By Winter's Light
About By
Winter’s Light:
#1 New
York Times bestselling author Stephanie Laurens returns to romantic
Scotland to usher in a new generation of Cynsters in an enchanting tale of
mistletoe, magic, and love.
It’s
December 1837, and the young adults of the Cynster clan have succeeded in
having the family Christmas celebration held at snow-bound Casphairn Manor,
Richard and Catriona Cynster’s home. Led by Sebastian, Marquess of Earith, and
by Lucilla, future Lady of the Vale, and her twin brother, Marcus, the upcoming
generation has their own plans for the holiday season.
Yet where
Cynsters gather, love is never far behind—the festive occasion brings together
Daniel Crosbie, tutor to Lucifer Cynster’s sons, and Claire Meadows, widow and
governess to Gabriel Cynster’s daughter. Daniel and Claire have met before and
the embers of an unexpected passion smolder between them, but once bitten,
twice shy, Claire believes a second marriage is not in her stars. Daniel,
however, is determined to press his suit. He’s seen the love the Cynsters
share, and Claire is the lady with whom he dreams of sharing his life. Assisted
by a bevy of Cynsters—innate matchmakers every one—Daniel strives to persuade
Claire that trusting him with her hand and her heart is her right path to happiness.
Meanwhile,
out riding on Christmas Eve, the young adults of the Cynster clan respond to a
plea for help. Summoned to a humble dwelling in ruggedly forested mountains,
Lucilla is called on to help with the difficult birth of a child, while the
others rise to the challenge of helping her. With a violent storm closing in
and severely limited options, the next generation of Cynsters face their first
collective test—can they save this mother and child? And themselves, too?
Back at the
manor, Claire is increasingly drawn to Daniel and despite her misgivings,
against the backdrop of the ongoing festivities their relationship deepens. Yet
she remains torn—until catastrophe strikes, and by winter’s light, she learns
that love—true love—is worth any risk, any price.
A tale
brimming with all the magical delights of a Scottish festive season.
Review to come probably later on.
Review to come probably later on.
Q&A
with Stephanie:
You state that BY WINTER’S LIGHT is an essential
volume for the Cynster novels going forward. Why is that?
One of the critical features of a long-running
series is readers’ feelings of returning to places and people they know - of
seeing heros and heroines they have come to know as individuals go through the
challenge of finding love and marrying the right man or woman for them. Knowing
at least one of these characters beforehand - understanding what has made them
as they are, what their strengths are, and even more importantly what
weaknesses they hide - allows greater interest, empathy, and absorption for the
reader.
In the case of the Cynster Next Generation, the
children of the Bar Cynster couples, readers know who they are, but have seen
very little of them. And as we all know, actions speak much louder than words
about the caliber of people, of who they really are beneath the outer glamor.
In BY WINTER’S LIGHT, readers see Lucilla, Marcus, Sebastian, Michael,
Prudence, and Christopher in action, responding to external pressures and
threats, and also to each other, and separately readers also learn more about
Louisa and her emerging character.
Readers have more recently seen Lucilla and
Marcus act in VISCOUNT BRECKENRIDGE TO THE RESCUE, but now they are a decade
older, and we - both the readers and me as author - need to see more of the
adults they are shaping up to be, which are insights BY WINTER’S LIGHT affords
us. Unsurprisingly, the first pair of Cynster Next Generation romances are
those of Lucilla and Marcus, and as they are twins, the stories are tightly
linked.
Subsequently, working off the base of their
characters revealed in this book, we’ll follow Sebastian, Michael, and Louisa
through their romances, and later learn about Prudence and Christopher’s
romances, too.
So there’s lots more Cynster novels in the
pipeline?
Indeed! Lucilla’s book, THE TEMPTING OF THOMAS
CARRICK, is already written, and will be released at the end of February, 2015.
It will be followed by Marcus’s story, A MATCH FOR MARCUS CYNSTER, in late May,
2015. Further Cynster novels are scheduled for release in 2017.
There’s an obvious tradition that isn’t included
- that of a Christmas tree. Why is that missing?
Christmas trees - the erecting and decorating of
them - while echoing the decorating of a house with fir and holly, was a German
custom. In the early 1800s, the only major house in England that sported a Christmas
Tree was the Duchess of Rutland’s household at Belvoir Castle, because the
Duchess was German. Only much later, after the marriage of Victoria to Albert,
who introduced the custom of Christmas trees to the royal household, did the
custom of Christmas trees become more widely adopted in England.
Victoria married Albert in 1840, so in 1837 in
Scotland, the custom of a Christmas had not yet arrived.
If there was one thing you could say to readers
when they pick up BY WINTER’S LIGHT, what would it be?
Put your feet up, kick back and relax, and enjoy
the holidays Cynsters-style!
Excerpt:
CHAPTER 1
December 23, 1837
Casphairn Manor, the Vale of Casphairn, Scotland
Daniel Crosbie felt
as if all his Christmases had come at once. Letting his gaze travel the Great
Hall of Casphairn Manor, filled to overflowing with six Cynster families and
various associated household members, he allowed himself a moment to savor both
his unexpected good fortune and his consequent hope.
About him, the
combined households were enjoying the hearty dinner provided to welcome them to
the celebration planned for the next ten days—as Daniel understood it, a
combination of Christmas, the more ancient Yuletide, and Hogmanay. Seated about
the long refectory-like tables on benches rather than chairs, with eyes alight
and smiles on their faces, the assembled throng was in ebullient mood.
Conversation and laughter abounded; delight and expectation shone in most
faces, illuminated by the warm glow of the candlelight cast from massive
circular chandeliers depending from thick chains from the high-domed ceiling.
The central room about which the manor was built, the Great Hall lived up to
its name; the space within its thick walls of pale gray stone was large enough
to accommodate the Cynster contingent, all told about sixty strong, as well as
the families of the various retainers who worked in and around the manor, which
functioned like a small village.
With no family of
his own still alive, Daniel had spent his last ten Christmases with the Cynster
family for whom he acted as tutor—the family of Mr. Alasdair Cynster and his wife,
Phyllida—but this was the first time in that decade that the Cynsters had come
north for Christmas. The six Cynster families present—the six families closest
to the dukedom of St. Ives, those of Devil, Duke of St. Ives, his brother
Richard, and his cousins Vane, Harry, Rupert, and Alasdair—invariably came
together at Christmastime. They were often joined by other connected families
not present on this occasion; the long journey to the Vale, in the western
Lowlands of Scotland, to the home of Richard Cynster and his wife Catriona in a
season that had turned icy and cold with snow on the ground much earlier than
expected had discouraged all but the most determined.
Out of
long-established habit, Daniel glanced at his charges—soon to be erstwhile
charges—seated at the next table with their cousins and second cousins. Aidan,
now sixteen years old, and Evan, fifteen, had passed out of Daniel’s immediate
care when they’d gone up to Eton, yet Daniel still kept an eye on the pair when
they were home—an action their parents appreciated and which the boys, at ease
with him after all the years, bore with good grace. At that moment, both were
talking animatedly with their male cousins in a fashion that instantly, at
least in Daniel’s mind, raised the question of what the group was planning. He
made a mental note to inquire later. Jason, the youngest son of the family and
the last of Daniel’s true charges, was similarly occupied with the group of
Cynster offspring nearer his age. Now eleven, later in the coming year, Jason,
too, would start his formal schooling—a circumstance which had, for Daniel,
raised the uncomfortable question of what he would do then.
Once Jason left for
Eton and there were no more boys in Alasdair Cynster’s household in Colyton, in
Devon, for Daniel to tutor, what would he do for a living?
The question had
plagued him for several months, not least because if he was ever to have a
chance at the sort of life he now knew he wanted, and, if at all possible, was
determined to claim, he needed to have secure employment—a place, a position,
with a steady salary or stipend.
He’d been wracking
his brains, trying to think of his options, of what might be possible, when Mr.
Cynster—Alasdair—had called him into the library and laid before him a proposal
that, in a nutshell, was the answer to all his prayers.
On several occasions
over the years, Daniel had assisted Alasdair with his interests in ancient and
antique jewelry, with documenting finds and establishing provenances, and also
with cataloguing and adding to the collection of rare books Alasdair had
inherited from the previous owner of the manor. Alasdair, supported by
Phyllida, had suggested that, once Jason had departed with his brothers for
Eton, if Daniel was happy to remain in Colyton as a member of their household,
they would be delighted to engage him as Alasdair’s personal secretary, an
amanuensis to assist with Alasdair’s ever-expanding interests.
The suggested
stipend was generous, the conditions all Daniel could have hoped for. Not only
would the new position suit him, it would solve all his difficulties.
Most importantly, it
cleared the way for him to offer for Claire Meadows’s hand.
He glanced along the
board to his right. Clad in a soft woolen gown in a muted shade of blue,
Claire—Mrs. Meadows—was sitting on the opposite side of the table, two places
down. She was the governess in Rupert Cynster’s household; as Rupert and
Alasdair were brothers, Claire and Daniel were often thrown together when the
families gathered. It was customary in such circumstances that the attending
tutors and governesses banded together, sharing responsibilities and each
other’s company, as they were at present. The manor’s governess, Miss Melinda
Spotswood, a comfortable matronly sort with a backbone of forged iron, was
chatting to Claire. On Melinda’s other side, opposite Daniel, sat Oswald Raven,
tutor at the manor; a few years older than Daniel, Raven projected a debonair
façade, but he was hardworking and devoted to his charges. Raven was chatting
to Mr. Samuel Morris, who was seated alongside Daniel and hailed from Vane
Cynster’s household in Kent; the oldest of the group, Morris was slightly
rotund and had an unfailingly genial air, yet he was a sound scholar and very
capable of exerting a firm hand on his charges’ reins.
All five had met and
shared duties on several occasions before; the rapport between them was
comfortable and relaxed. Over the coming days, they would, between them, keep
an eye on the combined flock of Cynster children—the younger ones, at least. The
oldest group, the seventeen-year-olds led by eighteen-year-old Sebastian
Cynster, Marquess of Earith and future head of the house, could be relied on to
take care of themselves, along with the large group of sixteen- and
fifteen-year-old males. But there were six boys thirteen years and under, and
seven girls ranging from eight to fourteen years old, and over them the tutors
and governesses would need to exert control sufficient to ensure they remained
suitably occupied.
There was no telling
what the engaging devils would get up to if left unsupervised.
Being governess or
tutor to Cynster children was never dull or boring.
Daniel had managed
to keep his gaze from Claire for all of ten minutes. Despite the color and
vibrancy, the noise and distraction—despite the many handsome and outright
stunningly beautiful faces around about—hers was the shining star in his
firmament; regardless of where they were, regardless of competing sights and
sounds, she effortlessly drew his gaze and transfixed his attention.
She’d done so from
the moment he’d first seen her at one of the family’s Summer Celebrations in
Cambridgeshire several years ago. They’d subsequently met on and off at various
family functions, at weddings in London, at major family birthdays, and at seasonal
celebrations like the current one.
With each exposure,
his attraction to Claire, his focus on her, had only grown more definite, more
acute, until the obvious conclusion had stared him in the face, impossible to
resist, much less deny.
Utterly impossible
to ignore.
“If the weather
holds,” Raven said, commanding Daniel’s attention with his gaze, “and the older
crew go riding as they’re planning, then we’ll need to invent some suitable
pastimes to keep our charges amused.”
Seated with his back
to the table at which the Cynster children were gathered, Raven had turned and
asked what the animated talk had been about. Riding out to assess the position
and state of the deer herds had been the answer.
Daniel nodded. “If
at all possible, let’s get those left to our care out of doors.”
“Indeed,” Melinda
said, turning from Claire to join the conversation. “We need to take advantage
of any clear days. If it is fine enough tomorrow, I was saying to Claire that
the fourteen-year-olds—the girls—might like to gather greenery to decorate the
hall.” Melinda gestured to the stone walls hosting various fireplaces and
archways, all presently devoid of any seasonal touches. “It’s customary to
decorate them on the twenty-fourth, which is tomorrow.”
“I’d heard,” Morris
said, “that there’s some tradition about the Yule log that’s followed
hereabouts.” He looked to Raven for confirmation.
Raven, his hair as
dark as his name would suggest, nodded. “Yes, that’s an inspired idea. Not only
is it necessary to collect the right-sized logs, but the logs have to be
carved. That should keep the boys amused for hours. I’ll speak to the staff
about organizing whatever’s needed.”
Daniel nodded again,
and his gaze drifted once more to Claire; she’d been following the
conversation, her calm expression indicating her agreement with the
suggestions. With her glossy mid-brown hair burnished by the candlelight, with
her delicate features and milky-white skin, her lips of pale rose, lush and
full, and her large hazel eyes set under finely arched brown brows, she was, to
his eyes, the epitome of womanhood.
That she was a
widow—had been widowed at a young age—was neither here nor there, yet the
experience had, it seemed, imbued her with a certain gravitas, leaving her more
reserved, more cautious, and with a more sober and serious demeanor than might
be expected of a well-bred lady of twenty-seven summers.
Her station—gentry-born
but fallen on hard times—was similar to, or perhaps a touch higher than,
Daniel’s; he didn’t really know. Nor did he truly care. They were both as they
were here and now, and what happened next … that was up to them.
He’d come to
Scotland, to the Vale, determined to put his luck to the test—to seize the
opportunity to speak with Claire and plead his case, to learn if she shared his
hopes and if she could come to share his dreams.
A gust of laughter
and conversation drew his gaze to the high table.
The six Cynster
couples were seated about the table on the raised dais along one side of the
room, a traditional positioning most likely dating from medieval times. In
addition to those twelve—middle-aged, perhaps, yet still vibrantly handsome,
articulate, active, and engaged—there were three of the older generation at one
end of the board. Helena, Dowager Duchess of St. Ives, mother of Devil and
Richard and elder matriarch of the clan, was seated at the end of the table
closest to the hearth, and had chosen to summon Algaria, Catriona’s aging
mentor, and McArdle, the ancient butler of the manor, now retired, to join her
there. The three were much of an age and, judging by their glances and
gestures, were busy sharing pithy observations on all others in the hall.
Having met the dowager and been the object of her scrutiny on several
occasions, Daniel didn’t like to think of how much she, let alone black-eyed
Algaria, was seeing.
A comment in a deep
voice, followed by laughter, drew Daniel’s gaze back to the twelve Cynsters of
the generation that currently ruled. Their children might have been growing
apace, might already have been showing signs of the forceful, powerful
individuals they had the potential to become, yet the twelve seated about the
high table still dominated their world.
Daniel had observed
them—those six couples in particular—for the past ten years. All the males had
been born to wealth, but what they’d made of it—the lives each had successfully
wrought—hadn’t been based solely on inherited advantage. Each of the six
possessed a certain strength—a nuanced blend of power, ability, and
insight—that Daniel appreciated, admired, and aspired to. It had taken him some
time to realize from where that particular strength derived—namely, from the ladies.
From their marriages. From the connection—the link that was so deep, so strong,
so anchoring—that each of the six males shared with his wife.
Once he’d seen and
understood, Daniel had wanted the same for himself.
His gaze shifted
again to Claire. Once he’d met her, he’d known whom he wanted to share just
such a link with.
Now he stood on the
cusp of reaching for it—of chancing his hand and hoping he could persuade her
to form such a connection with him.
Whatever gaining her
assent required, he would do.
Now Fate in the form
of Alasdair Cynster had cleared his path, it was time to screw his courage to
the sticking point and act.
Hope, anticipation,
and trepidation churned in his gut.
But he was there and
so was she, and he was determined to move forward. He knew how he felt about
her, and he thought she felt similarly toward him. His first step, plainly, was
to determine whether he was correct in believing that—and whether with
encouragement, “like” could grow into something more.
* * *
About
Stephanie Laurens:
Laurens's novels are set in the
time period of the British Regency, and her settings range from Scotland to
India. Laurens has published fifty works of historical romance, including 29
New York Times bestsellers. All her works are continuously available in print
and digital formats in English worldwide, and have been translated into many
other languages. An international bestseller, among other accolades Laurens has
received the Romance Writers of America prestigious RITA Award for Best Romance
Novella 2008, for The Fall of Rogue Gerrard.
Her continuing novels featuring the
Cynster family are widely regarded as classics of the genre. Other series
include the Bastion Club Novels and the Black Cobra Quartet. For information on
upcoming releases and updates on novels yet to come, visit Stephanie's website.
Glad to hear there are more Cynsters to come!
ReplyDelete