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Medieval 03 - Enchanted

Titel: Medieval 03 - Enchanted
Autoren: authors_sort
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Simon himself was called the Lord of the Rowan.
    For it was Simon who had discovered what even the
Learned did not know…
    The sacred rowan is a woman
born long, long ago, a woman whose refusal to see love cost first
her lover’s life, then the lives of her family, her clan, her
people .
    But not her own life. Not
quite .
    In pity and punishment she was
turned into an undying tree, a rowan that weeps only in the
presence of transcendent love; and the tears of the rowan are
blossoms that confer extraordinary grace upon those who can see
them .
    When enough tears are wept,
the rowan will be free. She waits inside a sacred stone ring that
can be neither weighed nor measured nor touched. She waits for love
that is worth her tears .
    The rowan is waiting
still .

Author’s
Note
    O ne of the questions I am most often
asked by readers is “Your Western and contemporary romances
were so successful, what made you decide to write medieval
romances?”
    The answer involves a true story that really is
stranger than fiction. I wouldn’t have dared to make it up,
because no one would believe it! Here is how it goes…
    For twenty-six years I have been well and truly
married to the only man I ever loved. In addition to being husband,
lover, friend, and father of my children, Evan is my writing
partner. (We write as A.E. Maxwell and as Ann Maxwell.) Evan is
also a hardheaded contrarian who loves to argue so much he’ll
take either side of any issue.
    In the course of doing research for The Diamond Tiger , Evan and I went to Britain. As
Maxwell is a Scots name, we decided to drive to Scotland. My maiden
name, Charters, is also Scots, a corruption of the name
Charteris.
    Evan and I weren’t chasing family ties, we
just wanted an excuse to see a new piece of the world. We jumped in
our rented car and set off north, sitting on the wrong side of the
car, shifting with the wrong arm, and driving on the wrong side of
the road.
    By the time we crossed the border into Scotland, we
were bored with super highways. We turned off into the first
country lane we found and began winding along the edge of a
windswept, shallow bay. When I spotted some distant ruins rising
out of the land, I was ecstatic; I hadbeen
wanting to photograph ruins, but everything I had seen so far in
Britain had been depressingly well kept.
    We chased the ruins over roads that got more and
more narrow until we came to a Scottish National Trust site. The
site was closed for the season. But the ruins were there for all to
see—and photograph.
    While Evan set off to read the historical plaques,
I started taking pictures. After a few minutes, Evan called to me
in an odd voice and waved me over to where he was. When I got
there, he simply pointed to the plaque. The magnificent red ruins
were of a castle called Caerlaverock [Meadowlark’s Nest],
which had been built in the twelfth century.
    The castle had been the Maxwell Clan
stronghold.
    Evan and I were stunned by the coincidence of time
and place and us. We hadn’t been seeking family landscapes in
Scotland; we hadn’t even known they existed. Yet here we were
in Caerlaverock…
    When we finally left the castle, we were full of
questions. We collared one of the locals in a pub. He told us there
was a place called Maxwellton [Maxwell Town], near Dumfries. There
was a museum there devoted to Maxwell Clan history.
    We went to the museum. While Evan admired the
assortment of weapons and armor, I wandered off to look around.
There was a map of all the clans. The Charteris Clan was there,
too, a tiny little fingernail clinging to the edge of the
Maxwells’ vast lands.
    Beneath the portrait of a fierce-looking Maxwell
was a short history of the clan. Soon after I started reading, I
was laughing out loud. Evan came over, wondering what was wrong
with me.
    When he started reading, he discovered what I
already had: the Maxwells were a Norman warrior clan that had
fought on the wrong side of every major battle after
1066…including the Spanish Armada. Three times an English
king took Caerlaverock after a very long siege, pulled down the
castle, and stripped the Maxwells of titlesand
lands. Three times an English king was forced to give back the
lands, the titles, and the castle to the Maxwells, so that the clan
could guard the western approach to Britain.
    The fourth time Caerlaverock was pulled down, it
stayed in ruins. The lands and titles were given back to the
Maxwells, but not the right to “crenellate” (build
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