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  A battle of wills . . .

  As the oldest son and heir to Anglesea, it is Roger’s duty to stand tall and strong. But his tough exterior belies the heart of a true romantic, a devoted son who yearns for the deep love he has witnessed between his parents and his sisters and their husbands. However, with the Anglesea family jockeying for a more advantageous position, Roger must marry judiciously.

  A fight for the heart . . .

  Having spent her childhood watching her mother suffer, Kathryn of Mandeville is determined never to marry. To be as a Viking shield maiden of old is her heart’s only desire. But when her sister Matty runs away to escape Roger’s sensible proposal, Kathryn is forced to help Roger find a more suitable bride. Bound by duty, Roger and Kathryn soon discover they are facing a much tougher fight—the one that is within their hearts . . .

  Visit us at www.kensingtonbooks.com

  Books by Sarah Hegger

  Sir Arthur’s Legacy Series

  Sweet Bea

  My Lady Faye

  Conquering William

  Roger’s Bride

  Published by Kensington Publishing Corporation

  Roger’s Bride

  A Sir Arthur’s Legacy Novel

  Sarah Hegger

  LYRICAL PRESS

  Kensington Publishing Corp.

  www.kensingtonbooks.com

  Copyright

  Lyrical Press books are published by

  Kensington Publishing Corp. 119 West 40th Street New York, NY 10018

  Copyright © 2016 by Sarah Hegger

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any means without the prior written consent of the Publisher, excepting brief quotes used in reviews.

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  Kensington and the K logo Reg. U.S. Pat. & TM Off.

  Lyrical Press and the L logo are trademarks of Kensington Publishing Corp.

  First Electronic Edition: December 2016

  eISBN-13: 978-1-60183-914-5

  eISBN-10: 1-60183-914-6

  First Print Edition: December 2016

  ISBN-13: 978-1-60183-917-6

  ISBN-10: 1-60183-917-0

  Printed in the United States of America

  Dedication

  To the all authors who have held my hand throughout this journey. You know who you are, and I love each and every one of you.

  Chapter 1

  Roger wanted to jab his dagger into his eye. He despised failure, hated it, yet judging by his intended bride’s reaction to his courtship performance, he and failure now shared a bed. Love and war, with a clear plan, a man could manage one in much the same manner as the other. Hadn’t a lifetime under the guiding hand of Sir Arthur of Anglesea set this lesson into Roger’s marrow?

  Except, Roger’s courtship had veered from the battle plan.

  Lady Mathilda had accepted his flowers with her sweet, lovely smile and even moved her skirts to make place for him beside her. Since then, his plan had moved from disarray into rout. Lady Mathilda should be sighing by now, at least peeping at him from beneath thick dark lashes. He’d watched William turn a woman sweet a hundred times.

  In her haste to put distance between them, she inched her curvy hips down the bench, almost tipping onto her pert ass. She pressed a fluttering hand to her throat. “Five sons, Sir Roger?”

  “Aye.” He softened his tone. A woman would not enjoy being bellowed at like a man-at-arms. “My mother had four, and the two girls. I wager we could do better.” He gave her a tiny nudge. “Aye?”

  Agape, Lady Mathilda shook her head. Her nut-brown hair made a silky swish on the bench.

  Too abrupt? Perhaps. He should have refrained from the nudge for certain, but desperation crept through him with each passing moment. “Of course, that is if you are willing, my lady.”

  Gentle, his mother had urged. Woo her with sweet words and smiles.

  Roger smiled.

  She stared at him with huge eyes, dark like aged walnut, and gave him her flawless profile.

  Mother had chosen well. Lady Mathilda boasted the sort of beauty that would make any man want to strut and crow like a barnyard cock.

  “Your lips.” He gave it another try. Please let the spirit of his brother, William, dwell within him now. “Are as ripe as…apples. Red apples, not green. Not the red and green ones either. All red, like…” Jesu, give him strength. Even he could do better than that. “I mean cherries.”

  “You are most kind.” Her chest rose and fell with her quickened breathing, and while a man tried not to look, or get caught looking, she filled out the front of her bliaut with a tasty, ripe bounty.

  Roger balled his hand into a fist, tempted to punch his own face with it. He made a dog’s ballocks of this. Give him a keep to tear down, a young soldier to train, a horde of marauding Scots. Anything but this.

  Still, he’d vowed to marry, and marry he would. Time to do his duty as the heir. At his feet, his favorite bitch peered at him and whined. She understood him, never needed pretty words from him. Why couldn’t women be more like dogs? Only, with not quite so much fur and the bad breath. There must be something they could speak of. He waded into the oozing silence. “Dogs?”

  Lady Mathilda clasped her hands in her lap, fingers white about the knuckles. “Dogs, Sir Roger?”

  “Aye, dogs. Do you like them?”

  “Nay.”

  He should talk about her. That last bit of counsel from older sister, Faye. “What do you like?”

  “Me?” She started. A flush stained her peachy skin. Mother had certainly found him a girl to rival Faye in looks.

  “Aye.”

  “I like flowers.”

  There, he had done one thing right. “Flowers are nice. And?”

  “Um…” She stroked her skirts over her knees. “Silk. I like silk.”

  “Then I shall be sure to clothe you in silk for the rest of your days.”

  Her head snapped up and she went taut beside him. “The rest of my life?”

  “Indeed.” The rest of his life seemed to stretch in front of him like an endless road to nowhere. Did Lady Mathilda perhaps sense his reluctance to marry? “I am sure we will be very happy together.”

  Lady Mathilda sprang to her feet. “Aye.” Retreat bellowed from every taut line of her as she scurried away.

  Roger received the message clearly. Lady Mathilda did not favor his suit.

  Her full hips rocked with the speed of her flight.

  It was a pity for her, then, that Roger of Anglesea had decided he would wed Mathilda of Mandeville. Will she or nil she.

  * * * *

  Kathryn stuck her head around the screens at one end of Anglesea’s hall and tried to signal her sister. Matty charged straight into hell with all Kathryn’s carefully conceived and executed plans. Why could a person not run a courtship like a battle? It would be so much simpler that way.

  Matty stared at Sir Roger like the man had sprouted two heads. Blast!
What ailed her sister? Sir Roger fit Kathryn’s requirements to perfection. Not much for prayer, Kathryn had spent hours on her knees asking for just such a husband for Matty. They’d been at Anglesea for two days now, and Kathryn’s relief when she met Sir Roger had made it easy to encourage Matty to welcome the match.

  She could not fathom, why today of all days, the usually biddable Matty had taken one of her huffs into her head. Lord above knew, they did not happen often, but when Matty took one of her stands, there would be the devil’s work to sway her. The wedding contracts remained unsigned, on Sir Arthur’s behest, until Roger and Matty both agreed they would suit.

  Sir Roger tugged at his tunic neck as he shifted on the bench beside Matty.

  If only the man had a touch more address. To be fair, however, Kathryn had not aided his courtship because of his honeyed words and pretty gestures. She had explained all this to Matty.

  Matty rose and near ran for the door.

  Fists balled by his sides, wide shoulders taut, Sir Roger watched her go.

  Matty rushed past and Kathryn dropped into step beside her. “What happened?”

  With a shriek, Matty leapt away from her. “Kate?” She pressed her hands to her bosom. “You near scared the life out of me. I thought you were him.”

  “Father?”

  “Nay, him.” Matty jerked her head toward the hall. She glanced back. “Does he pursue me?”

  Sir Roger stood, much as Matty had left him, with a tremendous frown on his handsome face.

  “Nay.” Kathryn lengthened her strides to keep up with Matty. “What happened?”

  Matty stopped, one foot on the bottom stair. “Did you see him?”

  “Aye, I did. Great comely fellow that he is.” Kathryn suffused as much enthusiasm as she could into her words. Not as pretty as his brother, William, but Kathryn preferred Sir Roger’s more rugged looks.

  Matty shuddered. “He is a brute.”

  “Brute?” Kathryn followed her sister up the stairs. “Nay, Matty, but he is a warrior, which is why we agreed you should marry him.”

  Matty spun and glared. “We agreed to nothing. You and father said I should marry him.”

  “Matty.” It was the first and last time Kathryn would probably agree with their father. “We spoke about this. Remember?”

  Matty drooped. Her eyes filled with tears. “I cannot marry him.”

  “But why not?” Kathryn climbed closer to her sister. “He may be big and rough, but I enquired everywhere about him. They say he is tough but fair, and kind to his people. Men like this do not come about like the village peddler. We must snap him up while we can.”

  “I cannot.” On a soft cry, Matty ran up the stairs.

  “But you must,” Kathryn whispered to the empty space. “How else am I to keep you safe?”

  Chapter 2

  Kathryn dug her heels into Striker’s flank and urged him faster. The quintain sped closer, and Kathryn fixed her aim dead in the center. Her sword snug in her hand, she leaned to the side. Striker shifted his weight to accommodate her.

  A hit! Dead center and the arm whirled around. Kathryn ducked low to Striker’s neck to avoid the sandbag as it came about. She halted Striker before they plowed into the low wooden rail fence surrounding the practice yards.

  After her failed conversation with Matty, she had gone straight to the stables and saddled Striker. Her intention to ride until she could formulate a new plan had been subverted by the Anglesea practice yards. Sir Arthur of Anglesea certainly kept a good yard for his men. Here amongst the predictable action of thrust and parry, the fine but exact joust against the quintain, she could think. Plan.

  This marriage must happen. Everyone, from the stable hands to the village midwife loved Sir Roger, extolled his virtues. Could Matty have seen something in Sir Roger all Kathryn’s clandestine enquiries had missed? She wiped her sweaty sword hand on her tunic. She would have preferred a lance against the quintain, but none lay about, so her sword would do.

  “Get off that horse,” Father bellowed.

  Striker pranced to the side.

  Father stomped across the practice yard toward her, ruddy with ill temper. His black stare bored holes straight through her tunic.

  She’d disobeyed both parts of Father’s decree. She hadn’t stayed out of sight as much as possible, and even worse, she’d engaged in manly pursuits. Kathryn’s belly tightened, but she hid her reaction behind a blank mask. Like a mad dog, her father sensed fear and fed on it.

  She had last seen him happily ensconced in the armory with a mug in one hand and a buxom wench on his knee. It had augured well for a couple of hours out of his sharp notice.

  She slid to the ground beside Striker. Sweat trickled down her sides.

  “What did I tell you?” He grabbed her upper arm and yanked.

  Kathryn stumbled forward.

  His beefy hand engulfed her arm and tightened.

  Searing pain shot up her arm. She refused to let the hurt show. Instead, she raised her chin and held his angry gaze. “There is nobody about. The men are all out.”

  “Lucky for you, you stupid girl.” Spit dotted his thick lips and hit her face. “I warned you.” He would leave bruises a mile wide on her arm. “You will not destroy your sister’s chance at this match.”

  Matty’s chance? His chance he meant. Her father was randy as a rutting buck for this alliance. Anglesea meant money and power, both of which the old cur would whore his soul for. Instead, he whored his youngest daughter.

  “Forgive me, Father.” She managed the words past her clamped jaw. “I will put Striker away and change before anyone is the wiser.”

  “Not this time.” He shook her. The yard dipped and swirled as her head jerked this way and that. “This time you will learn. I will have that horse carved into dog meat.”

  “Nay.” Kathryn tried to step closer to Striker. She had raised him from a foal, trained him herself. Death would come before she lost him. “It will not happen again.”

  “You are right it will not.” Her father pushed his face closer to hers. “Because when we return to Mandeville Castle, that horse will be dead.”

  A deep voice came from behind Father’s heavy shoulder. “That would be a shame.”

  Tall as a tree and just as wide, Sir Roger stood with one booted foot on the bottom rail of the fence surrounding the practice yard. The wind toyed with his dark hair. “That is a fine animal.”

  “Sir Roger.” Father gave a turd-sucking grin. “I did not see you there. Were you not whispering sweet nothings to our Mathilda?”

  “Lady Mathilda was called away,” he said.

  Or ran away. Whatever the reason, he seemed disinclined to tattle on Matty. Another excellent quality in his favor. She would get Matty to see reason.

  “What a pity.” Father rubbed his hands together. “Such a fine pair you make.”

  “Speaking of fine pairs”—Sir Roger strode closer—“your daughter and that horse are as well-matched pair as I have clapped eyes on. It would be a terrible shame to separate them.”

  “Separate them?” Father slapped Striker’s withers. “As if I would. Nay, I am merely funning with the girl.”

  Relief made her dizzy. Father would never risk his displeasure. She wanted to fall at Sir Roger’s feet and thank him.

  “Is this your oldest daughter?” Sir Roger loomed above her, his direct gaze on her. Dark hair, blue eyes, and a pair of shoulders that looked as if they could swing a battle-axe with ease.

  A flush crept over her cheeks. His intense scrutiny disconcerted her. She felt small and delicate before him and, for the first time in her life, she felt the girlish urge to giggle.

  “Indeed.” Father shoved in front of her. “This is Kathryn, but I beg you to pay her garb no mind.” He sidled closer to Sir Roger. “She is a bit of a strange one. There is one in every keep, is there not?” Hearty laugher gushed from him as he nudged Sir Roger.

  “Indeed.�
�� Sir Roger stepped away. “I taught my youngest sister to fight with a dagger. A woman should know how to defend herself.”

  Kathryn dropped her head to hide her surprise. Not many men thought as he did. He grew in her estimation.

  “Aye.” Father bobbed his head.

  “I have never taught a woman to joust, however.” Sir Roger smiled at her.

  Kathryn’s mind emptied. Her feet rooted to the spot. Handsome in repose, when he smiled…dear Lord. The man had a smile to bring the birds from the trees. It crinkled about his eyes and softened the stern lines of his mouth.

  “Women do not joust.” Father gaped at him.

  “Come now, Sir Royce.” Sir Roger clapped Father’s back.

  Father staggered two steps forward. A full head shorter than Sir Roger, but wide through the girth, her father bore considerable meat on his bones.

  “You have two charming daughters. Allow a man the pleasure of both their companies.” Sir Roger winked. “Let me get to know my sister by marriage, at least.”

  Father tugged his ear. “There will be time enough for that once you are wed to our Matty.”

  “You are right.” Sir Roger threw his arm about Father’s shoulders. “But an ally in Lady Mathilda’s camp could not hurt.”

  Clever man, making the one argument that would weigh with her father. Was his intervention deliberate or merely a fortunate coincidence?

  Father huffed, and shifted his feet. “I would not want her to cause offense. I have told her not to concern herself with men’s matters.” He shot a glare at her.

  Her blood ran cold. Sir Roger’s presence had merely delayed her punishment.

  “I am not in the least offended,” Sir Roger said. “I find it rather…endearing.”

  Endearing? That might just be enough to save her a beating. Sir Roger seemed a little more perceptive than she had suspected.