One Knight's Kiss: A Medieval Romance Novella
Page 8
Yet, she wanted to. So very much.
Never before had she felt such urgency—as if her very soul, her very life, depended upon it. How was it possible to crave so intensely? ’Twas as if she’d been caught up in some kind of magic, and the only way to break the spell was to press her lips to Tristan’s.
Kiss him, her conscience whispered. Hurry, for it might be your only chance.
She would not let life pass her by.
Before she could stifle the impulse, she pressed her mouth to his.
***
His eyes closed, Tristan tried to focus on something other than Honoria. He tallied how many goblets of wine he’d downed last night; how many days were left until he was traveling to London; hell, anything to keep from thinking about the beautiful woman so close by.
Her floral scent teased him every time he inhaled. The whispering of her gown reminded him of sheets tangling as lovers kissed, caressed, and with impassioned gasps, surrendered fully to their carnal desires. And the gentleness of her fingers on his skin….
He must be mad, or under that enchantment he’d experienced last night. Even while he was enduring pain, he experienced a stirring of lust. A damned awkward stirring, when all he had to conceal his swelling interest was a towel.
Ah, God, he’d vowed to be honorable, but his body was betraying him.
Mayhap she wouldn’t notice?
And then, he felt the softness of her lips upon his.
His eyes flew open. Her face was near his, her eyes still shut, as though she was savoring the sensations elicited by the kiss. She was exquisite, her skin dewy, her lips as red as wild strawberries.
Had he been her first kiss? The throbbing in his groin intensified.
Slowly, her eyes opened.
She blinked, clearly startled to see him staring at her. Her cheeks reddened, and she abruptly drew back.
“Honoria—”
“I…I am sorry. I—”
“Please. Do not fret.”
“I should not have kissed you.” Fumbling with the rag, she pushed up from the bedside.
“Wait. Why did you kiss me?”
She stilled and then sank back to her knees. Her mortified gaze met his and then darted away again. “I thought…. I was worried you had fainted because of the pain.”
Disappointment coursed through him. “You didn’t kiss me, then, because you wanted to.”
“Oh, I did want to.” She sighed. “You will think me foolish if I tell you the truth.”
“Not at all. I really would like to know.”
She bit down on her lower lip; he longed to rise up on his elbow, sink his hand into her hair, and kiss her, right there where she’d bitten. “I…wanted to be like the damsels in the old tales. I longed to know what it was like to kiss a knight.” She swallowed hard. “Not just any knight, but…you.”
He fought a proud smile. “I see.”
“I was wrong to have done so. You trusted me to treat your wound, and….”
“Honoria.”
“I acted on an impulse I should have ignored, as I have ignored it ever since you arrived.”
Astonishment ripped through him. “You have wanted to kiss me since we first met?”
Her blush intensified, making her cheekbones even more pronounced. She nodded. “My yearning for you…. I cannot explain it, but I cannot deny it, either.”
She was experiencing the same intense feelings for him as he was for her?
“I should not have told you,” she whispered.
“I am glad you did.”
“You are?”
He nodded against the pillow. “’Twas a very nice kiss.” If she glanced at his lower body, she’d see just how enticing it had been. He stifled his annoying conscience reminding him of his promise to be honorable and said: “If you like, we can kiss again. A bit longer this time, so you can fully experience what ’tis like.”
With a soft plop, the rag landed in the bowl of water. She seemed both eager and uncertain.
“You will have first-hand knowledge, then, to draw upon when reading the tales.” He couldn’t let her go now; he was starving for her kiss, even more than he’d been last night.
“What if someone sees us?” She sounded breathless, as if she’d just run up a long flight of stairs. “Cornelia will be bringing some items—”
“Then we must be quick.”
His conscience cried out again; ’twas overruled by his hunger. He carefully lifted his right arm, curved it around her upper body, and urged her toward him. He half-expected her to resist, but she moved easily, allowing him to slide his hand up her back and into her plaited hair. How silky her tresses felt against his fingers.
She leaned down, her essence flooding his senses, and kissed him.
The touch of her lips sent heat racing through him. As her mouth pressed to his in the most innocent of kisses, he moved his lips beneath hers, encouraging her to explore him. If she was willing, he’d teach her all the nuances of kissing. She exhaled against his mouth, and her lips followed his, matching his kisses, becoming caught up in the sensual exploration.
Ah, God, but he’d never been this aroused from kissing a woman.
Desire became a demanding, fiery need within him. As they kissed, he slid his tongue between her lips to taste her. She shuddered and then slipped her tongue into his mouth, and he groaned at the pleasure. His fingers tightened in her hair. He wanted her, far more than he dared admit.
He should stop kissing her. He should stop touching her—
Her breath fanned his damp lips, and she caught his bottom lip with her teeth. She suckled, nipped, and kissed as if she couldn’t contain her rising passion any longer, and with such incredible skill, he groaned again. Helpless to resist, he opened his mouth to her, and their tongues clashed, slick heat to slick heat.
She moaned in awe.
He couldn’t fight his desire any longer. He kissed her hard, fast, their breaths mingling.
Over their muffled gasps, he caught a faint sound.
Someone was drawing near.
Stop, his conscience cried. Now!
The warning tore into the haze of need fogging his mind. Before he could wrest his mouth away, Cornelia cried: “Honoria! How could you?”
Chapter Ten
Honoria froze. Beneath her, Tristan stilled too, his mouth still touching hers.
She pulled away from him, her lips tingling. She’d been soaring on the most incredible pleasure; it had shattered the instant she’d realized they weren’t alone.
Cornelia stood at the end of the bed, holding a tray with the salve and poultice ingredients Honoria had requested. The younger woman looked angry enough to drop the lot on the floor.
“Honoria,” Cornelia shrilled.
Shame taunted her as she pushed to standing. “Please, I was—”
“I know what you were doing. I saw.”
Honoria took the tray and set it on the bed, all the while scrambling to think of a reasonable explanation for what she’d done. She didn’t want to speak falsely, not to a friend. Not when kissing Tristan had been the most thrilling experience ever.
The bed rustled behind her. “’Twas my fault,” he said. Somehow, he’d pulled the blanket up to his waist. She might have scolded him for straining his wound, but sensed he’d had a reason for adjusting the bedding—and ’twasn’t that he’d been cold.
Cornelia glowered. “How is what happened your fault, Tristan?”
“I asked her for a kiss. One to help me heal faster.”
Honoria shook her head. Tristan was being most gallant, but she couldn’t let him accept responsibility. “Tristan is not to blame for the kiss. I am.”
Anguish filled the younger woman’s gaze. “Why would you do such a thing, when I told you…?” Her words died on a furious sob.
“I am sorry,” Honoria said softly. “I could not help myself.”
“Could not help yourself? He was to be mine.”
“Wait just one moment,” T
ristan said firmly. “Not once did I—”
“I thought we were friends.” Cornelia wiped away tears running down her cheeks. “I trusted you.”
Guilt twisted up inside Honoria. “I did not mean to hurt you.”
“But you did. That you would be so deceitful at Christmas makes it all the worse!” Wailing, the younger woman dashed from the chamber.
Honoria pressed her hand to her still-tingling mouth. How would she ever make matters right with Cornelia?
A bone-deep chill settled within her. If the younger woman told any of the castle folk about the kiss, Honoria’s virtue would be in doubt. No lord would want to marry her if he believed she was ruined.
“Oh, God,” she murmured.
“Oh, God, indeed.”
Her traitorous heart quickened at the fetching sight Tristan made, his hair spilling like ink against the pillow, his eyes soulful. She longed to sit beside him and kiss him again, consequences be damned…but she mustn’t.
She picked up the items she’d used to treat his wound and carried them to the table.
“If there is any question as to what happened between us, I am prepared to accept all of the blame.”
She couldn’t let him do that. She’d initiated the kiss; thus, she must take responsibility. There had to be a way to resolve the situation, if only she knew what ’twas.
“Honoria,” Tristan insisted.
Determined to keep a firm hold on her desires, she returned to the bedside, picked up the salve from the tray, and lifted back the edge of the bedding to check he hadn’t torn any stitches. Thankfully, he hadn’t.
“If you want to go to Cornelia, I will be fine.”
“I will visit her shortly.” Honoria pulled the cork stopper from the pot, releasing a strong herbal scent. “I promised to care for your injury, and I will.” She leaned down and dabbed salve on his damaged flesh.
He laughed roughly. “You regret kissing me.”
The bluntness of his words hurt, but she wouldn’t lie to protect herself. Applying more of the thick, greenish salve, she said, “I do not regret our kiss.”
“Good, because I sure as hell do not.”
Surprise flickered inside her, along with a poignant flare of joy. “You cannot mean that.”
“I meant every word. I enjoyed kissing you. If the choice were mine, I would be kissing you again. Right now. Until you begged me to stop.”
Oh, mercy. He shouldn’t say such wicked things. She wanted to respond, but heard someone drawing near.
A small wine cask tucked under his arm, Radley entered the chamber. “How is—?”As his focus shifted from Tristan to her, his expression sobered. “What is going on?”
Honoria’s grip tightened on the pot. “I—”
“I kissed Honoria,” Tristan said. “I am clearly not as honorable as you and I expected.”
***
“Tell me what happened,” Radley demanded.
Tristan ran his hand over his face. A short while ago, Honoria had set the salve on the trestle table and left, and Radley had shut the door behind her so he and Tristan could speak in private.
“As I said, I kissed your sister.”
Pacing the space between the bed and the table, Radley asked, “By accident?”
Tristan stifled a brittle laugh. They both knew ’twas not possible to kiss a noble lady, of all women, by accident. “Nay.”
Radley halted, his eyes blazing. “On purpose, then.”
Tristan weighed his words carefully. “I wanted to kiss her. I have done since I first met her.”
“Why did you not tell me before?”
“I never imagined I would have the chance to kiss her, outside of the quick, meaningless kisses that are part of holiday revelry. I had vowed not to become involved with another woman—”
“I know! You told me.” Radley’s lips flattened. “After your eloquent words about being an honorable man, I trusted you completely.”
“And I failed you.”
Just as Tristan had failed his sire.
The pain in Tristan’s thigh reminded him all too well that he was mortal and fallible. He tried to shift his position, to better see his friend, but grimaced at the discomfort. Radley must have noticed, because he moved to the bedside.
“I regret disappointing you,” Tristan ground out, “but I will not say I wish the kiss had never happened.”
Radley’s gaze sharpened. “You intended to ruin my sister’s reputation?”
God’s blood! “Of course not.”
“Then you had best explain.”
“’Twas a fine kiss. One of the best I have ever had.”
As though stunned by the revelation, Radley sank down into the chair. “I find myself torn between the urge to rejoice and the desire to throttle you. Tris, you kissed my little sister—”
“An exquisite young woman—”
“Who could be ruined because of what happened in this chamber.”
True. Cornelia could be confiding in the household gossips right now. Tristan could only hope that the younger woman wouldn’t be so cruel.
Resolve glowed like a hot, bright flame within him, for he might have failed others in his life, but he wouldn’t allow Honoria to suffer for the pleasure they’d shared. “I promise you, all will be well.”
“How?”
“I have an idea, but I will need your help.”
***
Honoria knocked on the closed door. “Cornelia.”
“Go away,” the younger woman answered.
“Please, let me in.”
“I said, go away!” Muffled sobs came from inside the room, and Honoria fought a renewed wave of guilt. Mayhap she should leave Cornelia alone for a while.
Nay. She couldn’t leave her friend so distraught. She pressed down on the door handle and the panel swung inward.
Cornelia stood at the open window, her back to the door. As Honoria entered, the younger woman’s posture stiffened, and she dried her eyes with a handkerchief.
“I was hoping we could talk.”
“What more is there to say?” Cornelia snapped, while staring out the window. “What I saw made the situation perfectly clear.”
“I never set out to hurt you.”
With a harsh sob, the younger woman whirled around. “You do not understand, do you? Why I ever thought you did….”
“Understand what?” Hating to see her friend in such torment, Honoria moved closer. “Please, tell me.”
The younger woman’s features etched with anguish. After a silence, she said, “I just…want someone to love me, to care for me enough to make me his wife.”
The agony in Cornelia’s voice was truly heart-wrenching.
“You are so clever, Honoria, and interesting, and elegant—”
Mother Mary.
“And I have this.” She pointed to her blemished cheek. “When a man looks at me, he sees I am imperfect, and he does not want me.”
“That is not true. You are very beautiful—”
“Do you know, I was not even supposed to be traveling the day of the accident, but Mother wanted me to accompany her?” Cornelia sniffled. “Part of me wishes I had never agreed to go, for I suggested…that we take a different route than usual, and…that is why we crashed.”
Honoria longed to embrace the younger woman, but sensed Cornelia wouldn’t accept such comforting from her. “What happened was not your fault. You could not have known the storm would make that road perilous.”
Dabbing at her eyes, the younger woman said, “That day changed everything for me.”
It had, and not just for her. Yet, there was no reason at all why she couldn’t marry once she’d found the right man—one who would treasure her and nurture her interests and talents.
“I thought Tristan might be different, that he might see me for more than my scar,” Cornelia continued, hugging herself. “I was wrong.”
Honoria touched her friend’s arm. “There are many other lords who might be right for you
, including Radley. My brother—”
“I wanted Tristan.”
“I know you did, but he does not feel the same way about you.”
Cornelia shrugged off Honoria’s touch. “He might have done, except you pursued him.”
Honoria’s torment gouged deeper. “I never expected to have romantic feelings for him.”
“Or want to kiss him, like the damsels in the old stories?”
Cornelia’s taunting words stung, but Honoria merely nodded. “Just like in the old stories.”
The younger woman snorted in disgust. “Say what you will, but I do not believe you. You stole Tristan from me. I will never forgive you.”
Chapter Eleven
December 24
Honoria opened the shutters at her chamber window to reveal a gray, overcast sky. She shivered in the frigid breeze and hoped that today, Christmas Eve, would be much better than yesterday, when Cornelia had avoided Honoria. At mealtimes, the younger woman had sat with her father at the opposite end of the table to Honoria and had left the hall as soon as the meal was finished, instead of staying to chat or embroider by the hearth.
Earlier yesterday, Radley had ridden off with several guards to settle grievances between two farmers with neighboring lands, and hadn’t returned until late afternoon. Radley had assigned a man-at-arms to care for Tristan’s wound, so Honoria had wrapped the gifts she’d purchased in pieces of linen and tied them with twine, and had spent the afternoon with her mother. Tristan had rested in bed most of the day, but had kept her and her mother company by the fire in the evening. While he hadn’t mentioned kissing again, and neither had Honoria, the memory of their stolen intimacy had glinted in his eyes when their gazes had met. Sitting near him had made her feel alive with a glorious awareness she’d struggled to contain.
But she had. Kissing Tristan had caused tremendous upheaval. After being awake most of last night thinking about the situation, Honoria still wasn’t sure what to do about it. Mayhap a morning walk would enlighten her.
Honoria fastened her cloak and headed to the bailey. She passed under the kissing bough, hanging from the archway separating the hall from the forebuilding stairs down to the bailey, on the way. No else was coming or going at the same moment, though, so no berries were picked or kisses were stolen—although some obviously had been, likely by the servants, because there were fewer berries than before.