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The Night Side

The Night Side, August 2009
by Melanie Jackson

Love Spell
Featuring: Colin Mortloch
336 pages
ISBN: 0505528045
EAN: 9780505528049
Mass Market Paperback
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"Pure escapist historical romance with a paranormal angle."

Fresh Fiction Review

The Night Side
Melanie Jackson

Reviewed by Sue Burke
Posted July 13, 2009

Romance Paranormal | Romance Historical

Set in the time of Henry VIII, THE NIGHT SIDE delivers in spades. A spy for an aging Henry VIII, Colin Mortlock finds himself growing restless and even bored. Summoned to Scotland on family business, Colin becomes embroiled in the intrigues and ghostly goings on of Noltland Castle.

The clan of Balfour is without a real leader. A boy of 12 has inherited the title after the laird, along with all his sons, was cut down in battle. The boy, a nephew of the dead laird, is currently living in the castle with the late laird's daughter, Frances Balfour.

Lately, Frances has been haunted by the howling of a ghostly dog. Called the Bokey hound by her people, he appears whenever a Balfour is destined to die. Frances uses every weapon in her limited arsenal to keep George, her young ward, safe and in power, but she and the boy are without real protection and the castle is in constant danger of being taken. Frances is afraid she will be forced to wed and George quietly disposed of by the interloping new laird. What Frances desperately needs is a miracle. What she gets is Colin; a strong man powerful enough to protect her small corner of the world and decent enough to protect her heart.

A seasoned storyteller, Jackson delivers another entertaining story with THE NIGHT SIDE.

Learn more about The Night Side

SUMMARY

Colin Mortloch was a spy for Henry VIII and had seen many strange and violent things, especially since he had 'the sight' the ghosts of murdered men were happy to betray their killers. But Noltlund Castle held a mystery like no other, a Scottish hellhound called The Bokey, and a strange and lovely mistress who was every bit as adept as Colin when it came to matters of political intrigue.

Excerpt

Colin Mortlock sat at his table in his private study in York and read the messenger's missive over a second time, trying in vain to make some sense of it. It was not that the letter's words weren't straightforward enough. The sentences were all simple statements and arranged logically, though penned in a very ill fist by someone obviously not often given to scrivacious pastimes.

The difficulty came with comprehending the context in which the message was written, and in certain absences of comment when some remark would have been normal.

Colin shook his head. He did not for one instant suppose that the brief interregnum in the north isles had made the new Laird of Skye any less intelligent or capable of looking after the clan's demesnes than his ruthless and half-insane father and uncle had been before him. But Colin was still uncertain of precisely what The MacLeod wanted of him in this instance, and whether he should be wary of answering this intriguing familial summons.

The letter even began interestingly, using both Latin and the Christian calendar. This was a certainly a change from the previous laird's style, who had disowned Colin's mother when she married a Catholic Sassun and moved south to the lands of the enemy English- might the French pox rot them!

    To our cousin, Cailean Mortlach, at the season on the
    mellowing moon, in the year of our Lord 1544

    Greeting Dear Kinsman!

    Sorrowful tidings we have had of the death of the
    fifth king of the Scots called Seumas. Many brave
    lives and things more precious were lost at the rout
    of Solway Moss. But such must be expected after the
    dissolution of the treaty of perpetual peace.
    Sir Michael Balfour and his thirty sons were also
    recently lost to this world. There remains only his
    daughter and a young nephew at Noltlund castle near
    our kin on Orkney.

This was where the letter began to get obscure. Everyone had heard the amazing tale of the death of Michael Balfour and all of his sons in one battle--leaving only his daughter as heiress to his fortunes and a distant kinsman, a lad of twelve, to inherit the title-- but Colin had not the slightest notion what it had to do with the MacLeods of Skye. MacLeods were descended of the Vikings who had settled in Orkney, but Noltlund was now in the territory of the Keiths and Gunns and MacKays, and it was very unlikely that they were going to stand aside for the MacLeods if they made a grab for power.

"Cousin, cousin, what do you intend?" Without indulging in offensive pridefulness, Colin knew that he was accounted as being an astute man. But though he could sense that his cousin was steeped in some purpose in regards to Noltlund, what this project might be he could not yet see.

Not truly expecting enlightenment, Colin still read on.

    Reports of a favorable nature have reached us and
    we have need of you in Orkney. You must for a time
    forsake the lands of this King Eachann and return
    home at once to Dunnvegan.

    We hope that you have not forgotten your gowff.
    Yrs with great affection,
    Alasdair, MacLeod of the MacLeods

Now, this was the puzzler, the contradiction that could not be explained. The MacLeods were panophobic of all foreigners--which, sadly, Colin was considered to be, in spite of his mother being sister to the last laird. And this reference to his boyhood training of the game of golf--a sport which he actually detested and played most ill--was frankly beyond his comprehension. He could only conclude that one of the other of them was suffering from a distemperature of the mind.

It would be reassuring to know that it was the MacLeod whose humor and reason were so disturbed, but unhappily Colin could not place his oath upon the ailment resting with his Scottish cousin. His own nature had lately been excessively troubled by odd humors, which he suspected had begun affecting his judgment.

And now there had come this letter of rapprochement from his kin in Skye. A letter that was full of intriguing references to many strange events and people. Might this not lend purpose to a life that had of late been lacking in stimulation?

Colin drummed his fingers on the arm of his chair. It was madness. He shouldn't even be thinking about accepting the summons. The suggested journey smacked of potential grave danger and certain discomfort as he traveled roads that went from bad to nonexistent. He recalled little of his childhood visit to the Orkneys beyond vast, disagreeable expanses of gray rock, stinging midges and biting ponies. There were no roads. And the region's politics were certainly among the bloodiest and unsubtle in Scotland. It was for this reason that his father had never permitted him or his mother to return to the Isles once her homicidal brother became chief.

Still, was the potential for swift death not better than slow suffocation from boredom? And for an intelligencer, born as well as bred, there really wasn't another choice, was there?


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