Lions in the Garden
by Chelsea Luna
Release Date: March 1st 2016
Lyrical Press (Kensington)
Summary from Goodreads:
Prague, 1610
Ludmila Novakova--Mila--has barely set foot outside Prague Castle in her seventeen years. But with the choice between braving the bandits and wolves of Bohemia's uneasy roads or being married off to a disgusting old baron, she's taken what she can carry and fled.
Escape won't be easy. Even Mila has heard the rumors of a rebellion coming against the court. The peasants are hungry. The king hasn't been seen in months. Mila's father, the High Chancellor, is well known and well hated.
But Mila can't sit behind a stone wall and let fear force her into a life of silk gowns and certain misery. Her mother's death has taught her that much. She has one ally: Marc, the son of the blacksmith. A commoner, a Protestant--and perhaps a traitor, too. But the farther she gets from the castle, the more lies she uncovers, unraveling everything she thought she knew. And the harder it is to tell friend from enemy--and wrong from right . . .
by Chelsea Luna
Release Date: March 1st 2016
Lyrical Press (Kensington)
Summary from Goodreads:
Prague, 1610
Ludmila Novakova--Mila--has barely set foot outside Prague Castle in her seventeen years. But with the choice between braving the bandits and wolves of Bohemia's uneasy roads or being married off to a disgusting old baron, she's taken what she can carry and fled.
Escape won't be easy. Even Mila has heard the rumors of a rebellion coming against the court. The peasants are hungry. The king hasn't been seen in months. Mila's father, the High Chancellor, is well known and well hated.
But Mila can't sit behind a stone wall and let fear force her into a life of silk gowns and certain misery. Her mother's death has taught her that much. She has one ally: Marc, the son of the blacksmith. A commoner, a Protestant--and perhaps a traitor, too. But the farther she gets from the castle, the more lies she uncovers, unraveling everything she thought she knew. And the harder it is to tell friend from enemy--and wrong from right . . .
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Chapter One
Prague, Kingdom of Bohemia
May 1610
A handful of peasants carried an open casket on
their shoulders while the remainder followed, sobbing and chanting.
The head of the recently deceased corpse was separated from its body.
Not in a vulgar, bloody display, but the neck was cleanly severed
through the spine and the head sat neatly beside it. I swallowed down
a scream and guided my mare to the side of the road as the funeral
procession passed by.
I’d heard stories of the peasants’
superstitious behaviors—like removing the head after death to
prevent the deceased from returning to life. I’d never seen such a
spectacle in person, but this was my first time outside the castle
walls unescorted.
An old woman clutching a wooden rosary caught
my eye. Her eyes trailed from my face, hidden in my hood, down to my
dress. She recognized me. It had been stupid to think that I could go
undetected. I nudged my mare, Sepia, ahead, seeking an escape from
prying eyes.
The late afternoon sun struggled to break
through Křivoklat Forest’s almost impenetrable canopy of leaves.
The road split ahead— there were no signs like I’d imagined there
would be. I didn’t know which direction to take, only that I
wouldn’t go back to Prague.
I tapped my heels against Sepia’s sides and
decided on the left path. Any decision was better than none. Time was
becoming an issue—night would soon fall. The mare must have sensed
my apprehension, because she eased into a canter. Maybe there was a
village nearby or maybe I could sleep—
Sepia fell forward onto the ground.
Her front legs gave out and I catapulted over
her shoulder. I squeezed my eyes shut and braced myself for the fall.
I landed hard on my back in a jarring heap. My palm sliced against
something hard. Warm blood seeped from the cut and dripped down my
wrist.
The mare lay on her side breathing heavily. She
held her front left leg at an awkward angle, and even I—who’d
ridden only a handful of times—knew the limb was broken. Large
brown eyes rolled backward into her head.
I wiped my palm on the grass and crawled to
Sepia, despite my long cumbersome skirts. My hand throbbed from the
cut, but I couldn’t think about that now. Sepia was suffering. I
didn’t know what to do or how to stop the pain. My hands hovered
uselessly over the animal. Something rustled behind me.
Two men strolled out from the trees. One was
bald, short, and barefoot. His feet were blackened with mud and
excrement. The second man had a patchy black beard. Both were
extraordinarily dirty, like they’d just been rolling around in the
mud.
“Good day, miss.” The black-haired man
scratched his scruffy neck. “Looks like you’re in a bit of
trouble.”
I hesitated. I didn’t have much experience
with people outside the castle. Something warned me to be wary, but I
needed help. “My horse is hurt.”
“Horse, eh? What do you think, Vitaly? Want
to take a look?” the black-haired man said to his barefoot friend.
Vitaly peeled his eyes from the diamond combs
that pinned back my hair and approached the mare. Sepia’s tongue
lolled from behind her teeth. Her rib cage rose and fell as the poor
animal struggled to breathe.
I wiped my sweaty hands on my bodice. The
black-haired man’s eyes fell to my stomach and I followed his line
of sight. Blood had left a long red smear over my pale yellow gown.
“You ruined your pretty dress.” Something
gleamed in the man’s eyes—like he’d found a shiny coin on the
side of the road. I scanned the forest for an escape route, but where
would I go? I was a half day’s ride from Prague and there was
nothing around but trees.
Vitaly kneeled over Sepia. “Broken leg.”
The black-haired man ignored Vitaly’s
diagnosis. He shuffled closer. Grime crusted over his face like a
second layer of skin. “Where are you headed?”
Lie. “To Kladno.”
“Kladno?”
“Yes.”
“Do you live there?”
“Yes.” Another lie.
The poor mare grunted and kicked her back legs,
as if she could sense the danger emanating from the men. Sepia wanted
to flee, but she couldn’t stand.
The black-haired man scratched his armpit. “How
are you getting to Kladno with an injured horse?”
Lie.
“My father rode to get help. He should be
back any minute.”
It was a bad lie—why would a father leave his
daughter alone in the forest? Why wouldn’t she have ridden with him
on his healthy horse?
All of these thoughts must have crossed the
black-haired man’s mind, too, because his mouth stretched into a
blackened-gum-filled smile. “I don’t think so, miss.” He moved
to the flailing mare. He petted Sepia’s smooth coat with gentle
strokes before plunging a knife deep into the horse’s throat.
I screamed.
A terrible gurgling escaped the mare before she
went deathly still. The man wiped the blood from the blade on his
dirty trousers, leaving a deep crimson stain on top of another
splatter of something green and crusty.
I backed away from the men. The forest was
eerily quiet.
Vitaly inched away from the pool of blood
seeping from the carcass. “You should thank Niklas. No one could
fix that leg. He put the beast out of its misery.”
Niklas tilted his head and squinted at me with
a strange expression on his face. “You know what, Vitaly?”
“What’s that?”
“We may have stumbled onto something
interesting here,” Niklas said. “I see a gold bracelet, diamonds
in her hair combs and, by the looks of it, a high-quality silk gown.”
Vitaly’s eyes gleamed. “Fancy.”
“Her skin looks soft and smooth. I’d bet
those hands have never scrubbed a pot.” Niklas stepped closer. “I
think I know who she is.” “Who?”
“Vaclav Novak’s daughter,” Niklas said.
“The king’s chancellor?”
“That’s the one. What’s her name?” He
tapped his chin. “Hmm . . . Ludmila Novakova.”
Vitaly wrinkled his nose. “It’s hard to
say.”
Niklas had mispronounced my name as Lud-mill-a,
and not the correct Bohemian pronunciation of Lood-mee-la. They were
foreigners— probably Protestants—Prague was crawling with them
these days. It wasn’t a good sign, because that meant they likely
held no loyalty to the king or to the Catholic Church. My father had
warned me about how much the Protestants hated us. They probably
resented me just because I was Catholic.
As the men discussed my possible identity, I
slipped my hand into the carrying sack secured across my chest. My
fingers grazed smooth metal. I inched the dagger out of the bag and
hid it behind my back.
“She’s the spitting image of Isabella
Novakova.” Niklas rubbed his hands together. “Don’t you
remember her—the Spaniard? Daughter looks exactly like her. Same
blue eyes, same dark hair, same snotty look on her face.”
I flinched as the memories lashed out. Bloody
water sloshing over the rim of the porcelain tub. My mother’s
translucent hand stiffened with curled fingers.
Vitaly rubbed his hairless head. “I can’t
be certain if it’s Isabella’s daughter. Mighty pretty, though.”
“It’s her. I’d bet my life on it,”
Niklas said.
Vitaly shrugged. “That’s good enough for
me.”
I lifted my chin. “I’m a member of King
Rudolf II’s court and I live in Prague Castle. My father, Vaclav
Novak, is the High Chancellor of the Kingdom of Bohemia, and he, as
well as the king, will see to it that you are both hunted down and
hanged in the town square if something happens to me.”
“I don’t think so,” Niklas said. “Old
King Rudolf doesn’t show his face anymore. He hides behind his moat
and his tall walls.”
Vitaly grinned a row of rotted teeth. “Who
would know what happened to you way out here? That gold bracelet
alone could feed us for a year.”
I revealed the dagger and pointed it at Niklas.
The hilt was ornately carved with fighting dragons. The beasts’
eyes were encrusted with garnets.
Niklas’s face lit up. “Oh, it’s her all
right, Vitaly.”
The dagger felt heavy and useless in my hand.
“Stay back.”
“I spent years digging for garnets in the
mines,” Niklas said. “I’d break my back hollowing out those
rocks and then they’d ship the gems off to the castle.”
Niklas and Vitaly spread apart. I widened the
arc of my swing. The dagger sliced through the air as I whipped the
blade back and forth. The men circled me like vultures preying on a
carcass.
“Hand them over,” Niklas said. “The
bracelet. The hair combs. That dagger. I even want the dress. I can
get a good price for that silk.”
I swiped the dagger at Vitaly. I could run, but
I wouldn’t get far.
Maybe if I gave them what they wanted, they’d
take the jewelry and leave. I unfastened my gold bracelet and yanked
out the two dainty hair combs that were overlaid with tiny diamonds.
My dark hair fell in front of my shoulders in long waves. I tossed my
belongings to the ground in between us. “There. Now leave me
alone.”
Niklas shook his head. “I want the dress and
the dagger, too.”
“I’m not taking off my dress and I’m
certainly not giving you my dagger.”
“That’s a shame.” Niklas dove on top of
me before I could react. I fell hard to the ground, for the second
time that day, but I managed to hold on to the dagger when I fell.
I brought the blade to his scruffy chin. The
dagger shook in my hand.
The moment’s hesitation was all Niklas
needed. He seized my forearm and slammed it to the ground. The dagger
tumbled to the grass.
“Hold her shoulders down, Vitaly. I’ll slit
her throat. It’ll be easier to take the dress off a corpse.”
“Don’t get blood on the silk.” Vitaly
dropped to his knees beside my head. “Do you know how much this is
going to get us? We’ll be rich!” He released a high-pitched
giggle, but the galloping of hooves drowned out his laughter.
My two attackers turned just as a man vaulted
off a stallion. Vitaly stumbled backward, but not before scooping up
my hair combs and gold bracelet. He edged toward the forest. The
young man was a head taller than Niklas and Vitaly. He had short dark
hair with a light shadow of stubble across his jaw. He silently drew
his sword.
“Who the hell are you?” Niklas pointed his
bloodstained knife at him.
The man ignored Niklas and looked at me. “Are
you all right?”
I swallowed. “Yes.”
Mahogany eyes fell to the blood on my dress.
“Did they hurt you?”
“No, not yet. They killed my horse.”
Without warning, Niklas attacked, but the man
was ready. He swung his sword and slashed Niklas’s arm. A nasty red
line appeared through the rip in his shirt.
Niklas gaped at the wound. His face reddened
behind his patchy beard, and he lunged again.
The man stepped aside and brought down his
sword. This time, his blade sliced the back of Niklas’s thigh,
shredding his pant leg. Vitaly watched the uneven battle progress.
After a few moments, he shrugged and fled into the forest with my
diamond hair combs and golden bracelet.
“Vitaly!” Niklas screamed. Several
wounds—on his arm, legs and back—bled freely. He stumbled toward
Vitaly. “Come back! Where are you going?” Seething with anger,
Niklas whirled around to face the swordsman.
The man dodged Niklas’s knife, pivoted, and
brought the hilt of his sword crashing down on top of his attacker’s
head. Niklas teetered from the blow. The man punched him in the jaw
and Niklas crumpled to the ground.
He sheathed his sword and nudged a limp Niklas
with his boot. I stepped away.
The man showed his hands. “I’m not going to
hurt you.” His eyes fell to my hand.
I looked down—when had I picked up my dagger?
The sweaty metal felt foreign in my palm. I unclenched my fingers and
the weapon slipped to the ground, penetrating the grass.
“Are you hurt?”
My eyes roamed to Niklas and then to my dead
horse. “No. Thank you.”
He bowed. “At your service, Lady Novakova.”
I frowned. How was I ever going to run away
from the castle if everyone knew who I was? I motioned for him to
stand upright—I hated it when people bowed.
My rescuer inclined his head and I studied his
handsome face. He had a straight nose, a strong jaw and dark eyes. He
looked a few years older than me, but it could’ve been because of
his size. The top of my head barely came to the middle of his chest.
I’d seen him before— you couldn’t forget a face like that.
“Are you one of the blacksmith’s sons?” I
asked.
“Blacksmith’s son number two. Marc Sykora.”
He bowed again.
“Pleased to meet you, Lady Novakova.”
“Please, call me Mila,” I said. “Thank
you for saving me. You’re very skilled with a sword.”
“I make them for a living and I have two
brothers to practice with—it helps.” Marc’s eyes drifted to my
hand. “You’re hurt.” I’d forgotten about the cut. “It’s
nothing.”
“You’re bleeding.” Marc approached me
like I was a feral animal that might attack at any moment. He
inspected the wide gash that ran the length of my palm. He tore the
bottom of his shirt and wrapped the fabric around my hand. “There.
That should help.”
“Thank you.” I pulled my cloak around my
shoulders. The temperature had plunged with the sun.
Marc flashed a friendly smile. “How far did
you think you’d get? Out here all alone?”
I lifted my chin. “I don’t know what you’re
talking about.”
Marc’s eyes lingered on my carrying sack and
then on Sepia’s dead body facing the road that led away from
Prague. After a long minute, he nodded. “I’ll take you back to
the castle.”
“To the castle?”
“Where else would you go? It’s dark.”
The sun had set sometime during my struggle
with Vitaly and Niklas. I turned to the open road that disappeared
deep into the forest. The path vanished into absolute blackness, and
beheaded corpses slithered through my mind. There was no way I could
make it to the next village without a horse.
But how could I go back to the castle? I’d
heard the rumors. I’d watched the opulent caravan arrive from
Moravia and the fat old Lord Igor Otto waddle up the castle stairs to
ask my father for my hand in marriage.
“I’ll take you back to Prague,” Marc
said. “But if you’re not interested, you should know that the
nearest town is more than a day’s walk away.” He pointed to
Niklas’s unconscious body. “Unfortunately, there are probably
other men in the woods looking for pretty young women like you.”
I bent to retrieve the dagger. I’d blushed
when he called me pretty and I had to hide my face before I could
look at him again. “I’d be most grateful if you’d escort me
back to the castle.”
“Shall we—?”
Wolves howled.
Marc eyed the horse carcass with a frown. He
clicked his tongue and his chestnut stallion strutted out from behind
the trees. “We should leave before we have company of the
four-legged kind.”
“What? You can’t possibly mean—”
“That’s exactly what I mean.”
My stomach sank at the idea of wolves ravishing
Sepia.
Marc led me by the elbow. “Hurry, they’ll
be drawn to the smell of blood. I can probably fight off a couple of
hungry wolves, but not a full pack.” Instead of offering his hand,
Marc seized me by the waist and lifted me onto his stallion. He
jumped on behind me and gathered me in close.
The wolves’ howls filled the forest as we
raced toward Prague. Their primal cries came from every direction.
The sky darkened to the point where nothing was visible—only a sea
of blackness. I could feel Marc’s thighs behind mine, pressing
occasionally to guide the stallion. I’d lost all sense of
direction, but I was confident he knew the way back to the city in
the dark.
Marc loosened his grip on the reins and I
noticed a thin black string of thread tied around his wrist. It was
almost hidden by his sleeve cuff.
“I didn’t know female members of the king’s
court were allowed to leave the castle without an escort,” he said.
“I didn’t know you were the keeper of the
king’s laws.”
He chuckled. “Don’t worry, your secret is
safe with me, whatever it is. But we do have a long ride ahead of us
. . .”
What was the point of keeping it to myself? I’d
obviously failed at my escape attempt. “I was headed to Munich.”
“Munich? That’s far. Why were you going all
the way there?”
“I wanted to book passage to Spain.”
He made a noise in his throat that indicated
how ridiculous my plan was. “And what’s in Spain?”
“My aunt.”
Marc waited for an explanation.
“She’s the only family member I have left
outside of Bohemia. I can’t stay in Prague.”
“Why not?”
“Because they’re trying to marry me off to
this old, fat lord from Moravia. And I refuse to do it.”
“How old are you?”
“Seventeen, and Igor Otto is probably fifty.
I won’t marry him.”
Marc hesitated. “Munich is farther than I’ve
ever ridden and I know this forest better than most. It’s dangerous
for a woman to be alone in the woods.”
I looked at him over my shoulder. The top of my
head fit underneath his chin, so it was difficult to see his face,
especially in the dark. “What were you doing in the forest alone?”
I asked accusingly.
“I was returning from Kladno.”
“On official blacksmith business?”
Marc hesitated. “I took my father to my
uncle’s house. They . . . they’re working on something there.”
“On what?”
“You ask a lot of questions.”
“Are you a Protestant?” It slipped from my
tongue before I could stop it.
“I am,” he said. “You’re Catholic.”
“Yes.” It wasn’t a secret. All of the
king’s court was Catholic. I hadn’t missed that Marc had
deflected my questions about what his father and uncle were doing in
Kladno. Clearly, he didn’t want me to know. I’d heard whispers in
the castle about the beginnings of a Protestant rebellion. And many
of those rumors stemmed from the very anti-crown village of Kladno.
Could Marc and his family be involved?
“And you are a member of the House of
Habsburg?” Marc asked.
“On both my mother’s and father’s sides.”
“Interesting,” he said.
We lapsed into a companionable silence as we
rode through the forest, and before long we reached the edge of
Prague. . . . It was dark, but my eyes had adjusted enough that I
could make out the redtiled roofs and steeples of the town center.
This was my home and I knew it well. Despite the darkness, I knew
what lay ahead—the lengthy stone bridge that crossed the Vltava
River and led up to Prague Castle, sitting like a fortress high upon
Hradčany Hill.
The castle was separate from the rest of the
town, but it provided all the necessary comforts of royal life.
Towering spires erupted from behind inaccessible walls, and a deep
moat around the castle provided ample security from outside threats.
It felt like a prison to me.
The beauty of Prague Castle—my home—filled
me with an overwhelming sense of panic. I shivered, partly from fear
of returning to the castle and partly because my thin cloak didn’t
provide enough warmth from the night’s chill.
“You’re cold,” Marc said.
“I’m fine.”
He slipped his hand under my cloak and rubbed
my bare arm. “You’re not fine. You’re freezing.”
“We’re almost there. I won’t freeze.”
Marc drew me to him until my back lay against
his chest. I shivered again with the unexpected contact. He wrapped
his arms around my waist and leaned into me, using his large frame to
shield my body from the unseasonably cool air. I couldn’t stop
myself—I nestled into him, seeking his warmth.
“That’s better,” he whispered.
I was incredibly aware of how close we were and
how much of our bodies touched. I’d never been this close to a man.
My mind buzzed with activity. Was he as aware of me as I was of him?
Or was I being silly?
“You may want to pull your hood up,” Marc
said as we descended the sloping hill into the basin that was Prague.
He was right. I couldn’t be seen outside the
castle walls sharing a horse with the blacksmith’s son. My
reputation would be ruined, my father would kill me, and the king
would ban me from his court. I didn’t care about any of those
repercussions, but I pulled the soft fabric down over my forehead
anyway. I didn’t want Marc to get into trouble.
The horse’s hooves echoed off the uneven
cobblestone streets west of the town square. Marc pointed to a
curving, narrow street lit by one lone torch. “I live down there.
My father’s shop has been there for thirty years. My brothers and I
live above the store.”
I tried to imagine Marc living above the
blacksmith’s shop with his brothers and his father. Was it crowded?
Or was it wonderful living so close to your family?
We crossed under the towering covered parapet
and onto the wide stone bridge. The rushing Vltava River separated
the town—where Marc lived—from the castle on top of Hradčany
Hill. Dread filled the pit of my stomach. I didn’t want to go back.
“Can you take me around to the side
entrance?” I whispered. “To the Eastern Gate?”
The bridge ended at the second parapet. The
horse climbed the steep hill and I slid back into Marc. The strange
warm feeling that I’d experienced with his first touch spread
through me again. “The gate is over there.” I pointed.
Light from the castle lit the side entrance
that servants used to bring in food and supplies. Marc climbed down
from the horse and the cold air assaulted me with his departure. I
couldn’t stop my teeth from chattering while he helped me to the
ground.
“Thank you,” I whispered.
The horse’s body blocked the gate, and even
though I’d just ridden with him for the last several hours,
standing with him in the shadow of the looming castle walls felt . .
. intimate.
“Can you get inside?” Marc asked.
“Undetected?”
“One of the guards should let me in.”
I didn’t want to go inside for several
reasons, but I didn’t know what was keeping him from leaving me. It
finally dawned on me that I should give him some form of compensation
for all that he’d done for me. Coins clinked as I rummaged through
my sack. “Here, let me give you something for your troubles.”
Marc’s hand clamped around my wrist. He shook
his head. “No.”
“It’s no problem—”
“No, really. I appreciate the gesture, but I
don’t want your money.”
“How can I thank you?”
“You just did. I’m glad I was there to
help,” he said. “You shouldn’t run off into the forest again.
Or if you do, come find me first.”
A guard appeared on the other side of the gate.
“Who’s there?”
“I have to go,” I whispered.
“Good night, Mila.”
“Good night.” I ran to the gate, hugging
myself to keep warm.
The guard drew his sword. “Who’s there?”
“It’s me,” I said softly.
“Lady Novakova? What are you doing out
there?”
I didn’t answer. I waited for the guard to
unlock the gate. I slipped a coin in his hand as I passed, hoping he
understood that I needed him to keep quiet. The guard pocketed the
coin with a nod.
My skirts swished against the ground as I raced
up the path. I was headed to the back entrance of the castle, where
all of the nobles and other important members of the state’s
administration lived.
I glanced over my shoulder before I went
inside. Marc watched me from behind the gate. We made eye contact and
something passed between us. I held the stare for longer than was
probably considered acceptable for a lady, but after all the rules
I’d broken today, I hardly cared.
Marc tapped his heels against the stallion’s
sides and he disappeared into the night. I immediately missed his
company. The guard paced in front of the gate. It was a disturbing
reminder of what separated us—peasants and members of the working
class were prohibited from entering the castle unless they were on
official royal business.
Marc couldn’t enter the castle grounds—and
I couldn’t leave them.
Chelsea Luna is the author of the bestselling NEW ENGLAND WITCH CHRONICLES, a young adult paranormal romance series comprising of four novels. Chelsea is also the author of the bestselling LOVE & THE ZOMBIE APOCALYPSE, a young adult horror trilogy.
Chelsea received a Juris Doctorate from New York Law School in New York, New York in 2007, and a B.A. in Sociology, with a concentration in Criminal Justice, from the University of Tennessee in 2004. She lives in Tennessee.
Chelsea received a Juris Doctorate from New York Law School in New York, New York in 2007, and a B.A. in Sociology, with a concentration in Criminal Justice, from the University of Tennessee in 2004. She lives in Tennessee.
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