Once Upon a Knight

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Once Upon a Knight Page 69

by Tanya Anne Crosby

Graeham smiled. "I'm certain I shall manage, sire."

  Stephen chortled. "Aye—smooth-tongued bastard that you are." Once again, he waved Graeham up from his knees, and then placed an arm about Graeham's shoulders, leading him toward the door. "Tell me, then... does this mean I will have yet another God-spouting prelate fighting to save my soul?"

  Graeham laughed, and cocked his head. "Perhaps, sire, though I vow to give you no more grief than the Empress' minions have."

  Stephen laughed outright and whacked him upon the back. "Ye God! I would have you quartered," he swore emphatically. "I would indeed!"

  William's mood was black—blacker yet for the news he'd just received—from the king, no less! Though he tried to keep his calm, he stormed from the king's apartments, bursting out into the sunlight, his face a mask of stone, lest anyone's eyes were upon him.

  That whoreson d'Lucy! What possible reason could the fool have for giving up his lands to his infernal brother? If he had dared so much as touch Dominique wrongly... he would strangle the imbecile with his bare hands. If he thought for one instant that he, having given up his holdings, was going to wed with Dominique still, then he was truly mad!

  At the very least, he was a fool! As was Stephen for granting the petition, for Blaec d'Lucy's loyalties lay with no other save his brother. His interests were purely his own. And his power, while it had been harnessed beneath his brother's thumb, was incontestable. There would be no bounds to his greed now that his business was his own.

  And Blaec! God damn the man to hell! William would as lief strangle Dominique himself, rather than allow the bastard to touch her. The very last thing he intended was to allow Blaec d'Lucy to usurp what was his. Graeham, he could have borne—Blaec was another matter entirely, for he could well recall the way Blaec had gazed at Dominique. No duty there. Nay, for he recognized lust when he saw it.

  Damn d'Lucy!

  It had been all William could do to mask his anger when speaking to the king—king, bah! the man had no wisdom at all for the dispensation of justice. Nor had he the stomach to rule as he might. Had not England suffered enough these nineteen winters? Stephen was a spineless fool, wanting to please everyone, and pleasing no one at all. At least Henry had known to choose allies. Stephen was little more than an idiot.

  Well, by damn, if Stephen could not execute justice, then William was perfectly capable of doing so—and more than ready, as well.

  Perhaps all was not lost... yet. Aye, perchance all that was needed now was a reverse in plans. Perhaps Dominique might still become lady of Drakewich. His lady of Drakewich.

  Aye, perhaps.

  But then... if it proved to be so, and Blaec d'Lucy had bedded her... if he had so much as touched her... mere poison alone would not be a fitting enough death. By the eyes of Christ, he would personally rip out Blaec d'Lucy's entrails and feed them to his accursed buteo!

  Chapter Twenty-Two

  All Dominique needed do was walk into a room to command attention—even dressed as she was in her threadbare blue bliaut, all eyes followed her. Her silky mane, rich and full, cascaded behind her as she lifted her skirts and raced across the hall, oblivious to his and the steward's presence. She didn't see him even as she rushed past them toward the stairwell, and Blaec was hard-pressed to listen to the steward's report as he watched her—as was the steward. The man struggled to keep his train of thought, he couldn't help but note. Still his mood was too good to fault the fellow for what he himself could not help.

  Excusing himself once she disappeared from view, he followed her, racing up the tower steps after her, his pace swift but silent, for he intended to surprise her.

  He quickly overcame her stride, hooking his arm about her waist, lifting her, and hauling her up the stairs along with him. She gave a small shriek of surprise. "You are being made off with," he told her, chuckling. He carried her into the nearest doorway.

  Dominique shrieked indignantly. "Not here!" she exclaimed.

  He set her upon her feet, grinning. "Ah, now, but where is there better a place for solitude?"

  "Aye, but 'tis the garderobe!" Dominique returned.

  He lifted his chin, gazing with a look of surprise about the small chamber. "Is that what it is?" he asked, sniffing. "I didn't notice."

  "Oh, you!" Dominique laughed and shoved him away, trying to evade him. "God's truth, but I think you are mad!" she said with certainty.

  He caught her, backing her once more against the wall. His lips curved roguishly. "Mad for you," he agreed readily. He arched a brow.

  Dominique laughed softly. "You are a wicked, wicked man," she said, berating him.

  "Well, there you have it…" He brushed her hair from her shoulder and bent to peck her neck with his lips. "And since we are here..."

  Dominique gasped. "I do not think I could bear the odor, my lord!"

  Lest she escape him, he pinned her to the wall, bracing his arms on either side of her. "I smell only the fragrance of your body," he murmured silkily, leaning into her, nuzzling her hair. One knee went between her legs, lifting up against her.

  Dominique inhaled sharply at the gesture. "I cannot be certain, my lord," she said on a sigh, her head lolling to one side, "but I believe you have only just insulted me..." He placed a hand upon her breast, and she murmured softly.

  The door made to open suddenly, and she stifled a cry of surprise, her head jerking up. Blaec's arm thrust out before it could open to reveal them, ramming it shut once more. "Tis occupied," he called out.

  For an instant, there was only silence from the other side of the door. "Sorry, my lord," answered a male voice.

  "Good God, can a man not relieve himself in peace?" Blaec added for good measure, smiling for Dominique's benefit.

  Dominique stifled a gasp, her eyes widening at his crudeness.

  "Aye, my lord," came the chagrined reply from beyond the door, and then the sound of retreating footsteps.

  She lifted a hand to cover his mouth, lest he speak again.

  Blaec shook away from her, saying, "Ah, my love, but I am relieving myself."

  "Shhh! My God, he will hear you!" Dominique hissed at him. "You are truly mad!"

  "He is gone," Blaec murmured, reaching down and lifting up her hem with purpose. "And aye... I am mad... mad with need," he told her huskily. "Let me love you, Dominique..."

  He didn't wait for her to reply, but bent and kissed her lips. She melted against his knee, and her soft crooning was answer enough.

  They were being pursued.

  For the last few hours since departing London, they had borne a shadow. And now, at intervals, the foreboding glint of metal flickered ahead of them, making Graeham wonder that they were being led into an ambush.

  His brows drew together as he considered who it might be, and then he frowned outright, for the truth was that he could not fathom who might be at their heels. These were lawless times at best.

  Everyone was suspect.

  Instinct told him that their pursuers had been with them from the first, yet anyone leaving London would have heard the rumors, and would know... there was no longer anything to be gained by challenging him. He held his father's lands no more. Nay, there was naught to be gained... unless they wished to demand a ransom... or to settle a debt.

  He glanced at Nial, riding proudly at his side. Nial held his banner high, unmistakable with its glittering gold-threaded field, and its black, fire-breathing dragon—a device more suited to his brother, for Blaec was the true dragon of Drakewich. Even without the lands, Blaec held the title already. He was the Black Dragon.

  Strange that... that people could sense a leader even when that leader swore to follow.

  Graeham had never had reason to doubt Blaec. His brother had always given him fealty without question or regret. The truth was that Blaec would likely hang him by his testicles when he discovered what he'd gone and done. Nevertheless it was done, and there was naught that could be said to change Graeham's mind and will. God's truth, he'd done what was best for
all, and for the first time in his five and twenty years of life, he felt like his own man—not his father's puppet.

  Once again the metallic flicker appeared in the distance, nearer this time. Nial spied it as well, Graeham noticed, and he nodded at the faithful squire. "Go and warn the men," he commanded him.

  Nial immediately fell back "Aye, my lord."

  "Discreetly," Graeham said, studying the surrounding land with keen eyes, "lest we force their hand."

  To the right, no more than a furlong's distance, lay thick woodlands, ideal for hiding an army, yet instinct told him it was not there that the danger lay. They had remained behind at an indistinguishable distance—perhaps farther now, for he'd not caught a glimpse of them in the last twenty minutes.

  In the immediate stretch before them, the land sloped upward, concealing what lay beyond. And to the left of them, the terrain was the same. The road on which they traveled lay at an angle to the two hills, cutting between them at the point at which they met, along a lower, narrow passage. It was there he focused his attention.

  There, and the small pockets of woodland they had yet to pass. He skirted them, all but the last, and was forced to make a decision, for the last thicket posed a quandary. If they went around it, they would be forced to pass to the right, dangerously close to the even thicker woodland to their right. Yet it would also give them a clearer view of the dale as they entered. If they passed through the thicket itself, it would place them in danger of an ambush within, and then they would emerge blindly into the dale. If they forced a pass to the left, then they would need ride up the hill, placing themselves also in danger of an attack upon the hillside, and then again as they entered even more vulnerably into the valley.

  Damn, damn, damn... it was always when Blaec was not there that he needed him most. Yet it was his own fault, Graeham acknowledged irritably, that his brother was not with him, for it was he who had commanded him to remain behind. Clenching his jaw, Graeham reined in, his skin prickling, for he knew instinctively that it was at this point in which their greatest danger lay.

  And the decision was solely his.

  Though he retained his calm, the palms of his hands began to sweat profusely. At this moment his attraction to the church had never waxed deeper. This was not his strength, by God. It was Blaec's. He laughed derisively. What absurdity... Driven by guilt for what his father had done to his brother, for his own part in the injustice, he had placed his life in danger so many accursed times... and now did if he died... he would bequeath his brother with a legacy of the selfsame burden. Scarcely could he bear the thought.

  It seemed his men understood his dilemma, for one knight came forward at once, offering to scout the hill. He ordered another to the right of the thicket. And another to scout within. Though uneasily, all three obeyed at once, cantering away, while Graeham watched them, sweating like a hog beneath the sweltering August sun. Yet though his face was soaked with perspiration, he resisted the urge to remove his helm, knowing without looking that his men watched him.

  No sooner had the three ridden away, less than twenty yards distance, the ruse was revealed. The knight riding for the thicket scarcely had time to turn about, so fast was he descended upon. He was cut down as the attackers stampeded past him. His scream of pain rent the air.

  ‘To me!" Graeham thundered. ‘To me!" Wily bastards! From the thicket, they might have fallen upon them had they passed from either side. Were it the last bloody thing he did, he planned to skewer their ignoble leader through. It'd be the finest thing his father's sword had ever done.

  With the clashing of metal, the battle was joined, and Graeham found himself, sooner than expected, face-to-face with the iron-helmed leader.

  Masked with ventail and a helm, the nose guard distorted his face, cutting it visually in half. The fiend left only his eyes exposed to reveal his identity but Graeham instantly knew those eyes: brilliant sapphire blue.

  "Bastard!" he cried out as his mount reared beneath him. Vicious laughter rang in his ears, even as did the metallic peal of their first clashing blows.

  Chapter Twenty-Three

  They were alone upon the tower roof. Another moment of solitude, stolen.

  As Dominique gazed out over the wall, she felt as though she were suspended somewhere between heaven and earth. From this great height, the land stretched far below them, revealing the horizon as never she had beheld it before.

  Breathtaking.

  Nor had she ever been so deliriously happy.

  Like a whisper from God, telling her all would be well, a gentle breeze whipped at her face, her hair, her dress, lifting her spirits as though on angel's wings. She was bewitched. So much so that she did not hear Blaec as he came up behind her once more, embracing her, the heat of his body warming her from her nape to the curve of her hips. She gasped as his big hands slid about her waist, and she reveled in the way that he held her... as though he cherished her.

  He squeezed her gently, and she smiled, turning her head, her eyes radiating the pleasure that flooded her at his touch. "'Tis beautiful, is it not?" he asked. Her gaze returned to the landscape, and his arms tightened about her waist. "You are beautiful," he whispered fiercely.

  Smiling, Dominique laid her head back against his chest, gazing up at the pale blue sky, her heart swelling with joy. A dove winged its way past them, landing gracefully at a higher place upon the tower wall, and she gazed up at Blaec to see if he was watching. He was, indeed. In profile, his face was harsh in the most beautiful sort of way. Her eyes fell once again upon the scar that marred his cheek.

  This time she could not have held herself back had she tried. She reached up, stroking the pale outline of it with the tips of her fingers, her eyes dulling at the smooth feel of it. It ached her to know that he had suffered pain at all, and it brought to mind the reality of what he was.

  He was a knight. A warrior, loyal to his brother and his king. Even were they to resolve the insurmountable obstacles that lay between them, there would always be the possibility that he would be taken from her in war. She shivered, scarcely able to bear the thought. With the reckless desperation of one who had been too long without air, she wanted to breathe him within her so that they might never part.

  "How did you receive it?"

  He smiled, the corners of his eyes crinkling as he gazed down upon her. "What?"

  She frowned at him, removing her hand from his face, and placing both of hers upon his own at her waist. "You know very well what I wish to know," she accused him petulantly.

  His green eyes twinkled as one hand slid up to squeeze her breast. "What is that?" he countered playfully, changing the subject effortlessly.

  Dominique shrieked with surprise, and laughing, tried to disengage herself from his embrace. But he held her firmly within his arms, unwilling to release her.

  "Nay, do not," he said. "I'll not let you go."

  ‘Then tell me," she demanded of him.

  His eyes sobered slightly. "If you must know... I was sliced with a shaving knife by a careless barber."

  "Nay!" Dominique was incredulous. "Say it cannot be so!"

  He hugged her, nuzzling her neck playfully. "Ah, but 'tis true," he swore, his breath warm against her neck.

  "That is not what I have been told." She sagged against him, feeling the answer of her body in the tautening of her breasts as he nibbled her neck, nipping her lightly.

  His tone was unconcerned. ‘Tell me what it is that you heard, demoiselle." He lifted a hand to cup her breast, while the other explored the flat contours of her belly, and his lips explored her neck.

  Dominique's breath quickened. "I heard..." And then she laughed. "If you will not stop, I cannot speak," she berated him, but her head lolled to one side, giving him better access. "I heard, my lord, that you received the scar during battle," she relented, "during some great feat of valor."

  "Babble," he muttered, dismissing it. He gave her a gentle squeeze, holding her. "Yet though I like that tale better, my lady,
I can assure you..." He went silent a moment, and then he sighed, relenting, "'Twas nothing so noble as that."

  Dominique sighed, as well. ‘Tongues do wag," she agreed, undone by his gentle attentions.

  "Mmmmm... like this?" He tickled her neck with the tip of his tongue, and Dominique laughed softly.

  It amazed her the difference that had come over him in the last days. He was almost like a mischievous boy, she thought. "You, my lord," she said dreamily, "are a very... very wicked man."

  "Hmmmmm." He nodded, nuzzling her lazily. "So I've been told, demoiselle. Yet you sound disappointed... Would you rather I admitted the scar was suffered during battle?" he asked blithely.

  "Nay!" She clutched his arms about her tightly. "You mistake me, my lord." And then she blurted with a wistful sigh, "Would that this moment might never end."

  He said nothing in response, and Dominique closed her eyes, leaning against him, wanting so desperately to ask him of their future.

  Did they even have one together?

  Did they have anything at all?

  For the last days they had somehow, without speaking it, agreed not to think of this as the betrayal it was—nor of Graeham, or that it should end. Nay, for it had been easier to pretend...

  In the distance, a lone tree swayed with the breeze, its feathered limbs arching this way and that, like some graceful dancer beneath God's watchful eyes. The silence between them in that instant was so acute that Dominique could almost hear the rush of the breeze stirring through its brilliant green leaves.

  "What will Graeham say when he returns?" She nibbled at her lower lip as she awaited his reply.

  It was not forthcoming. He laid his chin atop the pate of her head, as though reflecting upon her question and the very thoughts were too burdensome to bear. She could feel his jaw working, tautening.

  "Do you think he knows?" she persisted.

  "My brother is no fool," he said with quiet certainty. "He knew before he left."

 

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