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Revolutionary Love

For love and revolution.

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  • The Revolution has cost Verity Sterrett nearly everything. Redcoats killed her father and burned her home. Verity is forced into living with her Loyalist uncle, who is determined to marry her off to a brutal British officer among those boarding with the family. And her beloved brother and his best friend Theo, the man Verity loves, are off fighting for independence. When one of the Redcoats brags of covert plans for an ambush, Verity sees her chance to aid her cause. It’s the first step in her role as a spy in Martha Washington’s spy ring.

    Major Theodore Kinnard volunteered to fight for his new nation with ideals of chivalry and honor. War has shattered those ideals. Gifted at sharpshooting, Theo has become General Washington’s best sniper. However, killing at a distance feels more like murder than honorable combat and leaves Theo hesitant to admit his love for Verity lest he corrupt her innocence and goodness.

    As the war moves forward and Verity’s involvement grows, Theo does his best to shield her from its danger, and from himself. The battles rage on, and Theo and Verity won’t stop fighting for independence. But when the danger mounts, if Verity can’t convince Theo to give their love a chance, their happiness and their freedom may become another casualty of the war.

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Revolutionary Love

Revolutionary Love

For love and revolution.

Excerpt

“This world?” A small shake of her head set the moonlight shimmering in her dark tresses. “As if we are living in two different places.”

His voice turned hard. “We are. You have no idea what I’ve seen. What I’ve done in this blasted war.” He released her arm and looked away; afraid his sins would somehow show on his face.

She touched his shoulder, but he refused to meet her eyes. “And you’ve no idea what I’ve seen and endured. The British soldiers in New York…they are not kind or decent men. I’ve seen how prisoners are treated. I’ve firsthand experience in how they treat women. Whatever you’ve done, the soldiers I know you’ve killed in battle, is all for the greater good of America.”

He spun back to her. “You don’t know what I’ve done! I murder men. Murder. Not fight in battle but sit atop hills and cliffs three hundred yards away with my long rifle and shoot men without warning. They have no means to fight back against me. They never see me coming. My sharpshooting skills are exceptional, and I’ve been singled out as Washington’s private killer.” His chest heaved from the force of his breathing. Hands shaking with rage and regret, he balled them into fists. “Go to bed.”

Stay. God, he wanted her to stay, but he’d stain her sweet innocence. He wasn’t worthy of her attention. Not when she discovered—

“Oh, you are too hardheaded!” She snarled with all the ire of a wet kitten. Plunking her hands on her hips, she scowled.

He choked back his guffaw at the indignation she displayed. Even angry, she was delightfully charming.

Her jaw clenched tighter, brows lowered a fraction more, and her eyes burned.

Unease stirred within him. Perhaps he’d underestimated her vexation.

“Don’t you dare patronize me.” She stepped closer so they were chest to chest. She tilted her chin up to keep their stares locked. “You believe General Washington is so morally corrupt he’d use someone as a trained killer on a whim?”

“No, but—”

She sliced a hand through the air. “Tell me, these men you’ve shot from afar, were they key soldiers leading troops into battle?”

“Yes, but—”

She poked a finger into his chest. “Did their deaths mean swift victories for the Continental Army without additional bloodshed?”

“Most of the time, but—”

“Then you saved lives, you daft man! By working with Washington to choose when and whom to target, you are saving countless American and British soldiers from death on the battlefield. I spent one dinner with the general and I know without qualms he is the very best of men. His Excellency would not be our chosen leader if he did not inspire unwavering trust in his decisions for the good of our country.”

Theo blinked while his mind whirled over her words. A few points were fair, but still these men did not have the hope of fighting back against him. They did not see their deaths coming at his hands. “The soldiers I’ve murdered did not even know from which direction death struck.”

A frustrated growl filled the air, and she stamped her foot. “As is so for most of us. Not everyone is fortuitous enough to see Death approach and have an option to fight back. People die every day and there is nothing to stop it. My father is proof. Redcoats dragged him from our field without warning. Tortured him for information. Beat him when he refused to pledge allegiance to the king. Hanged him and burned our home to the ground. All while I cried and begged for mercy. The only mercy I found was when they left me to spread the news of what happens to so-called traitors.”

His eyes grew round as horror swept through him. He marveled at the strength she held inside her tiny frame. It shamed him further to think of how he hid from afar behind his gun. His teeth ground together. He was a worthless coward. A worthless coward who could not provide her the life she so deserved.

Her face softened. Shaking her head, she lifted a hand to his cheek. “You cannot blame yourself. No matter what your mind tells you, you are a good man.”

Theo jerked his head away from her touch, afraid to sully her. “You are too naive.”

“Stop treating me as a child. I am a full-grown woman, in case you hadn’t noticed.”

Before he registered it, he reached out and swept her into his arms so their bodies touched from chest to thigh. “I am all too aware you are no longer a child.” He shifted his hips against her belly, and she gasped as his erection pressed there. “There is no mistaking your female curves.”

Their eyes locked and held. In the moonlight, he saw her pupils enlarge, her pulse flutter at her throat, and the small parting of her lips as her breathing quickened. Her body softened and relaxed into his embrace. “Theo,” she whispered. The tip of her tongue peeked out to wet her lips.

Take her! his body screamed, but his heart protested. She deserved a better man than he. Verity did not warrant a hurried ravishing on the cold ground, but to be made love to in a warm, plush bed with a man who could marry her without reservations. A wail strangled in his throat as he forced his arms away.

She stumbled back but steadied herself.

“Go to bed. Please, I cannot take more torment tonight.”

She opened her mouth yet closed it without a word. With one last fleeting glance, she spun and ran inside. Theo stood beneath the tree, every fiber of his body aching to race after her. To soothe away the tears he saw glimmering in her eyes. Only his self-loathing kept his feet in place.

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