The USA Today bestselling author of Men in Kilts and The Corset Diaries goes medieval. At a modern-day Renaissance faire, one woman is about to meet her knight in tarnished armor.
"Right, so where are all the good-looking men in
formfitting tights?"
"Probably rehearsing. You can set that down next
to the cooler."
"Rehearsing? Rehearsing what? Hunky men in
skintight clothing don't rehearse! They're far too
manly for such a sissy thing. Actors rehearse. Men in
tights ... well, they just don't. Unless ... hey! You
wouldn't drag me out here to the middle of nowhere
by promising me really handsome, dashing guys in extremely
cool knight getup without telling me they
were all gay, would you?"
CJ grinned as I deposited a box of toilet paper,
napkins, and assorted towels on top of the red plastic
cooler. "I'm sure some are, but not all. Don't worry;
you'll have lots of manly-man guys to slobber over."
"I'd better," I muttered darkly as I stomped off to
the car to fetch another load of camping accessories.
Twenty minutes later I returned from the wilds of the
parking lot. "You know, I always imagined ye old days
of medieval yore had a whole lot more dashing, daring
knights hanging around, and fewer steaming piles of
poop." I stepped carefully over the huge pile of fly-bespecked
horse manure, and staggered toward the
ever-growing collection of bags, boxes, coolers, food
hampers, and suitcases that contained those items my
cousin deemed vital to our continued existence.
"Oh, no, poop was everywhere back then. Open
sewers, you know," CJ answered from where she was
on her knees digging into a rucksack, muttering to
herself as I dropped a box of canned beans and packages
of freeze-dried hiking food next to her.
"I still haven't seen even one man in tights. There's
a couple of women a few tents down who are dressed
like knights, but that's it. So help me, Ceej, if you
dragged me out here on false pretenses ..."
"I didn't!" CJ all but climbed into the rucksack, her
voice muffled as she tried to placate me. "They're
rehearsing, I promise. Everyone rehearses before
opening day. The vendors are probably vendoring or
setting up their booths. And the jousters are doing
practice runs."
"Okay, but I'd better start seeing some soon. You
promised me great big herds of manly guys being
knights and rogues and swashbuckling pirates." I
peered around at the sea of tents that surrounded us.
The flat, open field adjacent to the fairgrounds housing
the Faire served as a tent city of Faire performers,
vendors, employees, and joust participants. Most of
the tents were blocky squares and rectangles of dull
gray or green, like the one CJ had provided for us,
but at the far end of the tent city were clustered beautiful
striped tents of all colors, some with pennons and
flags bearing coats of arms waving lazily in the late
afternoon summer breeze. Other than the two women
I'd seen coming from the car, the tent city was
strangely devoid of human life. "I'm not seeing even
a small flock of manly knights, much less a herd of
them. In fact, there doesn't seem to be anyone here
at all. Are you sure that this Faire is a hotbed of
romance and dishy guys?"
"Would I lie to you?" CJ pulled herself out of her
rucksack, a smile lighting her happy gray eyes. "I personally
know of six couples who met because of the
Faire in the last two years, and they're all happily
married. So don't worry; there are oodles of manly
knights here, all of them dashing and daring and wildly
romantic, just like my lamb."
I rolled my eyes as I started back toward the car,
located a hot, sweaty half mile away in a distant field.
"Oh, yeah, your lamb, the man known to everyone as
the Butcher of Birmingham. I said I wanted a modern-day
personification of knightliness, Ceej, a man who's
not afraid to laugh triumphantly in the face of death,
a man who lives for adventure and excitement-not a
guy who scares the crap out of anyone who gets a
good close look at him. I'll go get the last of the stuff.
If I'm not back in half an hour, find the bravest, handsomest
jouster you can and send him after me. Maybe
you'd better make it two. I'm feeling like I'll need a
lot of resuscitating."
CJ waved an acknowledging hand at me as she dug
through the canvas bag. "Right. After you get back
you can slip into the garb I brought for you."
I sighed a sigh of the soon to be martyred, and
staggered off toward the car. By the time I collected
the last items, locked up CJ's VW Beetle, and returned
to our tent, sweat was rolling down my back,
soaking the light gauze shirt I'd put on before we left
my aunt and uncle's house in London-the town midway
between Detroit and Toronto, not the English
capital.
"Whew!" I set down the box of kitty litter, kibble,
tiny little cans of premium cat food, bottled water,
three different kinds of cat treats, a bag of dried catnip,
assorted cat toys, and one huge domed litter box
with infrared beams and automatic clump removal.
"Criminy dutch, the things this cat ... Moth! Come
back here; that isn't yours! Ceej!"
My cousin CJ looked up at my whine. "Hmm?"
"Your parents' cat is eating someone's tent." I
pointed at the huge white cat with four orange stockings
that was gnawing on the black canvas tent set up
next to ours.
"Oh. Probably isn't best that you let him do that.
He'll just puke it up later. I wonder where I put my
side-lacing bodice?" Ceej walked on her knees over
to where three suitcases were stacked neatly in front
of the humongous pea-green tent it had taken us a
half hour of sweating (and swearing) to erect.
"Me? He's not my responsibility anymore. My job
was to get him from Seattle to Ontario in one piece
while your parents did the cross-country thing. I did
that, not that it was easy, since he insisted on yowling
and trying to claw me through the cat carrier the entire
flight. But we're here now, and that means he's
your responsibility."
"Nope, sorry, I've got too much to do, what with
the official Wenches' Conference and all. Besides,
Mom paid you to take care of him."
"Only for the flight!" I dug through the ice in the
cooler and extracted a chilled bottle of water. "They
were supposed to be home by now to receive the horrible
beast with open arms."
"Yeah, well, you know how Dad is. Once he gets
an idea in his head, there's no changing his mind. He's
always wanted to see the Klondike."
"He's the only man I know who'd feel it necessary
to drive from Seattle to Ontario via Alaska," I grumbled
as I swigged the cold water. "Moth, dammit ...
argh! No! Spit it out! Bad cat!"
"You really should keep a closer eye on him," CJ
said as I grabbed the cat and pulled out of his mouth
the bit of tent he was gnawing on. "Mom's really
attached to him. She'd never forgive you if anything
happened to him."
Moth shot a slitted, yellow-eyed glare at me as I
picked him up.
"The feeling's mutual," I growled, and lugged him
over to the pyramid of stuff in front of our tent. I
checked the snap on the long leash that was tied onto
a lounge chair, adjusted his harness so he couldn't slip
out of it again, and tethered him to the chair so I
could put stuff away. "There isn't enough money in
the world to pay me for having to babysit him for two
whole weeks."
"Well, it's not like you have a lot of other options,
is it?" CJ asked.
I froze in the act of hauling the sleeping bags into
the tent.
"Oh, Pepper, I'm sorry. That wasn't nice of me. I
didn't mean it. It's not your fault that unemployment
is so high in Seattle."
I shrugged the sting of her comment away and
tossed the sleeping bags inside the musty, faintly
mildew-scented tent. "It may not be nice, but it's the
truth. I don't have anything else to do except sit
around and watch my unemployment benefits run
out." That wasn't really the truth; my days were very
busy, what with job-hunting and all the volunteering
I did to keep myself sane-I didn't even have time to
date, let alone sit around and do nothing-but still,
her point was taken.
"Maybe if you went to California? I always heard
that was a good place for software engineers."
"It was, which is why when so many of us were laid
off two years ago, everyone moved to Silicon Valley
and its environs. I figured with the mass migration
south, I'd have a better chance at finding a job where
I was, but ..." I shrugged, unwilling to dwell on my
increasingly desperate situation. This was supposed to
be my vacation, my man-hunting, romantic, "fall
madly in love with some gorgeous guy" vacation. I
wanted to forget the depressing life I would have to
face if it all came to nothing.
"Isn't there anything else you can do?" CJ asked,
her brow wrinkled as she sat on her heels watching
me. "You've got a degree; surely there must be some
job-"
I shifted a few more boxes into the tent. "You'd
think so, huh? But since there were some fifty thousand
other people let go by the local airplane company,
there's nada job-wise. Squat. Zilcho. Not even
a McDonald's fry-jockey job."
"Boy, that is hard." CJ sucked her lower lip for a
moment as I flopped down exhaustedly on the cooler,
brushing at the trickles of sweat snaking down the
valley between my breasts. "I guess you don't really
have any other option but to find yourself a man, fall
in love with him, and live happily ever after. Fortunately,
I'm here to help you."
My shoulders slumped as the full realization of what
I was doing hit me. I'd been in delusional mode ever
since my cousin had convinced me that she'd be able
to hook me up with a veritable God of perfection,
courtesy of the local Renaissance Faire and international
jousting competition. And now here I was, actually
believing her promise of finding me a man, a soul
mate, someone who would fill my empty, lonely life.
It was all so ... sordid. Unrealistic. Stupid. I let my
damp forehead drop into my hands as I moaned. "Oh,
Ceej, what am I doing? Why did I let you talk me
into this? Your plan is ridiculous, utterly ridiculous!
What was I thinking? I'm thirty-six, unemployed, have
a degree in programming and half of one from the vet
school I quit before I got eaten by something big with
sharp teeth, and guys don't even look twice at me.
Why on earth did I imagine that you can find me a
man in two weeks when I haven't in sixteen years of
concerted searching?"
"Because I can!" She tipped her head to the side
as I rocked miserably on the cooler. "I told you that
Butcher and I met at the Faire last year, and we were
madly in love after just a couple of days."
"He lives in England. You live here," I pointed out,
wondering if I shouldn't just give in and have an indulgent
wallow in self-pity.
"But I see him every couple of months, and just as
soon as I get that job at the BBC, we'll be set. And
then there was Fairuza Spenser, Cathy Baker, and
Mary Denhelm."
I looked up, having decided against the wallow.
"Who are they?"
"Wenches in my local chapter whom I introduced
to their respective husbands last year at various Faires.
You'll meet them later. And the year before that there
were three others whom I also found hubbies for. I'm
a matchmaker extraordinaire, so relax and place yourself
fully in my capable hands. Before the Faire is
over, I will have not only found you your perfect man,
but you'll be deeply in love and well on the way to
happily-ever-aftering."
"Life is not a fairy tale," I said morosely, wanting
to believe her, but knowing that things like that just
didn't happen to people like me.
"No, it's better," she said calmly, then frowned as
her brows drew together. "You have to help, though,
Pepper. You can't just stand around waiting for the
love of your life to swoop you up and carry you off."
"Why not? We're surrounded by knights in shining
armor."
Her frown deepened. "I just want to make sure that
you're totally committed to the idea of finding a guy."
"Committed like to a madhouse?"
"Pepper!"
I held up my hands in mock surrender. "Okay,
okay, little joke. I'm committed; I really am."
"I hope so, because once I find a guy for you, you're
expected to keep him. I just worry that you're not
really serious about this. After all, look what you've
done at home."
I stood up and glared down at where she sat poking
through the bag. "What do you mean, what I've done
at home? I haven't done anything!"
She grabbed a handful of jeans around my knee
region and tugged me down to the cooler. "Stop looming
over me like a great hulk. You're too tall. I can't
bend my head back far enough to see you. And that's
exactly what I mean-you seem to expect the perfect
man to drop into your lap without your lifting a single
finger to find him, but that's not going to happen unless
you get proactive. You have to admit that until
now, you haven't actually expended any energy in
dating."
I grabbed her ear and peered in. "Hellooo, anyone
home?" She slapped my hand away. "Didn't you hear
me on the drive up here? I've looked and looked and
looked, but all the guys back home are either unemployed
plane mechanics or likewise unemployed software
geeks. The first group hang around bars ogling
women and having competitions about who can pee
the farthest, while the second thinks a wild time is
getting drunk and creating dirty computer animations."
"Maybe your standards are too high," CJ said
thoughtfully as she eyed me up and down. "There's
nothing really wrong with you. You're pretty, in a general
sort of way. You have nice thick red hair. And
freckles-guys like freckles. And if you're a bit ...
well ... solid, guys like that, too. Some guys. Most
guys. And you're smart; that's a plus."
I paced the length of the tent, avoiding Moth as he
lunged for my ankles when I passed in front of him.
"You try it, cat, and you're going to find yourself
locked into the tent for the next two weeks. Thank
you for your so reassuring assessment of my many fine
qualities, CJ."
"You're also stubborn, very set in your ways, and
you like to argue, but that's okay, I think we can work
around those points." She gestured expressively with
her tiny little hands. I added that to the list of injuries
I was nursing. In addition to being gainfully employed
by the Canadian Broadcasting Corporation as a
researcher-a job that allowed her to travel to England
several times a year-CJ was graceful, delicately
built, and had a charming little heart-shaped face and
a fragile manner that left most men prostrate before
her. I, on the other hand, was built along the lines of
a brick house, or so my mother always used to tell
me. Big-boned, tall, and gawky-that was me. The
only way a man was going to be prostrate before me
was if he accidentally ran into me and was knocked
out cold. I knew it wasn't fair to add CJ's genetic
makeup to my list of ways the world was picking on
me, but I was too crabby to care.
"I don't know, maybe it's me. Maybe something's
wrong with me."