Knight Blindness
(Knights in Time book 3)
Chris Karlsen
Genre:
Paranormal Romance
Blitz
Host: Lady
Amber's Tours
BACK COVER BLURB FOR KNIGHT
BLINDNESS
Ready for battle, Medieval English
knight, Stephen Palmer, charges into the French enemy’s cavalry
line. Heeding a warning given months before, he hesitates as he comes
face-to-face with the knight in the warning. Struck down in the year
1356, he finds himself landing in the year 2013. Grievously wounded,
he’s taken to a nearby hospital. Confused by the new world
surrounding him, he attempts to convince the staff he’s from
another time, only to find they think him mad.
Rescued by friends, who, to his
surprise, have also come through time, he must find a way to function
in this odd modern England. He is quickly enchanted by the kind Esme
Crippen, the young woman hired to tutor him. She too is enchanted by
him. Tempted to deepen the relationship, she hesitates thinking him
adorable, but mad. He must discover the means for getting her to
believe the truth, all the while, unknown to him, he didn’t come
forward in time alone. The enemy knight has also traveled to 2013.
French noble, Roger Marchand, doesn’t
question why the English knight who charged him hesitated. That
fraction of a pause gave him the advantage needed and he brought his
sword down upon the Englishman’s helmet hard, unhorsing the knight.
He moved to finish the Englishman off when the world changed in a
rush of sensations as he is ripped through time.
Seeking a reason for the terrible
event, he enters a nearby chapel. There, thinking God has chosen him
for a quest to turn French defeat that day in 1356 to victory, he
sets out to find the English knight. The man he is convinced holds
the key to time. If he returns to the day of the battle, he can warn
his king of mistakes that snatched victory from them.
Link:
Excerpt
Two: Knight Blindness
She knocked and a
short, compact man with grey, thinning hair, cloudy blue eyes, and
the reddest lips she’d ever seen on a man answered. In a way, he
reminded her of Rupert Bear. He wore a red sweater vest over an
open-collared white shirt, unfashionable brown plaid cuffed trousers
that looked a size too big, and well-worn brown, wing-tipped shoes.
“You must be Esme
Crippen.” He gestured for her and Electra to come inside. He closed
the door and extended his hand. “Will Davison.”
“I’m Esme,”
she said, shaking his hand. “This is my sister, Electra.”
“Electra, a fine
literary name,” Davison said as they shook hands.
Esme took a quick
scan of the cluttered office, surprised a curator, even of a small
museum, hadn’t a secretary.
“You said you’re
looking for a drawing lent to us by the National Gallery in 1960. The
Black Prince at Crecy, you said.”
“Yes. Does it
sound familiar?”
“I was an
apprentice here then. I believe I know the work you’re speaking of,
an impressively detailed rendering considering the environment. It
was done on vellum, we believe for the king, as colored inks were
used, including gold, although no gold leaf was applied. We think the
work was probably done by one of his priests. Unfortunately it was
placed into storage back in the seventies and the facility burned to
the ground in 1979.”
The news sucked
every ounce of energy from her. She had so much hope. Why didn’t
Davison tell her over the phone and save her the trip? The bloody
drive took three hours. Bad enough to waste those hours not to
mention they’d hit the London rush hour on the return. She’d like
to wrap her hands around his scrawny neck and shake the fillings from
his teeth.
“Fortunately,”
he continued, “We had a copy made prior to the drawing going into
storage. “The original was fragile, obviously. The curator and I
worried it might deteriorate more if it stayed on display. As the
Black Prince was the subject, and is such a big part of Canterbury’s
history, we did want to keep a representation exhibited. We had it
copied in oil. It hangs in the main room of the museum. Come, I’ll
show you.”
He led them to a
side door of his office that also served as a door to the rear of the
museum proper. This section of the museum displayed artifacts and
pictures from the Victorian period up to and including the hard
fought air war, the Battle of Britain.
Through another
archway to the next room, Davison led them to a painting. The
gilded-framed oil was about a meter wide and a half meter high and
hung in the center of one wall.
“Remarkable isn’t
it?” he said. “It depicts the aftermath of the battle. This is
where the young prince raised up so many young men who fought
alongside him to knighthood.”
“Oh my God,”
Esme whispered. Shocked, she stared unable to take her eyes from the
painting. How could this be? Identical down to the wound on the chin.
She’d seen the scar on Stephen’s chin up close.
Unlike the larger,
more famous sister institutions, the simpler Museum of Canterbury
didn’t employ infrared protective alarms that go off when a visitor
gets too close to an exhibit.
Davison’s hand on
her arm stopped Esme as she stepped forward, fingers inches from the
canvas. “No touching allowed, Ms. Crippen,” he warned and removed
his hand.
“Sorry,” she
said, moving back to drop onto the bench in front of the painting.
“What is it?”
Electra asked.
“Are you ill, my
dear?” Davison asked.
She shook her head,
too numb to speak.
Electra joined her
on the bench. “You look like you’re going to faint. You’re
white as a ghost.”
“Would you like
some water, Miss Crippen?”
Finally, she found
her voice. “No. Thank you but I’m fine,” she told Electra and
Davison.
Esme turned from
the painting to ask, “Is this an exact copy of the original?”
“Yes. The curator
at the time was meticulous man and would not approve even the
slightest deviation.”
“You’re
positive?”
He nodded. “Very.”
“Esme—”
She held up her
hand to stop Electra’s question. “Thank you, Mr. Davison. This is
more than I expected when I asked about the drawing. If it’s all
right, I’d like a few minutes more to appreciate the excellent
artistry.”
“No worries, Miss
Crippen. If you require no more of me, I’m going to return to my
office. Take as much time as you like. The museum is open until
five.” Davison gave each a polite tip of his head and left.
As soon as he was
out of the room, Electra said, “Esme talk to me. There’s
something up with you and this painting. I want to know what.”
“The young man
kneeling, two over from the prince’s left, the one holding a bloody
gauntleted hand under his chin.”
“What about him?”
“He looks just
like Stephen.”
From Electra’s
sour expression, she found the explanation anticlimactic. “That’s
all? Jeez, I thought it was something really big.”
“You don’t
understand. He could be Stephen’s double. That’s not all. The man
standing behind him I’d swear is Alex Lancaster. A younger version
but hand to heart, I think it’s him.”
“I’ve only seen
pictures of Alex Lancaster when he’s been in the press. I agree. It
does look like him. But it isn’t either Stephen or Alex since those
men,” she tipped her chin toward the painting, “lived close to
seven hundred years ago. Why are you weirding out?”
Esme ignored the
question. Too many of her own occupied her thoughts. How had his face
wound up on this medieval man: the narrow too long nose, the strong
jaw, the broad forehead, even the shape of his eyes...his injury
didn’t change the slight downward tip to the outside corners?
“Hello,”
Electra waved her hand in front of Esme’s face.
“Stop it.” She
dug her cell phone out. Conscious of how light and shadow might
affect the shots, she took pictures of the painting from different
angles.
Electra tugged on her arm, pulling the
camera away from her face. “He’s not Stephen. Maybe he’s his
ancestor, five-hundred times removed, but he’s not Stephen.” She
let out a heavy sigh.
I was born and raised in Chicago. My
father was a history professor and my mother was, and is, a voracious
reader. I grew up with a love of history and books.
My parents also love traveling, a
passion they passed onto me. I wanted to see the places I read about,
see the land and monuments from the time periods that fascinated me.
I’ve had the good fortune to travel extensively throughout Europe,
the Near East, and North Africa.
I am a retired police detective. I
spent twenty-five years in law enforcement with two different
agencies. My desire to write came in my early teens. After I retired,
I decided to pursue that dream. I write two different series. My
paranormal romance series is called, Knights in Time. My romantic
thriller series is, Dangerous Waters.
I currently live in the Pacific
Northwest with my husband, four rescue dogs and a rescue horse.
Author
links:
Good Morning,
ReplyDeleteI want to thank Jenny for showcasing Knight Blindness. I look forward to talking with her followers. I'd like to let everyone know that Knight Blindness is a free download today for Kindle: http://www.amazon.com/Knight-Blindness-Knights-Time-ebook/dp/B00E2QS488/ref=sr_1_1?s=digital-text&ie=UTF8&qid=1375539463&sr=1-1&keywords=knight+blindness
Chris Karlsen