “It is your duty to marry,
mignon
, so your papa may have a warm place by the hearth in his old age,” he teased her. “Unless, of course, you wish to enter a convent.”

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