Praise for Susan Krinard
and her books
âA poignant tale of redemptionâ
âBooklist on To Tame a Wolf
âIts compelling characters and the universal nature of their
underlying conflicts should guarantee an across-the-board appeal to general fantasy fans and other readers.â âLibrary Journal on The Forest Lord
âA master of atmosphere and descriptionâ
âLibrary Journal
âReaders ⦠will be pleasantly surprised at the depth and
breadth of this novel. Character-driven, enhanced by plenty of adventure, it encompasses a far wider scope than a romance.â âRomantic Times BOOKclub on Shield of the Sky
âThe standard for todayâs fantasy romance.â
âAffaire de Coeur on Shield of the Sky
âKrinard is a bestselling, highly regarded writer who is
deservedly carving out a niche in the romance arena.â âLibrary Journal
âSusan Krinard was born to write romanceâ
âNew York Times bestselling author Amanda Quick
London, 1847
THE WOMAN WAS BEAUTIFULas no earthly creature could be, flawless in form and carriage, her hair cascading over her shoulders like Fane gold spun by a master weaver. The world of men had names for her kind: Fairy and Daoine Sidhe and Fair Folk among themâbut no such description could begin to capture her radiant perfection. Her ivory face shone with a stern radiance that no mortal could gaze upon without recognizing that he was nothing but a low, wretched brute in the presence of divinity.
Donal wasnât afraid, though Da had left him alone with the Queen of Tir-na-Nog. The man known by humans as Hartley Shawâthe Forest Lord, stag-horned master of the northern forestsâhad been cast out of the Blessed Land, driven away by his own mother because he would not give up his love for the mortal Eden Fleming. But now Queen Titania gazed down at her grandson and spoke, smothering the little spark of defiance Donal nursed in his six-year-old heart.
âYour father has made his choice,â she said, her voice sweeping over Donal like a blast of cold north wind. âBut you are young, and your blood may yet serve your people.â
Donal had heard those same words a hundred times before, and always he gave the same answer. âI want to go home, with Da.â
âHome.â Titania flicked her slender fingers, and silver leaves shook loose from the stately tree beneath which she stood. âThe vile sty mortals have made of the good, green earth. That is what you return to, child.â
Though Donal knew there were many bad things in the world, he knew it was not as terrible as his grandmother said. Animals still ran free in the forest beyond the Gate. Ma and Da had seen to that. No matter what happened anywhere else in the land called England, Hartsmere would always be safe.
âBut not for you,â Titania said. âNever for you, grandson. You will find no peace at your motherâs hearth. You will always be torn between two worlds, and your fatherâs choice will haunt you for as long as you live among mortals.â Her lovely face darkened as if a cloud had passed over the ever-shining sun of Tir-na-Nog. âHear me, and remember. If ever you should love as my son loves ⦠if ever you fall into the snare of a mortal femaleâs wiles ⦠you will lose the gift that lifts you above the People of Iron. The voices of the beasts will vanish, and you will be alone. You will have nothing ⦠nothingâ¦.
DONAL FLEMING WOKE with a start. The voice in his mind faded, and in its place rose the clamor and din of morning at the Covent Garden market.
Only a dream, he thought. Not a memory, real as it seemed ⦠at least not his own. But Tod had been there on that terrible day twenty-five years ago, and the hob had told Donal the story so many times that Titaniaâs threat had become unquestionable fact.
Donal flung aside the coverlet and swung his legs over the side of the bed. He massaged his temples, seeking in vain to quiet the incessant noise that was inescapable in the vast metropolis called London. With a groan he set his bare feet on the faded carpet and staggered to the washbasin to splash his face with the tepid water that remained from the night before. The few drops that passed his lips tasted of the smoke and coal dust and grime that hung in the London air. He scrubbed his skin with the towel so thoughtfully provided by the hotel staff, but no amount of washing would remove the cityâs taint.
He draped the towel over the back of his neck and went to the window overlooking the square below. The competing cries of vendorsâsellers of vegetables and fruit, meat pies and bread and sausages, flowers of every varietyâmingled with the clatter of cartwheels and hoofbeats, penetrating the thin glass as if it were tissue. Swarming humanity ebbed and flowed between the stalls and shops, kitchen maids bumping elbows with waifs buying violets to sell on street corners and bleary-eyed dandies gulping coffee after a night of theater and tavern.