The LURE of the MOONFLOWER
A PINK CARNATION NOVEL
by Lauren Willig
Praise for the novels of Lauren
Willig:
“There are few authors capable of matching Lauren
Willig’s ability to merge historical accuracy, heart-pounding romance, and
biting wit.”
—BookPage
“Willig’s sparkling series continues to elevate the
Regency romance genre.”
—Kirkus
Reviews
“A merry
romp with never a dull moment! A fun read.”
—New York Times bestselling author Mary
Balogh
With THE LURE OF THE MOONFLOWER (NAL Trade Paperback Original; August 4, 2015; $16), Willig delivers the epic conclusion to the much beloved series. The Pink Carnation is faced with her most dangerous mission to date—and that’s not including the sexy, rebellious spy she’s forced to team up with…
All of Portugal believes that the royal
family departed for Brazil just before Napoleon occupied Lisbon. Only the
English government knows that Queen Maria was spirited away by a group of
loyalists determined to rally a resistance.
A brilliantly
designed novel filled with espionage, suspense, intrigue, and wit—Lauren Willig
never fails to deliver heart-pounding, swoon-worthy stories. THE LURE OF THE MOONFLOWER gives fans
of the series a conclusion to remember and is a must-read for this summer
season.
EXCERPT
To set the scene…. It’s 1807 and Jane Wooliston, aka the Pink
Carnation, is on the trail of the missing queen of Portugal, with orders to
find her before Napoleon does. But to do
so, she needs the help of Jack Reid, the agent known as the Moonflower. He speaks the language; he knows the
terrain. She doesn’t. But Jane doesn’t like losing control, so she
decides to even the odds by having them travel in a way which gives her the
upper hand: disguised as French soldiers, she an officer, and Jack her servant.
She doesn’t count on her
“servant” sharing her tent….
“Daydreaming, Lieutenant?” Jack Reid let the flap of the tent fall back
down behind him as he walked in as though he owned it.
“What are you doing here?” Hastily, Jane yanked her jacket back around
her shoulders. As befitted an officer, the shirt beneath was made of fine
linen. Too fine.
Jack tossed his hat onto her cot, where it spattered rainwater on her
blanket. “We made less than five miles today. At this rate we’ll make Porto by
spring.”
“Don’t be absurd. I’m sure we’ll pick up speed tomorrow.” Jane snatched
the hat off the bed and thrust it back at him. “Don’t you have somewhere else
you need to be?”
“The mule is settled and Moreau’s servant is short a week’s pay. Dice,”
Jack explained helpfully, as he plucked Jane’s cloak from its peg and began
rolling it into a makeshift pallet.
“How nice for you,” said Jane, with heavy sarcasm. Heaven help her, she
was beginning to sound like him. She set her hands on her hips. “What are you
doing?”
“Insurance.” Jack removed a pair of pistols and placed them by the side
of the pallet. “Not to mention that it’s drier inside than out.”
He plunked himself down on Jane’s cloak, smiling seraphically up at
her.
Jane blinked down at him. She hadn’t thought about where he would
sleep. She had assumed, if she had thought of it, that the officers’ servants
would have their own accommodations.
The tent felt very small with Jack Reid in it.
Jane narrowed her eyes at him. “You can’t bunk with one of the other
batmen?”
“And leave you unprotected?”
There, at least, she was on firm ground. Jane reached beneath her
pillow. “I have my own pistols.”
“Try not to point them at me,” said Jack, and settled back, using his
camp bag as a pillow. “Would you mind blowing out the lantern when you’re done
prinking? I don’t like sleeping with a candle lit.”
Neither did Jane, but that was beside the point. “What about ‘go’ and
‘away’ don’t you understand . . . Rodrigo?”
Jack propped himself up on one elbow. The lamplight picked out the
strands of copper in his dark hair, dancing along the lines of his muscles
beneath the folds of his shirt.
“Are you going missish on me, princess?” There was a dangerous glitter
in his amber eyes. “Because if you are, tell me now and we can abandon this
whole bloody charade.”
The profanity, Jane had no doubt, was deliberate and designed to shock.
“If this is an attempt to provoke me, I can assure you, it will be quite
unavailing.”
“‘Quite unavailing’?” Jack collapsed back on his camp bag, rolling his
eyes up at the roof of the tent. “Forget what I said about not pointing those
things at me. Put me out of my misery and shoot me now.”
Jane resisted the urge to direct a short, sharp kick to the side of the
Moonflower’s head. “No one asked you to join me.”
“Didn’t you?” retorted Jack mockingly. “I don’t remember being given
much choice in the matter. Master.”
“In my tent,” Jane amended, glaring at him.
It was too cold to strip down entirely, but she’d intended at least to
remove her boots before seeking her bed. Jane regarded the recumbent figure on
the floor—on her cloak—with tight lips. Missish, he had called her.
If she could endure his presence in her tent, he could bear with her
wet feet.
Jack rolled onto his side, looking up at her with an expression of
feigned innocence. “Need help with that?”
“I can manage,” said Jane, with as much dignity as she could muster
while hanging half upside down. These boots had been designed with a valet in
mind. Either that or the leather had shrunk in the rain.
The first boot came off with a pop, nearly conking her erstwhile batman
in the head.
Jack dodged out of the way. “Apparently not,” he said, and before Jane
could stop him he had gripped the other boot by the heel. “Relax, princess.
Consider this a basic instinct for self-preservation.”
“I thought you had rather a well-developed instinct for that,” said
Jane tartly. Empires could rise and fall, but the Moonflower always seemed to
land on his feet.
“If I did, would I be here with you?”
The boot came off easily in his hands, leaving Jane’s leg bare but for
her silk stockings, rather the worse for wear. Jack Reid’s fingers ran along
her calf, his thumb digging into the tight muscles, massaging them.
Jane froze.
So did Jack Reid. He snatched his hand away as though burned.
Jane drew her leg back, tucking it behind the other. She could feel the
tingles all the way up her shin. “Thank you. For your help with the boot.”
Jack Reid rocked back on his heels. “This is only the beginning, you
know.” He looked up at her, his eyes dark in the uncertain light. “I’m your
manservant. I live in your tent. I see to your, ahem, needs. You’re going to be
seeing a lot of me, princess.”
Jane pressed her eyes briefly shut. Of course. Another ploy, another
stratagem. She ought to have known.
“We’re not going back to Lisbon,” said Jane flatly.
“Suit yourself.” Jack shrugged, burrowing down into Jane’s cloak and
tipping his hat down over his nose. From beneath the brim, she heard him
murmur, “It’s going to be a long march.”
Lauren
Willig
is the award winning, New York Times bestselling author of the
Pink Carnation novels, set in the Napoleonic Era. Before becoming a full time
writer she received a JD from Harvard Law. She resides in New York City.
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