About the Book
Title:
Fairly Certain
Author: Deborah Ann Davis
Publisher: D&D Universe
Pages: 196
Genre: New Adult
What happens when a
Computer Geek challenges a Medieval Outlaw?
PETIR TAKES A ROUGH TUMBLE IN
THE CONNECTICUT WOODS, and awakens in the middle of old England. His instinct to freak out is tempered by the arrival of a
fair maiden wearing a bow… and arrow. In his college world, fair maiden types
don’t ordinarily go for computer geek types, but for some reason, he is no
longer in his world. Petir’s fairly certain he can try whatever he wants
without consequence… but the fair maiden isn’t playing fair.
WITH THE CONFLICT BETWEEN THE
ROYALS ESCALATING, MAID RIANNE has joined the outlaws hiding in the woods,
outwardly defying the handsome and accomplished knight to whom she is promised.
She is fairly certain she is simply flattered by Lord Petir’s uncensored admiration
of her skills with the staff and bow, the same unmaidenly pursuits disdained by
her knight. But, that doesn’t explain her reaction to Lord Petir’s
unguarded gaze.
TO PETIR’S DELIGHT, AND MAID
RIANNE’S DISMAY, the outlaws invite him to join their merry band. What better
way to get close to her? Throwing caution to the wind, Petir decides he has
nothing to lose by pursuing Maid Rianne. It’s fun and games, until Maid Rianne
is captured by the enemy. Now, a geek with no ability to defend himself must find
a way to rescue a fair maiden who has become much more than fair game.
“Adorably romantic!” An absolutely fun, adorable, romantic read that
will thoroughly entertain you, no ifs, ands, or buts! The plot was
extremely unique and I l-o-v-e-d just how unusual it was. It was thoughtfully
planned out and written with a smooth glide, seemingly effortless on the
author’s part. The ending was surprisingly unexpected and I’m thinking I
really, really like this new-to-me-author, Ms. Deborah Ann Davis! I’m already
anxiously awaiting her next book. Don’t miss Fairly Certain or I’m completely
certain you’ll be upset you did!
-- Review by bookshellz
For More Information
- Fairly Certain is available at Amazon.
- Pick up your copy at Barnes & Noble.
- Discuss this book at PUYB Virtual Book Club at Goodreads.
Maid Rianne
Her stance was relaxed, her
feet about a shoulder’s width apart. Backlit by the sun peeking through the
trees, the loose leggings she wore hinted at the shape of her legs. The
shapeless jacket topping them was cinched at a small waist. A bow was draped
over her shoulder, and an accompanying quiver of arrows hung across her back,
its sling defining curves hidden by the baggy jacket. One hand rested on a
sheathed dagger hanging from the belt. In the other, she held what looked like
a walking stick. She stood there, a true warrior, her sharp gaze appraising the
scene, ignoring the tail-wagging, three legged dog competing for her attention.
Wow! What movie did she
just walk out of? As far as Petir knew,
girls from Connecticut didn’t walk around armed to the teeth. Unexpectedly, this
dream had just developed some serious potential.
As she stepped closer, the
sunlight splashed across her face, revealing a scowl. Her black-brown hair was
all but hidden under a peaked green cap. Her gaze narrowed at his open-mouthed
stare. He snapped his jaw shut and began scrambling to his feet.
He barely registered the
boys skirting him to stand by the warrior girl. Most of his attention was
hijacked by his thigh. Shocked by the sudden onslaught of pain, he collapsed on
the ground, gasping as he grabbed his leg.
Should there be this kind
of agony in a dream?
“Take this, John.” The girl
shoved her walking stick at one of the larger boys.
“But, mistress,” he
protested as she handed the bow to another boy, “if ’tis indeed a trap?”
Mistress? Petir eased himself into a sitting position, trying to
decide if he dared massage his injury.
“With you wielding the
staff and Dale the bow, I shall be well protected.” She smiled reassuringly at
the boy as she unslung the quiver and passed it to the one called Dale.
John followed her back to
Petir, slapping the staff against his palm. Dale hastily notched an arrow into
the string and aimed it at Petir’s chest.
“Hey, watch where you’re
pointing that thing!” cried Petir, extending his arm as if it could ward off an
arrow.
“Behave, m’lord, and no
harm will befall thee.” John’s grim tone matched his expression.
The girl dropped to her
knees by Petir’s side. “Where are you hurt, m’lord?” she asked, her manner
brusque, but her fingers gentle as they inspected his battered cheek.
He pulled his face
away. “I … I’m not sure. Everything hurts.” Although he still focused on
the cocked bow shaking in the boy’s grip, the rest of his attention zeroed in
on her and her fresh outdoor fragrance. Nice.
“Were you in a fight?” She
ran practiced fingers over his arm, her head lowered as she focused on her
task.
This was different. Petir
stopped breathing and stared at her blankly. In the last two years, the only
females who ever touched him were related to him. Or cleaning his teeth. They
certainly weren’t cute British girls dressed up like a female Robin Hood.
A few rebellious curls
escaping from her hat outlined the curve of her cheek. Oh yeah. She was cute,
but it was her confidence and grace that cranked her up to hot. Even
though it hurt when she touched him, the simple act of running her fingers
along his arm was reducing him to stupid, leaving him with all the capabilities
of a puddle, including a puddle’s ability to hold a conversation. He had
nothing to say. Absolutely nothing.
What was there to say
anyway? Come here often?
She shifted to his collar
bone. Judging by her behavior, she seemed to have no idea how her touch
affected him outside of the pain she was evoking. He was fairly certain it was
fortunate she was causing him to wince; otherwise, he might be embarrassing
himself in front of all these kids.
“M’lord?” This time
she spoke louder and slower as if talking to a simpleton. “Were you in a
fight?” Her prodding fingers moved to his ribs as he grimaced.
Yeah. You should see
what I did to the other guy. “No,” he
managed to mutter. He didn’t want to appear to be an actual idiot, but… “I fell
out of a tree.”
“Pardon, m’lord? I did not
hear you.”
“I fell out of a tree,
okay?” Petir’s face heated.
A moment of silence greeted
his confession, followed by a burst of laughter from the boys. The girl by his
side ducked her head to hide her own grin.
Embarrassed, he snapped,
“And who are you supposed to be? Robin Hood and her Merry Men?”
With the boys snickering
behind her, she chuckled as she reached across his body to examine the other
side. “Not likely! You may address me as Maid Rianne. And your name, sir?”
“Petir. Petir Capota.”
“Ah, as in Saint Peter, one
of the patron saints of travelers. He must be responsible for us coming to your
aid.”
“Well, I’m P-E-T-I-R, not
P-E-T-E-R.” Squirming, Petir grabbed Maid Rianne’s wrist. “Look, I really
appreciate the exam and all, but it’s my leg. Okay? My leg needs help.”
Startled, her eyes swung
toward his, and whoosh! All the air left his lungs.
Brown eyes.
Very brown eyes.
Very brown eyes with
dark rings around them.
Very brown eyes with—
Her very brown eyes
narrowed. John and Dale took an anxious step closer.
Uh oh. You think I’m
coming on to you. Petir released her like
she was a hot potato. As if anyone would ever put a computer geek like me
and a hottie like you in the same sentence.
“No, honest.” He cocked his
palms back in surrender. “I can’t stand. Watch!” He rolled to his side and
began to repeat his previous night’s attempts, but she restrained him.
“That will not be
necessary, m’lord.” She pressed him back down and assumed a position closer to
his leg. Her skilled fingertips resumed their exploration.
Whoa! This is way worse. Computer jockeys hardly ever got hot babes checking
out their ribs, however, they absolutely did not get them feeling up their
legs. But here was this babe doing things his leg had only dreamed of.
Wish I had my cell phone
so I could take a selfie. Hey there, Mistress Hottie, would you mind posing for
a picture so I can prove you groped my leg?
Whoops! Her fingers drifted
a little too high. Okay, this could end up being a problem. He needed a
distraction, and he needed it fast.
Conversation. Yeah,
that’s the ticket.
“Hey, you, uh, really know
what you’re doing. Are you some kind of—” His attempt to chat her up ended in a
yelp as she probed the site of his injury.
Maid Rianne sat back on her
heels, hands at her waist, as Petir gingerly rubbed the back of his leg. She
pondered the situation, her teeth tugging at her lower lip.
Females biting their
lips is definitely underrated.
Sighing, she looked over
her shoulder and addressed the boys. “We cannot leave him here to fend for
himself. We shall have to drag him.”
Drag me?
“Fetch at least two large
branches. We can lash smaller branches to them with vines.”
“But, m’lady, we canna
bring him back to the camp! He might be a spy!” Dale’s brow furrowed as he
shook brown hair out of his eyes, still pointing the bow at Petir.
A spy? In Connecticut? Whatever for?
“He could lead them right
to us,” said a frizzy-headed blond boy with a scowl.
Lead who?
Maid Rianne faced the boys.
“As to his fate, ‘tis not our decision to make. We shall bring him back to the
camp blindfolded and let the elders decide. Off with you.” She tilted her head
toward the trees.
After a moment’s
hesitation, Dale lowered the bow, nodded to John, and turned toward the brush.
Immediately the others scampered off in different directions, leaving John
smacking the walking stick in his palm. Maid Rianne held out her hand, and John
reluctantly returned the staff to her. She nodded as if to reassure him, but
instead of following the others, John retreated to a nearby tree and squatted
against it. From there, he seemed content to glower at Petir.
Petir cleared his throat.
“I guess he kind of has a crush on you, huh?” He nodded toward her protector.
“A crush, m’lord?” Maid
Rianne frowned.
“You know, he … you know …
he likes you,” Petir floundered as she looked at him. He was fairly certain
they didn’t use the word “crush” where she came from.
“Likes me, m’lord?” Maid
Rianne furrowed her brow. “We side together for the same cause, our fight
against oppression from tyrannical rulers. He merely stays to protect me should
you be revealed a clever trickster.”
“Clever trickster? Not me!”
Petir raised his palms in a defensive gesture. “I’m not at all clever. I mean,
I’m clever, but I’m no trickster.”
She quirked a delicate
brow.
Great eyebrows.
“Oh, really, m’lord?”
Heat rose around his neck
as she studied him.
“And how is it that you
come to be in these woods, with your foreign talk, and your odd clothing?” she
asked.
“My foreign talk? My
odd clothing?” Petir sputtered “What about you and the seven dwarfs?”
“The seven—?” She leaned
back on her haunches, hands on her hips. “You would insult those who would come
to your aid, sir? Perhaps we should simply be off and let the soldiers help you
find your way.”
“Oh, the soldiers, huh?”
His voice dripped sarcasm. “You mean the ones who work for the tyrannical
rulers and cause all the oppression?” Sarcasm, it turned out, helped keep the
rest of him in check. “Look, I’m more than sore, and I appreciate playing bows
and arrows as much as the next guy, but—”
“Playing bows and arrows?”
the girl parroted, irritation sweeping her face.
“Well, yeah. You know, a
girl like you, armed to the teeth-”
“A girl like me?”
She sprang to her feet,
twirling the staff faster than he could follow. Her spinning staff traced an
arc over her head then slammed into the ground, inches from Petir’s ear. Only
the floating leaves landing on his scrunched-closed eyes disturbed the silence.
Petir carefully opened his eyes, ignoring the fresh aches created by his manly
cringing.
She straightened gracefully
after her lunge and rested the staff on her shoulder.
“A girl like me, m’lord?”
She spun on her heel and stalked away.
John smirked from his
position by the tree.
“Whoa!” breathed Petir. He
propped himself on his bruised elbows and surveyed the dent in the ground left
by the staff. What the hell? That could have been his head.
Maid
Rianne? Ha! More like Mad Rianne. Or Maid Xena, the Warrior Princess.
About the Author
DEBORAH ANN DAVIS has been writing since she was assigned to keep a
Journal in her 5th grade English class. She began to
look around for writing inspiration. Lo and behold, she found her world was
full of funny stories just waiting to be told. As she grew older,
occasionally she could manipulate one into some school assignment,
but it never occurred to her to pursue writing, not even when she discovered
her flare for telling stories at college parties.
After a string of college majors,
she realized she could have a captive audience EVERY DAY in the public school
system. As it turns out, teenagers love to laugh, and what could be more
entertaining than Biology, Earth Science, and Environmental Science? Then
there's the added bonus that once kids know you like to laugh, they want
to make you laugh.
Go figure.
In addition to Writing, she is
also an Educational Speaker and a Certified Personal Trainer. She taught for
25+ years, although somewhere in the middle of all that educating, she
stepped out of teaching for 6 years to do the Mommy Thing, and run the office
for their family construction company.
Even though they had followed
separate paths, Deborah reunited with, and married her childhood sweetheart,
twelve years after their first kiss. Together they coached their
daughter’s AAU Basketball Team, which swept States two years in a row. (Yay!)
Then, for several years their daughter and their money went to college.
They currently reside on
a lovely lake in Connecticut. She enjoys dabbling with living a sustainable life,
writing novels for her Love of Fairs series, dancing, playing outside,
and laughing really hard every day. She promotes increasing the amount of
movement throughout your day via Wiggle Writer posts on Merry
Meddling.
Remember, you can do
anything if you set your mind to it— including becoming an author at any age—
but it’s way more fun if you are grinning back when the Universe smiles down on
you.
Deborah’s latest book is the
new adult novel, Fairly
Certain.
For
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