did-you-know? rent-now

Amazon no longer offers textbook rentals. We do!

did-you-know? rent-now

Amazon no longer offers textbook rentals. We do!

We're the #1 textbook rental company. Let us show you why.

9780345459961

Heart of the Dove

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780345459961

  • ISBN10:

    0345459962

  • Format: Trade Book
  • Copyright: 2005-11-29
  • Publisher: Ivy Books
  • Purchase Benefits
  • Free Shipping Icon Free Shipping On Orders Over $35!
    Your order must be $35 or more to qualify for free economy shipping. Bulk sales, PO's, Marketplace items, eBooks and apparel do not qualify for this offer.
  • eCampus.com Logo Get Rewarded for Ordering Your Textbooks! Enroll Now
List Price: $6.99

Summary

The darkest heart . . . Everything that Randwulf of Greycliff loved was torn from his grasp in a night of fire and terror. His wife and child slain, his manor destroyed, Rand now lives for one thing alone: revenge on the man who ordered the attack. Armed with part of the legendary Dragon Chalicethe object his enemy most desiresRand embarks on a deadly voyage to trap his foe. He will avenge his family . . . and let no one stand in his way. The brightest hope . . . On a stormswept shore in the wilds of northern England, a gentle maiden discovers a man lying on the beach, shipwrecked and in need of care. But helping him is forbidden. Serena has the gift of Knowing: with a mere touch, she can see all the secrets in a man's heart. It is a gift that has kept her secluded from the outside world, wary of those who would use her powers for their own gain. But Rand's wounded heart beckons, and his passionate nature draws her to himdaring her to surrender to a dangerous seduction that could destroy them both. . . . From the Paperback edition.

Author Biography

Hailed as “pure gold” (All About Romance) and among the “best of the best” (Oakland Press), Tina St. John, a Romantic Times Reviewers’ Choice and National Readers’ Choice recipient, quit a full-time corporate job to pursue her dream of becoming an author. She sold her first completed manuscript, Lord of Vengeance, and has since gone on to pen several acclaimed medieval romances for Ballantine Books, including Lady of Valor, White Lion’s Lady, Black Lion’s Bride, Heart of the Hunter, and Heart of the Flame.

A Michigan native and descendant of Mayflower passenger William Bradford, later governor of the Plymouth Colony, Tina St. John makes her home in coastal New England with her husband, who is the inspiration for all her heroes and her most devoted fan.

Readers can learn more about Tina St. John’s upcoming works and sign up for her newsletter at www.TinaStJohn.com.

Supplemental Materials

What is included with this book?

The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts

The Irish Sea, off the coast of England
June, 1275

A huge wave gathered under coal black skies and rolled with deadly menace toward the side of the ship. It hit much as the dozens that had come before, a fist of crushing force that exploded against the wooden hull, rocking the vessel and spewing a sheet of drenching water over the already sodden deck. The cog lurched heavily under the pummel of the storm, the protesting strain of its joints screeching over the steady clap and roar of thunder.

Randwulf of Greycliff sat apart from the rest of the ship’s few passengers on deck, his back pressed against the sheltering wall of the sterncastle, knees drawn up, boot heels braced apart to help steady him for the hurling pitch and swoon of the storm. It had only worsened since their departure from Liverpool’s harbor, and showed no sign of reprieve. Three travelers had joined them in the port town when they docked for supplies that morning, two men and a young woman. At first Rand thought they were together, but the man and his wife had since moved off to share the cover of a moth-eaten blanket with five other passengers, all of them shivering, their gazes anxious and wide, holding similar looks of concern for their safe passage.

The man who also boarded in Liverpool seemed no more inclined to mingle with the others than Rand himself. One arm lashed around the railing, he sat less than a dozen paces from Rand on the same side of the deck. Rain pelted his uncovered head and beard, wetting shaggy dark hair to spiky bristles in the sudden flashes of lightning that illuminated the somber community of the vessel.

“You look as miserable as I feel,” the man called to him, chuckling wryly. With his free hand, he held something out to Rand. A hammered metal flask glinted in the brief arc of light that broke as another bolt ripped jaggedly overhead. “Irish whiskey. Have some, friend. It will warm you.”

Although he had done nothing to warrant mistrust, Rand decided he did not like the man’s look. Ignoring the offer, soaked to the marrow of his aching bones, he pulled the dripping hood of his mantle down a bit lower on his forehead and steeled himself to ride out the churning squall.

The weather had been unseasonably harsh since he had set out on this journey more than a fortnight past. His destination, Scotland, was still several days north—easily more if the conditions of the sea did not clear up. And judging from the furious roil of the thick, sooty clouds overhead, he doubted there would be any mercy forthcoming.

In truth, it seemed the farther north he sailed, the more ferocious the ocean’s turbulence became. As though God Himself knew of the unholy purpose that drove him, and sought to dissuade him with the unrelenting lash of the elements.

Let Him rage, Rand thought with grim savagery as another gale shouldered the side of the vessel and sent it groaning into a listing starboard plunge. The women on board screamed as the prow dipped sharply and took on more water.

Rand did not so much as flinch where he sat. He refused to cow to the vicious tumble of the waves. Biting rain needled his face as the storm spat and hissed all around him. Let the ocean swell and the winds tear him apart. Not even godly fury would be enough to turn him away from his goal.

Revenge.

It was his sole intent now, all of his hatred focused on one man . . . if that’s what the villain he sought truly was. Rand doubted it. Born of flesh and blood, perhaps, but there could be no shred of humanity left in the one called Silas de Mortaine. Not when he commanded a small army of changeling beasts from another world, sentries conjured by some manner of sorcery to aid him in his quest for wealth and power. De Mortaine would stop at nothing, and woe betide any who stood in his way.

Even innocents, for on his order two months past had come the brutal deaths of a woman and child.

Rand’s wife and son.

They had been everything to him—life, love, more blessings than were deserving of him, he was certain of that. But they were gone now. With the slayings of fragile, sweet Elspeth and little Tod, Randwulf of Greycliff no longer had anything to live for.

Save to avenge them.

And he would, justice delivered with the slow and ago-nizing death of the one who took them away from him in a hellish night of fire and screams, and the waking nightmare of their blood spilling before his very eyes.

Rand carried the tool of his vengeance with him on the ship. Its weight knocked against his hip with the roll of the deck, an artifact secured within a leather satchel and concealed beneath the wide fall of his cloak. There was nothing Silas de Mortaine wanted more than the treasure that Rand and his brother-in-arms, Kenrick of Clairmont, had claimed from an abbey church at the crest of Glastonbury Tor three weeks ago.

That treasure—coupled with the final piece Rand was headed for Scotland to find—would be all the lure he would need. De Mortaine was certain to rise to the bait, and when he did, Rand’s retribution would be dispatched by ruthless, savaging steel.

He did not expect he would survive to savor his victory. Nor did he delude himself with the notion that he might join his family in the hereafter when his heart was blackened with hatred, his hands soon to be willingly stained with the cold-blooded murder of his enemy. But it mattered naught. Elspeth’s and Tod’s deaths would not go unmet, even at the price of his very soul.

“For them,” he muttered under his breath, the words misting in the rain before the rising howl of the storm swept them away.

The crash of another wave slammed the side of the cog, spraying briny water into his eyes. With the answering lurch of the deck, the young woman from Liverpool gave a sharp cry of distress. She flung her arm out to reach for a small purse that had come loose from her belongings. The tide washed across the deck, carrying the little pouch swiftly toward the edge. Too late to retrieve it, the errant purse rode the pull of the retreating wave right into the sea.

“My mother’s brooch was in that bag!” the woman wailed to her husband as he gathered her close to comfort and protect her.

“Best keep a tighter hold on your treasures. Wouldn’t you say, friend?”

Above the din of the storm, Rand heard the voice of the man seated down the deck from him. The query—and the oddly phrased advice—was directed at Rand, rather than the couple huddled across the deck. Rand lifted his head to peer at the stranger through the pelting rain. Dark eyes stared back at him from under the fall of a thick forelock, their narrowed, unflinching look too focused to be mistaken for anything less than cunning.

And now that he considered it, Rand noted with a degree of cool foreboding that the man had at some point moved closer to him. No longer a dozen paces, but less than half that distance. Just out of arm’s reach.

“I am not your friend,” Rand growled in warning, “and I’ve a blade at my hip that’s itching to convince you of that fact. I don’t like your look, sirrah. I’d advise you to back off.”

The man gave an abrupt shout of laughter. “You advise me, do you?”

“That’s right.” Beneath his mantle, Rand wrapped his fingers around the hilt of a dagger sheathed on his belt. “I won’t tell you again.”

There was something peculiar about the stranger’s face. Indeed, something peculiar in his very being. The sheeting rain seemed to distort his features, sharpening the man’s bearded jaw, bulking his dark brow. The eyes that stared at Rand with such boldness seemed lifeless and devoid of color now, coldly black. In the scant light, they took on a feral glint.

Battle instinct clamored an alarm in Rand’s gut. He pressed his spine against the sterncastle wall, feet planted firmly apart as he prepared to spring into combat mode in an instant, heedless of the raging weather.

The stranger grabbed the railing of the deck and hauled himself to his feet. The man chuckled now, his mouth filled with sharp, bared teeth. “You arrogant, stupid . . . human.”

He spat the word, as much a curse as the one Rand hissed when he realized what faced him now.

A bolt of light cut across the blackened sky. Thunder cracked and rolled in ominous fury. Rand ignored the tempest, sluicing water out of his eyes as he rose to confront one of Silas de Mortaine’s deadly minions.

“Give me the satchel,” the man snarled, his lips curling against the bright slash of his teeth.

“I’ll see you dead first—and gladly,” Rand told him. He did not wait for the attack to come to him. Preferring to be on the offensive, he made the first move, drawing a dagger from his baldric as he took a step forward.

One of the other passengers across the deck shouted through the driving force of another shuddering, spitting gale. “Sit down, fools! The storm will sweep you over!”

The warning went unheeded, wholly insignificant when one understood the truth of what was at stake here. The storm was brutal, to be sure, but there was a deadlier force at work on the rain-slickened deck of the ship. Rand was not about to let that threat go unmet.

He surged forward, lunging for de Mortaine’s man and locking him in a punishing choke hold. The dagger found vulnerable flesh and sank in, tearing a roar of pain and anger from the man’s throat. Blood flowed at once, tainting the briny darkness with the stench of rising death. De Mortaine’s henchman struggled to reach his own weapon, but Rand’s blade drove home again, this time plunging into the heaving barrel chest.

Where Rand anticipated surrender, he felt further resistance from the bearded man. The bleeding bulk of his body seemed to shift in his grasp, rippling with a queer power. Fingers that curled into Rand’s back for support grew longer, digging into his flesh with the hard bite of beastly claws.

Excerpted from Heart of the Dove by Tina St. John
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

Rewards Program