Read A Knight to Remember Online

Authors: Bridget Essex

Tags: #Fiction, #Lesbian

A Knight to Remember

A Knight to Remember

 

by Bridget Essex

 

Synopsis:

 

A librarian, a warrior woman, and a love story that's out of this world...

Holly tells herself that the reason she hasn’t asked her girlfriend to move in (after four years of dating) is that she’s too busy–but it isn’t true. A very book-obsessed librarian, Holly has buried herself in so many romantic and magical stories, that at night, she dreams of a woman who will sweep her off her feet–something her indifferent girlfriend has never done. But one night, during an unusually vicious storm, magic and romance appear in Holly’s backyard in the form of a mysterious, gorgeous woman…wielding a sword.

The dashing stranger’s name is Virago. She claims that she’s a warrior on the hunt for a great and terrible beast; that she, and the beast, slipped through a portal from their world into ours. Holly isn’t sure what to believe, but she is now responsible for a (possibly crazy) swordswoman who is bewildered by modern-day conveniences like escalators, but not by the chivalry of sweeping a woman off her feet.

Can Holly help Virago find her own world again, or will that falling-in-love thing get in the way? And, of course, there’s the tiny problem of the beast Virago wounded that is now seeking revenge…

A KNIGHT TO REMEMBER is a light-hearted, fantastical romance that will take you on a journey you’ll never forget.
 
It is approximately 74,000 words (several days worth of reading or so).

 

 

"A Knight to Remember"

© Bridget Essex 2014

Rose and Star Press

First Edition

All rights reserved

 

No part of this e-book may be reproduced in any manner whatsoever, including Internet usage, without written permission from Rose and Star Press except in the case of brief quotations embodied in articles or reviews.
 
Please note that piracy of copyrighted materials is illegal and directly harms the author.
 
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places and incidents either are products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.

 

 

Dedication:

For my own lady knight in shining armor—who, instead of a sword, wields a pen.
 
I love you and every adventure we’ve shared together.
 
Here’s to countless more.

 

And this book is especially dedicated to Mrs. P.
 
Thank you for always handing me a stack of books and for listening.
 
Without your humbling kindness, I would never have become a writer.
 
You changed my life for the good, and I’m grateful.

 

 

Contents:

 

 

Chapter 1:
 
The Beginning of the End

Chapter 2:
 
It’s in a Book

Chapter 3:
 
Virago

Chapter 4:
 
Another World

Chapter 5:
 
Modern Miracles

Chapter 6:
 
Do You Believe in Magic?

Chapter 7:
 
Two Stories

Chapter 8:
 
Fiction

Chapter 9: Things Left Unsaid

Chapter 10:
 
The Red Herring

Chapter 11:
 
Open Doors

Chapter 12:
 
Books and Breakups

Chapter 13:
 
The Joust

Chapter 14:
 
Hunter and Hunted

Chapter 15:
 
Remember Me

Acknowledgements

About the Author

 

 

 

Chapter 1:
  
The Beginning of the End

 

Everyone but me loves a Renaissance Festival.

I mean, how can I not, right?
 
At the Ren Faire, you can get gigantic turkey legs on sticks, watch “wenches” wrestling in the mud while yelling medieval insults at each other and see gigantic, gorgeous horses bedecked in colorful armor carrying jousting knights (who also yell medieval insults at each other, but are usually a little less covered in mud).
 
I mean, I know this might not sound like everyone’s cup of tea, but it was certainly mine.

I
used
to look forward to July more than any other time of the year, because July was when the Knights of Valor Festival would pull up in its creaking, rusted train cars and set up in a little local dog park on the edge of Boston for a week.
 
I’d get all dressed in traditional wench wear (which basically means that my chest was
almost
entirely visible in my daringly low cut white “wench blouse”), spend all of my money on overpriced fried food and hand-made artisanal soap, yell “huzzah!” approximately eighty thousand times, and generally be the happiest person in the world.

But this was all before Nicole.
 
Or “BN,” as Carly loves to put it.

I sigh as we pull into the parking lot that has been set up on the very edge of the dog park.
 
Before us spreads out the chaotic brightly colored tents of the festival.
 
I can already see one of the large horses—bedecked in purple and gold ribbons dangling from his halter—being shoed by a traditional blacksmith behind one of the largest tents, and the scent of turkey legs is already pumping in through the car vents.
 
Somewhere distantly, I can hear lute music.
 
All of this should spell happiness.
 
But my best friend Carly puts the car into park, switches off the ignition, and savagely rips the cap off of her lipstick and starts to apply it.

Carly silently applying lipstick means that Carly was angry.
 
Carly pretty much
never
does anything silently.

“You know…” I begin, licking my lips.
 
I clear my throat.
 
“You know, it might actually be fun today,” I tell Carly, who’s still glowering at her reflection in the rearview mirror.
 
She snaps the cap back on her “Vixen-Red” lipstick and stares at me with one perfectly manicured eyebrow raised.
 

“Right.
 
Because it’s been just
so much fun
the past four years,” she snorts, pushing up her visor with a roll of her eyes that’s so hard, the force of her sarcasm practically melts the steering wheel.
 

“Carly…you don’t have to come with us,” I murmur, scrunching down in the passenger seat, shoulders hunched forward as my tiny bit of hope gets squashed.
 
I know she doesn’t mean for it to hurt, but it does.
 
I mean, I wish it wasn’t like this, too, but…

“Hey.
 
Hey
,” sighs Carly, glancing sidelong at me.
 
“Look—you’re my best friend in this entire universe, and several parallel dimensions, okay?”
  
She holds my gaze for a long moment as she reaches across the space between us and squeezes my hand tightly.
 
“I would march with you to hell and back if it’s where you wanted to go on summer vacation.”
 
Her eyes narrow.
 
“But I’m
also
allowed to think that your girlfriend is an
asshole
if, you know,
she actually is
.”
 
Carly pulls down the visor again and stabs another bobby pin through her tight red curls and slightly-drooping flower crown.

“I mean,
asshole
’s a little harsh,” I begin, but then there’s a sharp rap at my window.

And speak of the devil…there’s Nicole.
 

When Nicole told me, a few nights ago, that Carly and I should go to the festival together, and she’d meet us there on her way home from work, I’d had my doubts she was even going to show up at all.
 
I mean, I think it’s safe to say that the Renaissance Festival isn’t exactly her scene.
 
But no—I was wrong.
 
She was
here.

As I stare up at her through the window, at her bright blue eyes that stare deeply into mine for half a heartbeat, I wonder if this means I’ve been wrong about other things.
 
She
tried
this time.
 
That counts for something.

But my girlfriend, the girlfriend I’ve been with for five years, doesn’t exactly look happy to see me.
 
Yes, her gaze flicks to mine for that heartbeat, but then those piercing eyes are trained back onto her cell phone.
 
Nicole’s standing outside of the car in her blue power suit with the crisp creases in the legs, soft black briefcase dangling from her bright red fingertips, smart phone in the process of becoming glued to her ear already.
 
And she’s frowning deeply, her full lips curling down at the corners.
 
She turns away from me, speaking sharply into the phone.

I hold tightly to my door handle, take a deep breath and open it.
 
No matter what, at least she’s
here
, right?

“Asshole,” Carly repeats quietly to me, and then we’re both out of the car, standing on the grass of the “parking lot.”

Nicole doesn’t even look up at me, hasn’t greeted me, hasn’t even grunted in acknowledgement that I’m here.
 
We haven’t gotten a chance to ask each other how work was, because we don’t really do that anymore.
 
And I know—my day at the library wasn’t all that exciting, really, but still.
 
I did survive another day cataloging the gigantic endowment left by Mrs. Herschel.
 
The most exciting thing that happened was my eating a peanut butter and jelly sandwich that I’d left in the library lunchroom for two weeks and then found miraculously when I moved the discarded magazines off the table.
 
The sandwich was still tasty, and I didn’t die from food poisoning.
 
And if Nicole could unglue the smart phone from her ear for a moment, wipe off the purely disgusted look she has on her face when she glances at the row of people dressed to the nines in period garb, already making their way into the festival, I could tell her that story about my sandwich.
 
Or at least tell her “hello.”
 

But she doesn’t unglue the smart phone from her ear.
 
She doesn’t look my way as she sneers into her phone.

She doesn’t want to be here.
 
It’s obvious.
 
So painfully obvious.

I realize, my gut clenching, tension rushing through me already, that I honestly wish she hadn’t come at all.

“David says he’ll be here shortly,” says Carly, glancing down at the phone in her hand when it makes its bicycle bell sound to alert her to his text message.
 
When she says the name “David,” her voice goes all gooey, like she’s been eating cotton candy, and I grin sidelong at her, folding my arms in front of me and leaning against the side of her badly rusted Ford Escort.
 
I’m glad Carly has David.
 
They’re good people, and he’s a good guy, and she really deserves a good guy.

And hey, at least two people in our group of four are going to have a good time today.
 

I sneak a glance at Nicole.
 
She’s turned completely away from us now, brandishing her hand as she shakes her head sharply, practically seething into the phone.
 

Awkward silence crushes us in place for five minutes as Nicole works on her phone, continuing to mutter short, sharp phrases into it until I shift uncomfortably against the car and clear my throat.
 
Nicole holds up a finger, her other hand furiously pressing at the screen of the smart phone as she ends another call.

“This is important…” she mutters, and then puts it up to her ear, walking away down the line of cars.
 
She
still
hasn’t looked at me.
 
“Jeff?” she says crisply into the smart phone as she raises her chin, her eyes flashing.
 
“Yes, this is Nicole Harken…”
 
She stalks quickly away from us, down the staggered line of cars parked on the grass.

“Okay, seriously, Holly—why are you two still together?” asks Carly then in frustration.
 
Her extremely curly red hair is blowing in a slight wind, her eyes are narrowed as she stares at me, and even though I really,
really
didn’t want to have this conversation (again) today, I’m struck by how dramatic she looks.
 
The wind is actually blowing through her hair quite briskly, like she’s on the set of a fantasy movie and about to go into battle…and not asking me painful personal questions.
 
I clear my throat, shift my weight against her car and purposefully look away, my mouth suddenly dry.
 
But she doesn’t let up.
 

Holly
…” Carly murmurs, stepping forward, looping one of her arms through mine tightly.
 

You could be so happy
.
 
I promise you, have I ever steered you wrong?”

I glance up at her, already feeling the lump in my throat as I swallow again.
 
I just wanted to have a nice evening at the Renaissance Festival.
 
I breathe out.
 
“Well,” I say, trying to crack a joke, “there was that one time in college—”

“Okay,
whatever
, we were in college.
 
Stop bringing up the Bunny Disaster, would you?” she chuckles, but then pins me in her gaze again.
 
“C’mon, Holly, serious time, okay?
 
I’ve seen you happy.
 
I’ve seen you with ladies that are
really
good for you, and I can tell you, as your best friend and person who’s had a lot of experience seeing you through your highs and lows, Nicole is a definite,
definite
low.
 
You’re not a good match, and it needs to end.
 
I mean, you
want
it to end, so why are you dragging this out?
 
Just dump her.
 
She doesn’t care about you.
 
We’ve been over this a thousand times—” she groans.

I disengage Carly’s arm from mine quickly (and with a hope that Nicole actually
didn’t
hear us) as Nicole turns and stalks back toward Carly’s car, phone smoothly tucked into her suit pocket.
 
“Hello,” she finally tells me, but the word is cut off and curt, and she merely nods her head to Carly, and then smiles a little at me, though it’s strained.
 
She looks around, her long fingers nervously patting the suit pocket where she just, seconds before, deposited her phone, like she can hardly function without that device in her hand.
 
“Anyway, ladies, where’s David?
 
I can only stay here maybe a half hour, hour tops—there’s an account that I have to—”

“Look,
Nicole
, it costs fifteen bucks to get in,” says Carly, voice sharp as she curls her shoulders forward toward Nicole, her hackles obviously rising.
 
“You’re just going to waste fifteen bucks on a half hour?
 
Holly’s been looking forward to this for—”

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