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Promo – Scarlet: Book Two of the Robyn Hood Series

Action! Adventure! Awesome women! Fellow author Niamh Murphy has a new book out today, the second in her gender flipped Robyn Hood series. Keep reading for the blurb and a fun excerpt!

Blurb:

GREED. CORRUPTION. GOLD.


Robyn Hood and her loyal friend Littlejohn want nothing more than to stay one step ahead of the Sheriff of Nottingham’s men.

But when they offer their help to a Holy Sister in need, they soon discover not all is as it seems.

Now they have both the Sheriff of Nottingham on their tail and the self-serving Bishop of Hereford too.

Will they aid a fellow thief? Or save their own necks, keep the gold for themselves, and leave the fugitive, sword-wielding rogue for the gallows?
 

Find out in this brand new Robyn Hood Adventure! 


Excerpt:

As Robyn went to follow the two women into the chamber block, Marian paused at the door. She glanced behind her into the gloom where Sister Mary had disappeared then finally looked up at Robyn. “Do you trust this woman?” Her voice was a low whisper, and Robyn had to lean forward to hear her words.
 

She nodded, then winced at her easy lie. “Well,” she admitted, “she did steal from Littlejohn and me.”
 

Marian raised her eyebrows and sighed; she opened her mouth to speak but merely shook her head.
 

“I do trust her though,” Robyn added quickly, thinking of the young woman’s vulnerability, how many times Robyn could easily have ended up being Nottingham gaol herself, and how it was Robyn’s fault that the poor young nun had been captured by the sheriff’s men and so badly wounded by a trial.
 

“Why, Robyn?” Robyn recognised that tone, it was the same tone that Marian had always used when Robyn had suggested they swim in a freezing cold lake, or travel to the next county on a whim, or ride their horses over ever-higher obstacles.
 

“I…” Robyn started to explain but her confidence and charm abandoned her. “I see something in her, something… like me.”
 

“I see.” Marian nodded, there was a bitterness to her smile that Robyn didn’t recognise. “I had wondered why I hadn’t seen you these last few weeks.” Robyn suddenly realised what the cause of her bitterness was and immediately tried to repair the damage. “No! It’s nothing like that, I mean-I’ve only just met her…I – I haven’t seen you because I didn’t want to put you in danger. I’m still not clear of the sheriff’s men, Marian, I couldn’t risk leading them right to you.” 

“You risked it tonight.”
 

“But…That’s different; she needed help. I had nowhere else to go.”
 

“And… I understand.” Marian looked away and tried to shut the door but Robyn held it open.
 

“No, Marian, please, I wanted to protect you.”
 

“I know.” But she still wasn’t looking at her and Robyn felt that with every word she said Marian was pulling even further away.
 

“I have been desperate to see you,” Robyn whispered.
 

“Have you?”
 

She lowered her voice, all too aware of Sister Mary waiting for them in the room beyond. “I’ve thought about you every day we’ve been apart.” Marian sighed but she still didn’t look up. “Have you?”
 

Robyn reached out to take her hand, why was Marian slipping away from her? What could she do to bring her back? “I’ve thought about our kiss.” Marian looked up then, and her eyes glistened. “Then why-” she cut herself off as her voice cracked. “Then why have you not come to see me?” Robyn opened her mouth but was unable to conjure a reply. She’d thought Marian would be delighted to see her again. Not driven to angry tears. “If I had put you in danger-”
 

“In danger?” Marian spat, “You think rescuing your mother from the clutches of the sheriff’s men did not put me in danger?”
 

“Well, of course, but-”
 

“You think coming here tonight did not put me in danger?”
 

“B-but I-”
 

“So, you cannot put me in danger unless you need to put me in danger? You cannot risk coming here until you need to come here? You cannot risk doing anything until you need to do it?” Marian’s cheeks were turning pink and her blue eyes seemed cold as stone. “What about what I need? All that time you say you have been thinking of me, but have you ever thought about what I need?” “Well… I-”
 

“Have you ever thought I might be worried until I am sick with it? Thinking each day would be the day I would hear of your death? That every time I enter Nottingham it will be your body I see swinging from the gallows? Did you ever think of that?”
 

Slowly, Robyn shook her head, feeling the guilt writhe in her stomach. “I didn’t.”
 

“Did you ever think I might want to hear from you? I might want to know how you are? I might want to see you—” She choked on a sob, silencing her tirade and biting down as she looked away.
 

“I’m sorry,” Robyn said, aghast and unable to think of anything else, “I had no idea.”
 

“Of course you had no idea!” Marian hissed, “You never thought to ask!” Robyn opened and closed her mouth several times. “I just wanted to keep you safe,” she said, but her voice sounded weak.
 

But Marian shook her head. “It’s not up to you to keep me safe. It’s not up to you to decide when I should and shouldn’t place myself in danger,” Robyn opened her mouth to argue but Marian interjected before she could speak. “It’s up to me.” Marian stared at her and took both Robyn’s hands in her own. “I thought I was your oldest, dearest and closest friend-”
 

“You are!”
 

“But you trust strangers more than you trust me. This Sister Mary of yours and that giant Reynold Littlejohn-”
 

“Littlejohn is a good man.”
 

“I’m sure he is Robyn, but it still hurts that you trust him more than you trust me.”
 

“But Marian I….”
 

 “What?”
 

“I couldn’t bear it if anything ever happened to you because of me.” Marian shook her head and looked up at her. “And I can’t bear being cut out of your life like this.”
 

“I love you, Marian.”
 

Marian took a deep breath and nodded. “I know,” she whispered, “But… what does that mean to you?” Marian waited a moment for Robyn’s reply and when it didn’t come, she shook her head, and stepped back, shutting the door in Robyn’s path.
 

Robyn lay her hand and then her head on the wood as she heard the bolts close. “It means everything,” she whispered.
 

About the Author:

 

Niamh Murphy is an author of adventure books with lesbian main characters. Her mission is to write exciting and engaging stories with women taking centre stage. She tells stories of gripping high seas adventure and epic fantasy, with a dash of romance and loves to explore historical settings, science fiction landscapes, and fantasy worlds. She lives in the ancient town of Colchester in England with her partner.

Find Niamh on Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and her Website.

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