The Book: Tempted by the Highland Warrior by Michelle Willingham
Particulars: Medieval Scottish historical romance, Harlequin Historical #1098, 2012, self-published reprint edition 2024, Book 3 in MacKinloch Clan series
Why Was It In Wendy's TBR?: Willingham is essentially an autobuy, and I had not one, but two copies of this book. A signed print copy of the Mills & Boon edition I picked up at an RWA conference and a digital copy of the self-published reprint when the author made it a freebie back in 2025.
The Review: Honestly, I couldn't have picked a more perfect book for this month's Freedom! theme. Not only has the hero been held captive for several years, turns out our heroine is also desperate for freedom of her own.
Our story opens in 1305 Scotland, where 18-year-old Lady Marguerite de Montpierre, daughter of a French Duke, is set to wed the English Earl of Cairnross, who turns out is a very bad man. Those pesky Scots have been stirring up all kinds of trouble and the Earl has kept several captive in his dungeons for years - including Callum MacKinloch, also 18-years-old. Marguerite is awakened in the dead of night to the sound of a man's screams, and despite her maid begging her not to leave the tower room, Marguerite is soft-hearted and cannot ignore such screams for help. Who she finds is Callum, his back riddled with the marks of a serious whipping and a dead man (the one who was screaming) laying not far from him. Callum doesn't utter a word. Hasn't uttered a single sound in years, even before his older brother, Bram, escaped the Earl's custody and left Callum behind. The boy has all but given up hope he'll be rescued but immediately succumbs to the nursing of Marguerite. It's instalove all the way, and he's smitten. But the Earl spies the interaction between Marguerite and the Scottish scum, and would normally just kill the man then and there - but decides instead to send the prisoner south to another Lord who is just as much of a "great guy" as he is.
It's not long after Callum is moved to his new torture chamber south that his brothers show up and burn the Earl of Cairnross' keep to the ground. In the melee the Earl is killed and they rescue Marguerite, who tell them what she knows Callum's whereabouts. They rescue Callum and head home. But it's not long before more soldiers show up and Marguerite, wanting to prevent more violence goes off with her father's men. By now it's too late. Callum is hopelessly devoted to her and she's in love with the mute highland warrior.
Marguerite is the youngest of the Duke's four daughters and as any Duke with no sons and only daughters is want to do - he's looking to make the most advantageous alliances he can through marriage. He quickly arranges a new match for Marguerite, another English nobleman who needs her dowry and an heir. Sure Daddy's first match for her left much to be desired, but this new guy actually seems pretty OK. Too bad she's desperately in love with Callum, a man far below her station and a man Daddy would never, ever consent for her to wed. Ah, but Callum. Despite the whole being mute thing, he's passionately in love with Marguerite, so off he goes to get her back and manages to secure work in her father's stables. Will these two star-crossed kids find a way to be together?
This is a historical romance with legitimate high stakes and believable cross-class conflict. The romance is very much instalove but the story itself unfolds over one year. I'll say one thing for these two kids, they stay true to their convictions and feelings for each other, even though Marguerite spends most of the story looking for a diplomatic way out of her predicament. Her three older sisters all made advantageous matches, surely as the youngest she can get Daddy to see reason. What she didn't plan on is her vile Aunt Beatrice who, turns out has been burning up the sheets with widowed Daddy. Also, this poor dumb bunny, like Daddy Duke is just going to let her marry some unwashed Scottish dude. This is the guy who was like, "Well, the Earl of Cairnross really wasn't all that bad, those marauding Scots are a problem yo."
It's a lot of star-crossed Romeo & Juliet stuff and unfortunately the whole thing takes a while to cook. The first several chapters rely heavily on "telling" and also feature jumps in time on the narrative, including the brothers rescuing Callum!, only to be employed as brief flashbacks later on. Also, I never quite understood the deep, obsessive attraction our couple had for each other outside of some shared trauma. Marguerite has led a pampered life up to this point and Callum literally doesn't utter a single word until we're well past the halfway point. As a teenager I would have swooned over this (for sure!) but as a middle-aged woman I need more.But the conflict is high-stakes and it does pick up steam in the second half. Marguerite's new betrothed is a decent guy and not unsympathetic but frankly he's not keen to let her walk away (spoiler: not only does he need her dowry, turns out he's gay with no family left to speak of. He tells her, hey bring your lover to England and if he gets you with a boy child I can use as my heir, all the better!). Frankly while Daddy would be a more than sufficient villain, instead he comes around (somewhat - I mean he's still a Duke and his daughter still weds an unwashed Scot) and we're left with Aunt Beatrice, who is so vile she spoiler: spikes Marguerite's wine with an herbal concoction after she figures out she's had sex with Callum to force a miscarriage should she have gotten pregnant. A scheme Daddy knew about but it was all Aunt Beatrice's idea! So of course Daddy gets a pass. Ugh!
But you know what? It's not boring. Also, and this cannot be overstated, I started and finished it in a single Sunday afternoon. I've never been a fan of instalove and I still prefer Willingham's Irish medievals over the Scottish ones, but given my inability to stay focused on reading anything whatsoever right now and the fact that I read this in a couple hours in a single afternoon? Yeah, I ain't mad.
Final Grade = B-





















