Cover Reveal and Giveaway: Bewitching a Highlander

Today Roma Cordon, CamCat Books, and Rockstar Book Tours are revealing the cover for BEWITCHING A HIGHLANDER, her debut Historical Fantasy Romance which releases June 7, 2022! Check out the awesome cover and enter the giveaway!

 

On to the reveal!

About the Book:

Title: BEWITCHING A HIGHLANDER (A Scottish Highland Warriors Novel #1)

Author: Roma Cordon

Pub. Date: June 7, 2022

Publisher: CamCat Books

Formats: Hardcover, Paperback, eBook

Pages: 368

Find it: GoodreadsAmazon, Kindle, B&N, iBooks, Kobo, TDB, Bookshop.com

 

 

Defying all for the love of a bewitching lass.

Breena MacRae, a healer from Skye with a touch of witchery in her blood,
embarks on a dangerous search for her missing father. She arrives on the Isle
of Coll, seat of the vile Campbells. There, she encounters the debonair future
chief to the Dunbar Clan, Egan, who rescues her from a Campbell sentry.

Egan Dunbar is on Coll to keep the peace between the feuding Campbells and
Dunbars. But when he catches Breena in a lie, he agrees to help her find her
father to pay back an old debt and get to the bottom of the secrets she’s
hiding.

As their attraction for each ignites like a firestorm, Breena and Egan realize
a future together could trigger deadly consequences—a clan war between the
Campbells and the Dunbars. Is Egan willing to betray his clan for love, even
though he knows Breena is keeping secrets from him? Can Breena trust him with
her family secret and put those she loves at risk?

 

 

Excerpt:

CHAPTER

1

“You have witchcraft in your lips. .
.”

William Shakespeare, Henry V.

October 28, 1747—Isle of Coll,
Scotland

Breena MacRae’s heart beat out of tune from the cacophony of
their wagon’s rattling. Sixteen horse hooves trampled the knurled road, pulling
them southwest toward the  Campbells’ keep, a clan she blamed for most of
her childhood miseries.  Three weeks ago, she’d awoken from nineteen years
of delusions, yet  it was no less painful living the truth. Her parents
had neither died in  some horrific accident nor left because of her.
Breena was after all the  most deplorable witch the MacRaes and Maxwells
ever had the lamentable fortune to beget.  

Uncle Craig leaned over and gave her shoulder a gentle
squeeze. The  clumsy yet affectionate gesture grounded her. It rid her of
her punishing  thoughts. 

“We aught to go over the plan again.”  

She would always be obliged to him and Aunt Madeline.
They’d  been her guardians since she was six, although many times since
then,  despite the fact that she loved them both with all her heart,
they’d made  her want to either scream or blaspheme.  

Sometimes both. 

His familiar features reminded her of her mother’s, his
little sister. “All right, but understanding the need to lie doesn’t make it
any less  difficult,” she said.  

“Difficult it may be, but it will keep us alive.” 

She huffed. He was too cautious. Or was she not cautious
enough? Breena blinked up as the afternoon sun reconsidered slipping pass
horizontal puffs of clouds. 

Mayhap she herself should reconsider her decision to come
here. No. Even if there was a remote possibility her father was alive,
she  had to attempt to find him. She had to free him. Her heart ached for
all he  must have endured. She’d believed him dead for the past nineteen
years,  until three weeks ago, when lovable yet scatterbrained Aunt
Madeline  had let slip the truth. After suffering from dysentery and a
bout of guilt,  her aunt had blurted out that Ian might still be alive.
Had Aunt Made line known she wasn’t at death’s door, she might have been more steadfast
in her secrecy. Craig and Madeline had insisted her parents wanted  the
truth kept from her all this time. The secrecy and deception might  have
been the stimulant for her childhood misery, but it hadn’t been the
cause. Nonetheless, it had resulted in long, wasted years.  Her dream from
the previous night replayed in her mind. Beloved  Grandmother Sorcha,
their majestic matriarch, had told her Ian had  something to reveal. If
Breena believed dreams were a sign of things to  come, then it was a sign
her father was indeed alive. But she didn’t know  if she believed in
dreams. After all, she lacked the gift of second sight. The revered Sorcha
on the other hand wielded her own gift of sight like a true  proficient,
when she was alive. 

A chilled hollowness speared her innards, causing a shiver to
run up  her spine. It had been her tormentor since she was six. Often she
paused  and wondered what had slipped her mind, what she had forgotten—perhaps
she’d missed something. Then it would hit her. She hadn’t missed
anything, hadn’t forgotten anything, nothing had slipped her mind. It was
only that her parents had vanished, without a word, leaving an acute aching
void. She pulled her woolen arisaid tighter around her shoulders and
prayed not only that their scheme would work on the Campbells but that
she could rid herself of this ache in the pit of her belly, once and for
all. 

She gazed out the wagon as the panoply that was the Isle of
Coll  rolled by. The crisp October breeze swept her cheeks as she eyed
the  chestnut-feathered corncrakes scavenging the beachgrass-infested
sand  dunes. Nature’s russets, umbers, and olives, always vibrant at home
on  the Isle of Skye, were starved for luster here on Coll.  

A lone angler in the distance slumped his shoulders in a
small skiff,  then gazed up at the sky as if beseeching heavenly bodies
for a boon be fore casting a net onto the surface of the ocean. The earthiness
of the  damp ground below mingling with the briny sea air and the
pungency  of kelps filled her nostrils as she inhaled a cleansing breath.
She was well  acquainted with the pain of unanswered pleas. Well, mayhap
the tide was  changing for them both. 

When she caught the incessant tapping of her fingers on the
side of  the wagon, she pulled her hand back into her lap.  

“I’ll wager they don’t even remember the name Beth MacRae after
nineteen years.” Breena fought against the agonizing emotions that
flooded her every time she said her mother’s name. 

Craig’s brown eyes looked back at her from beneath shaggy
brows,  the slight impatience that twitched his cheek muscles highlighting
his wrinkles. “That’s a wager I’ll not be taking, for the price of losing
is finding our necks at the wrong end of a noose.” 

George, her uncle’s worker, flipped the reins up ahead with a
sharp,  practiced snap. A throaty intake of breath escaped his mouth.
“Holy  Saints. It looks haunted.” 

Breena’s head snapped up to follow his gaze. The back of her
neck  prickled. Castle Carragh loomed grim on the horizon. George was
as  strong as a feral goat but simpleminded. 

“There are no such things as ghosts, she said.” But from her sudden
inability to swallow, she wasn’t sure she believed her own attempt to as suage
his fears.  

If the builders of this castle had meant to strike terror
into its visitors, they’d carried out their goal to perfection. The shadows
cast by Carragh against the backdrop of the setting sun stretched out toward
them  like crooked talons, warning them to keep away.  

She ignored the warning and said a silent plea that they were
not too  late, that her father was still alive. 

As they approached the castle’s outer gates, Breena made out
two  menacing sentries dressed in threadbare tartan trews of blue and
green,  the colors of the Campbell clan. They were each outfitted with a
sword,  mace, and a flintlock rifle; were they preparing for war? George
pulled  their wagon up closer to the gate, reined in the horses, and
lowered his  head, awaiting instructions. It always caused Breena such
disquiet to  see such a large man lower his head like that. She had known
George  for close to a decade, since he’d come to work for Craig, and
despite his  broad, hulking body he was the gentlest person Breena had
ever met.  

When one of the sentries at the gate brandished his sword,
Breena’s dry gulp refused to be suppressed. His flared nostrils and
squinting  eyes made his pugnacious expression more acute. Did he wish to
intimidate them? If so, he’d gotten his wish. The other sentry snarled,
exposing crooked incisors, as he scratched his crotch. Breena eased the
tension  in her face into what she hoped was a pleasant smile, even as her
fingers curled against her damp palms. The squinty-eyed sentry scowled.
“What’s your business here?”  

“I’m Craig Maxwell. I’m a healer and spice merchant. May we
be of  service to your clan?”  

Neither Squinty Eyes nor Crooked Incisors was impressed by
her  uncle’s request. Squinty Eyes spat on the ground, his scowl
deepening.  He sauntered to the back of their wagon and started sifting
through their  supplies.  

All of a sudden he lifted his sword high in the air and
brought it  down in an echoing crash on the lock of a trunk. Breena gasped
out loud  in surprise.  

Craig jumped down from the wagon and stumbled toward
Squinty  Eyes. “I’ll show you whatever you wish, but there’s no cause to
break our  trunks.”  

Squinty Eyes raised his hand, still gripping the sword and
slammed  the hilt down, with a dull thud, into Craig’s jaw. Breena’s body
froze with  horror. Her uncle teetered backward and fell to the ground,
landing on  his rump.  

“Unc—Father!”  

Dread rose up her gullet as she jumped down from the wagon, almost
buckling at the knees, landing with more force than anticipated.  She
ignored the approaching thunder of hooves and rushed toward  Craig. She
couldn’t lose him too. She just couldn’t. She took hold of  Craig’s arms
and helped him from the ground. 

“Are you hurt?”  

Her uncle’s mouth was open, his gaze flat. She took some of
his  weight as he leaned against her. He was in shock. There was blood at
the  side of his mouth, at the end of an ugly cut, where he’d been struck.
A sharp pang of fear speared her midriff as she reached into her pocket
for  a clean square of linen and, with a gentle touch, dabbed the blood
away.  Her uncle’s worker approached them with hesitant steps.
Breena sent him a cursory glance, noting the fear in his bulging eyes
when he saw Squinty Eyes. 

“George, why don’t you remain with the horses?” Breena said.
His head bobbed. “Yes, mistress.” 

George understood horses, but he had difficulty with people.
She returned her attention to Craig. She took hold of her uncle’s  chin,
avoiding the darkening bruise that was now a stark contrast to his  pale
skin. She inspected the wound as she gently followed his jaw line  with
her fingers all the way to his neck. Nothing broken. She closed her  eyes
and exhaled a breath of relief.  

Craig was a graying man of eight and fifty with a slim build,
whereas  Squinty Eyes was younger and more than twice the size of her
uncle.  Breena ground her teeth when another drop of blood fell from
Craig’s  mouth. Her pulse raced with heated indignation. How dare this
barbaric  bully strike Craig? How dare he block them from entering this
atrocious  castle? It’s not as if there were endless visitors clamoring
for entrance.  Losing her parents and years of this aching void pushed her
to retaliate.  But she couldn’t. They were at the utter mercy of this
insolent sentry to  gain entrance to the Campbells’ keep. He held their
fate and her father’s  life in his hands, a fact he was utterly unaware
of.  

As she tended to Craig, a loud snigger pierced the air. She
swung  around to see Squinty Eyes dangling a gossamer shift off the tip of
his  sword, right above the now-broken trunk. He jutted his flaccid chin
in  Breena’s direction as he addressed Craig. 

“You let me have a roll in the hay with the lass and I’ll let
you in.” Breena’s eyes narrowed at the crude proposition. The insult dug
in. Her heart rate quickened as self-preservation and a survival instinct unfurled
inside her. The heat of it spread throughout her entire body like  a wave
of sickness, making her shake. “You bastard.”  

Rationality went out the window as she took two steps forward
and  dealt a resounding slap across the sniggering face of Squinty Eyes.
He  was caught off guard, judging by the way his mouth fell open and
his  head jerked back. His odious stench made Breena want to pinch the
tip  of her nose shut and breathe through her mouth.  

But then, coldness sank into her stomach. Oh no. No. What had
she  done? She blinked, trying to swallow against the rising bile, and
stepped  back.  

She would never forgive herself if they were barred entrance
because  of her foolhardy actions. She’d never done anything like that
before.  What was the matter with her? The earlier mention of a noose
burned  her ears. 

Squinty Eyes recovered. He grunted and swore as he grabbed
her.  His grip, like cold steel, dug into her soft flesh. He wrenched her
right  arm forward. Her mouth tightened with defiance as she glared at him.
Even as her right shoulder was at risk of dislocating under his granite
hold, she held her chin high. She would not give this bully the satisfaction of
seeing her cower.  

“You brazen wench, how dare you strike me?”  

His eyes bulged, and spittle escaped from his mouth. She
tugged  and pulled to no avail as the pounding of horses’ hooves
reverberated in  the air around them. Out of the corner of her eye, she
glimpsed a towering, broad-shouldered Highland warrior dismounting from the
blackest  stallion she’d ever seen.  

He stormed Squinty Eyes from behind.

 

 

About Roma Cordon:

Roma Cordon was introduced to
romance novels in her teenage years and instantly became a voracious reader of
the genre. In the 1990s, she came to live in New York where she earned her
undergraduate and graduate degrees. After taking a writing course at New York
University with Anne Rice, she dived into the world of writing while testing
the waters at public speaking at her local Toastmasters club. By day, Roma
works in the finance industry; in the evenings and weekends, she is a
passionate romance writer. She also writes on her blog romacordon.com.

 

Inspiration for Roma’s debut
novel, Bewitching a Highlander came from trips to Scotland
with her husband. Roma is an active member of the RWA-NYC Chapter and lives in
New York with her husband where they care for two adorable furry friends
adopted from local shelters.

 

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