The Lost Love of a Soldier: A timeless Historical romance for fans of War and Peace. Jane Lark

The Lost Love of a Soldier: A timeless Historical romance for fans of War and Peace - Jane  Lark


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      The Lost Love of a Soldier

      Jane Lark

      A division of HarperCollinsPublishers

       www.harpercollins.co.uk

      Contents

       Jane Lark

       Dedication

       Chapter One

       Chapter Two

       Chapter Three

       Chapter Four

       Chapter Five

       Chapter Six

       Chapter Seven

       Chapter Eight

       Chapter Nine

       Chapter Ten

       Chapter Eleven

       Chapter Twelve

       Chapter Thirteen

       Chapter Fourteen

       Chapter Fifteen

       Chapter Sixteen

       Chapter Seventeen

       Chapter Eighteen

       Chapter Nineteen

       Chapter Twenty

       Chapter Twenty One

       Author Note

       The Illicit Love of a Courtesan

       Chapter One

       About HarperImpulse

       Copyright

       About the Publisher

       Jane Lark

      I love writing authentic, passionate and emotional love stories. I began my first novel, a historical, when I was sixteen, but life derailed me a bit when I started suffering with Ankylosing Spondylitis, so I didn’t complete a novel until after I was thirty when I put it on my to do before I’m forty list. Now I love getting caught up in the lives and traumas of my characters, and I’m so thrilled to be giving my characters life in others’ imaginations, especially when readers tell me they’ve read the characters just as I’ve tried to portray them.

      You can follow me on Twitter @JaneLark.

      This is an unusual story for me. I chose to write the prequel to The Illicit Love of a Courtesan - The Lost Love of a Soldier - because the readers who love the series asked for a prequel. But when I decided to write this, I realised I had to follow elements of a real story.

      I’d made the decision when I wrote The Illicit Love of a Courtesan to use the title of a real regiment who fought in the battle of Waterloo. I chose the 52nd (Oxfordshire) Regiment of Foot. So when I began this story my first task was to research the 52nd, to find out how they came to be there, and what part they played in the battle.

      The 52nd returned from The Peninsular War to Britain, in the summer of 1814, two hundred years ago to the year of this novel, and therefore this became the window of opportunity for my fictional characters, Paul and Ellen, to meet.

      I dedicate this story to all those who serve in the military, and the families who support them.

       Chapter One

      “Lady Eleanor…” A gentle almost-knock struck the door as Ellen’s maid whispered through it, as if she feared someone hearing her, even though she knocked on the servants’ entrance to Ellen’s bedchamber.

      Ellen’s father, the Duke of Pembroke, would not be near the servants’ stairway.

      “Pippa?”

      The handle turned. The door opened.

      “My Lady, a letter.” Pippa held it out as she came in. “It is from the Captain.”

      “From Paul?” Ellen swept across the room, her heart clenching as she moved. Paul was the reason the whole house had slipped into tiptoeing and whispering. He’d caused her father’s recent rage, and now everyone was terrified of causing offence and becoming the next focus for her father’s anger.

      If it was rude to snatch it from Pippa’s hand, then love had made Ellen rude.

      Her fingers shook as she broke open the blank seal and unfolded the paper.

      My love.

      Holding the letter in one hand, the fingertips of her other touched his words.

      My love… He’d only said those words for the first time a week ago, and yet she’d hoped to hear them for weeks, perhaps for months. Paul. An image of him dressed in his uniform crept into her head, his scarlet coat with its bright brass buttons hugging the contours of his chest. She loved the way he smiled so easily, and the way it glowed in his blue eyes. But he was a man of strength and vibrancy; life and emotion burned in his eyes too, and power cut into his features.

      He was a breathing statue of Adonis; his beauty more like art than reality.

      Her gaze dropped back to his words.

       I’m sorry. Your father has said, no, and by now I am sure you know it. I tried Ellen, but he would not hear me out. He said I am not good enough for you. He would not even consider me. He will not have his daughter become the wife of a mere captain,


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