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Available 4.15.24


A Raven's Heart

A Raven's Heart, October 2016
Secrets and Spies
by K.C. Bateman

Loveswept
Featuring: William de l’Isle; Heloise Hampden
ISBN: B0190HP7G0
EAN: 9780804181518
Kindle: B0190HP7G0
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"A ripping action-packed romantic adventure of Napoleonic spies"

Fresh Fiction Review

A Raven's Heart
K.C. Bateman

Reviewed by Make Kay
Posted November 9, 2016

Romance Historical

A RAVEN'S HEART is book 2 in the Secrets and Spies by K.C. Bateman. I adored book 1 in the series, TO STEAL A HEART, Bateman's debut novel. A RAVEN'S HEART is another excellent entry in Bateman's Napoleonic spy romances. The characters are related to those from book 1, but no prior knowledge is needed to utterly enjoy this book.

Heloise is a charming heroine. She's smart and feisty. The strictures of society have been chafing her, and I love the feminism that she displays that hits all the right notes for the modern reader, but does not seem too over-the-top to be believable for historical fiction. Heloise is a brilliant code breaker, and has used her talents for England during the war to decrypt French communiques. I adore the fact the Heloise not only has great intelligence, but also figures out ways to use her brain given the societal limitations of her gender top to be believable for historical fiction. Heloise is a brilliant code breaker, and has used her talents for England during the war to decrypt French communiques. I adore the fact the Heloise not only has great intelligence, but also figures out ways to use her brain given the societal limitations of her gender- huzzah! Heloise has been in love with Raven for years, even before her face was disfigured by a scar incurred while rescuing her brother from an icy river (yet another way that Heloise displays her gumption). But Raven has been doing that annoying guy thing, thinking she is off limits as the little sister of his good friend.

Ducal heir William Ravenwood is known as The Raven, a smuggler and agent for the Crown who specializes in rescuing hostages and prisoners of war from captivity during the Napoleonic war. Raven is mad with worry about his friend and colleague Christopher 'Kit' Carlisle, who has been missing for the last two years and is presumed dead. When Heloise decodes a message saying Kit is alive and being held in Spain, Raven is tasked with assisting in Kit's rescue. A cryptologist colleague of Heloise's is murdered, though, and the French have now turned their sights toward Heloise's death as well. Raven makes the odd decision to take Heloise along with him into enemy territory on his rescue mission for Kit, in order to protect Heloise by himself. Of course, as they are thrown together through much danger and arguing and injury, true love ensues.

Despite the typical dude behaviors that leave me shaking my head, I do like Raven very much. The chemistry between Raven and Heloise is slowly simmers up to a raging boil, and the banter between the two is spirited and intelligent. The action and adventure underpin the whole lively narrative, and the book reminds me of some of my other favorite Napoleonic spy romances such as Joanna Bourne and Nita Abrams. Three cheers for Bateman's A RAVEN'S HEART, and please may I have another!

Learn more about A Raven's Heart

SUMMARY

When a bookish codebreaker and a dashing spy are reunited in this steamy historical romance from the author of To Steal a Heart, their lives depend on their ability to resist temptation. But fate is a mistress who cannot be denied. . . . In the war against France, Heloise Hampden is a high- value asset to the Crown. She’s cracked the enemy’s most recent communication, and for that, someone is trying to kill her. However, it’s the agent assigned to protect Heloise who poses the greatest threat to her heart: William de l’Isle, Viscount Ravenwood. Heloise has quarreled with the man they call Raven since childhood, yet always maintained a chaste distance. She’s sure nothing will change, thanks to the disfiguring scar on her face. So why is she so enchanted by the sight of Raven’s jet-black hair, rakish smile, and wicked green eyes? Nothing has changed. Raven still wonders how Hell-cat Hampden’s lithe body would feel pressed against his, but for the mission he must remind himself that the woman takes more pleasure in ancient languages than she does in seduction. His imprisonment six years ago broke him in a way that makes the prospect of love impossible. Still, his heart beats like mad whenever he’s within ten paces of Heloise, and he’ll do whatever it takes to keep her safe—even if that means taking her to Spain as an unwilling hostage. Protecting her from danger will be a challenge; protecting her from desire will be pure agony.

Excerpt

“I’m a spy, not a bloody nursemaid!” William de l’Isle, Viscount Ravenwood, glared across the desk at his mentor, Lord Castlereagh. The older man shook his head, supremely unmoved by his outburst. “Miss Hampden needs immediate protection. Someone’s targeting my code breakers and whoever killed Edward could also have discovered her identity. I can’t afford to lose her, too.” Raven narrowed his eyes. “Use another agent.” Castlereagh gave him one of those level, penetrating looks he so excelled at. “Who? Neither of her brothers are here; Nic’s in Paris, and Richard’s following a lead on that French forger he’s been after for months. Who else is left?” He pinched the bridge of his nose. “We’ve lost too many good men. First Tony got himself killed in France, then Kit disappeared. There’s been no news of him for months.” Raven frowned. He refused to consider the distasteful probability that his friend was dead. Kit was like him, a master of survival. He could be deep undercover. But with every week that went by with no word it became harder and harder to stay positive. “And now another good man, Edward Lamb, had been murdered,” Castlereagh sighed. “I don’t want Miss Hampden to be next.” The older man was a master of applying just the right amount of pressure and guilt. He hadn’t made it to head of the Foreign Office without knowing how to manipulate people. “You think I should entrust her to a less competent operative?” Castlereagh mused softly. “You’re not burdened by false modesty, Ravenwood. You know you’re the best I have. I was hoping you’d use your exceptional talent for survival to keep Miss Hampden alive, too.” Raven sighed, well aware he was being backed into a corner. If it had been anyone else he wouldn’t have hesitated. But Heloise Hampden was the fly in his ointment. The spoke in his wheel. A total bloody menace. Hellcat Hampden had been the subject of his guilty daydreams for years. What had started out as adolescent musings had matured into fevered erotic fantasies that showed absolutely no sign of abating. He’d told himself the attraction was because she was forbidden, tried to lose himself in other, far more available women. Nothing had worked. And while he’d rarely paid much attention to the monotonous sermons preached by the clergy, he was fairly sure there was something in the bible that said “thou shalt not covet thy best friend’s little sister.” Or words to that effect. He was the last person she should be entrusted to. He’d sworn to stay away from her. Had avoided her quite successfully—give or take a few blessedly brief skirmishes—for the past six years. Hell, he’d traveled to the far corners of war torn Europe to try to forget her. And now here he was, drawn back to her by some malevolent twist of fate. As if his life wasn’t cursed enough already. Over the past few years they’d settled into an uneasy, albeit barbed, truce; it was a sad reflection on his twisted nature that he preferred sparring with her to holding a reasonable conversation with anyone else. His blood thrummed at the prospect of seeing her again and he smiled in self-directed mockery. Few things increased his heartbeat anymore. In combat he was a master of his emotions, sleek and deadly and efficient. Fighting barely elevated his pulse. He could kill a man without breaking a sweat. But put him ten paces away from that slip of a girl and a furious drummer took up residence in his chest, battering away against his ribs. He shook his head. Being near her was a torture he both craved and abhorred, but he had a duty to keep her safe. A duty to her family, to Castlereagh, to the whole damn country. Much as he’d like someone else to deal with her, he didn’t trust anyone else. She was his to torment. Castlereagh, the old devil, smiled, as if he already sensed Raven’s grudging acceptance. “That’s settled, then. She’s safe at home right now. You can go over and get her in the morning.” He rose and strode to the door of the study, then flashed an amused glance at Raven’s immaculate evening attire and the mask resting on the desk. “I apologize for interrupting your evening, Ravenwood. I’ll leave you to your entertainments.” She was in. Heloise smiled in triumph as she trailed a group of masked revelers toward Lord Ravenwood’s infamous ballroom. She’d never been invited to one of these masquerades. Raven and her brothers had always excluded her from anything remotely interesting as a child, and the situation hadn’t improved now she was twenty-two and perfectly capable of looking after herself. Tonight, however, she had a perfectly valid reason for sneaking in; the crumpled translation she’d stuffed down the front of her bodice. Raven would forgive her when he heard what she’d discovered. The extravagant debauchery of his annual gathering was the stuff of legend. Even the most sophisticated members of the ton discussed it in scandalized whispers, behind twitching fans. She was finally going to discover whether its reputation was justified. Heloise reached the entrance to the ballroom, glanced up, and stopped dead. Her lips formed a soundless O of astonishment. The gilt-edged invitation she’d “borrowed” from Richard’s study had promised “An Evening of Heaven and Hell.” The rumors had not been exaggerated. She blinked. The guests had embraced the suggestion of depraved licentiousness with enthusiasm. Scantily-clad gods and goddesses mingled with angels and devils in a dizzying sea of color. Grotesque masks, all curved beaks and twisting horns, swirled above acres of exposed flesh. A hundred perfumes entwined with the smell of warm bodies, hair powder, and wine, while the string quartet in the corner was almost inaudible over the boisterous hum of conversation. Heloise glanced down at her own comparatively simple costume. She’d pilfered an authentic second-dynasty Egyptian beadwork collar from her father’s collection of Ancient jewelry and improved a black silk half-mask with whiskers and a pair of papier mâché ears. There: Bastet, the Ancient Egyptian cat goddess. Not that anyone here would have any idea who she was supposed to be. Her stomach gave an excited flip. She didn’t need to find Raven immediately. A few extra minutes wouldn’t make any difference. There was such a delicious freedom in being masked and anonymous. No one was who they appeared. That gilded lady over there could be a duchess or courtesan, actress or spy. That silver-masked satyr could be a diplomat or a prince. Heloise shivered, despite the stifling heat. The possibilities of the evening shimmered in the air like a summer haze, magical and dangerous. She could be anyone she wanted. Not someone’s unmarriageable little sister. Not the bookish code breaker. She could be flighty and irresponsible, the secret, daring girl she’d been before her face was scarred. The beautiful one, for once, instead of the clever one. Anticipation tingled through her body as if she were poised at the top of a steep, smooth slope. Just one small nudge would send her hurtling down, toward adventure. She grabbed a glass of champagne from a passing servant and took a few fortifying sips as her skin prickled with the unpleasant conviction that she was being watched. That was foolish. Neither of her brothers was here to curtail her enjoyment and the only other person who could potentially unmask her—tonight’s host, their neighbor and most irritating man on the planet, William Ravenwood— wouldn’t be expecting to see her. She was going to have the devil of a time finding him in this crowd. As if the very thought had summoned him, all the fine hairs on her arms lifted in warning and Heloise glanced around with a sense of impending doom. The crowd parted obligingly, and there he was. The god of the Underworld, staring at her. Oh, hell and damnation. He stood motionless, a pillar of darkness amid the colored gaiety, his tall frame somehow managing to radiate a barely leashed tension, as if he was poised to attack. Heloise repressed the instinct to cross herself. His mask was black like hers, only far more elaborate. The long muzzle of a jackal, ears pricked and alert, eyes rimmed with thick lines of gold, covered the top half of his face. Only his jaw was visible; hard and male, with unfashionably tanned skin shadowed by the hint of a beard. Dark hair curled out from beneath the mask to brush his snowy cravat and pitch-black evening jacket. The tiny part of her brain not frozen into immobility—and inexplicably concerned with historical accuracy—whispered that to be totally authentic, Anubis should be bare- chested. Her mouth went dry as she imagined the broad shoulders and well-defined chest concealed beneath all that black silk.


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