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70 A Witch's Spell
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AUTHOR’S NOTE
The belief in witchcraft is still very strong today and practised in parts of England and Europe. There are two types of witchcraft – black and white. White witches usually use herbs to cure wounds, sores and diseases.
Ten years ago a white witch from a coven in the North of England was asked,
“Does a witch possess what others would regard as ‘supernatural’ powers?’
The answer was,
“A witch possesses nothing that is not basic in everyone. People in becoming ‘civilised’ have lost sight of these powers. A witch cultivates them, learns how to bring them back into use – how to control them and make the power work.”
The terrible cruelty of the witch hunts in England between 1542 and 1684 resulted in a thousand witches being executed. In Scotland the number executed was higher and death was by burning. In Europe over two hundred thousand witches died at the stake during the same period.
In England in 1736 the statute was repealed and the law no longer punishes witches. By the end of the century the mania for witch hunts in Europe had disappeared, but in rural districts, however, they are still revered or feared.
CHAPTER ONE
1818
Coming from the farm with a basket of eggs on her arm, Hermia was humming a little tune at the same time as she was telling herself a story.
Because she was so much alone she invariably enlivened her daily tasks by pretending that she was the wife of an Eastern Potentate or the daughter of an explorer seeking treasures hidden by the Aztecs or even a pearl diver.
Just as she reached the end of the narrow lane that led to Honeysuckle Farm and was about to join the road that would take her to the village, she heard a man’s voice exclaim in a tone of exasperation,
“Damn!”
Hermia started because she had seldom heard a man swear. The country people were God-fearing and soft spoken.
Curious, she hurried down the last few yards of the lane to have her first sight of an extremely well-bred horse.
She appreciated its appearance and saw that its rider was bending down to pick up its offside hind leg.
She realised that he was looking at the horse’s hoof and guessed that it had lost a shoe.
It was something that frequently happened in the neighbourhood because the roads were so rough and Hermia suspected that the local blacksmith was not as skilled as his predecessor.
It flashed through her mind, however, that she did not recognise the horse or its owner, who at the moment had his back to her.
She walked forward to ask in her soft voice,
“Can I help you?”
The gentleman bending over the horse’s hoof did not turn his head.
“Not unless you have something to lever a shoe from a hoof!” he replied.
He spoke in an obviously irritated manner, but with the drawl that her brother had told Hermia was fashionable amongst the bucks in London and was affected by the aristocratic visitors who stayed with her uncle, the Earl of Millbrooke, at The Hall.
She guessed this was where the gentleman whose face she could not see had come from.
Moving closer she realised that what was upsetting him was that the shoe on his horse’s hoof had come loose, but was still attached by one nail which he could not dislodge.
This was an accident that had often happened to the horses her brother Peter rode when he was at home.
Without saying anything she put down her basket and looked at the rough surface of the road. A second later she saw what she sought.
It was a large flat stone and, picking it up, she moved to the side of the gentleman who was still struggling to wrench the shoe loose and suggested,
“Let me try.”
He did not glance up at her, but merely held his horse’s foreleg as he was doing already and waited while she bent down, slipped the flat stone under the shoe and levered it free from the hoof.
It took a certain amount of strength, but because she was doing it the right way and with a deft movement of her wrist, the shoe was detached from the hoof and clattered onto the road, taking the nail with it.
The gentleman beside her put the horse’s leg down straightening himself and said,
“I am extremely grateful to you and now kindly tell me where I can find a blacksmith.”
He picked the shoe up from the ground as he spoke.
Then for the first time he looked to see who had been skilful enough to help him.
Not realising she was doing so, Hermia, as she bent down to insert the stone under the shoe, had pushed back her sun bonnet so that, still tied by its ribbons under her chin, it hung down her back.
Her hair could now be seen curling unfashionably over her head in a natural and very attractive manner and was turned to burning gold in the sunshine.
It was the vivid gold of the daffodils in spring, the jasmine when it first appears after the cold of the winter and the corn when it is just beginning to ripen in the fields.
Anybody who saw Hermia looked at her hair as if they did not believe it could possibly be natural, but must owe its vivid colour to the dye-pot.
It complemented the pink-and-white clarity of her skin and the blue of her eyes, which strangely enough were the vivid blue of an alpine flower rather than the soft blue of an English summer sky.
Despite the cynical expression on his face, there was a look of astonishment in the eyes of the gentleman.
At the same time, if he was surprised by her, Hermia was certainly surprised by him.
Never had she seen a man who looked so sardonic.
His hair was dark, his features clear-cut and, while his eyebrows seemed almost to meet across the bridge of his nose, there was a bored, almost contemptuous expression in his eyes as if he despised everything and everybody.
They stood looking at each other until the gentleman commented dryly,
“You certainly make me believe that the stories of pretty milkmaids are after all not exaggerated!”
There was a faint twist to his lips which one could hardly call a smile as he added,
“And, of course, it’s an added bonus that you should be intelligent as well!”
As he spoke, he drew something from his waistcoat pocket and put it into Hermia’s hand saying,
“Here is something to add to your bottom drawer when you find a hefty young farmer to make you happy.”
Then, as Hermia would have looked down at what he had given her, he moved a step forward and putting his hand under her chin turned her face up to his.
Before she realised what was happening, before she had time to think, he bent his head and his lips were on hers.
She felt as if he held her prisoner and it was impossible to move or breathe.
Then, as at the back of her mind, she knew she must struggle and at the same time tell him that he insulted her, he released her and with the lithe grace of an athlete sprang into the saddle.
While she was still staring at him in bewilderment, he said,
“What is more, he will be a very lucky man. Tell him I said so.”
He rode off and, as Hermia watched the dust from his horse’s hoofs rising behind him, she thought she must be dreaming.
Only when the stranger was out of sight did she ask herself how she could have been so stupid as to have stood there gaping at him like any half-witted yokel while he kissed her.
It was the first time she had ever been kissed.
Then, as she stared down at what she held in her hand, she saw that it was a golden guinea and could hardly believe it was real.
Hermia was used to walking about the countryside by herself and everybody in the village knew her.
It had never struck her for one moment that a stranger
might think it odd or as she realised now, mistake her, because of the way she was dressed, for a milkmaid.
Her worn cotton gown was a little too tight from so many washes and her sun bonnet was faded because she had worn it since she was a child.
Even so she did not look in the least like Molly, the farmer’s daughter who helped him to milk his cows.
Nor did she resemble in any way, the middle-aged women who had worked on Honeysuckle Farm, some of them for twenty years.
‘A milkmaid!’ she whispered to herself and thought how angry her father would be at what had happened.
Then she could not help thinking that it was her own fault.
She had gone to the assistance of the stranger without explaining who she was.
Although he might have guessed from the few words she spoke to him that she was educated, she could hardly blame him for believing her to come from a very different background.
At the same time she thought that it was an insult even for a milkmaid to be kissed by a strange man for no reason except that she had helped him.
Because she was not only angry but in fact humiliated, Hermia’s instinct was to throw away the guinea the stranger had given her and hope that nobody would ever know what had happened.
Then she told herself that would be a wicked waste of money, for a guinea would buy many of the things that her father paid for himself for the poor and sick in the village.
Times were hard since the war and it was difficult for the younger men to find employment.
Those who were not fortunate enough to work at The Hall or on the Earl’s estate had to feed themselves by growing vegetables and keeping a few chickens.
Hermia looked down again at the guinea and thought that, if she slipped it into the poor box in the Church, which usually contained nothing, her father would be delighted.
He would bless the unknown benefactor, which was very far from her own feelings towards him!
As the full realisation that she had been kissed by a man she had never met before and would never meet again swept over her, Hermia fumed beneath her breath,
‘How dare he! How dare he behave to me in such a manner? It’s monstrous that no girl should be safe in a country lane from men like him!’
In the violence of her indignation, her fingers tightened on the guinea and she asked herself how she could have been so stupid as not to have returned it to him the moment he gave it to her.
Similarly she should have known when he put his fingers under her chin what he was about to do.
It had, however, never entered her mind that a man she did not know and who had seen her for the first time would wish to kiss her.
Yet it was just the way, she told herself, that she would expect the bucks and beaux whom Peter was always talking about to behave in London.
She should therefore have been on her guard from the moment she heard the man swearing in the lane and should have guessed what he would be like when she saw his horse.
“I hate him!” she cried aloud.
Then she found herself thinking that her first kiss was not in the least what she had expected.
She had always thought a kiss between two people would be something very soft and gentle.
Given with love and received with love, it would be something that reminded one of flowers, music and the first of the evening stars coming out in the sky.
Instead the stranger’s lips had been hard and possessive and Hermia thought again that he had held her prisoner so that she would not escape.
“If that is a kiss,” she exclaimed, “I want no more of them!”
Then she knew that that was not true.
Of course she wanted to love and be loved.
It was all part of the stories she told herself in which the wildest adventures carried her to the top of the Himalayas or along crocodile-infested rivers in the centre of Africa.
Then the heroine would find the man of her dreams and they would be married.
The hero had never had a face, but now she was certain of one thing, the man who had just kissed her would be the villain in her stories.
As she thought about him and remembered his drooping eyelids and the cynical twist to his lips, she was sure that he not only looked like a villain but even more like the Devil.
‘Perhaps that is who he was,’ she thought as she picked up her basket of eggs and started to walk slowly homewards.
It was a fascinating thought and she wondered what her mother would say if, when she arrived at the Vicarage, she told her that she had met the Devil in Chanter’s Lane and he had kissed her.
Moreover if the Devil had done so, that meant she had now become a witch.
She had so often heard whispered stories from the villagers of how in the dark woods that covered a great part of her uncle’s estate Satanic revels took place to which foolish girls had been lured.
Nobody knew exactly what had happened to poor little Betsy. She had been sane before she went to one, but they said that it was Satan himself who had sent her mad.
Her mother replied to such tales by saying that it was a lot of nonsense, Betsy had been born abnormal and her brain was damaged so that there was nothing the doctors could do for her.
But the villagers much preferred to believe that Betsy was Satan’s child and they enjoyed shivering apprehensively when she passed them.
If she was muttering, as she usually did, to herself, they were quite certain that she was casting a curse on those she did not like.
There was also a story about another girl who had gone into the woods night after night and finally had been spirited away so secretly that she was never seen again.
Hermia’s father had given the explanation that, as a visitor to the village who came from London had disappeared at exactly the same time, it was quite obvious what had happened.
But the villagers were convinced that the girl’s fate was the same at Betsy’s. She had joined in the Devil’s revelries and he had made her one of his own.
It seemed unlikely, Hermia thought, as she neared the village, that the Devil would ride such an outstanding well bred horse or would be dressed by the tailors patronised by the Prince Regent.
These were, Peter assured her, the only cutters who could make a man’s coat fit as if he had been poured into it.
Thinking of Peter made Hermia wish that he was at home. He would certainly think her experience amusing, but not even to her adored brother, to whom she confided almost everything, would she admit that she had been kissed by a stranger, Devil or no Devil.
‘Peter would laugh at my being so foolish,’ she told herself, ‘while Papa would be furious!’
It was not often her good-natured, happy-go-lucky father was angry about anything.
But she had become aware this last year since she had grown up that he disliked the compliments that the gentlemen who came to the Vicarage paid her, although there were not many of them.
She had heard him say to her mother that it was a great impertinence and he was not going to tolerate it.
Although she knew it was very reprehensible, Hermia had waited outside the door to overhear her mother’s reply.
“Hermia is growing up, darling,” she had said, “and, as she is very pretty, in fact lovely, you must expect men to notice her, although unfortunately there are not many eligible bachelors around here to do so.”
“I will not have any man, whoever he may be, messing about with her,” the Honourable Stanton Brooke said sharply.
“Nobody is likely to do that,” Mrs. Brooke replied soothingly, “but I wish your brother and his wife would be a little kinder in asking her to some of the parties they give at The Hall. After all, she is the same age as Marilyn.”
Hermia listening outside the door had given a little sigh and did not wait to hear any more.
She was well aware that her mother resented the fact that the Earl of Millbrooke, her father’s brother, and his wife had almost ignored her since she was eighteen.
> Not once had she been asked to any of the parties they gave at The Hall for her first cousin and Hermia knew even better than her mother the reason for it.
Marilyn was jealous.
During the last year when they had done lessons together, as they had ever since they had been small children, she had grown more and more resentful of her cousin’s looks and never missed an opportunity to disparage her.
Because she could not find anything unkind to say about her face, she concentrated on her clothes.
“That gown you are wearing is almost in rags!” she would say when Hermia arrived at The Hall early in the morning. “I cannot think why you are content to make a scarecrow of yourself!”
“The answer is quite simple,” Hermia would reply. “Your father is very rich and mine is very poor!”
She had not spoken resentfully, she had merely said it laughingly, but Marilyn had scowled and tried to think of another weapon she could hurt her with.
It did seem to Hermia very unfair, even though her mother had explained it to her, that it was traditional for the oldest son of the family to have everything and the younger sons practically nothing.
“By why, Mama?”
“I will explain it to you,” her mother had replied quietly. “Large estates like your Uncle John’s must be passed intact from father to son. If they once started to divide up the land and the money amongst other members of the family, there would soon be no great landlords in England, but only a lot of smallholdings.”
She paused to see if her daughter was listening to what she was saying before she went on,
“That is why in all the great aristocratic families the oldest son inherits everything, including the title. The second son generally goes into the Army or the Navy, while the third son becomes a Clergyman because there are always livings of which his father is the patron.”
“So that is why Papa became a Parson!”
Her mother had smiled.
“Exactly. I think in fact, if he had had the choice, he would rather have been a soldier. However, as you know, he is just a poor Parson, but a very very good one.”
That was true, Hermia knew, because her father for all his easy-going nature was extremely compassionate and had a real love of his fellow men.

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Paradise Found
A Victory for Love
Lovers in Lisbon
Love Casts Out Fear
The Wicked Widow
The Angel and the Rake
Sweet Enchantress
The Race For Love
Born of Love
Miracle For a Madonna
Love Joins the Clans
Forced to Marry
Love Strikes a Devil
The Love Light of Apollo
An Adventure of Love
Princes and Princesses: Favourite Royal Romances
Terror in the Sun
The Fire of Love
The Odious Duke
The Eyes of Love
A Nightingale Sang
The Wonderful Dream
The Island of Love
The Protection of Love
Beyond the Stars
Only a Dream
An Innocent in Russia
The Duke Comes Home
Love in the Moon
Love and the Marquis
Love Me Forever
Flowers For the God of Love
Love and the Cheetah
A Battle for Love
The Outrageous Lady
Seek the Stars
The Storms Of Love
Saved by love
The Power and the Prince
The Irresistible Buck
A Dream from the Night
In the Arms of Love
Good or Bad
Winged Victory
This is Love
Magic From the Heart
The Lioness and the Lily
The Sign of Love
Warned by a Ghost
Love Conquers War
The Runaway Heart
The Hidden Evil
Just Fate
The Passionate Princess
Imperial Splendour
Lucky in Love
Haunted
For All Eternity
The Passion and the Flower
The Enchanted Waltz
Temptation of a Teacher
Riding In the Sky
Moon Over Eden (Bantam Series No. 37)
Lucifer and the Angel
Love is Triumphant
The Magnificent Marquis
A Kiss for the King
A Duel With Destiny
Beauty or Brains
A Shaft of Sunlight
The Gates of Paradise
Women have Hearts
Two Hearts in Hungary
A Kiss from the Heart
108. An Archangel Called Ivan
71 Love Comes West
103. She Wanted Love
Love in the Clouds
104. A Heart Finds Love
100. A Rose In Jeopardy
Their Search for Real Love
A Very Special Love
A Royal Love Match
Love Drives In
In Love In Lucca
Never Forget Love
The Mysterious Maid-Servant
The Island of Love (Camfield Series No. 15)
Call of the Heart
Love Under Fire
The Pretty Horse-Breakers
The Shadow of Sin (Bantam Series No. 19)
The Devilish Deception
Castle of Love
Little Tongues of Fire
105. an Angel In Hell
Learning to Love
An Introduction to the Pink Collection
Gypsy Magic
A Princess Prays
The Goddess and the Gaiety Girl
Love Is the Reason For Living
Love Forbidden
The Importance of Love
Mission to Monte Carlo
Stars in the Sky
The House of Happiness
An Innocent in Paris
Revenge Is Sweet
Royalty Defeated by Love
Love At Last
Solita and the Spies
73. A Tangled Web
Riding to the Moon
An Unexpected Love
Say Yes Samantha
An Angel Runs Away
They Found their Way to Heaven
The Richness of Love
Love in the Highlands
Love In the East
They Touched Heaven
Crowned by Music
The Mountain of Love
The Heart of love
The Healing Hand
The Ship of Love
Love, Lords, and Lady-Birds
It Is Love
In Search of Love
The Trail to Love
Love and Apollo
To Heaven With Love
Never Laugh at Love
The Punishment of a Vixen
Love and the Loathsome Leopard
The Revelation is Love
Double the Love
Saved By A Saint
A Paradise On Earth
Lucky Logan Finds Love
65 A Heart Is Stolen
They Sought love
The Husband Hunters
160 Love Finds the Duke at Last
Kiss the Moonlight
The King Without a Heart
The Duke & the Preachers Daughter
The Golden Cage
The Love Trap
Who Can Deny Love
A Very Unusual Wife
A Teacher of Love
Search For a Wife
Fire in the Blood
Seeking Love
The Keys of Love
A Change of Hearts
Love in the Ruins
68 The Magic of Love
Secret Harbor
A Lucky Star
Pray For Love
21 The Mysterious Maid-Servant (The Eternal Collection)
Alone In Paris
Punished with Love
Joined by Love
A Shooting Star
As Eagles Fly
The Wings of Ecstacy
The Chieftain Without a Heart
Hiding from Love
A Royal Rebuke
The Scots Never Forget
A Flight To Heaven
White Lilac
A Heart of Stone
Crowned with Love
Fragrant Flower
A Prisioner in Paris
A Perfect Way to Heaven
Diona and a Dalmatian
69 Love Leaves at Midnight
Fascination in France
Bride to a Brigand
Bride to the King
A Heart in Heaven
Love, Lies and Marriage
A Miracle of Love
Bewitched (Bantam Series No. 16)
The White Witch
A Golden Lie
The Poor Governess
The Ruthless Rake
Hide and Seek for Love
Lovers in London
Ruled by Love
Mine for Ever
Theirs to Eternity
The Blue Eyed Witch
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The Cross of Love
The Ghost Who Fell in Love
Love and Lucia
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The Tree of Love
A Night of Gaiety
Danger in the Desert
The Devil in Love (Bantam Series No. 24)
Money or Love
A Steeplechase For Love
In Hiding
Sword to the Heart (Bantam Series No. 13)
74. Love Lifts The Curse
The Proud Princess
72. The Impetuous Duchess
The Waters of Love
This Way to Heaven
The Goddess Of Love
Gift Of the Gods
60 The Duchess Disappeared
A Dangerous Disguise
Love at the Tower
The Star of Love
Signpost To Love
Secret Love
Revenge of the Heart
Love Rescues Rosanna
Follow Your Heart
A Revolution Of Love
The Dare-Devil Duke
A Heaven on Earth
Rivals for Love
The Glittering Lights (Bantam Series No. 12)
70 A Witch's Spell
The Queen Wins
Love Finds the Way
Wish for Love
The Temptation of Torilla
The Devil Defeated
The Dream and the Glory
Journey to love
Too Precious to Lose
Kiss from a Stranger
A Duke in Danger
Love Wins In Berlin
The Wild Cry of Love
A Battle of Brains
A Castle of Dreams
The Unwanted Wedding
64 The Castle Made for Love
202. Love in the Dark
Love Is Dangerous
107. Soft, Sweet & Gentle
A Kiss In the Desert
A Virgin Bride
The Disgraceful Duke
Look Listen and Love
A Hazard of Hearts
104. the Glittering Lights
A Marriage Made In Heaven
Rescued by Love
Love Came From Heaven
Journey to Happiness
106. Love's Dream in Peril
The Castle of Love
Touching the Stars
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171. The Marquis Wins (The Eternal Collection)
Sailing to Love
The Unbreakable Spell
The Cruel Count (Bantam Series No. 28)
The Secret of the Glen
Danger to the Duke
The Peril and the Prince
The Duke Is Deceived
A Road to Romance
A King In Love
Love and the Clans
Love and the Gods
The Incredible Honeymoon (Bantam Series No. 46)
Pure and Untouched
Wanted a Royal Wife
The Castle
63 Ola and the Sea Wolf
Count the Stars
The Winning Post Is Love
Dancing on a Rainbow
Love by the Lake
From Hell to Heaven
The Triumph of Love