The raven-haired Lady Marged Bowen and the conquering knight Rolfe de Bretayne had met as enemies when he invaded her windswept, brooding Wales. But Rolfe had taken more than her beloved Bowenford Castle: he had awakened her sleeping senses and claimed her body for his own.
Now the passion that bound them tighter than any chains was being torn asunder, as destiny drove them across an England lit with fires of war, and she was fated to choose between her king, her country... and her ravished, captured heart.
This is a typical 'Hero storms heroines castle and takes her prisoner' book. Unfortunatly the author has the virgin prisoner begging the man that just stormed her castle and killed her kinsmen to make love to her by page 33. The next page she is declaring her love for him. I just couldn't believe that the author had written something so unreal. Neither Marged (the heroine)or Rolfe (the hero) are very likable characters, I just never felt like I cared about either of them. Rolfe leaves the day after making love to Marged and she then ecapes the castle to go and find her father. On her journey so many unbelievable things happen that soon after she evaded the advances of King Edward Plantagenet( she was his prisoner at the time and talked him out of bedding her).All I can say is 'yeah right!!' After that I just closed the book.