"Stasheff,Christopher - Heirs 2 - M'Lady Witch(v1.1)" - читать интересную книгу автора (Stasheff Christopher)
M'Lady Witch
M'Lady Witch
By Christopher Stasheff
ISBN: 0-441-00113-0
CHAPTER 1
"My son," said the King, "thy mother and I have decided that
'tis time thou wert wed."
"As thou dost wish, my father and sovereign." Alain
bowed. "I shall inform the lady straightaway."
And he turned and strode out of the solar, leaving his parents
gaping after him.
Wooden-faced, the sentry closed the door behind the
Prince. The sound jarred King Tuan and Queen Catharine out of
their shock.
"Who can he mean?" he asked, round-eyed.
"Who but Gwendylon's daughter?" It was characteristic of
Catharine that she didn't mention Rod Gallowglass, Cordelia's
father.
"The High Warlock's daughter!" Tuan had the opposite
problem. "He must be stopped!" He rose from his
chair. But Catharine restrained him with a hand on his
arm. "Let him be, husband. If he doth as I think he
will do, he may learn a most signal lesson."
Much as she loved her son, Catharine knew him to be something of
a conceited prig. Admittedly, the realization had only dawned
on her this last year, when the boy had turned twenty-one and she
had finally begun to think of him as a swain going a-wooing.
Looking at him in that light, she had begun to realize that her son
had some serious romantic defects. They all began with
attitude, of course—but if she knew Cordelia, her son might
soon have that attitude corrected.
Alain rode the high way toward the High Warlock's castle with a
high heart, enjoying the lovely spring day, the cascades of
birdsong, and the ribald chanting of his entourage—a dozen
young knights in doublet and hose, their swords at their
hips. He felt his whole being relaxing, surging upward in
delight. It was grand to be young and courting on a day such
as this—it even made him feel moderately good-looking.
Actually, he was a handsome young man, though he had been raised
with so much emphasis on modesty that he denied it to himself,
relying instead on his wardrobe. But he was well muscled,
blond, with large blue eyes, a strong chin, and a straight nose;
his face was open and ingenuous, though usually too serious.
On a day like this, though, he was perilously close to admitting
that he was attractive. He certainly felt so, for all the
world must love a lover. And it was such a relief to be away
from Runnymede and his parents' court, from intrigue and the need
to be formal and wary!
Alain didn't know it, of course, but the girl to whom he planned
to propose was even more of a hot potato than a hot tomato.
That wouldn't have stopped him—he was a trouble-magnet
himself; crown princes always are. Assassins and conspirators
lie in wait for them, ready to seduce them into plotting against
their parents, or to kill them if they aren't seducible. That
was why Alain travelled with a bodyguard of knights, and why his
father had made sure he was well trained with sword and
battle-axe.
Cordelia, on the other hand, wasn't apt to have any bodyguards
around; her parents cultivated the simple and humble image, as much
as you can when the King and Queen have insisted that you live in a
castle. But she was easily more lethal than Alain could ever
be, if she wanted to be—she was, in the eyes of the
superstitious peasants, a witch, and a very powerful one.
Actually, she was an esper, a person born with powers of
extrasensory perception and, in her case, extrasensory
activity. She was a telepath, a projective, a telekinetic
... and the list went on. About all she couldn't do was
teleport.
Of course, it was possible that she might run into something
that even she couldn't handle—say, an army or two. If
that happened, all she had to do was call for help from the Wee
Folk, and a brigade or two of elves, pixies, and brownies would pop
out of the woodwork to aid her. If anything stopped
them—such as too much Cold Iron, which tends to accumulate
around knights—she could always send out a mental call for
the rest of her family, and her father would teleport to her, with
her brothers right behind. Her mother would arrive a little
later, by broomstick. The family had not yet encountered any
enemy that could stand against them—provided, of course, that
nothing kept them apart.
Rod Gallowglass wasn't quite as adept at using his ESP powers as
his wife and children were, because he had spent half his life
under the blithe impression that he was an ordinary mortal.
Shortly after the birth of his fourth child, he had found out the
hard way that he could work "magic," as the local superstitious
peasants called the results of his ESP work. He had decided
that magic was catching.
Rod Gallowglass's late development was understandable,
considering that he hadn't even known there was a planet where
there were so many espers, until he came there; he had been born
and raised on a high-tech planetoid where the family business was
the manufacturing of robots, and had run away from home to spend
his twenties bumming around the civilized, modern planets, looking
for wrongs to right. Sometimes he wondered how he had ever
gotten into this situation. Then he would look at his wife,
even now in her fifties, and decide it had just been good luck.
Being a little more honest with himself, he would admit that it
had been a matter of needing a purpose in life. He had found
one by becoming an agent for the Society for the Conversion of
Extraterrestrial Nascent Totalitarianisms, an organization
dedicated to spreading democracy by sniffing out dictatorships and
other forms of oppressive government, and steering their societies
toward one of the many forms of democracy. Exploring the
galaxy for new totalitarian governments to topple, he had stumbled
across Gramarye. Now he was assigned here for the rest of his
life—because SCENT knew how important Gramarye was going to
be. Rod, on the other hand, had known how important the
beautiful, voluptuous "witch" Gwendylon was going to be, and had
married her, cleaving unto her forever—and therefore, of
course, to her planet and people, too.
The planet of Gramarye was the only place in the Terran sphere
of colonized planets where so many espers existed. All the
rest of the Terran planets together had produced only a few rather
weak telepaths—so Rod Gallowglass had a very important duty
guarding the planet of Gramarye from invasion and subversion by the
agents of dictatorship and anarchy.
SCENT believed that one of the prime factors in keeping a
democracy alive was speed of communications. If it takes too
long to get a message from the parliament to the frontier planets,
the frontier planets will eventually set up their own governments
and break away. The only way to prevent this is to do away
with democracy and resort to some form of government that keeps
such a tight hold over its colonies that they can't break
away—and that tight hold always turns into oppression, in one
form or another. So to keep democracy viable, the telepaths
of Gramarye were going to be absolutely essential.
Unfortunately, the future totalitarians knew that, tooand so did
the future anarchists. Each of them had its own time-travel
organization, dedicated to fostering totalitarian governments
(VETO) or to destroying governments altogether (SPITE)—and
both were directly concerned with keeping Gramarye from becoming a
democracy.
Which meant they were out to kill Rod Gallowglass, if they
could—and his family. Especially his children.
They had found out, over the last couple of decades, that they
couldn't kill Rod—no matter how hard they tried, he always
fought them off, and where he might have failed, his wife and her
elf-friends and children had beaten off his enemies for him.
Together, they were unstoppable—but the Futurians could, at
least, make sure his influence didn't go on into future
generations. They were bound and determined to kill his
children if they could or, if they couldn't, to at least keep them
from having children of their own.
So far, the new SPITE chief, Finister, had succeeded in giving
the eldest son, Magnus, a very unhealthy distaste for sex in any
form, and especially for women as sexual beings. As a result,
he had left home to go traipsing around the galaxy, looking for
wrongs to right and oppressive governments to overthrow.
Now Finister had set her sights on Cordelia. How she would
prevent Cordelia from ever being married, or even seduced, she
didn't know—but she would improvise. Half the fun of
her job, she had decided, was in finding how things came out.
So Alain rode through a golden morning, blithely unaware of the
Futurian witch who was setting her sights on himself and his
beloved. Not knowing, he was able to delight in the day.
"How shall you greet the lady, Your Highness?" asked young
Sir Devon.
"With cordiality and respect, Hall" It was such a pleasure to
speak so freely, without all that ridiculous and unnecessary
formality that the older folk used. "Thee" this and "thou"
that, when a simple "you" would suffice! "As I would greet
any fine lady!"
Sir Devon didn't seem so sure. "Mayhap, Highness, you
should treat her in some degree warmer than that."
"What? And have her forget that I am her
sovereign-to-be? Pooh, Hal! It would be beneath my
station!"
Hal started to say something more, then bit his tongue.
Alain saw. "Come, come! You must speak your mind with
me, Hal—for if my own friends do not, who will? What
had you in mind to say?"
"Only that it is a perfect day for so joyous an occasion,
Highness," Sir Devon said slowly.
"It is that." Alain looked around him with a broad
grin. Yes, it was a perfect day to become engaged, to kiss a
lucky maiden for the first time. The thought was somewhat
heady—he had always more or less planned to marry Cordelia,
and the notion of actually doing so made his heart sing, though it
also roused a nervous fluttering in his stomach. However, he
could ignore that—as he could overlook the fact that she
wasn't a princess.
He also overlooked the possibility of sending a page ahead, to
announce his coming.
Gregory looked up; pale light was beginning to lend color to the
leafy roof overhead. He folded up his notes with a satisfied
sigh; it had been a good evening's watching, and he had learned
quite a bit about the habits of the great horned owl. He rose
to his feet with a wince as cramped muscles protested, and noted
that he must not be doing enough yoga exercises. If only
eight hours of immobility for a night's watch made him stiff, how
would he endure the round-the-clock spell of meditation that he
knew was coming? His mind was working itself up to
that—when it brimmed over with new knowledge, he would have
to go into a trance to sort it all out. He didn't dare do
that when Mother and Father were home, of course—but they
travelled a good deal these days, so he was free to keep
night—long vigils in the forest if he chose, or
twenty-four-hour sessions of meditation. He knew it would
worry his sister Cordelia, but she would only hover over him, not
interrupt.
And, of course, there was the problem of trying to contact his
eldest brother Magnus, halfway across the galaxy.
He felt the need of that, too, from time to time, and it was
very demanding of both body and mind. Heaven knew the lad
wrote seldom enough!
His body was making its needs felt in other ways, too.
Gregory felt a pang of hunger, and decided, with regret, that he
would just have to devote half an hour to taking on some
food. He made his way out of the forest and off toward the
nearby village, where there was an inn that would be serving
breakfast.
As he came into the inn, the serving maid looked up, then gave
him a very, very warm smile; her lips seemed to glisten, her eyes
to grow larger. Gregory gave her an automatic smile in
return, instantly concerned—was the girl beset with a
fever? But no, on closer look, he could see no other
symptoms—the swellings in her bodice looked natural
enough.
He sat at a table, asked her for ale and porridge, then
instantly forgot her as he noticed the motion of dust motes in a
sun-ray that hinted at a pattern ...
Something tugged at his attention; irritated, he glanced at the
wench's retreating back. He noticed the exaggerated swaying
of her hips, and remembered his older brother Geoffrey telling him
that when a woman walked that way, she was seeking a
dalliance. Then Gregory finally remembered that the look on
her face had been one that Geoffrey had told him of, too—but
he also remembered his brother's caution that the lass might have a
shallow dalliance in mind, or a very deep one, or anything in
between, and that a man had to move slowly, trying to read her
intentions, for frequently she wouldn't know them herself.
It all sounded very tedious to Gregory, and singularly
unproductive. He supposed that he would have to try it some
day—but just now, he had far more interesting matters to deal
with. He was only sixteen, after all. And, to be quite
frank, he couldn't imagine how the physical pleasures Geoffrey
described could ever approach the ecstasy of intellectual insight,
the long hours of study and meditation that led to the rapture of
new understanding of natural phenomena.
Of course, women were natural phenomena, too—but somehow,
he doubted that they wanted to be analyzed. And he was quite
sure they didn't want to be understood.
The drawbridge was down, the porter sitting at his ease on a
stool in the shade of the gatehouse, cutting bits of apple and
nibbling at them. He stiffened abruptly at the cry of the
sentry in the tower above; then the troop of horsemen came into
view, and the guards snapped their halberds down. "Who
comes?"
"Alain, Prince of Gramarye!" cried the foremost knight,
and behind him, the golden Prince himself sat, cocksure and
smiling, head tilted back, resplendent in cloth of gold and velvet,
with a plume in his hat.
"Your Highness!" The porter bowed, his expressionless face
hiding his surprise, almost shock, at the suddeness of the Prince's
arrival. "I regret that Lord and Lady Gallowglass are not
within!"
"No matter, no matter," Alain said with careless generosity, "so
long as the Lady Cordelia is. Say, are there any others of
the family present?"
"His Lordship and Her Ladyship are away for the day, sir.
I regret there are none here but the servants, the steward, and
myself, saving Lady Cordelia."
"A most excellent notion," Alain said with joviality.
"Save her ladyship, indeed—and summon her!"
The porter blanched at the thought of "summoning" Lady
Cordelia. He decided to summon the steward instead, and let
him deal with the lady. After all, porters were not paid that
much.
Cordelia was in the stillery, brewing medicines to replace the
stock depleted by the winter chills and agues and fevers of all the
peasants on the Gallowglass estates. She enjoyed the work,
but it was tiring, not to say messy—her apron was spotted
with the extracts of various herbs and the mauve and purple from
the juices of various berries. Her hair was tied back in a
severe bun, to keep loose strands from being caught in the
glassware. Her face, too, was smudged with touches of
extract, bits of charcoal, and smudges of soot from tending the
burners. The solution in the alembic had just begun to boil
up into the cooling tube when ...
...the steward stepped through the door and announced, very
nervously, "Milady, Prince Alain has come to call on you. He
awaits you in the solar."
"Blast!" Cordelia cried, instantly furious. "How
dare he come unannounced! How durst he enter just as my brew
has come to the boil!"
The steward stood mute, stretching out his hands in
bewilderment.
"Well, there's no help for it!" Cordelia snapped, gaze
going back to the cooling tube. Drops of distillate had begun
to drip into a beaker. "Tell him I will come directly."
The steward bowed and left, relieved.
She would come as soon as the retort was empty and the beaker
full, Cordelia decided—two hours' preparation would not be
thrown away on a man's oafish whim! As to appearances, well,
he would just have to take her as she was.
Still, she patted her hair, wishing she had time to arrange it
properly—not to mention donning a pretty gown and washing her
hands and face.
Actually, she had very little cause for concern. Cordelia
had grown into a very beautiful woman, though she gave it very
little thought. There was so much to do—peasants with
illnesses, children who must be taught, women who must be aided in
their daily burdens. Now and then, she might snatch a few
minutes to think about a new dress, or even steal an hour to work
at making one. There were even odd moments when she would
experiment with a new hairstyle, though those tended to be very,
very early in the morning, and only on Sundays.
Makeup? She never thought of it—and never thought it
would do her much good, either.
She was half right. Her complexion was flawless, her
cheeks rosy, her lips so red that no paint could improve upon
them. Her features were those of the classic beauty, and the
curves of her body were generous and perfectly proportioned.
Her legs were long, her posture straight, almost regal.
Of course, these last were almost always hidden under a
work-dress of strong, serviceable fabric. There was, after
all, so very much to do.
Even the rough cloth could not hide her loveliness,
though—from anyone but herself. Cordelia, of course,
did not know she was a beauty.
"How dare he?" she fumed to herself, watching the last of
the solution boil out of the retort. "What the devil could
send him here at such a bad time?"
Alain paced the solar, fretting and chafing. What could be
keeping Cordelia so long? His sunny mood was beginning to
cloud over, exposing the nervousness underneath. He was
remembering that he was proposing a liaison that would last twice
as long as he had already lived, and was beginning to wonder if he
really wanted that. Still, his lieges, sovereigns, and
parents had told him he should wed, so he would.
He consoled himself with the thought that Cordelia had no doubt
rushed to dress in her finest and arrange her hair. It wasn't
at all necessary, he assured himself—but it was
flattering.
So he was jolted to his boot-soles when she bustled into the
room, unannounced and without ceremony, in a stained white
work-apron and blue broadcloth dress, her hair disordered and her
face smudged. He stared in shock as she curtsied, then
managed to force a smile. He didn't know which was
worse—the annoyance that rippled over her face as she looked
up at him, or her distracted air, as though she had something more
important on her mind. More important than him!
"Your Highness," she said. "How good of you to come."
Alain stared. "Highness?" What way was that to greet
an old friend, a companion of childhood? But the shock gave
way to a cold wave of calculation that was new to him, though quite
welcome under the circumstances—the emphasis on his exalted
station would make her even more aware of the honor he was doing
her. "Milady Cordelia." He forced a smile.
Cordelia saw, and withheld another momentary surge of
anger. Not bad enough that he had let himself show his dismay
at her appearance—now he had the gall to go chilly on
her! But she could play that game, too. She gave him a
smile of her own, making it very obvious that she was forcing it,
and gestured to an hourglass-shaped chair. "Will you sit, my
Prince?"
"I thank you, milady." Alain sat and, since they were
being formal, gestured to another chair. "I pray you, sit by
me."
"You are too kind," Cordelia said with withering sarcasm, but
took the chair that he offered her in her own solar—or her
own mother's, at least. "To what do I owe the pleasure of
this sudden visit, Prince Alain?"
Alain was surprised to feel relief at her use of his name.
He decided to unbend a bit himself. "To the beauty of your
face and the lightness of your form, Lady Cordelia." He had
rehearsed that line several times on his way from his parents'
castle, but the effect was somewhat marred by his choking on the
words as he gazed at her smudges and stains.
Inwardly, Cordelia was fuming. How dare he praise her
appearance when she knew she looked like last week's wet
wash? "My thanks, Alain—but you had little need to
journey so far to so little purpose."
"The purpose was scarcely small," he returned gallantly, "for
you are fair as a summer's day." He said it without choking,
this time. "Indeed, 'tis your beauty and sweetness that have
minded me to honor you."
"Oh, have you indeed?" she said softly, outrage kindling
within her.
"In truth, I have—for my mother and father have deemed
'tis time for me to wed. 'Tis you who are my choice, sweet
Cordelia, and 'tis you who shall be future Queen of Gramarye!"
Cordelia sat quite still, staring at him as a maelstrom of
emotions churned within her. True, she had always more or
less planned to marry Alain, and the thought of being Queen one day
was an interesting added fillip—but to be treated with such
cavalier disregard, to be the pawn of his whim rather than the
queen of his heart ... ! She felt the anger mounting
and mounting, and knew she would not be able to contain it very
long.
Alain frowned. "Have you nothing to say?"
"What should I say?" she asked in a very small voice, eyes
downcast.
"Why, that you rejoice at your good fortune, that you are
sensible of the honor I do you, that you acclaim me as your lord
and master!"
I shall acclaim you as a pompous ass, Cordelia thought, but she
didn't say so—yet. "Am I to have no voice in this
matter, my lord?"
The return to formality was like a stiletto through him.
"Assuredly, you are! 'Tis for you to say yea or nay,
surely!"
"How good of you to deign to allow me this," she said, syrupy
sweet.
Alain relaxed, complacency restored. She was sensible of
the honor after all. "'Tis nothing."
"Oh, ave, 'tis nothing!" The anger boiled up, and Cordelia
knew she could contain it no longer. "'Tis nothing to you, a
woman's feelings! 'Tis nothing to you if you humiliate where
you should elevate!"
"How now?" Alain stared, thunderstruck.
"I am nothing to you, am I? Only a brood mare, to .be
bought at your whim when you have a moment to spare from your great
concerns? Nothing to you, nothing but a minor matter that you
attend to when the mood is on you?" She rose from her
chair. "Nothing to you? Only a marriage, only a
lifetime's union, and 'tis nothing to you?"
"Nay, certainly not!" He leaped to his feet, stung to the
quick. "You twist my meaning!"
"Nay, I attend to the meaning of your tone and your actions, not
to your words alone! Why, you great gilded popinjay, you
puffed-up princeling!"
"I am your future sovereign!"
"Of my nation, but most assuredly—not of my heart!
How could you be, when you have no thought of love or
yearning?"
"Do you take me for a heartless wretch?" Alain
cried. "Surely I must love you!"
"Oh, aye, surely you must, if your parents command it! Yet
had you thought of it before I said the word? Had you never
thought to say it, never thought to woo, to court? A fine
prince are you, if you can but command!"
The absurdity of the charge struck him. "'Tis the place of
the prince to command, and of the subject to obey!"
"Oh, my apologies, sire!" Cordelia dropped an elaborate,
exaggerated curtsy. "Assuredly, if you order me to marry, I
must obey, must I not? If you command, my heart must
obediently adore you!"
"Why, you heartless witch, you storming shrew! I am your
Prince, and I do command you!" Alain shouted, then drew
himself up and glared down at her coldly. "I command you to
answer me straight! Will you be my wife, or no?"
Cordelia dropped her prettiest curtsy, bowed her head, smiled up
at him, and said, quite clearly, "No."
Then she turned on her heel and stalked off back to her
stillery.
She slammed the door behind her, leaned against it, and burst
into tears.
Alain stared at the doorway through which she had gone,
thunderstruck, distraught, and dismayed. Then he remembered
that a steward was apt to step through that doorway at any minute,
and masked his hurt in a scowl. The scowl raised up a torrent
of anger in its wake. He stalked through the archway, and the
steward stepped up. "May I fetch you anything, Your
Highness?"
"A modicum of sense in a woman's heart," Alain snarled.
"Aside, fellow! I shall seek my horse—'tis a fairer
creature than the Lady Cordelia!"
"Surely, Highness!" The steward moved aside with alacrity,
then signalled to a footman, who stepped to the stairs and
signalled down to the porter.
Alain didn't see; he was aware of nothing but a red haze, his
feet following the steps down to the Great Hall
automatically. The porter yanked the door open as the prince
came to it, and he stormed out,' his face thunderous.
In the courtyard, his escort raised a cheer that cut off as
though it had been sheared. Sir Devon stepped up, his face
dark. "Have they offered you insult, Highness?"
" `They'?" Alain cried. "No, not 'they'—only
she! An arrogant chit of a girl who holds her liege and lord
in little esteem!"
"Assuredly she has not spurned you!"
"Spurned me? Aye, as a tyrant would spurn a dog! I
shall be revenged upon her, upon their whole house!" The
leader looked shocked for a second, then masked his sudden fear
with narrowed eyes and a hard face. He turned back to his
fellows. "They have offered our Prince grave insult, sir
knights."
He was satisfied to see the same momentary dismay on every
face—all of them knew of the magical powers of the Lord
Warlock and his family. Moreover, all of them knew Cordelia's
brother Geoffrey to be the best swordsman in the kingdom. But
even as their leader had done, they all grew stone-faced, and
reached to touch the hilts of their swords.
"Say the word, Highness, and your revenge shall be executed,"
the leader said.
"Oh, not so quickly and easily!" Alain roared. "I
shall see humiliation and shame ere I see blood! 'Tis insult
I've been given, and dire insult must answer! Away, good
friends! For I must think long and hard on the manner of this
vengeance! Away!"
Out they thundered through the gatehouse. The sentry on
the wall looked up, ready to give the porter the signal that would
begin their revenge for the insults given their young
mistress. His heart sank at the thought, for he knew that if
they raised their hands against the Heir Apparent, the Royal Army
would have them sooner or later, and they would all be drawn and
quartered. But loyalty was loyalty, and Cordelia was his
young mistress, and the daughter of the Lord Warlock, to whom he
had sworn his allegiance.
Besides, he was more than a little in love with the lady, as
most of the younger men of the castle were.
The steward, however, was older, and a bit more practical.
More to the point, he had seen enough of life to recognize rash
words that would probably be atoned for in time, and to know that
young people frequently say things they do not mean. He only
shook his head—so the drawbridge stayed down, and Alain and
his young knights rode. out unharmed, across the drawbridge,
and down the road to the plain.
"What revenge is this he speaks of?" the sentry
demanded. "For if I must choose between the Lord Warlock and
the King, I know where my loyalties lie!"
"Your loyalty, and my lance," the steward agreed. "Still,
he does not speak of action yet, and the time has not come to draw
blades."
"But to speak of it to the lady?" the sentry asked, his
face uncertain.
"Not to the lady," the steward rejoined. "If I know her at
all, she is probably in tears over so disastrous an
encounter. Nay, we will. speak of it, to Lord and Lady
Gallowglass, or to either of their sons, should they come home
sooner."
Geoffrey came home sooner.
CHAPTER 2
In the Great Hall, Geoffrey stood rigid, closing his eyes,
visualizing Alain's face, trying to concentrate on it—but his
emotions were in too great a turmoil to allow him to
teleport. His own sister! That the empty-headed,
preening fool of a Prince should have had the gall to insult
Cordelia! He could scarcely throttle his rage enough to
detect the Prince's thoughts, there was such a roaring in his
head. "I shall have to seek him on horseback! Blast and
be hanged! 'Tis too slow!"
But there was no help for it, so he strode off to the stables
and saddled his roan as a groom leaped to the bridle. Minutes
later, the young warlock was pounding out across the drawbridge,
hard on the trail of the Prince who had insulted his sister.
"He spoke of what?" Geoffrey stared, incredulous.
"Surely not even Prince Alain would be so great a fool as to seek
revenge on our house!"
"I speak only of what His Highness said, sir," the steward
replied.
"And proper and loyal you are to do so." Geoffrey spun
away. "I must speak to my sister!"
He boomed through the stillery door. "Cordelia! What
has Alain done to you!"
Cordelia looked up at him, tears streaking her face. "Oh,
nothing! Only spoke a deal of nonsense, only been as lofty
and pompous as ever he was! Do go away, Geoffrey! Leave
me to cry in peace! You shame me with your gaze! Go
away!"
"Shame you!" Geoffrey spun on his heel and stalked out of
the stillery, his face dark, fists clenched.
"Geoffrey, no!" Cordelia cried, leaping to her
feet—but she was talking to the stout oaken planks of the
door. "I had not meant—oh, blast! Men are such
fools!" And she collapsed onto her stool again, weeping
afresh.
An hour later, Cordelia emerged from the stillery, face washed
but haggard. As she came into the solar, the steward stepped
up, all solicitation. "Are you well, milady?"
"As well as one might expect," Cordelia sighed, and sat down
beneath the clerestory window. "I am minded to take some tea,
Squire Bruntly."
"Aye, milady." The steward nodded to the footman, who
departed for the kitchen.
"And, Squire Bruntly..."
The steward turned back to her. "Aye, milady?"
"Where is my brother?"
"I cannot say, milady." Squire Bruntly did his best to
look apologetic. "I know only that he rode off posthaste, an
hour ago."
"An hour ago!" Cordelia stiffened. "Is it all of an
hour since he came to see me in the stillery?"
"It is, milady."
"Where has he gone?"
"I do not know." Squire Bruntly spread his hands,
beginning to have a very bad feeling about all this.
"Then I fear I do!" Cordelia leaped to her feet and began
pacing the floor. "Blast! Knows he no better than to
meddle in my affairs?"
"I am sure that your brother is quite concerned for your honor,
milady," Squire Bruntly said, vaguely shocked without knowing
why.
"My honor, forsooth! When my honor needs such defending as
a brother might do, I shall tell him! Oh, Squire
Bruntly! In which direction did he ride?"
"Why, I cannot say, milady—but I shall send for the
sentries."
"You need not. Which way did Prince Alain ride?"
"West, milady, back toward Runnymede."
"Then you need not ask which way Geoffrey rode," Cordelia said
grimly. "Blast! If only I could teleport, as he
can! Well, there's no help for it! I shall return when
I may, Squire Bruntly!"
"We shall keep the kettle hot, milady." Squire Bruntly
stared after her as she caught up her broomstick and hurried away
toward the nearest tower. Now he knew why that feeling of
dread had been building within him.
As they had ridden west, the day had darkened, and Alain had
calmed a bit, from anger into moroseness. A strange, hollow
feeling had been growing inside him; where butterflies had been
struggling out of their cocoons, there was now only echoing
darkness.
Very dark indeed. There was a lethargy, a hopelessness,
that had never been there before. Could Cordelia really have
meant so much to him?
Yes, he realized. For year after year, she had been his
playmate, when the two families had met for feast-day or parents'
conference. She had played with the boys as vigorously as
any, and Alain had fallen in love with her before he was
seven. Of course, he had told himself, that had been only a
child's infatuation—but when she had undergone the teen-age
metamorphosis from child into young woman, he had been taken all
over again; his head had seemed lighter whenever he had looked at
her, watching her move and hearing her talk had become entrancing
again. Of course, he had been tongue-tied, unable to talk
with her then, except in the old, familiar ways of friend ship,
never as boy to girl, so he had never told her of his
feelings. Instead, he had consoled himself with the thought
that, since he was a Prince and Heir Apparent, he could have his
pick of any of the girls in all his parents' kingdom, and of course
he would choose Cordelia. It had never occurred to him that
she might say no.
However, with a new and brutal self-honesty, he realized that he
had never seriously thought that she could be in love with
him. Oh, yes, he was Prince and Heir, and would some day be
King—but he was lumpen compared to her. She was a
fairy, light and dancing; he was an ox, plodding through life with
nothing but a dogged determination to do what was right—right
for his subjects, right for the kingdom, and right for her.
Not for himself, of course—that was one of the most important
principles in being a knight and a nobleman, let alone a King: to
sacrifice one's own comfort and pleasure for others' good. So
his father had taught him, and it had never occurred to him to
question it, in spite of his mother's jaundiced looks and
jibing. She had never truly denied it, only joked with Father
that he was too intent on duty, to the point of being dull and
boring. Her sallies always resulted in his giving a ball, and
spending half the evening dancing with her, jesting and chatting
and listening to her, in a strenuous attempt to prove he could be
exciting and romantic still.
He had never done very well at it, Alain thought. He had
heard that his father had been handsome and gallant in his youth,
and the son could certainly believe it when he looked at the
sire—but he noticed that no one had ever said his father was
dashing or romantic, and he could easily believe that Tuan had
never been so. Always solidly dependable, always serious and
devoted, but never much fun.
Nor was his son, Alain reflected—and never would be, in
all probability. Worse, he didn't even have the advantage of
being handsome.
But he could be gallant. Iron resolve hardened within him;
he would treat Cordelia in the future as though she were a goddess;
he would bow to her, he would speak her fair, he would shower
compliments upon her. He would even send word ahead.
A shout broke the air behind him, inarticulate, angered.
"Highness!" Sir Devon snapped.
Alain looked up, startled, and turned around, to see Geoffrey
Gallowglass pounding after them down the road, cloak flying behind
him in the wind. Alain turned his horse, a glad cry of
welcome on his lips, but Geoffrey was roaring, "Caitiff!
Hound and swine!"
"How dare you speak thus to our Prince!" Sir Devon
bellowed back at him, and the other five young knights took place
behind him, forming a living wall between Alain and Geoffrey.
Suddenly, Alain remembered that Geoffrey was the brother of the
lady who had so lately scorned him, and that in his hurt, he might
have spoken more harshly to her than he had intended.
Geoffrey crashed in between Sir Devon and Sir Langley, throwing
his weight against Sir Devon in a bodyblock. Horse and rider
shuddered; the others were knocked aside, and the horse
stumbled.
With an inarticulate roar, Geoffrey whirled to chop down with
his sword at Sir Langley, who was just recovering his balance from
the unexpected shock. He looked up, appalled, then brought up
his sword barely in time to parry. Then Geoffrey whirled his
sword down to slam against the knight's shield. The strength
of his blow knocked the blade back against its owner, slashing Sir
Langley's forehead. He fell, senseless.
Then Geoffrey was beyond the group of knights again, turning and
halting his horse, glaring at them, eyes narrowing. They
shouted and spurred their horses—but two of the stallions
collided with each other, and the third knight's sword suddenly
wrenched itself from his grasp, then rapped him sharply on the head
with its hilt. He slumped in the saddle, and his horse
slowed, feeling the loosening of the reins. He fell, limp as
a sack of meal. The horse, well trained, stepped over him to
shield him with its body.
The other two young knights had steadied their horses and
regained control—but one's shield suddenly yanked his arm up
high, then knocked him on the head. He fell.
The last knight paled as he galloped toward Geoffrey, but he
didn't rein in; he even managed a battle cry of bravado—a cry
that turned into a yawn as Geoffrey glared at him. His eyes
fluttered closed, and he fell forward in his saddle, sound
asleep.
Sir Devon struggled back up to his feet, weaving and woozy, but
game.
Geoffrey turned to him with narrowed eyes.
"Hold!" Alain was jolted back to his senses. "'Tis
me with whom he fights! Stand aside!"
Geoffrey turned toward the Prince. "But,
Highness..." Sir Devon cried.
"Aside!" Alain stormed, and the thrill of battle sang
through his veins. He turned to his erstwhile friend Geoffrey
with an almost savage delight; this would be the perfect outlet for
the rage and frustration of Cordelia's rejection. "He is
mine!"
"Then have at thee, boorish Princeling!" Geoffrey
bellowed, and slammed his horse into Alain's.
But Alain had already seen the maneuver used against Sir Devon,
and was braced for it. He rocked in the saddle but held his
seat, and parried Geoffrey's overhand slash, then parried another,
and another ... the blades rang, strokes fast and furious,
the horses dancing around one another, the knights of the bodyguard
crying out in anger and alarm.
Geoffrey was staring in surprise, and Alain felt a thrill of
satisfaction; the Gallowglass had not expected him to be so able an
opponent! The satisfaction was strong enough to urge him to
use Geoffrey's own trick against him—he spurred his horse and
slammed it into Geoffrey's mount with a suddenness that took the
young warlock by surprise.
So did Alain's shoulder in his short ribs.
Geoffrey reeled in the saddle. Alain reached over to shove
with his left hand, and with a very ungraceful scrabbling and
grasping, the young warlock fell off his horse. He landed and
rolled up to his feet, sword still in his grasp, face red with
embarrassment and fury—to see Alain dismounting and turning
to him.
"Oh, very chivalrous!" Geoffrey snarled, and was on
him.
Now the blows flew thick and fast, thrust and parry and slash
and counter. There was no use of horses as weapons now, but
only naked steel, sword and dagger against sword and dagger.
But Alain was quickly on the defensive; he gave ground, and gave
ground again, astounded to realize that he was fighting for his
life, that his sword was beaten back again and again, that
Geoffrey's blows came so thick and fast that it was all he could do
to parry, not even having time to riposte.
Sir Devon cried out and spurred in.
"Hold off, Sir Devon!" Alain cried, but not soon enough;
Geoffrey leaped aside, whirled, and caught Sir Devon's foot as the
knight galloped by. He heaved, and Sir Devon came crashing
down from the saddle. Geoffrey spun back, ready to ward off
Alain's blow, but the Prince was standing on guard. "I would
not dishonor myself by striking at a foeman's back!"
"Would you not?" Geoffrey snapped. "Then your sense
of honor shall cause you to be slain some day, Highness!" And
he leaped in to the attack again.
Alain saw his one chance to regain the offensive, and took it,
leaping aside from the blow and thrusting at full
extension—but Geoffrey twisted to parry in a gyration that
Alain would have thought impossible, and slashed backhanded at the
young Prince's chest. Alain parried in the nick of time, then
parried again and again, giving ground with each stroke. His
companions howled their alarm and pressed in, but Alain bawled at
them to hold their places.
Then, suddenly, Geoffrey's blade swirled around his own, his
hilt twisted in his hand and wrenched against the fingers, and his
sword went flying away through the air.
Aghast, he stared at the point of Geoffrey's blade, six inches
from his face.
The young knights cried out in alarm and spurred their
horses.
"Back!" Geoffrey roared. "Or my hand might
slip!" The knights reined in, hard.
"Now," grated Geoffrey, "you shall apologize to me on my
sister's behalf, Your Highness, and swear to take your apologies to
her in person, or I shall witness the color of your entrails with
my own eyes."
Alain tried to glare back at him, but he remembered the rash
words he had snapped at Cordelia, and dropped his gaze in
chagrin. "I do most humbly apologize, for those were rude
words indeed that I spoke, and the lady deserved them not in the
slightest." He lifted his head, looking back into Geoffrey's
puzzled gaze. "As to fear of yourself or your blade, why, if
you think me a coward to have apologized at sword's point, then
stab with that point, and be done! You have sneered at the
notion of honor, so I shall not be surprised you have so little of
it yourself, that you would slay an unarmed man!"
Sir Devon gasped, gathering himself for a desperate
spring—but Geoffrey's eyes only narrowed to slits.
Before he could speak, Alain went on. "Yet be advised, young
warlock, that your sister's words had a sting of their own, and did
stab me most unexpectedly."
"Did that warrant your insults and threats of revenge?"
Geoffrey countered, grim-faced.
"I spoke in anger, hurt, and shame," Alain replied. "I
spoke rashly and foolishly. Surely, Geoffrey, you know that I
would never dream of hurting Cordelia—and to realize that I
have done so is cause for great shame! I shall apologize as
honor dictates I must, apologize to the lady most abjectly!"
"Why, how now?" Geoffrey eyed him warily. "Will you
do what honor dictates, when your station contradicts it?"
"Honor is of more import than rank," Alain returned. "In
truth, I cannot honestly claim royal station if I have lost
honor. Nay, I shall apologize to your sister as soon as I may
come to her."
Geoffrey tried to maintain the glare, but had to let it drop,
and his sword's point with it. He eyed his old friend with
disgust. "Why, how can I stay angry with you, if you behave
so admirably? You are a most aggravating opponent, Prince
Alain!"
"And you a most astounding one," Alain returned, suppressing a
tremor of relief. "I have never been beaten before, save in
childhood duels with yourself. You humiliated me, for you
were two years my junior—and you have done so again now."
"You have deserved it," Geoffrey said grimly.
"I know that I have." Alain frowned. "Yet we have
not duelled since we were twelve, for my father forbade it."
"Aye." Geoffrey smiled. "He forbade it as soon as we
were old enough to be truly a danger to one another. One must
not imperil the heir to the throne."
"You would not have slain me!"
"Not with purpose, no. Accidents have happened with swords
ere now, though, and will happen again. 'Tis a dangerous
game."
"But how could you win so easily?" Alain protested.
"Partly by my own skill." Geoffrey's anger had largely
abated. "The other part was your overconfidence."
"None have won against me save you!"
"Of course they have not." With friendly exasperation,
Geoffrey explained, "Who among your courtiers would dare to defeat
the Heir Apparent, Alain?"
Alain stared. "You do not mean they have let me win!"
"Certainly they did! Would any man in the Court dare to
antagonize the future King, whose favor will determine each man's
fortune?"
Alain looked away, numb and confounded. "I had thought
myself the epitome of courtesy and chivalry!"
"Well, mayhap in your daily conduct." Geoffrey
relented. "Yet surely not when you are angered. Your
speech with my sister was somewhat less than charming,
Alain." The Prince looked up again, alarmed.
"Less! How rude was I, Geoffrey? I came so filled with
enthusiasm and excitement that I may, ah, have overlooked the
niceties."
"Niceties?" Geoffrey grinned. "Forsooth,
Alain! You did not send word of your coming, you did not ask
to be admitted, you virtually commanded the lady to appear and,
worse, informed her that she was your choice! A lover should
plead and sue, not command!"
"Should he indeed?" Alain stared. "I know naught of
this."
"That," Geoffrey said drily, "is somewhat apparent" Alain's gaze
wandered again. "I had never thought to court a lady!
Princes' marriages are arranged for them; I did not think to have
choice, nor to have to woo, and therefore never learned the way of
it."
"No, you surely have not." Geoffrey felt a stab of
sympathy for his friend. "A lad does not dictate nor
condescend to the lady whom he loves, Alain, and well she knows
it. She must be sure that he yearns for her so greatly that
he will cherish her always."
Alain frowned, puzzled. "How do you know so much of
it?"
Geoffrey answered with a knowing grin. "Ah, well, my
friend, I am not a Prince, nor do I have so exalted a sense of
forbearance as you seem to have."
"You do not mean that you have courted ladies!"
"Well, not ladies," Geoffrey allowed. "With them, I have
only flirted, stealing no more than a kiss or two. With
ladies of one's own station, one is apt to be constrained to become
a husband, if one seeks to dally. With commoners, though,
there is less expectation, and greater willingness."
"You have flirted with chambermaids and milkmaids, then?"
"I will own to that," Geoffrey admitted, "and to having won
their favors."
Alain ached to ask just how extensive those favors had been, but
it would have been rude. The sudden, overwhelming realization
struck him: any favors he had won from women had been almost by
accident—and intoxication. "Alas! If I am not the
chivalrous knight I had thought myself, however am I to win your
sister's love?"
"Chivalry does not always have a great deal to do with it,"
Geoffrey allowed. "Do you truly wish to win Cordelia,
though? Or is it only that you have been ordered to?"
"I have not been so ordered!" Alain cried
vehemently. "She is my choice, my heart's desire! I
have known that I loved her since I was fourteen!"
Geoffrey sat still a moment, absorbing the fact of his friend's
passion. Then he said quietly, "Well, well. You have
kept your own counsel well, have you not?"
"So have I been bred." Alain looked away. "My father
has taught me that a king must indeed do so, for his bosom will
need to hold many secrets."
"You have kept this one too well. I doubt that my sister
knows anything of it."
"But how am I to tell her?" Alain cried. "I cannot
merely step up to her and declare it!"
Now it was Geoffrey's gaze that wandered. "No-o-o-o," he
agreed. "That would be unwise. You must create the
right mood for such an announcement, if you wish her to believe
you."
"Why, how is this?" Alain stared, astounded. "Is
there no love arising by itself, from a woman? Might not she
fall in love with me ere I have even spoke a word?"
"She will, if she is your one true love," Geoffrey said.
"If she is not in love with you, no persuading of yours will ever
create that love, though your conduct and bearing may inspire
it. When all's said and done, it is what you are that will
win the lady—and if you wish to win her, 'tis a matter of
what you can become."
"I cannot be anything but myself!"
"That is true," Geoffrey agreed, "and you were best to wait for
the lady who loves what you are, rather than try to become what she
loves. But you may have sterling qualities that would inspire
her love, if only you could show them. When all's said and
done, winning a lass is a matter of how you present yourself.
That, and learning to be romantic."
"What is this `romance'?" Alain asked, frowning.
Geoffrey spread his hands, at a loss. "'Tis as much a fantasy
as a reality, my friend. The troubadours know it'tis not a
matter of lying, exactly, but of making the plain facts more
appealing, of surrounding the bare bones of life with a pleasing
form. 'Tis this that awakens desire in a
lady—candlelight, and viols playing, and a dance that whirls
her away."
"You speak of deliberate planning, of cozening," Alain
protested. "Must I persuade her that what I say is
true?" Geoffrey shrugged. "Her future, her entire life,
depends upon it, Alain. She must be sure."
"Then however am I to win her?" Alain cried in
despair. "For I have no gift in persuasion, no silvered
tongue, no ability to charm! I am only a blunt, plain-spoken
soldier who knows how to guard his words!"
"Guarding one's words is not altogether what the ladies want,"
Geoffrey advised him, "though you must choose those words
well. They wish you to be borne away by a flood of passion so
strong that tender, caring words burst out of you."
"And all my training has been to keep words in!" Alain
turned away in misery. "I shall never win her love,
then! I shall never win any woman's love!"
Now Geoffrey felt the first faint twinges of alarm—of
concern for his friend but, moreover, for his sister. He knew
Cordelia had always thought of Alain as her personal future
property, and frankly, the young Prince was the only man whom he
thought worthy of his sister—not because he was the future
King, but because he was as dependable as a rock and, beneath all
his pomposity, goodhearted and warm. Geoffrey didn't doubt
that, if they were married, Alain would treat Cordelia like the
precious thing she was. He felt a sudden need to boost his
friend's ego. "It is nothing inborn," he said, "no quality
within you. It is only that all your life, all your
experience, has been spent in the safe confines of your parents'
castle, the controlled and artificial world of their court."
"Artificial!" Alain looked up, amazed and affronted.
"'Tis quite a work of artifice, a thing made by people, not by
God," Geoffrey explained. "Hunger and ugliness are banished
and kept out; oppression and cruelty are veiled and harnessed by
custom and manners. You have never faced real danger without
others to ward you, nor dealt with the world on its own terms."
"What terms do you speak of?" Alain demanded sharply.
Geoffrey realized that there were suddenly more concerns than
Cordelia on his mind. "Terms of danger, my Prince—the
danger of cruel men who murder and steal, the dangers of famine and
disease. You have never seen how your future subjects live,
nor to what authority they must answer. You have never gone
through your kingdom solely as Alain, not as the Prince."
"Why, thou dost paint me as a stock of a man, a painted stick, a
hollow effigy!"
"Even so; you have said it."
"How dare you!" Alain cried, the anger of his defeat
finally bubbling over. "How dare you speak so to your
Prince!"
Geoffrey nodded with grim satisfaction. "Even now you do
it—even now you seek refuge behind your title. As to
how I dare, why—I have only answered the questions you
asked. Do you truly ask me how I dare to answer them
honestly?"
Alain stared at him, then spoke, seeming numb. "No.
I cannot fault you for that, can I? Indeed, I should praise
you for the truthfulness all others near me do lack."
Suddenly he turned away, once again in despair. "But how
can I ever face her again? If I am truly so shallow, so
puffed-up and pompous, how can I ever hope to win Cordelia's
heart? How, if I am so superficial and vain?"
"Become a true man," Geoffrey answered, "one of flesh and bone,
with hot blood in your veins."
"Why, how can I do that?"
"Go off on a quest of your own, friend, to discover what you
truly are—with none to ward you, and no sign of your true
rank."
"I would not know how to bear myself, nor where to go," Alain
protested.
Geoffrey threw up his hands in exasperation. "Why, then, I
shall show you! Come, and we shall go adventuring, you and
I—but come straightaway. Do not go to your home to
shift your clothes, nor to pack your gear, but come away now!"
"'Tis even as you say; my parents would never hear of it."
With sudden resolution, Alain said, "Why, then, I shall learn the
way of it—of courting, of living, of being true! Come,
old friend, let us go!"
Sir Devon watched, amazed, as the two young men rode off into
the forest side by side. Clearly, the Prince had forgotten
Sir Devon. The knight felt a moment's rage before he
remembered how preoccupied Alain had been, how sunk in gloom; then
Sir Devon's resentment melted like ice in tea, for he had been
raised on romances like any other young gentleman of Gramarye, and
knew that all can be forgiven the lover who is driven to
distraction. He allowed himself a moment for a sad smile,
then sighed and called his horse. Alain might have been
forgiven, but Sir Devon still had his duty—to report what had
happened to Their Majesties.
He rode away down the road. Scarcely had he passed beyond
the first bend when Cordelia came shooting into view on her
broomstick. From her higher vantage point, she could see a
break in the trees, where Alain and Geoffrey were riding away
together. For a moment, she stared; then a hot surge of
indignation reddened her cheeks, and she banked into a sharp turn,
heading back toward Castle Gallowglass, growing angrier and angrier
with every mile she flew.
CHAPTER 3
"How could he! How could he go gallivanting off with one
who has but lately given his sister insult!"
Cordelia was pacing the floor of the solarium, fuming, tiny
slippers tapping. Rod and Gwen sat by, watching their
daughter and biting their tongues. At least, Rod was biting
his.
"Perchance," Gwen suggested, "thy brother had already rebuked
Alain, and punished him."
Cordelia looked up, instantly dismayed. "Oh, say not
so! I know the manner of Geoffrey's rebuke." She
frowned. "Nay, he could not have, or there would not be
enough of Alain left to sit a horse!"
"Unless Alain apologized," Rod pointed out.
Cordelia stared. "Alain, apologize? That stuffed,
selfimportant popinjay, lower himself to apology?"
"I think thou dost wrong him in that, daughter," Gwen said
gently. "He is chivalrous enough to apologize, if he could be
brought to see that he had wronged you."
"Even if he had, 'twas to me he should have apologized—not
Geoffrey!"
"Why, that is so," Gwen said, puzzled. "Wherefore would he
not seek thee out?"
"Scared," Rod opined. "I would be, too, if a pretty girl
had just rejected me flat out."
Cordelia turned to him, puzzled. "Why should this be?"
"Just a quirk of the male mind. We're sensitive about
being told we don't matter."
Cordelia frowned. "But I did not."
"Sure—you just told him "no.' Right? No
explanations, no excuses—nothing but a flat "no.' "
"There was more than that." For the first time, a trace
of guilt crept into Cordelia's expression.
Rod was silent, waiting—but Cordelia was silent, too, lost
in recent memory, and mortified.
Finally, Gwen broke the silence. "Thou hast ever been
quick and sharp of tongue, daughter."
"Oh, but I so rarely mean what I say in the heat of the
moment!"
"Aye—'tis naught but the telling remark, the barbed
retort, that matters, is't not? Yet hast thou thought of the
hurt thy hasty words may do?"
"Surely he knows that rash words are not meant!"
"Alain? No," Rod said. "I don't think he knows
anything of the kind. Very serious young man, that. In
fact, I wouldn't be surprised if he thinks angry words show how a
person really feels."
"Oh, but he cannot!" Cordelia wrung her hands. "He
cannot truly think that I meant what I said!"
"Are you sure you don't?"
Cordelia stilled, considering. Then she said, "He is
somewhat pompous..."
"And insensitive," Rod agreed. "Are you sure he's right
for you? Shouldn't you be going after a man with a bit more
of a sense of fun?"
Gwen flashed him a glare.
"But he could be changed!" Cordelia cried. "I could
make him see his true nature, lessen his conceit, teach him to
think of others' feelings!"
Rod shook his head. "Never think you can change a man,
daughter. Oh, he will change, in time—but not
necessarily into what you want him to be."
"Marriage itself will change him!"
"Aye, marriage will," Gwen agreed, "but not on the instant, and
not always in the way thou wouldst wish." Rod cast her a
rather guilty glance. Fortunately, she wasn't looking.
"But I have always known I would wed Alain!"
"Thou art not pledged to him," Gwen said sternly. "Look at
the man he has become, daughter, and say if thou truly dost wish
him."
"I do! Oh, I know I do! Have I not lain awake
thinking of him? Have I not watched him year by year, and
considered him?"
"Hast thou ever asked thyself if thou dost love him?"
"We will love one another in time!"
Rod shook his head. "Don't ever bet on that."
"Are not all royal marriages so made?"
"Catharine's wasn't," Rod pointed out.
"Aye," Gwen agreed. "She married for love, and I doubt not
she doth hope that her sons will also."
"I know that I want him!" Cordelia cried. "Is that
not enough?"
And, "No," both her parents said together.
"Oh, be still!" Cordelia stormed. "You understand
nothing, you are too old! You have forgot what 'tis like to
be young!"
Her parents ground their teeth, and tried to remember what
Cordelia had just said about not meaning what she said in
anger.
"The worst of it is that I must now follow them." Cordelia
started pacing again.
"Follow them?" Rod stared. "In the name of Heaven,
why?"
"It might not be the course of wisdom, daughter," Gwen
hinted.
"Wisdom is for crones, old men, and Gregory! I must follow
to see that no harm befalls my Prince!"
"Surely he is safe with thy brother," Gwen objected.
"Naught could touch him there."
"Naught but Geoffrey's soldierly nonsense! He will fill
Alain with swagger and bluster, I doubt not—tell him that no
man's a man unless he can drink a gallon of wine and still bed a
wench!"
"Cordelia!" Gwen gasped.
"He will, Mother—you know he will!"
"Maybe not quite in those terms," Rod hedged.
"Terms! What matter the terms?" Cordelia stamped her
foot. "Nay, 'tis what he may do that worries me! By
your leave, my parents, I must fly!" She turned and strode
out of the solar without waiting for an answer.
It was very still behind her, for a few minutes.
Then Rod released a long breath and said, "Well! What do
you think she's really planning to protect him from, dear?"
"Wenches who are pretty and willing," Gwen retorted. "What
else?"
"I think she'll find that her usual array of witch powers
doesn't do her much good there. Think she can learn new
techniques?"
"How to enchant a lad? I have no doubt that she can, if
she wishes to."
"Yes, but knowing our daughter, she's too honest to want to, if
she isn't in love herself."
"Dost thou truly fault that?"
"Not in the slightest," Rod sighed. "But I can't help
wondering if she's going to be enchanting for Alain. What do
you think of the chances?"
"I think that she may make the greatest mistake of her life,"
Gwen answered, "or the wisest choice."
"Let's hope for wisdom, in spite of what she thinks of
it." Rod shook his head. "I'm only glad that in my
case, wisdom and love happened together." He squeezed her
hand and smiled into her eyes.
Gwen smiled back, reflecting that it had taken her a great deal
of effort to make him understand that.
"He is gone! What! Off into the forest?
Alone?"
Tuan forced down a surge of irritation. He understood that
to his wife, "alone" meant with fewer than twenty bodyguards.
"Be of good cheer, my sweet. He could not be more thoroughly
warded if he had an army with him."
"Oh, thou dost place far too much faith in this boisterous boy
of Gwendylon's! How could they stand against a whole troop of
bandits, they two alone? And they are quite like to meet
such, there in the greenwood!"
She had been carrying on like this since Sir Devon had reported
what had happened.
"To dare to strike at the Heir!" Catharine ranted.
"'Tis treason, 'tis a crime most foul, 'tis..."
"'Twas a disagreement between two youths," Tuan interrupted,
"and our own lad was not blameless, if thou wilt consider."
"Well ... aye, he may have spoken rashly and in
haste! But the Crown Prince may not be assaulted!"
Privately, Tuan thought it had probably done his son a world of
good, and was rather proud that he had stood up for so long against
Geoffrey Gallowglass—for King Tuan was a knight born, bred,
and trained, and knew well the warrior—worth of the middle
Gallowglass boy. "Blows or not, they are friends
again..."
"Through our son apologizing! A Prince, to
apologize! 'Tis unheard of, 'tis humiliation, 'tis..."
"Most chivalrous," Tuan finished for her. "Howsoe'er it
may or may not have become him as a prince, it is most fitting for
him as a knight, and I am proud of him for it."
"Oh, thou wouldst be, thou! Men! Hast thou no care
but thy game of honor?"
Tuan stiffened. "That honor is the protection of many a
lady, and giveth her the respect that is due her. If our son
hath transgressed in this, at least he hath had the grace to make
amends..."
"Or shall, if he doth live! Husband, art thou a
fool? Canst thou not see his danger?"
"Danger, when he is a swordsman most excellent himself, and is
accompanied by the best in the land?" Tuan smiled. "Be
of good cheer, my sweet. He shall come forth from this wood
hale and sound, and more sure of himself than ever he hath
been."
"Oh, to be sure! That is what our son Alain most truly
doth need—an even greater opinion of himself!"
"In truth, he doth," said Tuan quietly, "for though he may
believe himself to be good, he cannot know. He is
untried, and therefore unsure of his own worth."
"Men!" Catharine threw up her hands in disgust. "As
though naught but thy ability with the sword proves thy worth!"
Tuan reflected that she had been glad enough of his ability with
weapons, when she had stood at war with her noblemen. "There
is also the matter of his being an object of desire in the eyes of
the lady he loves—and he hath but now found that in that
regard, he is naught."
Catharine stopped abruptly, frowning down at her knotted
hands. She was silent a moment, then said, "Doth he love her,
then?"
"Be sure that he doth," Tuan said softly. "Hast thou seen
his eyes when he hath watched her at a banquet or a ball, and
thought she did not see?"
"I have," Catharine said, her voice low, "and have watched
Cordelia's face, too, as she watched him when he was engaged in
talk—or in dance, with another damsel."
"Is she too in love?"
"I cannot tell," Catharine said slowly. "She is jealous,
aye, though whether it is for love, or for others' interest in
something that she doth regard as belonging to her, I cannot
tell."
"If 'twere only a matter of property, would she have cast him
off but now?"
Catharine shrugged. "If he came upon her unannounced, when
she was in such disarray? Aye, any woman would have turned
him away."
"I know so little of women," Tuan sighed, "but to me, that hath
more of the sound of love than of covetousness." Catharine
shrugged, irritated. "I fear, husband, that our son is
lacking in gallantry."
"He is," Tuan admitted, "as he is lacking in knowledge of his
people."
That stung Catharine in one of her most tender spotsfor she was,
in spite of her willfulness and temper, a diligent ruler who tried
her best to rule for her people's good. "Thou dost speak
truth. He hath never been among the folk." Then
hysteria surged again. "But how can I risk him?"
"You must," Tuan said, gently but inexorably. "He cannot
be a good man if he hath not tested his true mettleand he cannot
become a good King if he knoweth naught of those whom he would
rule."
"But the price!" Catharine cried, anguished.
"The price must be paid." Tuan still strove to be
gentle. "He must come to know at least a little about his
people, and what their lives are truly like. He must rule
more folk than the noblemen he hath grown to know, after all, nor
must he govern only for their benefit."
"I know that thou hadst some months among the poor," Catharine
said, low—she still felt guilty for having banished her
lover, even though he had forgiven her instantly. He had
smuggled himself back in from exile, and lived in hiding among the
commoners of the capital town. Then he had proved himself in
war, for her sake.
Tuan nodded. "'Tis for this that I have ever had as much
sympathy for the poor as thy tender woman's heart hath given
thee. But our son will not, if he goeth not among them whilst
he can."
"It is true," Catharine admitted, "and I have been glad of the
caution and respect for the common folk that thou hast brought to
accompany mine ardent wish to better their lot." She looked
up at Tuan. "Dost thou truly believe he must undertake this
quest, to become a good monarch?"
"And a good lover," Tuan amended. "Aye, it is most
necessary indeed."
"Why then, let it be!" Catharine threw up her hands in
surrender. "But if he must go, husband, thou must needs
assure he will not go unguarded—or, at the least, no more so
than is necessary."
"I shall have a squadron of knights ever at hand, in case of
need," Tuan promised.
"But how shalt thou know if there is such need!"
"That," said Tuan, "I shall leave to Brom O'Berin."
Brom O'Berin was the Lord Privy Councillor, but in secret, he
was also the King of the Elves. To his human friends, he was
a dwarf—but to his elfin subjects, he was a giant. He
managed to straddle both worlds without being torn apart—but
his love for a diminutive mortal woman had nearly rent his soul,
when she died. What had kept him going was the child she had
left behind, whom he had seen raised in secret, not knowing he was
her father, for he feared she would be ashamed of him. He
swelled with pride when he saw her with her husband and her
children, for she was Gwendylon, now Gallowglass, and her halfelven
blood made her the most powerful witch of her generation.
A few years later, his caring for his natural daughter was
supplemented by his love for his foster daughter—for he was
the King's jester, and took the little princess under his
wing. She had grown up to become Catharine the Queen.
So Brom had a double interest in the current quest—his
grandson, and the son of the woman that he loved almost as much as
his daughter.
He made sure they would be very safe.
"Still, my lord," said Puck, "the Prince should concern thee as
much as the warlock."
"Should he truly, Robin?" Brom turned a dark gaze upon his
right-hand elf. "Geoffrey is my grandson, after all—and
more to the point, Cordelia is my granddaughter."
Puck's brow puckered in puzzlement. "Aye, my lord, she
is—yet wherefore is that more to the point? She is not
at risk on this quest."
"Nay, but her happiness is. I find myself wary in regard
to Alain—moreover, in his fitness as a suitor."
"He has ever been summat of a spoiled brat," Puck admitted.
Brom nodded. "He spoke with far greater anger to the lady
than a gentleman ought."
"Well, true—but she had refused his suit, and quite
abruptly, with no graciousness to cushion the blow. Still, I
will own that even a squire should have shown more selfrestraint,
let alone a prince."
"Is it so easy, then, to believe that Alain is unworthy of
her?" Brom demanded.
Well, now, Puck wasn't related—and more importantly, he
had been baby-sitter for the Gallowglass brood when they were
children. He knew their inner selves quite well. "I
love the lass dearly, as do any who know her—yet I must own
that she, too, has her faults."
"Oh, aye, a temper ever too ready! Yet should she not
thereby wed a man with great inborn patience?" Brom shook his
head. "I had thought Alain to be such."
"Why, so he is, like his father before him," Puck answered,
"under most circumstances. Yet we speak now, my lord, of a
wound to the heart—and, though 'tis not easily seen through
the maze of Alain's vanity, he is in love with her."
That brought Brom to a halt. "Aye, he is, and hath been
since that he was a child. It is well thou dost bring it to
mind, Puck, for I am like to forget it, he hath learned to hide it
so well."
"What else might he do?" Puck sighed. "The lady hath
ever been bright and cheery with him, but hath never shown a single
sign of being a-love with him. Thinking him to be her
property, aye, but in love?"
"Mayhap I should not be unhappy to see them parted," Brom
mused. "Indeed, even a prince of mortals may not be worthy of
a lass who is herself a princess of Faerie, though she knoweth it
not."
And of course, as they both knew, the folk of Faerie were worth
far more than mere mortals.
"Worthy or not, were he to die, her heart would break," Puck
pointed out.
"Aye—but would it not also break if she kept a pet dog
that were slain? For she hath a most generous heart."
Brom's visage was dark.
Puck knew the kind of storms that darkness could presage, and
quailed within—but he spoke up bravely. "There is no
question, then, my lord—they must be warded, protected."
"Even so," Brom said heavily. "'Tis my duty to the
Queen..."
"If a King of Faerie could be said to have duty to any other
monarch," Puck muttered.
"I have sworn allegiance to her, Puck, and I love her, though
not so intensely as mine own daughter. Nay, we must protect
her son—and my grandson. Go thou to watch over them,
and summon a legion of elves if need be."
"I go." Puck bounced up—then paused. "Yet how
if need not be?"
"Then I will rejoice to hear it. Send word of their
journey daily, Robin—most particularly as regards the bearing
and conduct of the Prince."
Puck eyed his sovereign with foreboding. "And if his
comportment doth not meet thine expectation?"
"Then," said Brom grimly, "I shall find some way to bring his
suit to disaster."
A devilish grin lit Puck's face.
"Aye, thou hast had a dozen manners of mischiefbringing spring
into thy mind on the instant, hast thou not?" Brom said, with
dry amusement.
"No, my lord," Puck said truthfully. He had only had six
schemes for sabotaging Alain's courtship burst fullblown into his
mind.
"Hold them in abeyance until I bid thee," Brom commanded, "and
ponder on ways to aid his suit, should I decide he is fitting."
Puck made a face; helping lovers was far less to his taste than
sabotaging them.
"Away, now, to ward!" Brom commanded.
Puck darted away down the tunnel, and was gone. Brom
turned back to the long stone staircase that would take him up to
the secret door into the royal castle. He still had to
command the seneschal to send out a troop of knights to follow an
hour's ride behind the prince. As he climbed, he considered
Puck's reliability, especially considering the elf's inability to
refuse a chance to play a practical joke, should the occasion
offer. No, everything considered, Brom decided that he should
occasionally go himself, to check up on Alain's welfare and
progress.
Tuan had similar concerns, though he wasn't about to voice them
to Brom, and certainly not to Catharine—she would have denied
his comments hotly, taking them as an attack upon her son and, more
pertinently, on her ideas about rearing him. But Tuan was the
offspring of a country lord, and had been hardened by combat in the
field. He had been worried for some time that his son was
becoming a court fop, removed from the realities of life, concerned
more with the cut of his hose than the sufferings of the poor or
the political machinations of the aristocrats. Everything
considered, the chances of any real harm befalling Alain seemed
quite small compared to the benefits he might gain from the
excursion—not the least of which was the companionship of
Geoffrey Gallowglass, who had grown up to be everything Tuan had
hoped his sons would be. Admittedly, Geoffrey was several
things Tuan would not want Alain to be, too—he had heard
tales of the boy's roistering and wenching—but he trusted to
Alain's good breeding and inborn sense of rectitude to help him
resist those traits.
Above all else was the invaluable knowledge that Alain was
travelling with a swordsman who could beat him handily, and who had
no more respect for his station than if he had been the lowest
beggar on the road. Indeed, if that beggar had been able to
put up a good fight with his quarterstaff, it was quite possible
that Geoffrey would have had more respect for him than for the
Prince. Geoffrey respected the man and his inner qualities,
not the station. Tuan wasn't entirely sure that was a good
attitude, but in the present circumstances it was ideal.
No, all in all, the King had high hopes for the trip—it
might be the making of Alain, both as a man and as a human
being.
Still, there was danger.
He couldn't come right out and say any of this to Rod
Gallowglass, of course, but he could propose a friendly hunting
trip.
"Let us leave the ladies to their own devices for a while," he
said as the two of them walked in the courtyard of Rod's
castle. "It is too long since we rode the greenwood together,
to remember the true troubles of the world."
Rod couldn't remember their ever having gone hunting together,
but he knew a cue when he heard one. "After all, what could
be more natural than that the King and his Lord High Warlock should
go hunting together?"
"My thought exactly!" Tuan grinned. "And on the way,
Rod Gallowglass, we might discuss our mutual concernsperhaps even
our hopes."
"And just happen to be going in the same general direction as
our sons." Rod nodded. "Of course, it would be beneath
our dignity to travel with fewer than a dozen knights as an honor
guard."
"Quite so," Tuan agreed. "Certes, 'tis true that each of
us hath oft gone abroad among the common folk alone, and
disguised—but this would be more in the nature of a meeting
of state."
"Of course. Any time we get together officially, it's
always a meeting of state—and the fate of our children just
happens to fall under that heading, too."
"It does. Thou art not opposed to the match, then?"
"Cordelia and Alain? Not at all—though I would have
appreciated it if Alain had followed the social formula of asking
my permission before he proposed. Might have staved off the
current disaster."
"Aye." Tuan nodded heavily. "I have told him
aforetime that being royal doth not allow him to trample on custom
. .."
"But his mother has told him that princes are above tradition,
eh? Well, I think he'll begin to see that customs grow up for
reasons." Rod frowned. "But there's another side to it,
too, my liege."
"Aye." Tuan's face darkened. "Are they in love?"
"Such a short little word," Rod sighed, "but it can create such
difficulties, can't it? Especially if it's not there."
Tuan shook his head, perplexed. "How can he have gone to ask
her to be his wife, if he did not know her to be in love with
him?"
"Oh, they have more or less grown up with the idea that of
course they'll get married some day," Rod sighed. "After all,
how many young folk of their age are there among the nobility of
Gramarye?"
"A hundred, perhaps," Tuan said slowly.
"Yes, and a properly inbred bunch they are! Besides, half
of them regard Alain as a hereditary enemy, simply because their
fathers rebelled against you and Catharine at one time or
another."
"Aye," said Tuan, "and the other half live so far from Runnymede
that 'tis a wonder we have seen them once in a year. Still,
my boy hath seen other lasses his age. I wonder that his
devotion to thy Cordelia hath never swerved."
"It would be normal," Rod admitted, "but Alain is an unusually
conscientious lad, and very loyal." He did not add "humorless
and dull," though he might have. "He may feel that once he
has pledged himself to Cordelia in his heart, he can't even look at
another lady."
Tuan shook his head. "If it is not love, then the Archer
will smite him soon or late."
"Better to have it sooner," Rod agreed. "I'll tell you
frankly that I'm not all that sure that the match would be best for
either of them; they may not be right for each other."
"Cordelia is certainly of acceptable rank to be a queen," Tuan
said quickly, "and more than acceptable in her own person.
Indeed, I would be honored to call her my daughter-in-law."
"And I couldn't ask for a more worthy or more responsible mate
for her." Rod tactfully didn't mention that he really didn't
want his daughter to marry a selfish prig like Alain. Of
course, if she had really been in love, he wouldn't have
argued. "However, though they may be of the right quality for
each other, they may not be right in personality. After all,
so far as I know, neither of them has ever fallen in love with the
other."
"Oh, I have seen the odd glance between them," Tuan said, "and
the lilt to her voice when she speaks, and the toss of her
head."
"Flirting, sure," Rod said, "but even that might have been due
more to a shortage of other young folk their own age than to any
real interest."
"So we must watch them in more ways than one, eh? Well, I
shall tell Catharine of my departure. I doubt not she will be
relieved to have some small time to herself."
Catharine might have been pleased if she hadn't seen through the
ruse in an instant. Fortunately, the Lady Gwendylon had come
to discuss the situation with her. They were sitting in
Catharine's solar when Tuan breezed in and dropped his little
bombshell.
"Surely thou wilt not be too aggrieved, my love? Thou
shalt not? Why, there's a wench for you! Come on and
kiss me!"
Catharine's protests were smothered, and by the time she caught
her breath, Tuan was out the door and gone. "Oh! The
idiocy of men!" she fumed. "Thinks he that I cannot see
through his ruse? Hunting, forsooth!"
"In a manner, they do," Gwen sighed, "though 'tis our sons they
hunt, not the deer."
"And the dear knows when we shall see them again! Pray
they do not let the boys know they are followed!"
"I shall—and I shall pray the same for Cordelia."
Catharine turned to her, stunned. "Surely she doth not follow
them, too!"
"She doth," Gwen returned. "She hath little trust in her
brother."
"Well, therein may I agree with her," Catharine said
judiciously, "for Geoffrey is more filled with masculine non sense
than most—if thou wilt forgive the observation,
Gwendylon."
"When did truth need forgiveness?" Gwen returned, though
she could have added, "Frequently."
"They are so ridiculous!" Catharine fumed. "They
will likely follow a day's pace behind—too distant to protect
'gainst assassins, too close for the boys to know they must trust
to themselves!"
"Aye, 'tis most ridiculous," Gwen agreed, "but then, so are
Geoffrey and Alain. Still, I doubt not that Brom's forces
will be near. The young men will be protected, never
fear." She knew, far better than Catharine, exactly how
ubiquitous and effective Brom's troops were—his personal
forces, at least. She had been raised by the elves, and they
had no secrets from her, except the name of her father.
"Well—I warrant the men can do the boys no harm,"
Catharine grudged.
"We must let this issue pass, as we do so many that are really
of no consequence," Gwen agreed.
"Still..." Catharine turned to her with a glint in her
eye.
Gwen braced herself. "Aye, Majesty?"
"Why should not the followers be followed?" Catharine
said, with a wicked smile.
Slowly, Gwen's own smile matched the Queen's. "Aye,
Majesty. Be assured, I shall look in now and then on mine
husband—and on thine, too."
So Alain and Geoffrey went a-wandering wild and free, two
knights errant in search of adventure, on what must surely have
been the best-supervised quest of all time. In fact, it was a
virtual parade, with Puck shadowing his lord's grandson (not to
mention his granddaughter's suitor), a dozen royal knights
following a few hours behind the Heir Apparent, the two fathers
trailing their sons with a score of knights, and the Lady Gwendylon
keeping an eye on the two husbands.
But in front of them all, of course, went Cordelia.
CHAPTER 4
They rode in under the trees, Alain saying, "But where shall
we..."
"Hist!" Geoffrey turned to him with a finger across his
lips, then beckoned. He turned his horse off the trail
—and pushed through the underbrush.
Alain stared, taken by surprise. Then he pushed on after
Geoffrey, aching to ask what they were doing, but keeping his lips
pressed tight.
The underbrush thinned out, leaving room for the horses to walk,
though Alain had to duck under boughs. Fortunately, he could
watch Geoffrey in front of him, and be ready for the next
low-hanging limb. They had to skirt a few trees that had
branches down to the ground and step carefully over fallen logs,
but they kept on going.
Finally, Geoffrey's horse half-slid, half-walked down to a
stream. He stepped in. Alain followed, dying to ask
what they were doing—or rather, why; the "what" seemed
obvious.
They walked upstream for a quarter of an hour or more; then
Geoffrey turned his horse to climb back out onto the same bank from
which they had come, though a good way farther into the
forest. He reined in and waited for Alain to come up with
him.
"Wherefore have we perambulated so?" Alain asked.
"To lose pursuit," Geoffrey told him. "I doubt not that
knight of your bodyguard may waken to find us gone, but will follow
our trail into the wood. We do not wish him to be able to
trace us far."
Alain turned thoughtful. "Aye, even so. Sir Devon
would take it as his charge to find me, whether I wished it or
no."
"And he will be most reluctant to return to your parents with
word that he has lost us," Geoffrey agreed. "Nay, he will
seek to follow—and when he cannot find our trail, he will
take word to the King and Queen."
Alain's mouth tightened. "No doubt he will, and they will
send a whole troop of knights to dog our footsteps."
"Therefore shall we leave them no footprints." Geoffrey
grinned. "Mayhap we shall muddy our trail even further, then
double back to watch—them casting about to find us.
Would that not be pleasant?"
Alain's first instinct was to protest against taking pleasure in
troubling good men who were only trying to do their duty—but
Geoffrey's smile was infectious, and he found himself
grinning. "It would be amusing to watch."
However, Geoffrey could read his mind—only figuratively,
this time, though he could easily have done it literally. "Be
easy in your heart—they will not be greatly upset.
Still, if we are to be accompanied by a small army, there is scant
purpose in wandering."
"True enough," Alain admitted. "Nay, let us lose ourselves
thoroughly."
They did.
An hour later, Geoffrey reined in and pronounced them properly
hidden. "Now, Alain, we must set to work disguising
ourselves."
"Wherefore?" The Prince frowned.
"Why, because you wish to go knight-erranting, do you not?
To seek out wicked folk to punish, and good folk to aid, and
damsels in distress to rescue?"
"Indeed I do! I must prove myself worthy of your
sister!"
"Well, what wicked knight would dare to win against you, if he
recognized you as the Crown Prince Alain?" Alain's brow
creased as he thought it over, then nodded. "Aye, there is
sense in that. How shall we disguise us, then?"
"Well, to begin, you might take off your coronet and hide it in
your saddlebag."
"Oh, aye!" Alain sheepishly tucked away his low
crown. "Now, as to your garments," Geoffrey said. "They
must be leather and broadcloth, not silk and velvet. You must
be dressed for long journeying, not for court—a good woolen
cloak against the chill of night, and stout high boots."
Alain glanced down at his low but very fashionable boots and
nodded. "Where shall we find such?"
"In a village, if it be large enough. Let us fare forth to
the nearest town."
They rode on through the forest, and as they did, Geoffrey tried
to explain the nature of courtship. "You must begin by
flirting," he counselled, "and do not yet be serious."
"But," said Alain, "if I compliment a lady and seek to kiss
her..." He blushed. ". . . what shall
I do if she says yes?"
"If the offer's made, you may treat it only as one more
flirtation, and respond with some gallantry, such as `Ah, would
that I could! But if such beauty as yours is like to blind
me, I shudder to think what more would do!' Then touch her and draw
back your hand sharply, as though from a hot griddle, crying `Ah,
fair lady! Only a touch, and my blood boils to burn me!"'
Alain goggled. "Where did you learn that bit of
extravagance?"
"Why, it came to me even now, as we spoke."
"Alack-a-day!" Alain sighed. "I have no such gift of
silver to my tongue!"
"You will be amazed how quickly it comes, Alain, most thoroughly
amazed—if you begin to play the game, and enjoy it."
Alain reddened. "I could not!"
"Of course you could, and shall. But remember—'tis
only a game, but fully a game. Enjoy it, as you would enjoy
tossing a ball—for the words are like the ball, and you've
but to toss such compliments back and forth."
"Tell me a few more, I beg you!" Alain implored.
"For I would not go unarmed into my first fray!"
Geoffrey shook his head. "You must not think of it as a
fray, mind you, but a game. If a lass eyes you, so..."
He made a moue and batted his eyelashes.
Alain burst out in laughter that mingled shock and surprise.
"Aye, that is the spirit!" Geoffrey grinned. "If she
looks at you like that, then you must look at her like this!"
His eyes widened a little, seeming to burn as his mouth curved
slightly. "Then she will respond, thus... " He made
sheep's eyes at Alain. "And you must sigh and reach out to
touch her hand, ever so gently." He pantomimed a delicate
touch.
Alain laughed heartily. Then, gasping, he said, "I never
could! I never could do so in seriousness!"
"Oh, do not! A straight face is like the side of a cold
fish, and seriousness might be mistaken for ardor! No, you
must let your amusement show, but like this . .." He
gave a low and throaty laugh.
Alain tried to imitate him, but it came out as a rusty
chuckle. Nonetheless, Geoffrey nodded encouragement.
"Well begun! Now, you must speak of her eyes and her cheeks,
saying the former are like stars and the latter like roses .
.."
"Even I have heard those a thousand times!"
"So has she, friend, and will protest such, but in truth, she
never grows tired of hearing them. Still, if there is more
novelty in your saying, she will like it all the better.
Mayhap you should take her hand upon your own, and tickle the palm
whilst you nip the fingers with your lips... "
"Surely I could not!" But Alain's eyes were glowing now,
the color was rising in his cheeks, and his seriousness seemed
banished for the moment.
Encouraged, Geoffrey went on. ". . . and
you shall tell her that her skin is smoother than the current of a
placid stream and as cool, though it inflames your blood..."
And on he went, manufacturing extravagant compliments by the
yard. Alain clung to his every word, filing each away for
future use. They rode through the forest, Geoffrey explaining
the multitude of gallantries available for the courting of a lady,
up to and including the way in which the knight Don Quixote had
sent his vanquished enemies to his lady Dulcinea as proof of his
valor and the purity and intensity of his love.
However, he did not tell Alain that Don Quixote had been mired
in delusion. All lovers are, so it did not matter. Of
course, Geoffrey was not in love when he flirted—but he hoped
ardently that Alain would be. For, although love had touched
Geoffrey only once or twice, he knew the signs, and knew also that
he saw them in Alain. In fact, he knew that he had seen them
for several years.
On the other hand, he also knew that Alain had been busily
denying them. He seemed to think that such emotion, being
swept away on such a tide, was unworthy of a man destined to be a
king. His tutors had done their job too well. Geoffrey
was determined to undo it.
Then a woman screamed, ahead of them on the trail. Men
shouted, and there was the clack of quarterstaves. Alain and
Geoffrey stiffened. Then Alain gave a gleeful shout.
"So soon!" He drew his sword.
"Be sure which side is in the right before you strike!"
Geoffrey was already spurring his horse.
"Do not slay unless we must!" Alain called back from half
a length ahead.
They crashed through the brush screen just as some outlaws
knocked the quarterstaff spinning from a carter's hands. One
of their number leaped in to seize his wrists and force them up
behind him, bending him almost double. Two others were
pulling a woman down from the seat of the cart with lascivious,
gloating laughs. She was still screaming.
There were at least a dozen bandits, and only the one carter
with his wife.
"No doubt who has set upon whom!" Alain whooped and rode
into battle with Geoffrey a step behind him. The outlaws
turned, startled, but set themselves quickly. Most had
swords—badly nicked or honed down thin, but swords
nonetheless, with bull-hide shields.
The others had bows.
Arrows flew about the two knights. They ducked and
dodged. Then they were in among the bandits, laying about
them with their swords.
Alain knocked a blade aside, then stabbed down. The
bandit, a young fellow in a jerkin with a mane of black hair and a
beard, raised his shield to block, as Alain had expected. The
Prince's sword pinned the target, holding it up as he kicked a foot
free of the saddle and lashed it lightning—quick into the
bandit's jaw. The outlaw's eyes rolled up as he fell, almost
wrenching the sword from Alain's grasp.
But quick though the Prince had been, another bandit had been
quicker. He landed on Alain's back with a howl, arms hugging
the Prince's neck, pulling him backward. Alain fought to keep
his seat even through the choking and swung back with his
blade—back and around with the flat of it. The outlaw
cried out, and abruptly the pressure was gone. Heart singing,
Alain turned—to see a sword jabbing up at his belly with a
grinning bandit behind it. He rolled aside, but the blade
sheared through his doublet, staining it with blood. Pain
stung hot along his ribs, and fueled fear—but also
anger. Alain shouted and caught the blade in a bind as the
outlaw tried to riposte, circling his own sword, twisting and
sending his enemy's blade whirling away. Other outlaws cried
out, ducking the spinning steel, as Alain turned to the next
opponent.
A staff cracked against his skull.
The world spun about him; pain wreathed his head. Alain
fought to stay in the saddle, to keep his hold on his sword.
Dimly, he heard a yell of triumph, felt hands seize his legs
...
Fortunately, they seized both legs, and the tug-of-war lasted
long enough for the world to steady about him. Then he
slapped down with his sword and pounded down with his left
fist. Both blows connected, and the outlaws fell away.
Alain turned to follow up with the point of his blade ... And
saw all the outlaws rolling about on the ground, groaning and
clutching their heads, or out cold.
Alain sat still and stared for a minute that seemed to stretch
out to ten. Then he looked up across the collection of
moaning men to Geoffrey, sitting smugly across from him,
winking. Alain grinned like an idiot.
Then he remembered his duty and his dignity, and composed his
face gravely, turning to the carter and his wife. "Are you
well, goodman, goodwife?"
"Aye, thanks to thee, Sir Knight." The middle-aged couple
huddled together, his arm about her. The woman was weeping,
but through her tears cried, "Bless thee, bless thee, good
sirs!" Then she saw the red streak along Alain's side and
gasped, "Thou'rt hurted!"
"Hurted?" Alain looked down—and stared,
shocked. He had never seen his own blood before. But he
remembered himself, and forced a smile. " 'Tis naught,
belike."
"Aye, but let us be sure!" The woman hurried over to him,
drying her tears on her apron. She pushed the slashed cloth
aside and probed carefully. "Nay, naught but the skin is
cut. Still it must be dressed, good sir!"
"I shall tend to that," Geoffrey assured her.
She looked up at him doubtfully. "Knowest thou aught of
nursing, Sir Knight?"
"As much as a knight must know," he assured her. "You may
trust him to me, goodwife."
She subsided, stepping back to her husband, but didn't look
convinced.
"Tell us thy name, that we may boast of thy deed and spread thy
fame," the man urged.
Alain opened his mouth to tell him, but felt a nudge in his
short ribs. He glanced back over his shoulder and saw
Geoffrey frowning, with a shudder that could be interpreted as
shaking his head. That was right, Alain remembered—they
were supposed to be incognito. He turned back to the
carter. "I may not tell you my name, good folk ... um
. .."
"Until his quest is done." Geoffrey stepped smoothly into
the breach.
"Even so," Alain said with relief. But how then were they
to gain glory?
"Say that 'twas the Knight of the Lady Cordelia who gave you
rescue." Then Geoffrey remembered that his sister had not
given Alain permission to claim her as his sponsor, and that their
last meeting had certainly indicated anything but. "Or one
who would be hers, at the least."
That made the woman look up to stare in wonder; then she began
to smile, softly.
Women and romance, Geoffrey thought with exasperation,
but reflected that his more clumsy friend was scarcely any better
off. He turned to the outlaws. "What shall we do with
these?"
That brought Alain to his senses. He turned; staring
down. "What indeed?"
"They must be gaoled," Geoffrey prompted.
"But we are on quest! Must we ride guard upon them, to the
nearest sheriff?"
"We cannot leave them to wander the countryside and prey upon
travellers again, my friend."
"No, we cannot," Alain sighed. "Ho!
Blackbeard!" He leaned down to prod the biggest outlaw with
his sword. The man moaned, but forced himself to sit up, one
hand pressed to his head. " 'Twas a right shrewd blow, Sir
Knight."
"Be glad he did not use the sword's edge," Geoffrey
snapped. "What is your name?"
"Forrest, sir."
"I require your name, not your haunts! Speak truly!"
"Why, so I do, sir. 'Forrest' is the name my mother gave,
and my father blessed." The bandit grinned, showing a wide,
even expanse of white teeth. "Belike 'twas the name that gave
me the thought of the life in the greenwood."
Alain surveyed the man, something about the bandit catching his
interest. Forrest was tall, six feet or more, and
broad-shouldered. His face was open and regular-featured,
with thick black hair and a black jawline beard. His eyes
were large, well spaced, and deep blue, his nose straight and well
formed. He wore hose and cross-gartered sandals, instead of
the usual peasant's leggins and buskins, and in place of a tunic
wore only a sleeveless jerkin that showed a broad expanse of chest
and the bulging muscles of arms and shoulders. Alain found
himself wondering if it was by luck that he had defeated this
man.
"You are a gentleman gone wrong," Geoffrey stated. "What
is your family's name?"
"None of any consequence, for I doubt not they have disowned
me."
"Mayhap they have not. What name?" Geoffrey added
iron to the question.
"Elmsford," the bandit sighed. "How came you to this
pass?"
Forrest shrugged. "I am a youngest son of a youngest son,
who had need to seek his living however he might."
"You could have found a way more honorable!"
"I did; I pledged my sword to a lord. He took us all to
fight his neighbor, and we lost."
Geoffrey frowned. "Here is no shame."
"So I thought—but the neighbor sought to smite down all
who had opposed him. I fled to the greenwood for, my life,
and lived as best I could."
"Wherefore you did not throw yourself upon the King's
mercy?"
The bandit grinned, teeth startlingly white in the expanse of
beard. "The King is at Runnymede, sir, and though 'tis near
to us here, 'tis far from the estates of my former lord. I
have been many months seeking this greenwood, but have now so many
crimes on my conscience that I dare go no farther."
"Certainly the King's shire-reeve was near enough!"
"Aye, and under the hand of the lord who sought my life."
"You shall go to the King now, and woe betide him who would stop
you! Do you speak for all of this band?" The bandit
looked around, but nobody seemed to want to dispute it. "Aye,
Sir Knight."
"Then go to the sheriff at..."
"Nay." Alain stopped him with a touch. "Go to Castle
Gallowglass... "
Forrest looked up sharply, and Geoffrey whirled about to stare
at Alain. The bandits scrambled to their feet with groans of
fear. "The witch-folk!"
Geoffrey turned to scowl at them. "Aye, the Lord Warlock
and his family. Mind your manners about them, or you'll have
no heads to mind with!" He turned back to Alain with a look
that clearly said his friend was mad.
" 'Tis even as your Don Quixote did," Alain reminded him.
Then, to Forrest, "Go to the Lady Cordelia, and surrender yourself
to her there. If she bids you go to the King's prison, then
you must go—for trust me, you do not wish to transgress
against her."
"Be sure I do not!" Forrest bobbed his head, not smiling
now.
"Be cautious and filled with respect," Alain admonished
him. "Say to her that ... that he who hopes to prove
himself worthy has sent you."
The carter's wife clapped her hands, eyes shining.
Geoffrey restrained an impulse to look up to Heaven for help.
" `He who hopes to prove himself worthy.' " Forrest nodded, lips
pursed in puzzlement. "Yet why not send your name, good
sir?"
"Because ... because I shall not use it again in public,
till she has heard my suit!" Alain smiled, pleased with his
first attempt at improvisation. Geoffrey nodded judicious
approval.
The bandit bowed, his face wooden, and Geoffrey guessed he was
hiding his reaction to the quixotic gesture. "As you bid me,
sir."
"Go straightaway, and do not stray from the path," Geoffrey told
him. Then he raised his voice. "You, who thread the
forest's roots and stitch the green leaves for your garments!
Come forth, I pray thee, by the pact of kindred blood!"
The outlaws stared at him as though he had gone mad, but the
wife drew back against her husband with a low moan. For a few
seconds, the whole forest seemed to be waiting, still and
silent.
Then leaves rustled, and a foot-high mannikin walked out along a
branch. "Who art thou, who dost seek to summon the Wee
Folk?"
Now it was the outlaws who moaned and shrank away, while the
wife and husband watched, spellbound.
"I shall not use my name openly again until my companion uses
his," Geoffrey told the elf, "yet I ask the favor by the bond
'twixt he who rides the iron horse, and the king who goes about
among his peers disguised."
The outlaws glanced at one another and muttered, but none knew
what he was talking about.
The elf, though, must have recognized the references to Rod
Gallowglass and Brom O'Berin, for he said, "That will
suffice. What would you have us do?"
"Accompany these men to Castle Gallowglass," Geoffrey said,
"with a whole troop of your kind—and if they stray from the
path, I prithee discourage them."
The elf's eyes glittered. "Aye, gladly, for never has a
one of them left a bowl for a brownie! How strongly would you
have us `discourage' them?"
"Well, I would not have you slay or maim them," Geoffrey
conceded. "In all other respects, whatever mischief allows,
why, do."
"Here is no work, but play! Aye, surely, young warlock,
that we shall do!"
Forrest's head lifted; he glanced sharply at Geoffrey.
"Yet do not allow any others to detain them," Geoffrey said.
"I wish them to arrive at Castle Gallowglass, not to be taken on
the way."
"We know the lord whose lands lie between this forest and that
castle, and he knows us, to his sorrow," the elf said. "None
shall trouble them, save us."
"I thank you." Geoffrey inclined his head.
"It will be our pleasure." The elf bowed, stepped back
among the leaves, and was gone.
Geoffrey turned back to the outlaws. "Get you gone,
then—and seek to despoil none, nor to flee an inch from the
path. I doubt not you have some coins about you; what food
you need, see that you pay for. Be off!"
Forrest bowed again, barked a command to his men, and set off
down the road. They straggled after him reluctantly. A
whistling sounded from one side of the road, a hooting from the
other.
The bandits jumped, and started moving considerably faster.
"Well thought, Geoffrey," Alain said. "I thank you."
Geoffrey shrugged. "The gesture was perhaps extravagant, but
will no doubt prove effective."
"I doubt it not." Alain turned back to the carter and his
wife. "Go your way, now, without fear of these
brigands. They shall not trouble you more."
"Aye!" The carter ducked his head, touching his
forelock. "I thank you, Sir Knights!"
"And I you, for the chance of glory." Alain inclined his
head, and Geoffrey was tempted to tell him chivalry could be taken
too far. "Farewell, now, and travel safely."
"And you, good sirs." The carter turned to help his wife
climb up onto the seat, followed her, sat down and picked up the
reins, then clucked to his mule, and the cart ambled off down the
forest road. The couple turned back to wave before the leaves
swallowed them up.
" 'Twas well done, Alain, and a good beginning!" Geoffrey
clapped him on the shoulder. "Come, let us ride."
"Aye!" Alain cried with zest. "Adventure waits!"
The road curved, and an elderly knight wearing a hooded robe
stepped out to bar the outlaws' way. At his back stood a
dozen knights.
The outlaws halted. "We have done as you bade, Sir Maris,"
said Forrest.
"'Tis well for thee," the old knight said grimly. "You are
free of the King's dungeon now, and thy poaching and thievery are
pardoned. See to it you do not fall into such error
again."
All the outlaws muttered denials and avowals of future honesty,
and Forrest said, "We will not, I assure you."
"Cease this talk of `you' and 'your'!" Sir Maris
snapped. "Canst not say 'thee' and 'thou' like honest
men?" Forrest composed his face gravely. "Pardon my
offense, King's Seneschal."
Sir Maris eyed him narrowly, not missing the implication that if
Sir Maris weren't the King's Seneschal, Forrest would thumb his
nose at the old knight's demands. But Sir Maris was the royal
seneschal, and had had long experience of arrogant young men,
Prince Alain and Lord Geoffrey among them. "What did the
young knights bid thee do?" he demanded.
"To surrender ourselves to the Lady Cordelia, at Castle
Gallowglass," Forrest responded.
Sir Maris heaved a sigh of exasperation. "The folly of
youth! Well-a-day, then, thou must needs go! But think
not to take a single step off the road, or my men shall fall upon
thee like hawks upon sparrows."
Forrest bowed, poker-faced. "Even as thou dost say, Sir
Maris." He straightened up, called to his band, and led them
on their way. Why should he tell Sir Maris that they were
flanked by a troop of elves? Let his knights find out for
themselves—preferably the hard way.
Ever so carefully, he opened his mind, listening to the babble
of thought that surrounded him. Yes, the elves were still
there, and rather indignant about all the Cold Iron that was going
to be keeping them company. He was rather sorry that he had
had to throw that fight with the two young knights—he was
reasonably sure that the stockier one had been Geoffrey
Gallowglass, and he would have welcomed the opportunity to try his
own "witch powers" against those of the Lord Warlock's son.
Sir Maris watched the band of ruffians out of sight. He
did not trust Forrest or his band an inch beyond his sight.
Unfortunately, they would be many inches beyond the sight of
himself or his knights; it would not do for little Cordelia to see
her suitor's trophy-offering being escorted by Royal
retainers. He sighed and turned back at the creaking of a
cart. Now for the carter and his wife.
"Here is another florin to match that which I gave thee
aforetime," he said. "Didst thou do thy part well?"
"Oh, aye!" said the wife. "The two young men
believed all that we did, by the look of them."
"By the saints," said her husband, "I believed it myself!"
Sir Maris's gaze sharpened. "Did those bandits offer thee
harm?"
"Nay," said the woman quickly. "Well, no more than was
needful. They did not truly hurt us, sir, nor would they have
meant to."
"Not with thee and thy knights so close by," the carter
grunted.
Sir Maris nodded. "So I promised—so I did. But
did they affright thee?"
"Aye, sir, even though I had known them from their
cradles." The goodwife shuddered. "They have become
rough men indeed! And all for poaching—'twas that which
sent them, every one, to the greenwood! Still, I did not
truly fear them—naught save that black-visaged scoundrel who
was not of our village, and did call himself 'Forrest.' "
"What did he?" Sir Maris snapped.
"Naught," the carter said slowly. "Naught that he
did." "Aye," said his wife. "'Twas in his
look, and in his manner of speech. Though he smiled fair,
there was something of the devil-may-care about his eyes, that did
speak of danger. Still, he did do naught."
"Well, if he did naught, then I shall do naught to him," Sir
Maris grumbled, "though I would I had some strand of excuse to hang
him by."
"Nay, no cause, truly," the carter sighed.
"And the others?" Sir Maris peered at the woman
keenly. "Didst thou think they gave thee true cause to
fear?"
"Nay." At last, she laughed a little. "I've known
them all since they were lads, and they all knew that if any among
them had truly offered me harm, I would have told their
mothers."
CHAPTER 5
"Milady!" The porter bowed a little as Cordelia strode
in. The Gallowglass servants generally didn't do more than
incline their heads, but with the mood Cordelia was in, it was best
to play it safe.
"Here, Ganir!" Cordelia tossed him her cloak. "And
thank you. Where are my parents?"
"In the solar, milady."
"Mercy." Cordelia paced up the stairs.
Rod and Gwen looked up as she came in the door. "I do not
mean to interrupt..." she began.
"Of course you do." Gwen dimpled. "And we could wish
no happier afternoon than to have you do so. Could we not,
husband?"
"Of course," Rod said. "Back so soon?"
"Oh, aye!" Cordelia threw up her hands. "What else
am I to do? That lummox of a brother of mine told Alain about
the heroes of legend, who sent their defeated enemies to their
lady-loves as proof of their worth!"
"So we are about to be hit by an invasion of defeated
enemies?" Rod fought to keep a straight face.
"A troop of bandits! Ruffians! Outlaws! And I
must be here to receive them, so I cannot follow as I should!
What other dangerous silliness will they fall into unwarded?"
She had a point, Rod decided. For a second, he wondered if
Geoffrey might have arranged it this way. Then he dismissed
the thought as unworthy—such manipulating would have been far
too subtle for his direct, brash son.
Gwen gave a slow nod of approval. "'Tis an honor not
unworthy—to see the lambs defended and the wolves caged, in
thy name."
"'Tis a plaguey nuisance! 'Tis a monstrous
inconvenience! 'Tis an imbecilic imposition!" Cordelia
paced to the fire, glowering down at it.
Rod thought the lady did protest too much—and indeed, as
he looked at her face lit by the fire, he thought he saw some glow
of pleasure, of satisfaction, albeit carefully hidden:
Gwen knew she did, and that without reading her daughter's
mind—not literally, anyway. "'Tis romantic," she
murmured.
"Aye," Cordelia admitted. Finally, she smiled.
They rode on through the forest, chatting of this and
that—but Geoffrey did most of the chatting. Alain
listened, round-eyed and constantly feeling that he should not be
hearing such things. Geoffrey was telling him all the things
he had never said at court, about revels with villagers and tavern
brawls and willing wenches at town fairs. Alain's eyes grew
larger and larger, as did the feeling that he should tell Geoffrey
to stop—but he abided, partly in fascination, partly in the
conviction that somehow, mysteriously, all this would make him a
better suitor for Cordelia.
An hour or more they passed in this study. Then the trees
thinned out, and they saw the thatched roofs of a village
ahead.
"Come!" Geoffrey cried. "There will be hot meat and
cold ale, I doubt not, and perhaps even that change of clothing you
wish!"
Alain agreed enthusiastically—it had been a long time
since breakfast—and they rode out of the forest, down the
single street of the village. A peasant who saw them looked
up in alarm, then gave a glad shout. "Knights!"
"Knights?"
"Knights!"
"War-men to aid us!"
The villagers crowded around, showering the two young men with
cries of gratitude and relief.
"Why, what is the matter?" Geoffrey called over their
clamor.
"'Tis a monster, Sir Knight! 'Tis a horrible ogre, only
this morning come upon us!"
"Only this morning, you say?" Geoffrey frowned; something
there struck him as odd.
But Alain was delighted. "Have we come to our first
adventure so quickly, then? Surely, good folk, be easy in
your hearts! We shall find the monster and slay him for
you! Shall we not, Sir Geoffrey?"
"Oh, certainly," Geoffrey seconded. He realized suddenly
that, whatever its source, this most convenient monster would
certainly give Alain a good chance to prove his courage and
skill. Geoffrey couldn't have planned it better
himself. "Yes, surely we will fight the ogre for you—if
he is evil."
"Aye, if he is evil!" Alain sobered; he might have been
about to strike a harmless being, simply because it looked
frightening. That would have been very poor behavior indeed,
for a knight-errant. "What has he done?"
Well, actually, it turned out that the ogre hadn't done
all that much, really—only knocked a haystack apart, and made
off with a sheep. Of course, he had also taken the shepherd,
a boy of about twelve, who had been hiding in the haystack with the
sheep, and that was what the townsfolk were really concerned
about.
"He will eat the lad!" one woman cried, while another
comforted the mother, who could not stop crying.
"His father has already gone out to slay the monster," an old
man said grimly. "I doubt not he will be slain, if thou dost
not speed quickly, good sirs!"
"Why, then, let us ride!" Alain cried, eyes alight with
anticipation.
"Aye! To the fray!" Geoffrey wheeled his horse about
and rode off after Alain, amazed—not so much by the Prince's
eagerness as by his total lack of fear. Was he only hiding it
well? Or didn't he really understand what he was up
against? Probably the latter, Geoffrey reflected—ogres
were nothing but pictures in books to Alain, as much fantasy as a
real fight was. The trouble was that Alain didn't know that
the battles in the books, and the monsters, weren't real. How
would he react when he came face-to-face with the genuine
article?
Pretty well, as it turned out. They followed a peasant to
the haystack in question—or what was left of it, at leastthen
tracked the ogre down. It wasn't hard—he had left
footprints in the grass an inch deep and two feet long.
"If his feet are double the length of mine," Alain said, "will
he be twice my height?"
"Likely he will," Geoffrey said, trying to sound as grim as
possible. Didn't the callow youth understand what he was
getting into?
He certainly must have understood it when they came in sight of
the ogre. Newly arrived or not, he had found a cave
already—a hole in a rocky outcrop toward the top of a hill,
and the flinty pathway led up to him in zigs and zags. He sat
by a fire where, with one of his four hands, he was turning a spit
with some sort of meat on it, while he gnawed a leg-bone with one
of the others.
Now Alain paled, reining in his horse. "Pray heaven that
is not the boy's leg he is chewing!"
"I shall." Now Geoffrey turned grim in earnest as he drew
his sword. "Ah, for a proper lance and armor! But we
shall have to manage with what we have."
The ogre heard the sound of steel whisking loose from a scabbard
and surged to his feet with a roar, brandishing the leg-bone in one
hand and catching up a huge club with another. The other two
clenched into fists and shook in the air toward the two young
men. To Geoffrey, those extra arms seemed to have life of
their own. The ogre wasn't twelve feet tall after all, but
only ten—only ten! What he lacked in height, though, he
made up in bulk. He must have been four feet wide across the
shoulders. He needed the extra shoulder room, on the other
hand—and the other hand, and the other, and the other.
Then Alain howled a battle cry and spurred his horse. He
charged up the mountainside, sword swinging high as he shouted,
"For Gramarye and the Lady Cordelia!"
The romantic fool, Geoffrey thought, alarmed, even as
he spurred his own horse—but even in his exasperation, he had
to admire Alain's bravery.
For the first time, he found himself wondering what he was going
to say to Cordelia if he had to bring back the dead body of the man
she'd been planning to marry since she was five.
The ogre roared and charged down the slope as fast as Alain was
charging up. Geoffrey cried out in alarm—there was no
possibility of a misunderstanding here; that ogre was out for
blood! The huge club lifted for a blow that would flatten the
horse like a housefly, and the leg bone shot toward Alain's
head.
But the Prince chopped the bone out of the air with a sweep of
his sword, then shouted to his charger. Undaunted and well
trained, the warhorse charged straight at the ogre.
The huge club wound up and slammed down. Alain swerved at
the last second.
The club churned up the ground. With a roar of
frustration, the ogre yanked—but the cudgel stuck.
Enraged, the monster bellowed, grabbed it with two hands, and set
itself to pull.
Alain darted in to stab the monster's bottom.
The ogre howled, snapping straight upright, one of its free
hands slapping its buttock. The other swatted at Alain as
though he were a fly.
Alain danced his horse back, but not fast enough—the huge
palm slammed into his chest, and he reeled in the saddle. His
horse leaped back beyond range. Alain struggled for
breath.
Geoffrey saw he was needed. He howled like a banshee and
came riding in, waving his sword.
The ogre looked up, startled, then roared and snatched at its
club.
The club still refused to move.
This time, the ogre grabbed it with all four hands—then,
as Geoffrey galloped in, loosed one fist to swing backhanded at
him.
Geoffrey dodged, but not far enough—the blow glanced off
his head, and he saw stars. Holding onto consciousness, he
backed his horse clear.
The ogre gave a mighty heave and pulled the club out with a
shout of triumph.
Alain caught his breath and charged in.
He swerved around to the front, being too chivalrous to attack
an opponent from behind without warning, and Geoffrey groaned at
his friend's idiocy. He set himself to gallop back to the
fight, but Alain charged in so fast that the huge club slammed down
right behind him, giving the Prince just time enough to stab up, as
high as he couldright into the ogre's midriff. It screamed, a
ghastly sound choked off as its stomach muscles gave out.
Alain darted back out, but the ogre, disabled or not, slammed a
roundhouse blow at him that cracked his shield and made him reel in
the saddle.
Strangling and gasping, the monster waddled after him, murder in
its eye, club lifting in all four hands. Geoffrey shouted and
charged.
But Alain rallied, lowered his head, extended his sword like a
lance, and charged again.
The ogre gave a strangled cry and swung, but it was so weakened
that it overbalanced and fell—right on top of Alain.
Its whole body slammed down with every ounce of its impossible size
and weight. Alain disappeared under a mountain of flesh.
"Alain!"Geoffrey cried in horror, and leaped off his horse,
sword swinging high to chop off the ogre's head ... Then a
gleaming sword-tip poked out of the monster's back, and the ogre
went limp.
Geoffrey almost went limp himself, with relief—but not
quite. A dead ogre didn't prove a live Prince, after
all. He grabbed an arm and threw all his weight against it,
rolling the ogre up on its side.
Alain scrambled clear and climbed to his feet. He looked
about, crying, "My sword!"
"There!" Geoffrey grunted, nodding toward the ogre's
chest. "Pull it out, and quickly! I do not know how
long I can hold him up!"
Alain dived for the sword, set a heel against the monster's
chest, and heaved. The blade slid free as easily as though it
had been in its scabbard, and Alain went staggering back.
Geoffrey let go with a grunt of relief.
"I did it!" Alain stared down at the huge corpse in
disbelief. "I have slain a monster!"
"That you have," Geoffrey said sourly, "and with full measure of
danger, too. Might I ask you, next time, to wait for your
reserves?"
But Alain's face was darkening, elation giving way to
remorse. "It looks so shrunken, lying there..."
"Shrunken! 'Tis ten feet long and three times the bulk of
a man—nay, more! Make no mistake, Alain—that
pigface would have slain you in an instant, if he could have!"
That lightened the Prince's mood considerably—but he
still brooded, though with puzzlement now, not guilt. "How is
it he does not bleed?"
"Well asked," Geoffrey admitted. He had been wondering
about that himself.
None of the ogre's wounds showed the slightest trace of
blood—nor of ichor, nor any other sort of bodily fluid, for
that matter. They were as clean as cuts in bread dough.
In fact, the ogre's body looked far more like that substance, than
like flesh or meat.
"Still, 'tis no wonder," Geoffrey said, searching for something
reassuring to say—and found it. "The monsters of
Gramarye are not made as you and I were, Alain."
"Not made as we were?" The Prince transferred his frown to
Geoffrey. "Why, how is that?"
"Not made by mothers and fathers," Geoffrey explained, "or if
they were, those parents, or their ancestors, sprang full-blown
from witch-moss overnight. God did not make them as He made
us, from lumps of protoplasm formed by countless eons of random
changes that were shaped by the role He planned for them. No,
they were made by the thoughts of a granny who was a protective
telepath, but did not know it, shaped as she told a bedtime story
of monsters and heroes to her babes—or by one person telling
such a tale to many others, and of the many, there were several who
were projectives but also did not know it. Their thoughts,
together, formed the monster out of witch-moss."
He had told Alain about projective telepaths years ago—and
about all the other psionic talents the espers of Gramarye had at
their disposal. Of course, his father had warned him not to,
and Geoffrey could understand why, in the case of the ignorant,
superstitious peasants who would have reacted by saying that a
witch was a witch, no matter what you called her. But Alain
was neither ignorant nor superstitious—at least, not by local
standards—and Geoffrey and his brothers and sisters had
reasoned that he needed to know what his subjects really were, if
he was to rule them well when he was grown.
So Alain understood Geoffrey's explanation, nodding, though his
brows were still knit. "Naetheless, would such witch-moss
creatures not have blood in them?" He knew that the substance
they called "witch-moss" was really a fungus that responded to the
thoughts of projectives, turning itself into whatever they were
thinking about.
"Not if the granny who told the tale did not think of
blood. Difficult to imagine, for we who loved to hear tales
of bloody deeds even in our cradles, but there are many who do
not. Nay, there's no doubt the creature was only a construct,
naught more, and one brought to life only last night, or the
villagers would have seen him ere now."
"Well, there is no glory in slaying a thing that is not real, is
there?" Alain asked, disappointed.
"Oh, it was real, Alain! Be sure, it was real—and
you would have been sure indeed, if that club had touched
you! Do you not see the hole where it plowed into the
ground? What do you think it would have done to your
head? Nay, made by grannies or by God, this was a lethal
brute, and 'twas an act of great daring to slay it!"
Alain seemed reassured, then suddenly stood bolt upright, eyes
wide. "The child! The shepherd-boy! We must find
him! Pray God it was not .. ."
He could not finish, nor did he need to. Geoffrey nodded
grimly; he had also wondered at the source of the legbone the ogre
had wielded. "Aye, let us search."
They climbed up toward the ogre's cave, Alain calling,
"Boy! Shepherd! You may come out now with safety!
We have..."
"You waste your breath." Geoffrey caught his arm,
pointing.
Alain looked, and saw the shepherd boy pelting away across the
field, already little more than a dot of dark clothing against the
amber of the wheat.
"Praise Heaven!" the Prince sighed. "He is
safe!"
"Aye. I doubt not the lad was penned in the cave, and
seized his chance to flee when the ogre charged down upon us.
He will surely bear word to the village—if he paused to look
back."
"What boy would not?" Alain smiled.
"A boy who flees for his life." Geoffrey was very glad to
see the curve of Alain's lips; he had begun to wonder if the Prince
was going into shock. "We must go tell them ourselves.
Someone must bury this mound of offal, and I have no wish to tarry
long enough to undertake the task myself."
Alain nodded; Geoffrey didn't need to explain. The Prince
knew as well as he that a royal search party was very probably
already after them, and he had no wish to cut short his
adventuring.
Geoffrey clapped Alain on the back and turned him toward his
horse. "Come, away! For what other feats of glory await
you?"
But Alain hung back, glancing' at the ogre. "Should I not
hew off its head and send it to the Lady Cordelia, as proof of my
love?"
Geoffrey tried to imagine Cordelia receiving the ugly, gruesome
trophy and shuddered. "There is no need, and I do not think
she would find it aesthetic. Be assured, she shall hear of it
soon enough!"
She didn't, as it happened. All the elves who had been
watching the encounter were too late to tell her of it before she
left Castle Gallowglass to follow the boys again. But Puck
himself brought word back to Brom O'Berin.
"'Tis well." Brom nodded, satisfied.
"The mission is accomplished, and none hurt but the ogre."
Puck strutted as he said it.
Brom eyed him askance. "Here is turpitude indeed!
Have you no remorse, no sorrow for the creature you made?"
"None at all," Puck assured him. "It had no mind, look
you, only a set of actions implanted in its excuse for a
brain. It would charge when it was charged, strike when it
was threatened, and naught more—save to die when its time was
done."
"And was very clumsy into the bargain?"
"Tremendously. It could strike no object smaller than a
horse, save by luck."
"Bad luck indeed! 'Twas with that I was concerned."
"Be easy in thine heart, O King," Puck said, grinning.
"Surely thou dost know that I would take no chance with the
Prince's life."
"Aye, unless thy sense of mischief got the better of thee!"
"Well, it did not in this case," Puck said judiciously. "A
score of elves hid with me in the bracken and all about the field
of combat, to protect the Prince and thy grandson with their magic,
should mischance befall. Yet 'twas without need; 'twas not
mischance that befell, but the ogre."
"Aye, and nearly crushed Alain in its fall!"
"'Twas not so massive as that," Puck protested. "Indeed,
for its size, 'twas quite tenuous."
"As is thy report." But approval twinkled in Brom's
eye.
The villagers cheered as soon as the two young knights came in
sight.
"I take it the shepherd boy did watch the battle," Geoffrey
said.
Then the people were on them, clustering about their stirrups,
reaching up to touch their defenders.
"All praises be upon thee, young knights!"
"Save thee, my masters!"
"A thousand blessings on they who saved the boy!"
"Blessings and praises, and what soe'er they may ask that we can
give," said one buxom, dark-haired beauty with a look in her eye
that sent a thrill through Alain, one that held his gaze riveted to
hers as hot blood coursed through him, awaking sensations that he
found both intimidating and fascinating at the same time.
Then she transferred her gaze to Geoffrey, and Alain went limp
with relief—but the sensations were still there, with a
strength that shook him.
Geoffrey had no such trouble, of course. He met the girl's
gaze and grinned slowly.
Alain turned red and cleared his throat. "Aye! You
may give the monster burial! A score of your men, with
shovels and picks!"
"We shall, we shall straightaway!" cried a man. "But
what wouldst thou have for thyselves, good sirs?"
Alain glanced at Geoffrey, saw he was still eyeing the peasant
wench, and sighed. If his father's party caught up with them,
well, they would, and that was that. "I would have a bath,"
he told the man, "and food, and strong clothes fit for
travelling. Then, though, we must be on our way."
"Must we truly?" Geoffrey said, gaze still on the wench:
"Might we not stay the night? There will be few real beds for
us in the weeks to come, Alain."
The girl's smile broadened; then she dropped her gaze
demurely.
"Why, as you will," Alain sighed—but he found himself
eyeing the peasant lass, too, and forced his gaze away. It
did no good; the sensations she had raised still shuddered through
him. He did his best to ignore the feelings and said, "Still,
my companion, let us first bathe."
The village didn't have a bathhouse, of course—such an
item would have counted as a major technological breakthrough in
the Medieval Europe after which Gramarye's society had been
modeled. Such whole-body washing as was done occurred in the
local mill pond. The villagers didn't seem to have all that
elaborate an idea of privacy, but fortunately, there was a screen
of brush around the pond that the miller hadn't gotten around to
clearing for several years. On the other hand, from the
smothered titters and giggling that rose from the scrawny leaves,
Geoffrey guessed that the brush didn't screen them all that
thoroughly. He grinned, enjoying the attention of the unseen
audience as he languorously caressed his muscles with a cake of
soap—but Alain turned magenta with embarrassment, all over,
and made sure he didn't let anything more than his torso appear
above the waterline. That did inhibit the bath, of course,
but it was an improvement over the sweat-and-grime coating with
which he had climbed into the pool.
Then, though, there was the problem of climbing out. It
didn't bother Geoffrey in the slightest—he just waded ashore,
though he did catch up the makeshift towel so quickly that his
nudity was only revealed for a second. However, that was long
enough to still the giggling chorus. It began again as a
series of hushed murmurs as he turned his back, tucking the towel
around his waist as an improvised kilt, then holding another out to
Alain.
"I thank you from the bottom of my heart, Geoffrey," the Prince
muttered as he stepped out of the pool into the cover of the
towel.
"Well, from your bottom, anyway." Geoffrey grinned.
"You look quite well in that sacking the miller provided us,
Alain."
The Prince gave him a murderous look and caught up another
towel, rubbing himself dry with furious haste. Geoffrey
grinned, taking his time about towelling, playing to his hidden
watchers. The murmuring voices were properly
appreciative.
Alain caught up his clothes and went quickly toward the cover of
the mill. Geoffrey caught up with him, and they went through
the door together.
"You are quite shameless," Alain grumbled as they dressed in the
safety of the millhouse. "How can you enjoy displaying
yourself like a joint of beef?"
"Why, I find it quite stimulating." Geoffrey was still
grinning. "My blood tickles through me when I know that
lasses do watch and admire me—tingling in every limb, at the
hint of the pleasures that may follow, if they find enough to
admire."
"Shameless, as I said," Alain growled. "Surely you are too
chivalrous to seek after such pleasures as you mention!"
"To seek after, no," Geoffrey said, "though if they are offered
freely, I am delighted to accept."
"Have you no decency, no regard for others' feelings?"
Geoffrey blinked, surprised at Alain's vehemence. Then he
said slowly, "Well, some regard, surely. I would never think
to force my attentions on a wench who did not want them, nor on a
virgin, no matter if she did wish it, nor how greatly. I seek
to give only pleasure, Alain. never hurtand if there is
reason to think the lass wants more than the sheer fun of it, I'll
not come near her, for then is there chance indeed of hurting her
heart."
"But all women believe, in their hearts, that there will be more
than a night's sport—that the man will then take care of them
forever after! They do, Geoffrey, even if they admit it not,
not even unto themselves!"
Geoffrey took his time framing the reply, choosing his words
carefully. "They want something more than the pleasure of
their senses, that is true. But marriage? Nay! No
peasant woman truly believes a lord will wed her, Alainno woman of
sound mind, at least. In this instance, what they want is a
night with a hero, that his glory may adhere to them
afterward."
"Aye, and expect him to adhere to them, too, for all their
lives!"
"Hope for it secretly, mayhap—so secretly that they admit
it not, even unto themselves. If they see him again, they
will hope for at least a nod, a few tender words, a half-hour's
intimate talk. But, `expect'? Nay. Unless she is
mad, no peasant wench would truly expect a lord to marry her."
"Still, secret or not, expectant or not, there will be mayhem
done to her heart, whether she knows it or not!"
"Or will admit it or not?" Geoffrey shrugged.
"There, I cannot say without reading her mind far below her surface
thoughts—and even I shudder at so profound an invasion of
privacy. If she knows it not, neither do L I can only judge
by her actions, by the deeds and the farewell smiles of those I
have seen, by the boasting, covert or overt, among her
friends."
"Surely a woman would not boast of being used by a man, even a
hero!"
"Well, I have never heard a woman boast of a bedding," Geoffrey
admitted, "though I have seen them cluster about a hero, and hint
most plainly to be admitted to his bedchamber."
"Mayhap." Alain scowled. "I cannot deny it.
But does not each lass hope that he will cleave unto her
forevermore, no matter how plain it is that he will not—that
to him, she is only one among many?"
"Mayhap," Geoffrey sighed. "I cannot say. There is
no accounting for the daydreams women may spin for themselves, nor
may men truly comprehend them. I only know that I count it no
shame to take what is offered freely, and think that if it is so
offered, I give no pain."
But Alain only shook his head as he buttoned his doublet,
muttering, "I cannot believe it!"
As he followed the Prince out of the mill and back toward the
village common, Geoffrey reflected that Alain's attitude paid
credit to his upbringing, but not to his understanding of the world
as it really was.
The village common was decked with streamers of cloth and
bunches of flowers around trestle tables. The village girls,
decked in bright skirts, dark bodices, and white blouses, were just
finishing putting up the decorations, chattering and exclaiming to
one another. The village youths and men raised a cheer as the
two young men came in sight.
"Hail the slayers of the monster!"
"Hail the saviors of the child!"
"Hail the courageous and mighty knights, who have saved our
village from peril!"
Alain looked about as they closed in, applauding and cheering
him. He was dazzled by all the adulation. He, who was
used to the deference and flattery of the court, had never received
so much heartfelt praise due only to his deeds, not to his
station. He turned from one to another with an incredulous,
widening smile ...
And a village wench planted a kiss on his lips, firm and
deep.
He jerked his head back, shocked, but she was turning away
herself by that time, and another was taking her place. Alain
looked up to Geoffrey for help, saw him with a girl in his arms,
mouth to mouth, and mentally shrugged. What harm could a kiss
do? And would not the girls be insulted if he refused?
Surely, he did not want to hurt their feelings! He turned
back to give the peasant lass a courteous peck on the
cheek—but she had other ideas, ones that took a bit
longer. So did the next girl, and the next.
Alain finally managed to reclaim his lips and, yes, his whole
mouth, from the last admirer, dazed and incredulous to hear the men
still cheering all about him. Were none of them
jealous? Were there no sweethearts among the girls who had
just kissed him? He realized, with a sense of amazement, that
he was rather enjoying the whole affair.
They ushered him to a table and sat him down. Before him,
a whole pig was roasting over a fire. The aroma reached him,
and he breathed it in eagerly, suddenly realizing how hungry he had
become.
And how thirsty. A girl thrust a flagon into his hand and
her mouth against his—only this time, however it may
have looked to the outside world, her tongue trickled fire slowly
over his lips.
Then she straightened up with a glad laugh, and to cover his
confusion, he took a deep draft from the tankard. It was new
ale, nutty and strong. He came up for air. Geoffrey
slapped him on the shoulder, chuckling. "Drink deeply, my
friend, you have earned it."
And Alain did, wondering whether country ale always tasted so
good, or if it was only so after a feat of valor. Indeed, all
his senses seemed to be heightened—the village lasses seemed
to be prettier, their cheeks redder, their eyes brighter and more
inviting. The aroma of the roasting meat seemed almost solid
enough to bite, and the piper's notes sounded far keener than they
ever had, stirring his toes to movement. He took another
draft of ale; then a girl was pulling him up from the bench,
laughing, and another took his other arm. They led him to a
flat, level green, and began to dance. Alain knew the
steps—he had seen them often enough, at festivals, and his
parents had seen him schooled in the more stately steps of the
court dances. He began to imitate the girls' movements,
slowly and clumsily. Then he noticed that other girls had
stepped out to dance with the young men, and he could copy the
boys' movements. He did, with increasing sureness and speed,
turning back to his partner. Her eyes glistened, her teeth
were very white against the redness of lips and tongue as she
laughed, and he found himself caught up more and more in her
movements and his own, thought suspending, sensation claiming.
Then, at some unseen signal, the girl whirled away, and another
took her place. She leaned forward to give him a quick kiss,
clapping his arm about her waist, and moved through the same steps,
but much more quickly now. He gazed down into her eyes,
feeling his own grin widening, and let himself be swept up in the
movements of the dance. Dimly, he noticed that Geoffrey was
dancing, too, but it only seemed to be of passing interest.
Then, suddenly, the dancing was done, and the girls were leading
him back to the place of honor, thrusting another tankard of ale
into his hand. He took a long, thirsty pull at it. As
he lifted his head, Geoffrey scoffed. "Pooh! That is no
way to drink village ale, Alain! You do not sip it as though
it were a rare vintage—you pour it down your throat!"
So saying, he lifted his own tankard, tilted his head up, and drank
it down—and down, and down. Finally the tankard
exploded away from his lips and thumped down onto the table,
empty.
"Aye, that is the way of it!" a village youth next to him
cried with a laugh, and lifted his own tankard to demonstrate.
"Come, confess it!" Geoffrey cried. "You cannot even
keep pace with these stalwarts!"
"Oh, can I not!" Alain retorted, and tipped up his own
tankard. The ale was good, very good—but he did begin
to wish he could breathe. Nonetheless, he was hanged if he'd
admit defeat, so he hung in there, swallowing the rich dark tide,
until suddenly he gulped air. He thumped the tankard down,
drawing a very deep and welcome breath, and was amazed to hear the
villagers all cheer. He looked up, smiling, not quite
believing it, then grinning as he saw they were delighted to see
him enjoying himself. A fresh tankard appeared next to his
hand. Across from him, Geoffrey raised his mug in salute, and
Alain felt a sudden surge of determination not to be outdone.
He clinked his tankard against Geoffrey's, then copied his motions
as he swung the vessel up. He swallowed greedily, though to
tell the truth, he was liking it less than he had at first.
When the tankard was done, he slammed it down, almost in unison
with Geoffrey. The two young men stared each other in the
eye, and Geoffrey grinned. After a moment, so did Alain.
Then the tankards were whisked away and full ones set in their
place, but Alain was saved, because a trencher of sizzling pork was
slapped down in front of him. "Eat, as a hero
deserves!" someone cried, and he did.
He ate, he drank, and the notes of the pipes filled his head,
along with the scents of the meat and the ale. Things seemed
to be blurring together a bit, but the villagers were such warm and
friendly folk that it didn't worry him. He chewed the last
sliver of pork, and a girl was pulling him from his seat, laughing,
out to the dancing. Laughing, too, he feigned reluctance,
then fell into the steps with her, mimicking the extra sinuousness
with which she moved, and if she took advantage of the dance to
thrust herself against him, why, it seemed only polite to return
the gesture.
Then Geoffrey's face was there again, laughing, raising his
tankard in salute, and Alain was raising one in return, the
nut-brown ale cascading down his throat, then the tankard gone, and
the girl back, her eyes heavy-lidded, her smile inviting, her body
constantly against his as the dance moved them, till they seemed to
churn as one. Fire threaded itself through him, tingling in
his thighs, his hips, wherever his body touched hers.
Then she was holding up another mug of ale, and he was drinking
it down, lowering it to look into her eyes, and they seemed to be
huge and seemed to draw him in, and her lips were red and moist, so
moist, but she was not holding them up to him now, but drawing him
by the arm, out and away from the dancing, away from the fire, to a
place where shadows gathered, where their bodies crushed soft
bracken beneath them, and the music of the dance was distant, so
distant, but her mouth was warm, very warm, encompassing him, and
her touch thrilled him, so it seemed only right to return that
thrill, if he could.
CHAPTER 6
The whole castle was agog, bubbling with excitement, for the
elves hadn't made any pretense of keeping a secret. A brownie
had popped up at the kitchen door to announce that their unwelcome
guests were almost upon them.
Cordelia hurried out into the courtyard and took up her position
in a patch of sunlight, doing her best to look stern and
regal. She was resplendent in a white damask gown; the
sunlight glowed in her auburn hair, carefully set off by a plain
bronze circlet.
The bandits trudged in through the gatehouse, stumbling with
weariness and coated with dust. Cordelia stared,
appalled. Had they walked all night?
Then the foremost bandit looked up, saw her, and stared.
Suddenly, the weariness fell away from him. Cordelia gazed
back, amazed. Her first view of the bandits hadn't prepared
her at all for this. He was quite the most handsome man she
had ever seen—though that may have been as much due to the
hint of wildness in his face as to the actual set of his
features.
Or it may have been some other attribute; there was a lot of him
to admire, more than six feet, and most of it muscles. His
legs were exceedingly well formed, she thought dizzily, and that
sleeveless jerkin left one in no doubt as to the bulging muscles in
his shoulders and arms, though she did have to guess at the massive
chest beneath it. His face was open, his black eyes large and
long-lashed, his nose straight though perhaps a little short, his
lips full and red through the black jawline beard which blended
into the wealth of black curls on his head. His teeth flashed
white as he smiled, and the dangerous gleam in his eye as he looked
at her struck like a crossbow bolt, arousing sensations inside her
that she had never been aware of before, and wasn't at all sure she
liked.
Of course, she wasn't at all sure that she didn't like them,
either.
She stood a little straighter and tilted her chin up, looking
down her nose at him. "What do you here, sirrah?"
"Why," said the bandit, "my men and I have come to surrender
ourselves to the Lady Cordelia Gallowglass at the behest of him who
defeated us in battle."
"Indeed," Cordelia said, with her best attempt at
frostiness. "And what is his name?"
"Ah! My lady, that would he not tell us!" the bandit
chieftain lamented. "He said only that he was a knight who
sought to be worthy of you, and would not use his name in public
until he has proven his worth."
Cordelia stared. Such a poetic flight was quite unlike
Alain—and coming from the lips of this rogue with the tilted
eyebrows and the knowing smile, it set up strange quiverings inside
her. "Indeed! You have walked all night to tell me
this, sirrah?"
"Alas! We have—for the Wee Folk would not let us
rest. Whene'er we sought to halt, or to sit for more than
five minutes, they were upon us with pinches and stings."
Cordelia tried to glare at him while she considered. "I
might pity you, if there surely had been no reason for..."
She withheld Alain's name, not quite knowing why. ".
. . for the young knight of whom you speak to beset you
so harshly. What misdeed had you done?"
"Oh, no greater than to seek to rob a poor carter of his goods,"
the bandit said, trying to look apologetic.
"And to reive his wife of her virtue," squeaked a small voice
near Cordelia.
Her eyes widened, glaring. "How durst you, sir!"
"Ah!" the bandit said, the very picture of remorse.
"I would have stopped my men ere long! We had first to subdue
her husband, though, and must needs see that she not seek to aid
him."
Cordelia's indignation boiled over. "You have deserved
every pinch and every sting that the elves have given you, sir, and
far worse, I doubt not. Mayhap I should give you some more of
them, myself!"
The bandit chief stepped back, alarmed. He had some notion
of what Cordelia might be able to do if the spirit moved her.
He braced himself, ready to defend against a telepathic attack.
Her eyes widened; she felt the stir of his mind against her
own. "You are a warlock!"
An incredulous muttering sprang up behind him. He glanced
back at his men, then shrugged and looked up at her. "I had
not sought to make it a matter of general knowledge, my
lady—but yes, I am a warlock."
"For shame, sir! A warlock, and one nobly reared, for so I
can tell by your speech alone! For you, who were born gifted
in both rank and talents, to abuse your powers thus, by preying
upon the weak when, by virtue of birth, you had ought to defend
them!" Cordelia blazed.
"I know." The bandit chieftain bowed his head. "I
had meant to spend my life in defense of they who could not defend
themselves, my lady, to use my gifts for the general good—but
circumstance has decreed otherwise."
"Circumstance? Nay, tell me!" Cordelia bit off the
words sharply. "What circumstances could these be that would
turn you from the obligations of your station?" She reddened,
suddenly incensed as she realized what the rogue was doing.
"You seek to play upon my sympathies! Be sure, sir, I am not
so easily gulled as that! But what shall I do with you?"
She narrowed her eyes. "What mischiefs might Puck himself
invent? Can I be as ingenious as he?"
"I do not doubt it!" the bandit said quickly. "But I
pray you will not! Nay, if there is a gram of woman's pity in
you, forbear! Send us to the King's dungeon, if you willset
us to a year's hard labor—but do not seek to emulate the Wee
Folk in your treatment of us, I beg of you!"
Cordelia gave him a look of contempt. (She thought she did
it rather well.)
The bandit only looked up at her with wide, pleading eyes, and a
look of intense remorse.
Cordelia made a sound of disgust. "Well, indeed, we shall
see that the punishment does fit the crime! Get you to Sir
Maris, the King's Seneschal, and tell him of your deeds. Tell
him, too, who has sent you. Then, whatsoever punishment he
shall give you, see that you bear in patience."
"Aye, my lady." The bandit chieftain bowed his head to
hide his relief. "You are generous."
"Begone," she said, "before I forget my generosity."
"Begone?" He looked up and, for a moment, his face was
drawn, exhausted. Then he recovered his poise, forced himself
to straighten, and inclined his head. "As you wish it, my
lady. Come, my men." He turned away.
"Oh, bother!" Cordelia stamped her foot, hands on her
hips. "Nay, do not play the martyr! I will not be so
cruel as to seed you out with no rest at all. Go, go sit down
against the courtyard wall! Guards!"
The Captain of the Guards stepped up beside her. "Aye, my
lady?"
"Keep watch over these men, and if they seek to move more than a
yard from the places where they sit or lie, have at them!
Steward!"
"My lady?" Everybody was on hand, of course, watching and
waiting to be called upon.
"See to it these men are given gruel and water. Let them
rest till noon, then send them out."
"In the heat of the day, my lady?" The steward looked
appropriately horrified.
"Aye, even in the heat of the day!" Cordelia declared,
with some heat herself. "'Tis the least they deserve, who
have sought to wreak havoc on the weak." She turned back to
the bandits. "Rest then, and begone." And, in a whirl
of skirts, she turned and stalked away into the castle.
Forrest watched after her, reflecting that, if this was not the
most beautiful woman he had ever seen, she was certainly not far
from it. The vivacity, the fire within her, made her quite
the most fascinating female he had ever encountered. And she
was a witch!
He had heard stories of the delights that lay in store for those
who lay in love, warlock and witch, their minds melding as their
bodies did. He wondered if such ecstasy awaited those who
found themselves in such an embrace, even if they were not in
love.
Then, with a start of dismay, he realized that for himself, at
least, the question was academic. He fell in love easily and
frequently—and he knew the signs well. He had fallen
again ... And from the look in her eyes when they first saw
each other, he thought that Cordelia might have, too.
"You make it sound as though it were a trade to which a man
might be apprenticed, Geoffrey!" Alain
complained—almost, Geoffrey thought, scandalized.
"Well, 'tis not quite so methodical as that," he said,
grinning. "'Tis more a matter of an art for which one must
have a talent."
"As you have, to be sure," Alain said wryly. "But even
given that talent, there still seems to be a great amount that is
simply knowledge."
"Knowledge for some men, instinct for others." Geoffrey
shrugged. "If you enjoy the game for its own sake, you learn
it quickly enough. If you do not, you shall never play it
well, no matter how many years of study you invest."
"It can be learned, then!"
"Me forms, at least," Geoffrey agreed, "though they are worth
little without the true spirit. If you would court a lady,
you must dine by candlelight and, if 'tis possible, with a fiddler
or three nearby, but out of sight, playing softly."
"But her duenna..."
"Ah, we are assuming that her duenna is not there."
Geoffrey raised a forefinger. "We do not speak of ladies
only, after all, but also of village wenches. Still, if you
would win the heart of a fair lady, you must need find some time to
whisk her away by herself for conversation, even if 'tis only for
the quarter of an hour. A sheltered nook in her garden will
do, or a bower—and have your fiddlers seeming to stroll by,
or mayhap a lad who shall play soft songs of love on a flute."
"This by candlelight, or the light of the moon?"
"The moon is better," Geoffrey said judiciously, "if 'tis full,
or nearly. But candles will do, and that quite well."
"But what would I say?" Alain asked.
"Why, you must praise her eyes, her hair, her lips, the roses in
her cheeks," Geoffrey said. "It would help if you had written
a poem to her beauty and committed it to memory."
"I have small gift for versing," Alain said ruefully. "Oh,
there are poets aplenty who will scribble you a whole book of
verses for a piece of gold, my friend—and if you do not trust
your memory to work in her presence, you may surely bring the paper
along to read."
"But will she not know that 'twas not I who wrote it?"
"She may suspect," Geoffrey said carelessly, "but she will not
seek to prove it—if you do not give her occasion to.
Speak of love, or if you think you have it not, speak of the
feelings that rise within you when you look upon her."
"Why, there am I in confusion." Alain frowned, gazing off
into space. "If I look at your sister as she stands today, I
do feel most strangely within—and some of those feelings, I
would not speak of to her brother." He blushed
furiously. "Nor to any other being, mayhap, save my
father."
"I rejoice to hear it," Geoffrey said softly.
"Yet most swiftly rises, over the image that she is, the face
and form of the child she was." Alain turned to him in
consternation. "For she was indeed a comely little lass,
Geoffrey, as I am sure you remember."
"I would not have called her `comely,' " Geoffrey muttered.
"Nay, of course not—you are her brother. Still, the
sauciness, the scoldings, the brightness of her laughter—all
that arises when I look upon the grown Cordelia. It
seems..." He broke off, shaking his head.
"Come now, you can say it!" Geoffrey coaxed. "Out
with it! Speak it, then—nay, speak both, speak all, for
I see you are a very welter of feelings now."
"Aye, and they go at cross-purposes." Alain scowled at the
back of his horse's head. "On the one hand, there is the
feeling that the impish girl is still within the gentle form I see
before me, and although that has its attractive side, it is also
somewhat repugnant—for she was ever as quick to turn and
scold as she was to speak in mirth."
"I would say that child is still there within her, of a
certainty," Geoffrey said slowly, "for I have heard my father say
that we all are children within, and that 'tis tragedy beyond
speaking if that child dies."
"Aye, I have heard our chaplain say that, too." Alain
gazed off at the countryside. "That we all must strive to
keep alive the child within us—for Christ said that we must
become as little children if we would enter the kingdom of
Heaven."
"Become," Geoffrey reminded, "not remain."
But Alain wasn't listening. "I am not sure how I felt
toward that child, though, Geoffrey."
"Oh, stuff and nonsense!" Geoffrey said, with a flash of
irritation. "You did trail behind her like a besotted
mooncalf when you were twelve, Alain."
"Well, aye, I mind me of that," the Prince admitted,
embarrassed. "I speak now of a younger age, though, when she
dared to speak to me as though I were a lad with an empty
head."
"Oh, aye, but she did that when you were twelve, tooand fifteen,
and seventeen, and is like as not to do it again even now!"
Geoffrey scoffed. "Be sure, she will. If that truly
does repel you, Alain, seek elsewhere for a wife."
"Well ... I would not say `repel,' " the Prince
said. "It does nettle me, though—sometimes. At
others, it is as much a matter of spice as of bitter. There
are thorns on the stem, so to speak—but the man would be a
fool who would not brave those thorns for the beauty of the
rose." Geoffrey smiled, amused. Alain did have
something of the poet's gift within him, after all. "Yet what
is the feeling that does counter such ardent praise?"
"Why, simply that she was near to being a sister!" Alain
burst out. "Or the closest that I ever had, at
least—for she was the only female child near to my own age
that I saw with any frequency. How can one be in love with a
sister? 'Tis against nature, when one has known a lass too
well, too long, and too young. Why, there may be good
fellowship, but never love—or, at least, not the sort of love
that must be between a man and a wife."
"Yes, I see," Geoffrey said, nodding, "though I am not at all
sure that you would think it against nature if we were speaking of
peasant folk who lived in a small village, where all know one
another from earliest youth. When that feeling comes upon
you, try to remember in your heart the mooncalf that you were when
you were twelve. Surely, you did not then seem to find her
too sisterly."
"Well, there is some truth in that," Alain said. "But if I
were truly in love, Geoffrey, would I not lie awake o' nights,
dreaming of her face, her form? Would I not find food to be
of small appeal? Life itself of no joy? Would I not
spend my days in moping about and sighing?"
"Aye, if you were a fool," Geoffrey said. "In truth,
whenever I see such a man, I cannot help but think that 'tis not
love he feels, but sickness. What do you feel, when you lie
awake dreaming of her face and form?"
"Why, I am near to crying out in madness, that she seems to
entice, yet mock!" Alain burst out, then broke off suddenly,
staring. "You have tricked me, Geoffrey!"
"But only for your own benefit," Geoffrey said.
Cordelia couldn't resist coming out to see her guests off.
In the end, she relented, and told the guards not to expel them at
noon, but to let them rest until two o'clock. She chafed and
fretted at the delay in following Alain and Geoffrey—but also
found herself thinking constantly about Forrest and seeing him and
his men off. She told herself the strange feelings that
churned within her were only nervousness, and anticipation of
seeing such a gang of blackguards out her gate.
Nonetheless, as the time approached, she found herself moving
across the outer bailey to where Forrest reposed, a little apart
from his men, stretched out in the shade of the kitchens. But
he opened his eyes as she came near, and for a moment, she found
herself trapped by that ebony gaze, mischievously admiring as it
traversed her from head to toe, insouciant and arrogant with the
knowledge that he was attractive to her.
Cordelia knew that so surely that she also knew it must have
been a sort of psychic leakage, an unconscious projection of his
that was bound to make a woman want to come closer—and the
most maddening thing was that it worked. She flushed and
stepped closer, her voice as cold as she could make it. "You
are no peasant. What do you among this gang of thieves?"
Forrest sat up, running a hand through his hair and
shrugging. "I live as I can, milady."
"Surely you could live better than as a robber!"
"So I thought." Forrest drew his knees up and clasped his
arms about them. "I joined a lord's retinue—but he went
to war against his neighbor, and lost. Then the neighbor
hunted down those of us who refused to turn our coats, to slay
us—so I fled to the greenwood."
It was a harrowing tale, and Cordelia found herself fascinated
as well as sympathetic. She tried not to let any sign of it
show in her face. "But you are a warlock! Surely you
could have found a way by the use of your powers!"
"Could I indeed?" Forrest's smile curdled. "We are
not all like yourself and your brothers, milady—oh, yes, we
have heard of you, all young witchfolk have heard of you, even to
the farthest corners of Gramarye, I doubt not! The sons and
daughter of the High Warlock and High Witch? Oh, aye, we all
have heard of you! But few indeed are they who have so many
talents as you, or in such strength' Myself, I can read minds, and
craft witch-moss if I concentrate my thoughts with all my might,
but little more."
Again, his gaze raked Cordelia, making her feel as though he had
touched her, lightly, caressingly.
She tried to hide a shiver. "Nay, you are not," she said
tartly. "Still, you could have accepted service with the
Crown!"
Forrest grinned. "I have said it was the eldest who was
taken to Court to learn manners and love of the King and Queen,
milady, not the youngest. No, I found myself resenting them
highly, they who had shorn my father of respect, and myself of
opportunity."
"I had not thought..."
"Did you not think the King and Queen were merciful? They
did not behead the rebel lords for traitors, after all. By
custom and precedent, they could have hanged or beheaded all the
lords, scattered their armies, and attainted their wives and
children, so that none might inherit."
"Aye." Forrest shrugged. "How could you, when the
only witchfolk you have met have been those of the Royal Coven, or
the few who dared to try to seize all that they might, no matter
whom they hurt? They had the power, milady, that most of us
lack." He shrugged. "Too little to be of use, too much
to let us feel safe in our likeness to others—that is your
garden variety of witch."
Cordelia longed to tell him that the proper word was "esper,"
for those born with psionic talents, but knew she must not, to
anyone who did not already know of the great civilization on the
Terran planets outside of Gramarye.
"But you are a gentleman, at the least, and more likely the son
of a lord, if I mistake you not!"
"You do not." Forrest inclined his head. "But I am a
youngest son, and my father is a lord attainted in the first
rebellion against Queen Catharine, before either of us were
born."
"The Crown did let the rebel lords keep their lands and
titles..."
"But they were ever suspect thereafter." Forrest raised a
finger. "And their eldest sons were taken as royal hostages,
to learn loyalty to the Crown—but not their younger. My
father told me with regret that I had my own way to make in the
world, though he would help me as he could."
"Surely there were many positions open to a lord's son!"
"Honorable positions?" Forrest shrugged. "I had a
choice between the church and the army—anything lesser was
not honorable, and I am not cut out to be a priest. The
former can be of value in telling me when my enemies are coming,
but that does not always guarantee victory. The last is too
exhausting to be of much use as more than an amusement."
Cordelia's heart went out to him. "But you are still
branded with the sign of difference."
"Only figuratively, praise Heaven!" Forrest grinned again.
"And then only if I let it show. I have become expert
in dissembling. Indeed, I warrant you would not have guessed,
had you not been a witch yourself."
"Aye, I know, and given the estates to those who had supported
them loyally in the war." Forrest nodded, chagrined.
"They were merciful, even as you say—but the shame of the
parents clung to the sons, and it was no great boon to me to have
my eldest brother set even higher above me."
Cordelia remembered how brothers could vie against one another,
and had heard of families in which the rivalry was much sharper
than in her own. "You did not at least lack for meat, nor a
roof over your head! In truth, you did not lack for
comfort!"
"'Tis true," Forrest admitted, "but only till I was
grown—which is to say, sixteen. Then was I set on mine
own, for my father died, and my eldest brother had no great love
for me. You may say 'twas bad luck that I pledged troth to
the wrong lord and had to run for my life, making a living by my
wits—or you may say 'twas mine own recklessness that drove me
to the greenwood. I could not argue, in any case." He
looked up at Cordelia, and suddenly, his eyes seemed huge, seemed
to devour her, and with alarm, she felt herself turning weak
inside, felt a warming and a thrilling in the blood, far worse than
she had felt for the very first time so short a while ago—or
far better—and his words made it even sharper. "Were I
not so attainted and so ashamed, were I not cast down to banditry
and poverty, I might dream of suing and sighing, of wooing and
courting so beautiful a lady as yourself."
The blood roared in her ears, but she knew extravagant flattery
for what it was—and loved it, in a part of herself that she
tried desperately to deny. She heard herself saying, as
though from far away, "A man's lot is never lost. Faith and
industry, and honest striving, can resurrect the fortunes of any
nobleman, no matter how low he has fallen. You must never
give up hope, sir."
His eyes fired with that hope she had spoken of. "Surely,
my lady," he breathed, "if you say it, I shall hope—and
strive to clear my name, and prove myself worthy of regard."
She stared at him, stiff, her face burning.
He added, softly, "The regard of my King, of course." But
he fooled neither of them—nor did he intend to. They
stared at each other for seconds that seemed to last for an
uncountable time, until Cordelia felt she must break from the
strain. Clutching her hands at her waist, she said, "Then go,
sir, with your men, and prove your proud words."
He stood up slowly and stepped close. His scent seemed to
enfold her, the scent of sweat and dust—and something else,
some musk she did not know. He towered over her, so close, so
close, but not close enough... "If you say it, my lady," he
breathed, "I shall." And he held her gaze for one more long,
long moment until finally she gave ground, stepping back a little,
to break the strain.
Forrest smiled sadly, and turned to bawl at his men. They
came to their feet with groans, most shaking themselves from sleep,
and a scullery boy passed among them with a bucket and a
ladle. Another stepped behind him with a basket of
rolls. Each outlaw took a roll, took a drink, and looked up
at Cordelia in gratitude, muttering, "Mercy, Lady."
"Gladly given," she answered in her most lofty manner, wondering
for the first time, with desperation verging on panic, why her
mother and father didn't come out to help her with this.
Then Forrest bawled orders at his men, chivvying them into some
sort of order and shooing them out through the gatehouse. But
before the shadows swallowed him up, he looked back for a long,
last look at Cordelia, and his eyes seemed to glow.
Then he turned away, and was gone.
The whole of the outer bailey seemed to exhale in one vast sigh
of relief.
All except Cordelia, who stood rigid, staring after him.
Above, at the solar window, her mother beamed down, and her father
scowled.
"She did that rather well, my husband," Gwendylon said.
"Yes, she did," Rod answered. "And so, unfortunately, did
he."
"Ah, yes." Gwen's voice was entirely too cool. "He
doth seem to have gained her interest. However, it will do
her no harm to find some other suitor after her affections."
"Well ... if you say so." Rod did not look
convinced. "But I don't like the look of him."
"Or the look he gave our daughter? I cannot say I am
surprised. Yet be easy in thine heart, mine husband—she
is warded against those who would use her, as well as any maiden
may be."
"And no better. Why didn't you go down there and help her
out?"
"Why did not you?"
"Mostly because of your hand on my arm restraining me, every
time I started for the door."
"Well, that is true." Gwen smiled, dimpling. "After
all, 'twas to her they were bound to surrender, not to us."
"True," Rod admitted. "Still, I think she could have used
a little support."
"She is experienced with those who would do her harm, and is
quite ready to deal with them herself, mine husband. We
cannot always shield her—but I will admit 'tis best for her
to experience such men as he, when we stand near."
"Oh, you bet it is," Rod said softly.
The bandit troop passed out from the gatehouse and down the
winding road, descending the mound on which the castle stood.
There the road split, the eastern fork straggling off into the
wood, toward Runnymede. They trooped off eastward with
it—but as soon as they were in under the trees, there were
mutterings in the ranks.
"We could go now, and none would ever be the wiser!"
"Now could we fade in among the greenwood leaves, and none
should ever find us!"
Pebbles whizzed from the roadside. One clipped the last
speaker on the pate as it passed, knocking his hat off. He
cried out, pressing a hand to his head, then bent down to pick up
his hat—and a stick popped up out of the roadway to spank him
very soundly on the rump. He straightened up with a howl,
pressing his other hand to the injured anatomy.
"I think the Wee Folk have not forgotten us," said
Forrest. "We are not quite yet free to go where we will."
"Then when shall we be?" cried one of the bandits.
"Why, you heard the lady—when we have spoken to Sir
Maris!"
Sure enough, a few rods farther on, the roadway opened out into
a small clearing, and there stood Sir Maris with his dozen knights
at his back.
"The lady bids us bring ourselves to you for punishment, Sir
Seneschal." Forrest bowed a little.
"She has done well," the old knight grated. "We are freed
of any need to require thee at the King's dungeon."
"But you promised..." one outlaw burst out, before another
clapped a hand over his mouth.
"Aye, I gave my word," said Sir Maris, "and gave it in Their
Majesties' names—so thou art free to go. But see to it
thou dost not rob, nor steal, nor poach, ever again!"
"We shall not, sir," said Forrest, and the whole band behind him
mumbled hasty denials.
"Thou, sir, most of all!" Sir Maris glared at
Forrest. "Thou, the son of a nobleman, lowering thyself to
banditry by the roadside! Thou shouldst be red with
mortification, to stand before a knight! Thou shouldst be
afeard to admit thou wert ever dubbed a knight bachelor!"
"I am ashamed." Forrest lowered his
head—coincidentally hiding his expression.
"Well, mayhap there is some saving grace left within thee," the
old knight grumbled, leaning on his staff. "Go thou, and mend
thy ways, then—and see that thou dost make better use of the
life and fortunes God hath given thee! Be mindful, whene'er
thou art tempted to despoil those weaker than thyself, or those
come for a moment within thy power—what would any one of
these men of thine give, to have been born as thou wert? Be
grateful for what thou hast, sirrah, and do not berate God for not
having given thee more."
A flash of annoyance showed in Forrest's eyeresentment, quickly
masked. He bowed again. "I shall take your words to
heart, Sir Seneschal."
"See that thou dost! Farewell—and never come before
me again with complaints of misdeeds being levied against
thee! Go, go one and all—into the greenwood! You
are pardoned, you are free to seek honest labor within the King's
domain! Go, and never stray again!" He raised staff and
hands, dismissing them.
The bandits knew when to take their chance. They faded in
among the trees, one and all.
Including Forrest. He picked his way through underbrush,
then strode quickly over last year's fallen leaves until he was a
hundred feet from the roadway. There he stopped and listened,
and heard faint sounds that must have been his men gathering
together again. He set off in the opposite direction.
At last he was freed from their weight, hanging about his
neck—at last he was freed from the need to care for
them. If they still wanted him to lead them badly enough,
they could come and find him.
He hoped they would not. He wanted the freedom to be
himself again, to try to build his own future once more. He
had decided to take Sir Maris at his word, and make better use of
his time, indeed. He strode off through the woods, circling
back toward Castle Gallowglass, the image of a lissome form and a
beautiful face under a wreath of auburn hair burning in his
mind.
He intended to court Cordelia.
CHAPTER 7
"Alain? Ala-a-ain! Alain!"
Alain opened his eyes, and the light seemed to lance through to
his brain. He squeezed them shut, then forced them open a
crack. The light still pained him, and that infernal voice
was booming in his ears, sending pain rolling through his
head. "Alain! Praise Heaven! I feared I had lost
you!"
"So did I," Alain gasped. "More softly, Geoffrey, I
prithee! There is no need to shout!"
"Why, I do not." Geoffrey grinned, recognizing the
condition. He knelt and slid a hand under his friend's back,
pulling him up. "Drink, now. 'Tis time to break your
fast."
"Bury me," Alain groaned, "for I have died." But he took
the tankard obediently and drank. Then the taste hit him, and
he yanked the tankard down and spat. "Pah! 'Tis the
same vile potion with which you slew me!"
"'Tis good country ale," Geoffrey rejoined, "and 'twill go some
way toward making you whole and sound again." He was still
grinning. "But wherefore did you hide ... Oh, I
see."
Alain frowned. What was he talking about? He
followed the direction of Geoffrey's glance, and saw the bracken
flattened in what must surely be more room than he needed by
himself—and saw the stockings that lay there, forgotten as
the wench had tiptoed home in the false dawn. Alain
stared. "But ... but I did not . .." Then
memory struck, and he buried his face in his hands and
groaned. "I did!"
"Why, then, be glad!" Geoffrey slapped him on the
shoulder, albeit gently. "You have slain a monster, you have
drunk deeply, and you have lain with a wench! You live,
Alain, you are alive as you never have been!"
"I am dead, as I never have been," the Prince groaned, "or
nearly. You do not understand, Geoffrey."
"Oh, but I do. Quite well."
"Nay, you do not! I am the Prince, it is given to me to
take care of my people, to guard their welfare—not to use or
abuse them!"
"I doubt that you did," Geoffrey said slowly. "But you
have said it yourself!"
"I have said no such thing," Geoffrey replied with
asperity. "I told you to be glad of what you have done, and I
say it still. The wench was more than willing—she was
eager! I saw myself how she passed beyond flirtation to
invitation, to leading and chivvying. What happened after she
led you away, I cannot say, for I did not see—but if you
could remember, I think you would find that she did urge you on
even then, and did never say, 'Hold!' " "Nay, she did." Alain
pressed a hand to his forehead. "The memory comes
now—she did say, "My lord, how naughty! You must not!'
"
Geoffrey smiled slowly. "And what did you do?"
"Why, I drew back, and took my hand from her, as any gentleman
would."
"And what said she to that?"
"She took my hand and pressed it back where it had been, saying,
'Nay, you must—if you wish it.' I assured her that I
did..."
"And thereafter she told you where she wished you to put your
hands."
Alain blushed furiously. "Aye, though not always with
words."
Geoffrey shook his head. "You are wrong to torment
yourself with spasms of conscience. She wished it, and you
were too drunk to refuse her, or to deny your own desires.
There is no cause for you to feel guilt in anything save having
drunk to excess—and therein must I share the blame, for I
egged you on to it."
"My guilt is my own, for whatever I have done, I could have
chosen not to!"
"Yet you would not hesitate to share the glory." Geoffrey
grinned, shaking his head. "Well, bear in mind the wench's
name, and that of this village, so that if she does prove by child,
you can see that she is provided for. That much obligation
you may claim, though I would not think it necessary. Still,
if she knew who it was had lain with her last night, I have no
doubt she would boast of it, and raise the child with pride."
Alain started to pull on his hose. "Then I must tell
her!"
"Nay, nay." Geoffrey restrained him with a hand on his
shoulder. "If she should prove by child, I said. If she
does not, she will keep the memory of this night to herself, I
doubt not—or if she chooses to share it, 'twill be as a
boast, that she shared the bed of the knight who slew the
monster." Alain hesitated, half into his hose.
"Nay, do pull on your clothes," Geoffrey urged, "for we must be
away."
"Ought I not..."
"Nay, you ought not, for she may try to presume upon your good
nature." Geoffrey did not add "and innocence."
"Did you say a single word about love, or desiring anything
further of her?"
Alain scowled, clutching his head, forcing the memories up from
the alcoholic murk. "Nay. As I remember it, I could
scarce say a word."
"Then do not seek her out again, for if you do speak of love you
do not feel, or of desiring further acquaintance with her, you
would hurt her heart when you left. As it is, she will
remember a night's sport, and so will you—and since that is
all she desired and more than you promised, she will have nothing
bitter in her heart. Speak again, and she may. Come, be
of good cheer!"
Alain stood, fastening his hose-belt about his waist, but he was
still dark of face, brooding.
Geoffrey eyed him narrowly. "What else, then?"
"What a vile excuse for a man am I!" Alain burst
out. "To bed one woman while I love another! Indeed,
how can I truly say I love Cordelia, if I go slavering after every
shapely form like a dog in heat!"
"I would scarcely say that you went slavering," Geoffrey said
drily, "or that it was you who went after her. Still, 'tis a
sad fact, Alain, and maybap the bane of our species, that a man can
desire many women, even though he loves only one."
"But does this not mean that I am not truly in love with
her?"
"Not a whit," Geoffrey assured him. "The troubadours would
have it otherwise, I know—they sing to their patronladies
that a man's desire springs from falling in love, and that the man
will only desire her with whom he is in love but the truth is
otherwise. It is for me, at least."
Alain looked up. "You have been in love with one, yet
desired others?"
Geoffrey shrugged. "Either that, or been in love with many
at one time, or never been in love at all—have it as you
will. I fear that fidelity is as much a matter of selfcontrol
as of love, Alain."
"Well—I am schooled in that, at least." The Prince
seemed somewhat reassured.
"Too much so," Geoffrey told him. "Indeed, I rejoiced most
amazingly to see you drop your armor of chivalrous discipline for a
few hours, Alain. There is more to life than rules and
duties."
"I have been told that." Alain looked him straight in the
eye. "I have been taught that a wise ruler must recognize
that impulse toward excess in his people, so that he may understand
and be merciful if they do not cleave to the letter of his
laws."
"Have you been told, too, that men may be tempted and fall?"
"Aye." Alain looked away. "But I think that I never
truly understood it before."
"That may be, that well may be," Geoffrey agreed, "but you do
understand it now."
"Oh, aye! Most thoroughly!" Alain turned away in
selfdisgust. "Surely I am not worthy of the Lady
Cordelia." Geoffrey sighed. "I thought you had but now
said that you could understand that men could fall."
"Well ... aye, but .. ."
"Then what matter this one lapse, so long as you are faithful
after you wed?"
"But how can I be sure that I will be? I had thought love
was my assurance, but ... Geoffrey! How if I am not in
love?"
"If you can even ask the question, then you are not," Geoffrey
said, with inexorable conviction, "and if you are not, then 'tis
far better you learn it now, than after the wedding."
"I am in love with her!" Alain said. "I must be, for
I have planned it for years!"
"'Twas your head did that planning, not your heart. Yet if
your love is sure, it will stand the test."
"What test is that?"
"The test of conversing with pretty maids and beauteous ladies,
even of kissing them now and again. You must risk your heart,
Alain, or you may never truly find it." Geoffrey clapped him
on the shoulder. "Come, don your doublet, for the day draws
on apace."
"Aye, if you say it." Alain shrugged into his doublet and
turned away, fastening the buttons as he went.
Geoffrey followed him, reflecting that a quick exit might be
advisable, in case the wench came back looking for her hero.
He trusted neither her, nor Alain's conscience and sense of
duty. Besides, they had a world to wander, villains to
chastise, damsels to rescue ...
Beautiful damsels, and pretty maids all in a row. A long
row, Geoffrey decided. If he was going to trust his sister's
happiness to Prince Alain's heart, he was going to make sure that
heart had been tried in the crucible first.
In the vastness of the forest, a woman cried.
Alain snapped rigid, like a bird dog hearing the flap of
wings. "A damsel in distress!"
"Aye, from the sound of it." Geoffrey turned toward the
sound, too. "Let us beware of traps, though."
"Ridiculous!" Alain scoffed. "Who would think to
trap two knights with a woman's cry?"
"Who would think to summon drakes to the arrow by simulating the
cry of a duck?" Geoffrey returned. "Nonetheless, we
must go—but with tactical soundness, shall we not? Let
one go posthaste, and the other go carefully."
"Then I shall take the posthaste." Alain grinned and
plunged into the thicket at the side of the road. His horse
neighed in protest, but fought its way through. Geoffrey
followed the path made by Alain's horse, but rather more
warily.
He could hear the sobbing through the trees—forlorn,
heart-rending, almost as though the woman who wept was trying to
choke her sobs down, but not succeeding.
Alain rode through the brush and between the trees until they
opened out into a river meadow, a broad expanse of clover dotted
with wildflowers and bordered along the stream by weeping
willows. Under the largest sat a damsel, head bowed into her
hands.
Alain slowed, going softly, wondering if he had the right to
interfere—and Geoffrey came up behind him. They were so
silent in their approach they were almost upon her before she heard
the horses' hooves. She leaped up in fright, then gasped in
fear and backed away under the willow branches.
"Fear not, fair maiden." Alain reined in his horse.
"I would not hurt a lady in any way."
"We are knights," said Geoffrey, "sworn to protect the weak and
punish the wicked."
"If any man has wronged you, tell us," said Alain, "that we may
challenge him to mortal combat."
The damsel stopped withdrawing, at least. Alain's eyes
were fast upon her, and it was scarcely a wonder. She was
slender; long lashes swept across her eyes, so pale they seemed
gossamer; her golden hair fairly glowed in the sunlight, sweeping
down to the middle of her back. Her little heart-shaped face
was the perfect setting for such huge, lustrous blue eyes and her
small, pert nose. The width and fullness of her lips were
surprising, seeming somewhat out of place—but making a man
ache to lean down and kiss them. When she looked up at him,
he felt a stirring within him, and had to fight to keep it from
emerging as a shudder. She was, after all, a
beauty—very much a beauty. She wore a bliaut and a
kirtle, highnecked, full-sleeved, that should have been very
modest, but was made of some fabric that molded itself to her body
with every gentlest breath of wind, revealing the lush contours
beneath.
Geoffrey glanced about, trying to discern some hint as to why
the damsel wept—and why a lady of gentle breeding should be
alone by a riverside. He did see a palfrey, tethered to the
willow, grazing beneath its branches. Other than that, there
was no sign.
"Lady, we shall protect you," he called out. "How is it
you have come here alone?"
"Alas, good sirs!" She stepped forward timorously, coming
out from beneath the branches of the willow—but only a little
way. "There was a man—my true love, I thought—who
bade me meet him here this morning, as the sun rose. But the
dawn has gone, the sun nears the noon, and he has not come."
Geoffrey frowned, having something of a nasty suspicion as to
what had happened—but when it came to a motive, he could only
understand the most obvious, and it didn't make sense.
"Wherefore would a gentleman fail in rendezvous with so beautiful a
lady as yourself?"
The lady lowered her eyes, blushing, then looked up with a
sigh. "Ah, sir! I can only believe that he is a true
love turned false, or was never a true love at all! I blush
with shame to think that he only toyed with my affections!"
And she heaved another sigh.
Alain caught himself staring; the heavy sigh had done
wonders. Her gown clung to her figure, after all, and her
figure was very much worth clinging to. He found a desire to
do so himself.
Indeed, a very great desire.
"The man who forswore a tryst with you must have been a fool
indeed," he breathed.
"A fool," Geoffrey agreed, "or a very shrewd villain. Have
you a sister, milady?"
"Aye, sir—a younger sister." Her eyes were wide in
wonder. "How could you know?"
"You have no brother? It is the firstborn grandson who
will inherit?"
"Nay, sir—it is she who weds first." Then the maiden
gasped, covering her mouth with her hand. "You do not
believe..."
"How did word of this tryst come to you?" Geoffrey
asked.
"Why, from my sister! 'Twas she who brought me word from
my lord ... No! You cannot think that my own sister
would betray me!"
"And that she even now importunes upon him?" Geoffrey
shook his head sadly. "It has happened before this, and will
happen again."
"But wherefore should she deal so cruelly with me?"
"Why, to have your lover for her husband, and your father's
estates for her own," Alain said gently, his eyes full of
sympathy.
The damsel stared in shock, then burst into tears.
Alain leaped down off his horse and ran to take her in his arms,
patting her back, soothing, making comforting noises. He
looked up and glared at Geoffrey over the damsel's head.
Geoffrey felt a surge of annoyance, and fought to keep his face
impassive. Was the man truly so great a fool as that?
Or, perhaps, merely inexperienced.
Geoffrey knew that Alain had had very little acquaintance with
girls his own age, and that only under the very rigid rules of
court formalities. But perhaps he was not so great a fool
after all, for it was he who was holding the beautiful maiden in
his arms—and she certainly was a beauty.
Geoffrey tried to smile, but it came out as a grimace of
distaste. "Come, maiden," he called. "Where is your
home?"
The damsel's sobs had slackened. Alain stroked her hair,
murmuring inanities, looking stunned. "There, now—life
shall go on, and you shall find a truer love than he. Come,
let us dry these tears." He pulled a handkerchief from his
own sleeve and dabbed at her cheeks. "Five years since, you
shall look back on this day with amusement, and bless the
mischance, the betrayal, that held him from you—for you shall
find your true love, I doubt not, and discover him to be a far
better man than he who turned from you to your sister only because
you were not there, and she was."
The disturbing thing, Geoffrey decided, was that Alain really
meant every word of it. In this case, it was not that he had
acquired the gift of flattery—it was a genuine sympathy, a
real caring for a person who was suffering. .
Though, Geoffrey reflected cynically, Alain's sympathy might not
have been quite so strong if the damsel had not been quite so
beautiful.
"But has he truly turned to her?" she cried, eyes brimming
full again.
Alain stared down at her, feeling his heart turn over in his
breast—but it was a heart that was pledged to Cordelia, as
his conscience reminded him.
Well, no—it wasn't, really. After all, she had
rejected his suit—spurned him, in fact. He felt a
certain kinship with this maiden, who had sought her true love and
been disappointed by him.
He shook the thought from him. It was unworthy of a
knight. "It may be that he has not turned to another," he
said. "It may be that he remains true to you."
"Oh, can you truly think so?" She stepped back from him a
pace, looking up, eyes brightening with hope.
"It may be," Alain said solemnly, "though it may be as we
suspect, too. Only by returning to your father's house shall
we discover the truth. Come, tell us—where is your
home?"
"Yonder, sir." She pointed down the roadway. "In the
West, a day's ride."
"So far as that?" Geoffrey crowded his horse up near
them. "You have come so long a way by yourself, unescorted,
through half the night, alone?"
"Aye." She looked up at him, shuddering. "I did
fear; I did start at every noise. I thought every moment to
see a band of outlaws step forth from the greenwood, to assail
me."
There was every chance that exactly that would have happened,
Geoffrey knew, and that her purse would have been the least of
which they would have reft her—if, by good luck, he and Alain
had not sent the local gang packing. "But by good fortune,
they were all abed, and you came here untouched, to wait for the
dawn. You hid till daylight, did you not?"
She nodded.
Geoffrey looked at her, court-bred and dainty, her delicate gown
soiled at the hem, and knew that any woodsman worth his salt could
have found her trail and tracked her down. It had been luck,
good luck only, that no bandit had done exactly that.
"The owl's hooting never had so much quality of menace as it did
last night," she said.
"Then 'tis only by great good fortune that you have come thus
far in safety." Alain looked down at her sternly, "You must
return to your father's house forthwith—but you must not ride
alone. Come, mount! We shall accompany you!"
"I could not ask that of you." But even as she said it,
gladness suffused her face. "Assuredly, you are bound to
other destinations."
Alain saw those huge eyes glowing up at him, and knew that he
could not do anything else. "No true knight could turn down a
request from a damsel in distress," he told her. "We shall
ride with you—and we shall not hear a word to the
contrary."
Nor was she apt to give it, Geoffrey thought—but he did
not say so. After all, he would never turn down an
opportunity to escort so voluptuous a lady, either.
"I hesitate to ask it of you." She bowed her head, looking
up at him through long lashes. "Surely you must be bound on a
mission of great importance."
"You may say that." Alain smiled. "We are two
knightserrant, wandering where we will to discover damsels in
distress, so that we may give them aid and succor. I could
not think of any mission more important. Could you, Sir
Geoffrey?"
"Oh, nay, assuredly not, Sir Alain!" Geoffrey fought to
keep both sarcasm and amusement from his voice. At least one
of them was sincere.
"Then 'tis said; 'tis done." Alain stepped away from the
lady, albeit reluctantly, and stepped over to the palfrey. He
untied it and led it out from under the willow leaves. "Come,
my lady, mount!" He dropped the horse's reins, set his hands
to her waist, and lifted her up to the saddle, amazed that she felt
so light. She gasped with surprise and fright, clinging to
his arms, then smiled tremulously as she found herself on horseback
again. She hooked a knee about the horn of the sidesaddle,
arranged her skirts, and beamed down upon him. "Bless you,
sir!"
She looked up at Geoffrey, and for a second, he was hit with the
full force of that enchanting gaze, that adorable, piquant face,
those full ruby lips... "I shall praise you in my prayers
every night! How can I thank you for your mercy, to a poor,
lost damsel and, aye, a foolish one. How foolish, how
credulous, to believe what I have believed!"
And Geoffrey found himself reassuring her, just as Alain had
done. "Your trust does you credit, even though it was
betrayed—for surely, what woman would think that her own
sister would play her false? What man could think less than
highly of a woman who would ride to meet her lover?
Assuredly, my lady, we must accompany you!"
And, as he pulled his horse into step beside hers, he realized
the truth of what he had said. Thank heavens she was an
innocent, for that face, that voice, that form gave her a power
over men that was absolutely incredible.
Somehow, it never occurred to either of them that she might not
really be so innocent, and might know exactly how much power she
had. Even more should they have believed that she knew how to
use that power, too.
They rode back onto the forest road, turning their horses away
to the west, Geoffrey and Alain vying, with witticisms and
flattery, to raise her spirits. They succeeded
admirably—within half an hour her eyes were alight with
mirth, and her laughter rang like music in their ears.
The bandits were on their way, and Cordelia resolutely forgot
about them. Yes, she had put those dark, reckless eyes, broad
shoulders, and sensuous lips firmly out of her mind, and she knew
she had, because she thought of them every now and then, just to
make sure. Her mind clear, she went soaring off on her
broomstick to track down her brother and her suitor, cursing the
delay under her breath—with far too much vehemence.
It didn't take her long to find the village in which Alain and
Geoffrey had spent the night. She searched the minds of the
villagers quickly and lightly, injecting a thought of the two
heroes who had come through the town, and reading the memories that
rose in response. Her eyes widened as she learned of the
appearance of the ogre, and of the battle. She was even more
surprised to learn that it was Alain who had slain the monster, not
her brother—or, at least, that Geoffrey had given him full
credit for the deed. She wondered, for a moment, if her
brother had lied; then decided that he probably had not. Not
that Geoffrey was above lying, mind you, or at least
prevaricating—it was merely that, in this instance, there was
more for him to gain by truth, at least in terms of his goals for
Alain. Geoffrey was not the sort to lie unless it was to give
him a military advantage, anyway, and never in matters of honor or
glory. Chivalry, to him, was sacrosanct. How silly, she
thought, but was astounded when she found no memory of their
leaving; everyone in the village seemed to have waked to find them
gone—except ...
Except the village priest, who had risen early for Matins, and
seen them ride into the forest ... Cordelia arrowed off
toward the trees.
CHAPTER 8
Cordelia sped high above the treetops, a speck in the sky,
listening for thoughts from her brother and ... yes,
suitor. But flying takes time, and broomsticks move
considerably more slowly than jet planes. The sun was
dropping toward the western horizon before Cordelia finally "heard"
Alain's mind with her own. Not Geoffrey's, of course—he
habitually kept his mind closed, his thoughts guarded, and he took
considerably more concentration to read, if he did not choke off
all contact. But Alain ...
Alain was besotted.
Cordelia sat rigid for a moment, wide-eyed, horrified, all
attention riveted to Alain's words reverberating in her mind,
gallant and flattering. Why, he had never spoken to her like
this! Through his ears, she heard the musical, belllike tones
of the female voice answering him. She sat frozen, unable to
think, unable to spare the slightest thought for anything else
...
She was falling.
She was plunging toward the earth, broomstick in a nosedive,
falling out of the sky! She truly had become distracted, not
even sparing a thought for telekinesis! Anger flowed; at
herself, for such carelessness; at Alain, for his fickleness; at
Geoffrey, for having led him into this; but most of all, at that
scarlet hussy who dared to steal the affections of her man!
Never mind that the girl probably knew nothing of Cordelia, or
Alain's proposal—she was loathsome anyway!
But Cordelia was not about to be outdone, nor to see her prize
stolen from her. She would match the hussy on her own ground,
and win! She brought the broom out of its nosedive and sped
above the treetops, scolding herself for having let Alain get
away. Surely there must have been some way to say no and
insist on a proper courtship, without packing him off to the arms
of such a vampire as this! And that, without ever having met
the girl.
There they were, on the roadway, visible for a moment between
the leaves! But neither of the boys noticed her in the
slightest, and the girl certainly didn't. Just as well,
Cordelia thought, and sped ahead of them until the road curved
close to the river in an open meadow. Cordelia decided that
they would not pass by so ideal a camping place with the sun
already low. She landed in the woods a short distance from
the edge of the clearing, leaned her broom against a tree, and
waited.
They came riding into the meadow through the shadows of trees
stretched long across the grass—a golden young knight and a
dark young knight, with a blonde beauty between them, laughing and
chatting as they came out of the woods, both men seeming mightily
pleased with themselves. Cordelia lingered a few minutes
longer under the shelter of the leaves. Both of them were
looking quite lively; their color was heightened, their eyes
sparkled. So did the woman's; she looked down with frequent
blushes—very coy, very demure, very calculating!
Cordelia hated her on sight, not only for her golden tresses and
baby-doll face—after all, the poor child could scarcely be
eighteen!—but also for her deliberate manipulation of the
men. Couldn't the fools see what she was doing?
No. Of course not. They were enjoying it too
much.
What was worse, Cordelia found herself feeling dowdy for the
first time in her life—at least, in comparison to this
paragon of pulchritude.
Oh, but what a scheming creature she was! The high
neckline seemed demure and innocent—but the clinging fabric
showed her for what she was, in every sense. Shameless,
brazen! Cordelia must learn how she achieved the
effect. The blushes, the coquettish glances, looking up at
Alain with spaniel eyes, every movement planned, every modulation
of her laugh, and no doubt, the choice of every word, though
Cordelia could not hear them. She fumed inside, but also felt
a sinking despair. How could she possibly compete with such
an accomplished man-eater?
And she had to admit, after all, that the woman had been blessed
with uncommonly good looks.
For a moment, her heart quailed, but only for a moment.
Then she saw the men dismounting, vying with one another to see who
would help the lady from her perch. Laughing, she chose
Alain—of course!—and his hands closed about her waist,
lifting her down. Of course, she slid a little too hard, a
little too far, and fetched up against his chest. For a
moment, he froze, still holding her toes off the ground, then put
her down with a little, forced laugh. She laughed, too, then
turned away to blush—each movement exactly timed, head bent
at exactly the right angle. Cordelia seethed, but she had to
admire the sheer artistry of the wench.
Well, she would learn to outdo the minx at her own game!
No, not her own, Cordelia reflected—if she tried to compete
with the woman on her own terms, she was lost. Honesty and
innocence were Cordelia's strong suit—being forthright
without being forward. She must somehow make those qualities
into advantages—and she would!
She set forth from the trees, strolling closer, waiting for them
to notice her. It was the woman who looked up first, then
looked again, surprised, staring. The men noticed and broke
off their laughing, looking up. Geoffrey stared, as startled
as though he had seen a mouse walking about on the bottom of a
river, and Cordelia had the immense satisfaction of seeing Alain
turn pale. Then he blushed beet-red and turned away—as
well he might, Cordelia thought grimly. But she smiled as
boldly as she could and stepped forward. "Well,
brother! At last I have found you!"
"Indeed!" Geoffrey smiled. "You are well met,
sister. But wherefore did you seek me?"
He knew very well who she was seeking! "I have wearied of
my duties at home, and have come to see that, if you may go
adventuring, so may I."
"A woman, adventuring?" The vixen stared,
scandalized. "It is not seemly!"
Well, she should know, if anyone should. "Quite so,"
Cordelia agreed. "A woman alone may not—but in her
brother's company, there is surely nothing improper."
She had the satisfaction of seeing the look of dismay flit
across the hussy's features, though it was quickly masked. It
was even more gratifying to see the look of delight that crossed
Alain's face, even though it was hidden so quickly as to leave
Cordelia wondering if she had really seen it. She felt a stab
of remorse—how badly had she hurt him, that he dared not show
pleasure in her company?
"Well, this will be pleasing." Geoffrey smiled,
amused. "And timely: we are about to concoct supper.
Surely you will join us—must she not, companions?"
"Oh, surely she must," said the vampire, all syrupy
sweetness. Alain mumbled something that sounded vaguely
affirmative and looked away. He certainly should, Cordelia
thought, with a flame of white-hot anger—but she suppressed
it with a self-control that was new to her; she had more important
things to fry than Alain's conscience. She advanced toward
them, doing her best to simulate the movement of a cat on the
prowl. "Do you gentleman fetch some game for us, and we shall
set about building a fire for it. We shall see what we may do
to spark a blaze among kindling—shall we not, damsel?"
"Indeed!" For a second, the minx looked startled.
Then she smiled in amused anticipation.
Geoffrey cast a dubious glance from one to the other, then
shrugged. He, protect Cordelia from another woman?
As well to think of protecting a lynx from a kitten!
Besides, he had a notion of what was about to follow. "Well
enough, then. Milady, this is my sister, the Lady
Cordelia." He almost said "Gallowglass," then thought better
of it—an instinct to caution, Heaven knew why. But they
were, after all, supposed to be incognito. "Cordelia, this is
the Lady Delilah de Fevre."
"Delighted," Delilah purred.
"The pleasure will be all mine," Cordelia assured her, carefully
not specifying what she would take pleasure in. "Come, Alain,
let us seek out game!" Geoffrey turned his horse back toward
the woods. With a dubious backward glance, Alain rode after
him.
The clearing was quiet for a moment, only birdsong and breeze,
as the two women regarded one another, both with slight
smiles. Cordelia only wished that she really felt as
confident as she looked. Well, anger would have to serve in
place of confidence, and she surely had enough of that at the
moment! "Perchance we may come to know one another," she
said. "Come, let us chat, whiles we gather firewood and
tinder."
"Gladly, if you will show me what it is," Delilah said. "I
would not know what to seek, for my servants have always done such
chores."
Cordelia held down her indignation and forced a saccharine
smile. "'Tis the curse of we who are well bred," she agreed,
"that we cannot care for ourselves when the need arises."
"The need has arisen for you, then?" Delilah said
sweetly. "And you know that it will arise again?"
"Perchance," Cordelia said between her teeth, "and then,
perchance not. It was my mother's teaching that every woman
should know how to fend for herself if she must, that she not be
dependent upon a man's whims and cruelties."
"Your mother was no doubt wise," Lady Delilah purred. "Had
she cause to know?"
That stung worse—because, of course, Gwen had had
cause to learn how to take care of herself, until Cordelia's father
Rod came into Gwen's life. Cordelia was a little hazy on the
details, knowing only the story of how they met, courted, and wed,
with very little about how Gwen had occupied her time before Rod
had come unto her life; she knew only that they had not married
until Gwen was twenty-nine—very late for a medieval
woman. "My father did not think so," she said sweetly.
"Did thine?"
A frown creased the smooth perfection of Delilah's brow.
"My what?"
"Your father," Cordelia explained. She sighed, as though
striving for patience in explaining something elementary to a
five-year-old. "Did your father find need for your mother to
be dependent upon him?"
"Surely she did rely on him, and he proved ever reliable,"
Delilah said, amused. "In truth, I thought she fended for
herself most excellently in that."
Cordelia frowned. "How so?"
"Why," said Delilah, "the lady who fends for herself, and has no
true need of a husband, will not have one." Cordelia stared
at her, frozen for a moment, fuming—but she kept the fumes
inside, forced them into a curdled smile, and said, "She who does
not need a man for living will have naught but the best of
men—and only for love, true love."
"Ah! True love!" Delilah looked away toward the
trees. "How each of us does long for it! But what if it
comes not, Lady Cordelia? How then shall we fare?"
"As well as we wish," Cordelia snapped.
"Oh, nay!" Delilah turned huge, demure eyes upon
her. "We shall do as well as we may."
Alain, Cordelia saw, was as well as Delilah had decided she
might do. A change of subject was obviously in order.
She turned away, stooping to pick up a twig here, a stick
there. "How came you here, maiden, to the company of my
brother and his friend?" She put perhaps a little more
emphasis than was necessary on the word "maiden."
"Alas!" Delilah lamented. "I came at the behest of
him whom I love—but he betrayed me, and did not come."
That snatched Cordelia's poise away from her. She stared,
aghast. "Truly he did not mislead you so!"
"Aye," Delilah sighed. "I fear I am ever too
trusting."
Cordelia knew, with dead certainty, that "trusting" was one
thing Delilah was not—except, perhaps, trusting in her own
ability to manipulate a man. "Did you not fear the outlaws of
the forest?"
"Oh, aye!" Delilah touched her eyelid, where a tear had
presumably formed. "I feared they might hurt me soreyet not
so sorely as my lord has hurt me." She looked away—and
sure enough, fat tears trembled in her eyes, then rolled
free. For a moment, Cordelia almost embraced her in a rush of
sympathy—but it was replaced with a rush of anger. So
the female serpent could actually weep on demand! Her
admiration for the woman's artistry rose one notch higher, even as
her opinion of the woman's honesty dropped even lower.
Still, she strove to sound sympathetic. "The night must
have been long indeed."
Delilah said, "Any night is long, when one's love is not near
one."
Cordelia had been wondering about Delilah's right to the title
"maiden," but she was fast becoming sure. "I would not know,"
she said sweetly.
Delilah gave her a sudden, searching stare. "Nay," she
said, nicely seasoned with scorn. "I think you would
not." Cordelia felt her cheeks flaming—why, she did not
know; to be a virgin was something to be quite proud of. How
dare this flaunting flirt make it sound like a deficiency!
"How came you here?" asked Delilah. "I see you have
no horse."
Cordelia did some quick mental jockeying, trying to decide
whether she was better served by Delilah's ignorance, or her
probable awe of esper powers. Discretion won out, and she
said, "I do not believe a beast should be tethered, but should be
free to roam as he will, till I have need of him."
"Then he must be well trained indeed, to come at your call."
Cordelia wondered at the tone of mockery in Delilah's voice, or
why it stung. "I shall whistle him up when I wish," she
assured the wench.
Delilah sighed in a parody of longing. "I have never
learned to whistle."
"Then you have not had the bittersweet fortune of having
brothers," Cordelia said, with a sardonic smile.
"I have not," Delilah said, all wide-eyed innocence. "Does
that make a lass less hungry to be wed?" And, before Cordelia
could answer, "You must forgive my asking. I am too young to
know. I am but eighteen."
Eighteen what? But Cordelia did not say it out
loud. "You shall know all that a woman needs within a year or
so," Cordelia assured her, thinking all the while that Delilah
already knew far more than a genuine lady should.
"I trust I shall," Delilah sighed. "What is this
`kindling' that you spoke of?"
Geoffrey hailed them from the edge of the wood. "Small
sticks and twigs." Cordelia displayed her skirtful of bits of
wood. "We shall let the gentlemen fetch logsbut do you
quickly catch up some tinder, for they are come with dinner."
"What is `tinder'?"
"Dried grass and leaves!" Cordelia stooped impatiently to
catch up several handfuls as she walked toward the riverbank.
Geoffrey rode down toward the river. Cordelia went to him,
with Delilah trailing behind—which was fortunate, for she
could not see how Cordelia's cheeks flamed with anger and
humiliation. For some obscure reason, Cordelia felt she had
come off the loser in that battle of wits—and was sure it had
been a battle, though most of Delilah's comments had seemed
entirely innocent.
It was doubly strange that she should feel the loser, since she
had certainly given as good as she received, when the comments had
been barbed.
Hadn't she?
"Well!" Geoffrey surveyed the heap of kindling that
Cordelia dumped onto the bare clay by the water—then the
cascade of dead leaves and dried cattails that suddenly fell on top
of them. Cordelia looked up, startled, and met Delilah's
sweetest smile. The cat had snatched them up by the handful
as they had come back to meet the boys! "'Tis a good
beginning," Geoffrey pronounced.
"'Twill do to kindle a blaze." Cordelia knelt, brushing
grasses from her skirt.
Alain came up with a six-inch rock in each hand, set them by the
tinder, and, glancing furtively at Cordelia, mumbled something
about needing to fetch more, got up, and went away. She gazed
after him for a moment, frowning. Admittedly he should be
remorseful, repentant—but how was she ever going to win him
back, if he would not talk to her?
"Here is your flame." Geoffrey had dismounted and knelt by
the tinder now, drawing his dagger and taking a piece of flint from
his pouch. He struck them against one another with an expert
touch, several times, until a fat spark fell into the tinder.
He struck another, and another. Cordelia breathed on them
gently, and they began to flame. Out of the corner of her
eye, she realized that Delilah was still standing, looking down in
contempt at the hoyden who could get down on her knees in the grass
and kindle a fire as well as any boy. Cordelia turned and
smiled sweetly up at her. "It is given to women to be the
keepers of the hearth."
"Indeed." Delilah's eyes sparked. "But for a lady,
the hearth is watched, while servants build it up."
Fortunately, Alain arrived before the two of them could go any
further, with two more rocks to set by the flames. Cordelia
looked up, about to say something about their not being overlarge,
but saw how closed his face was, the furtive glances that he
flicked at her, and decided it was not the time to say anything
that was at all critical.
There was a rustle of cloth beside her. Cordelia glanced
out of the corner of her eye to see Delilah folding herself
gracefully to sit by the fire, adjusting her skirts to cover her
legs in complete modesty—that is, if you disregarded the cut
of her bodice. Apparently, she had realized that everybody
else was sitting or kneeling. Cordelia smiled to herself as
she took kindling from her little pile and fed it to the flames,
building them up little by little, letting it grow. "What
have you found for us to eat, gentlemen?"
"A hare." Alain proudly held out a spitted blob of pink
meat that bore about as much resemblance to a rabbit as a toad to a
toadstool. He was obviously very proud of having shot,
skinned, and cleaned it himself, but Delilah shrank back with an
exclamation of frightened disgust, as a delicate maiden would when
coming face-to-face with the world's realities for the first
time.
Alain was instantly all contrition. "I pray you, look
away, milady. I had forgot that you would never have seen raw
meat as it came from the hide."
"Nay, I never have." Delilah turned away, trembling.
"I doubt if I shall be able to eat of it now."
Alain stepped over to her side. "Come, come! When
'tis done, you shall not recognize it at all!" He reached out
to her, then drew his hand back. "I would not offer a
murderer's hands to you..."
She blinked up at him, and forced a smile. "Nay, surely
not. You mean only my welfare, I know, to see that I am
fed. Forgive me that my stomach is too delicate for such a
sight." She relaxed into his arms, laying her head on his
shoulder. Alain wiped clean hands on his hose before he put
his arms around her.
"Sister," Geoffrey murmured in Cordelia's ear, "what is that
grinding noise?"
"Only my teeth," she grated back. "Can he not see through
her, Geoffrey?"
"Why, no," whispered Geoffrey, surprised, "and neither can I,
though her skin is perfectly clear."
"So is her behavior! She is positively transparent!"
Cordelia made the comment a lash. "I would have thought that
my much-experienced brother would not be so easily deceived."
"Better, or worse?" Geoffrey smiled, amused. "Few of
us are born with defenses against a pretty face or form. Be
patient, sister. If she truly is as you imagine her to be, no
doubt we shall discover it."
" `Beauty is as beauty does,' do you mean?" Cordelia's
tone was scathing. "Many a man has discovered nothing of the
sort, 'til the priest has pronounced the words."
Then, with sudden despair: "What am I to do, Geoffrey? I
have no tricks, no skill in dissembling! How shall I save him
from her?"
"Do you care about him?" Geoffrey seemed quite
surprised. Then he frowned. "Or is it only that you
fear that something belonging to you will be taken?"
The echo of their mother's words irritated Cordelia. "Nay,
'tis more than that." But the image of Forrest came up
unbidden before her inner eye.
Geoffrey was not intent on reading her mind at the moment, so he
missed the picture, but he caught the hesitation, the
uncertainty. "When you are sure, Cordelia, you shall
prosper. But I pray you, do nothing extreme until we know
whether or not she is the monster you think her to be, or is truly
as sweet and kind as she seems."
"Read her mind, brother," Cordelia said, exasperated. "I
have tried." Geoffrey's brow knit, puzzled. "There is
only a sort of swirling there."
"What—say you that she has no mind?"
"Oh, nay! She is there, surely enough. We do not
deal with a witch-moss construct." Geoffrey deliberately
mistook her meaning. "Still, her thoughts cannot be read,
though she seems to make no effort to block them."
"Truly?" Cordelia glanced up in time to see Delilah push
herself a little away from Alain, blushing, eyes downcast, then
looking up and smiling, as though thanking him for his concern.
It was like a stab to Cordelia's own heart, that he did not even
think of her enough to realize that she might be hurt by seeing him
be solicitous to her rival. Either he was so smitten that he
did not even remember that Cordelia had reason to object—or
he was truly only being chivalrous.
Kindness to a stray kitten? And, in his own mind, nothing
that she should object to?
She didn't believe that for a minute.
They chatted as the roast turned on its spit, Cordelia wondering
at the back of her mind what Delilah was going to do when it came
time to eat. She toyed with the notion of conjuring up knife,
fork, and plate, but remembered that this was the boys' affair, not
hers. She sat back, hiding a wicked smile, to see what her
brother and her besotted beau would do.
She found herself wishing that he was besotted with her.
Then she remembered that he had been, but she had turned him
down.
Well, no—the arrogance with which he had approached her
had not been besotted, by any means. But she remembered a
younger Alain, of only a year before, whose gaze had followed her
everywhere she went, and the Alain of five years before that, who
had followed her about so persistently that she had scolded him for
being a pest.
She regretted that bitterly now. Had that scolding broken
her spell over him? Or was it still there, but he, in
obedience to her sharp tongue, was no longer allowing it to
show?
Watching him closely now, she would have to say that he wasn't
besotted with Delilah, really—only very attentive. Too
attentive. Far too attentive. And not at all so to
Cordelia—though he seemed to be avoiding her out of guilt
rather than indifference.
Still, what was Cordelia to do? Feign a swoon?
Certainly he would not believe that she needed comforting or
protecting! For a moment, a tide of self-pity swept
her. For the first time in her life, she found herself
wishing that she were not so confounded capable.
Geoffrey solved the tableware problem with slabs of journey
bread—flat, round cakes eight inches across. Lady
Delilah, however, did not even have a dagger—of course.
Alain solved the problem by cutting her meat for her, presenting it
on the improvised trencher as though on a silver platter.
"Oh, sirs, you should not trouble yourselves!" Delilah
protested.
" 'Tis no trouble at all, my lady, I assure you." Then, as
an afterthought, it seemed to Cordelia, Alain turned and, for the
first time, addressed her. "Cordelia, may I serve you in like
fashion?"
She would have cheerfully served him instead—on
toast. But she kept the lid on the seething and smiled
sweetly. "Why, surely, Alain. I thank you." She
bit back a scathing comment about being second, and probably always
being second in his affections. Hot tears stung at her eyes,
but she blinked them away. It was silly indeed to think that;
Delilah was surely a passing fancy, no more. Surely ...
"I thank you." She held out her makeshift trencher with
strings of steaming rabbit meat on it. Alain took it, cut the
meat, then handed it back to her, inclining his head gravely, and
offered his knife, hilt first. "Take it, I pray you, so you
need not soil your fingers."
Delilah froze, a bit of meat halfway to her mouth, her eyes
turning cold.
Cordelia was surprised to find herself blushing with
gratitude—or was it relief? "Gramercy." She was
on the point of refusing the knife—after all, she had a
smaller one of her own—but realized she had better not; he
might take it as a refusal of himself, too. "I shall endeavor
to finish with it quickly, so that you may once again have the use
of it."
"An excellent notion!" Geoffrey proffered his own knife,
hilt first. "Will you take my point, my lady?"
"Why, thank you, sir." Delilah bestowed a very sweet smile
on Geoffrey and took his knife.
Cordelia reflected on other potential uses for the blade as she
stabbed the bits of meat and popped them into her mouth. "It
is well done, in truth. You are an excellent chef,
Alain."
"I learned something in the kitchens, from time to time."
Alain smiled, relieved at having found a neutral topic—and
wondering why Geoffrey was suddenly coughing so violently.
"I am sure you have," Cordelia said, with a touch of
sarcasm.
Alain blushed and looked away.
Oh, no! Cordelia thought. I have set
him off now! And she set herself to being pleasant, with
renewed determination. What ailed the man, anyhow? If
he felt so guilty at paying attentions to Delilah, why didn't he
simply stop?
She chatted about the weather and about events in the palace,
while Delilah found occasion after occasion for a subtle
compliment, drawing Alain into telling her more and more about
himself.
Cordelia did her best to change the topic, but not too
much. "And how have you fared, knights-errant? I see
you have saved a damsel in distress. What of the monster that
did guard her?"
She was surprised, and chagrined, when Delilah broke into peals
of laughter, and the gentlemen grinned in answer. "We seem to
have saved her only from abandonment," Geoffrey explained, "though
it may be she would have had more fell creatures than that preying
upon her, if we had not come when we did. Still, in your name
and for your glory, Alain slew an ogre."
"An ogre?" Cordelia turned, eyes huge. She
remembered hearing the villagers thinking of the event, but
recognized a chance when she saw one. "How is this,
Alain? Does he mock me?"
"He does not, I assure you," Alain said, with grave
courtesy. "It was indeed an ogre, though your brother will
not admit to his part in its defeat."
"An ogre! Oh! How brave of you, sir!" Delilah
exclaimed, clasping her hands at her breast. "But how
dangerous! Thank heavens you are returned alive!"
Definitely overdoing it, Cordelia thought—but apparently,
Alain couldn't see that. He swelled visibly at her
praise. "It was a poor thing, in its way," he said
modestly.
"A poor thing! Oh, aye, nine feet tall, with four
arms!" Geoffrey scoffed.
"Well, true," Alain allowed. "But it had very little
brain."
"Though a great deal of brawn," Geoffrey reminded him, "and it
does not require so very much brain to swing a club half the size
of a man."
Cordelia stared at Alain. "And you rode against it with
naught but your sword?"
"I did indeed." Alain looked rather happy about it.
"I will own, though, that I did take a wound of him." Delilah
gasped again.
"Though 'tis naught that a little time will not heal," Alain
said quickly.
"How gallant of you, sir!" Delilah caroled—but
Cordelia was suddenly all business.
"Let me see." Cordelia stepped around the fire and began
to unbutton Alain's doublet.
"Why, Cordelia!" he said, eyes wide. "Really,
damsel!" Delilah huffed.
"Oh, be still!" Cordelia snapped. "If he is hurt, I
must know it. Where, Alain?"
"Why, you are a forward wench indeed!" Delilah
gasped. "A wench when it pleases me, but for now, I am a
nurse!" She folded the doublet open—and stared a
moment.
My heavens, the man had a massive chest! When had he grown
all those muscles? She felt the strange feelings beginning to
churn within her again, and turned her attention to the rough
dressing held to his side by a bandage that was wrapped around and
around his abdomen. "That was only a scratch, you say?"
"In truth, it was." Geoffrey frowned. "Do you fault
my doctoring, sister?"
"Was it you who did this?" Cordelia looked up. "How
deep was the cut? Was any organ harmed?"
Delilah turned pale.
"Nay, only muscle tissue, and not much of that; it scarce passed
beyond the layer of fat. No large blood vessels cut, either,
but only a seepage from many capillaries."
Delilab turned away, a hand to her mouth.
"Peace, peace!" Alain tried to recover his doublet with a
glance at Delilah. "'Tis naught, Cordelia, truly!"
Cordelia probed the wound gently, and when Alain only gasped
lightly, she grudgingly said, "It seems well enough." She
frowned up into his eyes. "My touch does not pain you?"
For a moment, his face turned fatuous. "Not in the
slightest," he breathed. "'Tis as the petals of a flower that
brush against me."
Cordelia stared at him in complete amazement.
A slight smile touched Alain's face. "If such touch as
that be pain, may I live in torment all my days!"
Now, finally, Cordelia blushed, and turned away.
CHAPTER 9
"Why, Alain," Cordelia said, "you have never spoken so
before."
"Aye. I have been a chowderheaded fool," Alain said, with
self-disgust verging on anger.
Delilah looked up indignantly, and Geoffrey decided it was time
he took a hand—a hand he had been wanting to take for quite
some time now. He stood up and stepped over to Delilah,
reaching down. "My lady, will you walk? While we hunted
for dinner, I found a small garden by the riverside. It must
have been planted by Nature herself, but it is so sweet a sight
that it must needs be the perfect setting for such beauty as
yours." He smiled, looking deeply into her eyes. "Will
you not come see it?"
Delilah looked startled, then cast an apprehensive glance at
Alain—a glance that gained an edge.
"I am sure they will be safe by themselves," Geoffrey said, then
leaned to murmur, "as you will be quite safe with me—if you
wish to be."
Delilah turned back to him, startled—and for a moment, he
saw the naked desire in her eyes, so hot that it led him suddenly
to doubt that she was quite the virtuous maiden she seemed.
But he could also see the calculation behind her eyes, as she
glanced at Alain with a scornful smile. That smile turned to
one of amusement, not altogether pleasant, as she turned back to
Geoffrey. "Do you promise, sir?"
"Aye, surely—that you shall be safe as you please."
Passion flashed in her eyes again, but was quickly hidden.
"Then I shall come." She rose in one lithe, sinuous motion,
taking his hand. "I thank you, sir. Surely this garden
will be at its most beautiful by moonlight."
"Alas!" Geoffrey tucked her hand into the crook of his arm
and turned her away toward the trees. "The moon does not rise
for some minutes yet."
"Then we shall await it." She turned back with a
vindictive smile for Alain—but he wasn't looking, and the
smile disappeared. "We shall return anon," she informed the
couple. "Fare well in our absence."
"Farewell indeed." Cordelia tried to hide her elationand
silently thought a beam of thanks at her brother. He smiled
and winked, since Delilah still had her back to him. Cordelia
tried to remind herself how thoroughly she disapproved of
Geoffrey's womanizing—but at the moment, it didn't seem at
all bad.
Alain looked up, startled at Delilah's words, then glanced
quickly at Geoffrey, who only gave him a sly wink. Not
altogether reassured, he glanced at Delilah—but she was
already turning away to go with Geoffrey, and when she looked up at
him, her smile was dazzling. Alain stared after her,
wondering whether he should feel wounded or relieved. He
decided on relieved, and turned back to Cordelia, dismissing
Delilah from his mind—and was rather surprised at the ease
with which he did it.
He caught Cordelia watching him with a look that clearly said he
was being weighed in the balance. "She is quite
attractive—in fact, a beauty."
"She is," Alain said judiciously, "but will she remain in my
mind when she is gone from my sight?"
"A most excellent question." Cordelia's answer was
somewhat tart. "Will she, indeed?"
"I think not." Alain tilted his head to the side,
regarding her. "But then, I have been spoiled, Cordelia."
"I know." Inside, Cordelia could have screamed at herself
for the sniping remark—but it was too old a habit; it would
take her some time to break it.
To her surprise, though, Alain only smiled, amused. "No, I
do not mean only as a Prince, having had all defer to me, and
having been given ... almost all I wish."
Almost? She wondered what he had been denied, then
realized that one thing had certainly been herself. She
blushed, looking down.
"I mean spoiled in regard to loveliness," Alain said. "Now
and again during my childhood, I have been exposed to true beauty;
I have had it before me more often than not. It may be that I
have become inured to the charms of beauty alone."
He was speaking of herself, she realized, and suddenly felt
rather dizzy. Where had Alain learned to make such pretty
speeches? And were they only that, pretty speeches? Or
did he really mean what he said?
Alarmed, he moved closer, taking her arm, resting it on his,
chafing her hand. "Are you unwell, Cordelia? Or have I
given offense?"
"Nay. I am ... well." But the support of his
arm felt very good indeed. Suddenly, she realized that if she
were a little more unwell, he might put his arm around her.
"It—is simply that it has been a long day, and..." She
let herself go limp.
Alain's arm tightened about her, holding her up. "Mayhap I
should let you sleep."
Somehow, that sent alarm bells ringing through her. She
wanted him close, yes, but not too close. "Nay. Only
... hold me ... for a small space."
"Why, that I shall," he said softly.
She let herself relax into the curve of his arm, leaning against
his chest. She was surprised to discover how hard it
was. "I ... I must thank you, Alain, for your ...
gift."
He looked at her, puzzled.
"Some dozen men in rags of green and brown," she explained.
"The outlaw band!" His face cleared. "Did you truly
find it pleasing, my lady, or was it another piece of
gaucherie?"
"Well ... it did make the day ... quite
interesting," she admitted. "I found myself beset with
curiosity as to what I should do with them. But it was simple
enough—I sent them on to Sir Maris. And I own that I
did feel honored, and quite complimented that you had sent me such
a tribute."
"I scolded myself for it when it was too late, and they were out
upon the road," Alain said sadly. " 'Tis no great gift to a
lady to have a dozen filthy, ugly knaves attending upon her."
"Oh, nay! It is the kind of gift that most I wish!"
She looked up at him, eyes wide, and very, very earnest. "To
restrain the brutal, the predatory, and to protect the weak!
Giving me signs that you have done these things, Alain, is the most
that I could ask of any man!"
Alain beamed down at her, reflecting that most other women would
have been far more pleased by the gift of a diamond bracelet or a
ruby tiara. He had no doubt at all the Cordelia meant what
she had said. "How..." His voice sank almost to a
whisper. "How if I could heal the sick as a king's touch is
supposed to do? Would that be a gift to you? Or only my
duty to my subjects?"
"Your duty to your subjects would be your gift to me!" She
moved within his arm, a little away from him, so that she could
look directly up into his eyes. "Truly the greatest gift that
any woman can have is knowing that she has made a man a better
man! But, Alain..." She lowered her gaze. "I
should not accept such presents—or any presents of any sort,
for . .." She looked back up at him again, forcing
herself to be honest. ". . . I cannot be
sure that, were you to ask again, I would be willing to wed
you."
Alain gazed down at her, his victory turning to ashes in his
mouth—until he remembered her words: "I cannot be
sure..." Hope flickered in his eyes again, and he said, "Then
there may be yet some chance?"
"Oh ... aye . .." She looked down
again. "There may be some chance ... But I would have
you know, Alain, that it is only this night that you have begun to
talk to me as yourself, Alain, not the Crown Prince. How can
I know whether or not I love you yet, when we have only now
met?"
"Well," Alain said softly, cradling her closer in his arm, "I
will be very glad with that, Cordelia. Come, let us learn to
know one another—truly, if we can."
They sat by the river, his arm about her, talking of
inconsequentialities, talking of grave matters, talking of
themselves and of each other, as the moon slowly rose.
But the moon had not yet risen when Geoffrey led Delilah to the
little fairy garden. It rose where a little stream trickled
into the river—tall, feather-soft columns in a semicircle,
backing smaller flowers and ferns: anemones, poppies, spirea.
They were only varying shades of gray in the starlight, of course,
but the stream reflected glimmers back at many points, and the soft
susurrus of the leaves of the willow that overarched the whole of
the tiny garden made it seem like an undersea grotto—partly
magical, and entirely alluring.
"Oh! How wonderful!" Delilah reached out to caress
the slender stalks. "Scarcely have I ever seen anything so
lovely!"
"We should leave a bowl of milk." Geoffrey knelt beside
her. "Such a wondrous place cannot have grown by nature, and
who but the elves could have tended it?"
"Fairies, say rather." Delilah looked up at him with
excitement in her eyes—not of wonder, Geoffrey realized, but
of anticipation, almost as though she were a hunter tracking
quarry—eager, eyes dancing with mischief. "For what
have you brought me to this place, sir?"
"Why," said Geoffrey, "to admire beauty."
"Then admire! Admire all you wish!" In a smooth,
continuous motion, she rose to her feet, skirts belling around her
as she pirouetted. "Gaze your fill—but you shall not
touch!" And she fled, laughing.
Geoffrey rose, grinning; he knew the game, and understood
it. He was on his feet, stalking her.
With a gay laugh, she disappeared among the trees. He
echoed her laugh with a deeper tone of his own, and followed.
In and out among the trees they darted, playing at nymph and
faun. Her laughter was not the pure, innocent trilling of a
maiden, but the mocking taunts of a woman of experience.
Geoffrey's blood flowed hotter for hearing it, and he followed
hard and close.
Several times he lunged out, grasping for a handful of cloth,
but she whirled aside at the last second, and the fabric slid out
from between his fingers.
Finally, she tired—or tired of the game. She
tripped, and stumbled back against a huge old oak. Geoffrey
was on her in a second, one hand slapping the trunk to either side
of her, boxing her between his arms, his face only a few inches
from hers, both of them laughing with delight—but not sheer
delight. No, delight and anticipation, as his lips came
closer ...
At the last second, she caught her breath and ducked out under
his arm, fleeing again, but not quite so fast as she should have,
and he caught her wrist. She pulled against it, but not too
hard. "Oh, sir, leave off! Let me flee!"
"Why, I shall let you do whatever you please." Geoffrey
stepped lightly around, circling her into the crook of his arm and
pressing her close. "But what do you truly desire?"
"Why sir, for shame!" She lowered her gaze, but only as
far as his doublet. She reached up as though to pluck a piece
of lint from it—but her fingers ended by fumbling with the
fastenings. "Have you no shame?"
"Shame?" Geoffrey wrinkled his brow, puzzled. "What
is that?"
"It is something that you do not have, but should," she reproved
him.
"It does come undone, you know," he said.
"Do you?" She rolled her eyes up to look at him through
long lashes. "Ah, sir! You might prove my undoing!"
He loosed the fastener and began the next. "Why, so I
shall. Have you never heard that you should do as you are
done by?" He reached around to the nape of her neck and let
his fingers trail down her back. She gasped, with a wriggle,
then laughed. "You are deceived, sir! I have no
fastenings of any kind; this dress is all of one piece."
"Why, then." His fingers traced under the curve of her
breast, to the lacings of her kirtle. "I shall have to undo
here, instead."
She laughed, twirling away, but he held onto the lace, and the
bow came undone.
"Sir! How dare you!" She put her hands to the
kirtle, pulling it tight, even though it had scarcely opened at
all. Geoffrey let the end of the lace slip of out of his
fingers. "What would you have me do?"
"Why, whatever you will." She tilted her chin up.
"But my sights are set higher than yourself."
"That takes not overmuch doing," Geoffrey countered, "for my
sights are set low—very low indeed."
"Nay, nay!" She stepped away with a wicked glance.
"I pursue one of higher station than your own."
Geoffrey was still for a second, then gave her a wicked
grin. "Why, think you I am but a squire?"
"Why, are you more?" she returned. "And is not your
friend a knight?"
"Am I not knight enough for you?" he countered. "Or
enough for a night?"
"I think perhaps you might be." Her voice was low and
throaty, and she stepped close to him, so close that he could have
sworn he had felt the touch of her body, though there was still an
inch of space between them—and for a second, her eyes burned
with the heat of desire.
Then she whirled away again, and when she turned back to regard
him from a distance of five feet, her eyes had cooled to the chill
of icebergs, and she gave him her most haughty look. "I think
you are not all that you seem."
"My friend, though, is?"
She shrugged elaborately. "I think that he is
more. Certainly I shall discover it."
"Will you truly?" Geoffrey grinned. "And will you
discover how much of me is substance?"
She gave him a cool, appraising stare, then flashed a wicked
smile. "If it pleases me—for surely, I know that I
would please you."
Then she turned and fled again.
He followed her, running fast, dodging in and out among the
trees. There was no laughter this time, only hot breath
panting in their throats, until finally he reached out and caught
her by the sleeve. She spun about, tripped, and fell to the
ground. He dropped down by her side, fingers trailing fire
across her cheek, down her neck, and across the swelling curve of
her breast, breathing hard. "Ah, lass, pray do as you
please! Fulfill your desires, and care not how base they may
be! Know that I am a man for all you might wish!"
"Aye, well might you be," she sighed, and her breath was
perfume, perfumed smoke from a fire where incense burns. "Yet
still shall I withhold, till I have taught another man delights of
which he shall never have his fill!"
"He shall cleave unto you always?" Geoffrey raised an
eyebrow.
"In truth! Then may you court me to the end, to the
finish! But for now, sir, I pray you—leave off!"
It cost him dearly, it required a huge effort—but Geoffrey
had sworn to himself, very early, that he would never pursue a
woman farther than she wished. He forced himself away with a
sigh, reflecting that if she had really wanted him to continue, it
was her own hard luck that she had bade him hold. She would
have to pursue him more fervently, and be more open and more
sincere in her flirtations, if she wished a different ending to the
game. "As you wish, then. Come, sit beside me for a
moment or two. I promise I shall touch naught but your
hand."
"Why then should I sit beside you?" But slowly, she sat
up, her eyes wary, weighing him, gauging him, not understanding,
not believing.
"Why," he said softly, "to look at this fairy grotto in the
moonlight. Only see!"
She sat up beside him, staring, then clasped her hands and
gasped in delight.
They had come full circle, had returned to the elfin
grotto—and surely, it was no surprise to her. The moon
had risen while they played at nymph and faun. The garden
glittered in the moonlight like the agglomeration of turrets and
spires that form a fairy palace.
She stared at it, spellbound, but as conscious of his hand
tickling fire across her own as she was of the magical
garden. He was true to his word—he touched no more than
he had said he would—but the way in which he did it made her
bitterly regret the course that she had chosen. She promised
herself that, when she had captured Alain, she would visit upon
Geoffrey every ounce of pleasure of which he dreamed, and more, far
more, until it was torment. She would use him, she would
drain him, then revive him to use him again—but only at her
pleasure.
When they returned to the campfire, they had assumed demeanors
that were properly chaste and sober. Alain and Cordelia,
though not quite so demure, seemed rather content with each other's
company.
Alain, for his part, wondered whether Delilah's eyes were really
glittering in the moonlight. Delilah, in turn, exulted within
to see that Cordelia and Alain were not talking to one
another. She had given her rival her chance, and, as Delilah
had expected, Cordelia had made a hash of it. She sat down by
the fireside with a sigh that was perfectly balanced between
boredom and gloating satisfaction.
Cordelia looked up with a spark in her eye. "Was the
garden so pretty, then?"
"By moonlight," Delilah purred, "one would have thought it was a
mermaid's grotto beneath the waves." Cordelia felt a burning
anger within her. What had the cat been doing with her
brother? What had she done to him?
From the look of him, though, she might have asked him the
reverse: what had he been doing with her?
However, there was still an edged and whetted hunger to him, a
devil-may-care, reckless, barbed delight about him. She did
not have to wonder long about what they had been doing, but only
how far the game had gone. Not too far, or Geoffrey would not
still look famished—but somehow, the notion was not
reassuring.
"Where shall we fare tomorrow?" she asked.
Delilah turned her head, locking gazes with Cordelia; she had
not missed the "we."
"The gentlemen shall escort me to my home," she purred, "or so
they have promised."
"And so we shall do," Alain said stoutly. "We could not
let so gentle a lady wend her way unescorted."
"Oh, aye!" Cordelia said, with a smile of her own.
"I shall join you."
"And what shall you ride, then?" Delilah asked
gaily. "For I see you have no horse! Perchance you
shall ride a broomstick!"
"Perchance." Cordelia's tone flowed like honey.
"Though perhaps I should leave it for you."
Delilah threw her head back with a tinkling cascade of
laughter. "Do not trouble yourself—for I have an
excellent palfrey."
"Why, then," said Cordelia, "I shall have to find a
stallion."
Cordelia waited until the others were asleep, then rose and
moved quietly off into the wood, but only a few paces. She
directed a thought at her sleeping mother, asking her to send her
father's great black robot-horse, Fess—with a sidesaddle.
Gwen agreed, and so did Rod, easily. Cordelia couldn't
tell they were only a mile away.
The sound of movement waked her. She opened her eyes,
lying still to avoid surprises. She frowned, feeling
muzzy-headed, and pressed a hand to her temple, but it would not
drive the shreds of dream away. A patched and ragged dream,
surely ...
Alain lay to one side of her—good. She muttered and
turned over as though she were still asleep, then peeked through
her lashes and saw Delilah, eyes closed, breathing deeply and
evenly.
You need not pretend, sister. Only I await
you.
As well you might, Cordelia returned. To be
sure, none has the advantage of you.
There is some truth in that, Geoffrey admitted.
Cordelia sat up, slowly, carefully, pressing a hand to her head
again. I had the strangest dream ...
I too. Let us go.
He was sitting on his heels across the campfire from her, but
now he rose silently, stepped around the coals, holding out his
hand. She took it and rose to her feet, then stepped away
from Alain and Delilah. Brother and sister wrapped their
cloaks about them, for the morning was chill. They moved
silently away from the sleepers and in among the trees, but not so
far they could not watch the campsite.
"Tell me your dream first," Geoffrey said.
"'Twas a dream of this Lady Delilah," Cordelia said, watching
his face—but he only nodded. No look of guilt, no look
of keen interest—no look of surprise. Heartened,
Cordelia went on. "I dreamt that in the deep of the night,
she did come into these trees and meet with several men."
Again, Geoffrey nodded, and did not look surprised.
Cordelia took a deep breath. "She did give them
orders—orders, Geoffrey! She did command! And not
a one of them disputed!"
Geoffrey still nodded, very intent.
"She did command them to prepare her home for her. She
spoke of a manor house and staff, but she bade them dress as
servants, and named one to impersonate her father. Nay, it
did seem that she had already given such orders, for these commands
were only in the nature of asking if all was in readiness—and
they told her nay, but nearly." She watched her brother out
of the corner of her eye. "What would you say to that?"
"I would say," Geoffrey replied slowly, "that it was the product
of spleen, envy and jealousy that one woman might have for
another—had I not had the same dream. Not only
like yours, mind you, but the same."
Cordelia stared at him in surprise.
"Aye," said Geoffrey. "And what would you say to
that?"
Cordelia turned away, walking very slowly. "I would say
'tis not the sort of dream I would have thought a randy young man
like yourself would have dreamt, of a beautiful woman."
"Cordelia!"
Cordelia shrugged impatiently. "A spade is a spade,
brother, and a lecher is a lecher. I will own I had some
intent to speak to you of that anon—and aye, I have seen the
covetous looks you cast upon the Lady Delilah, so I was not so
surprised as I might have been, to learn that you had dreamed of
her. But such a dream as this is not the sort I had
expected."
"Nay, I am sure it is not," Geoffrey said, with a sardonic
smile.
"How is this, brother?" Cordelia spread her hands.
"How is it we have both dreamed the same dream, even though it is
quite inappropriate to yourself?"
"Why, you know as well as I," Geoffrey countered. "What
could it be, but truth?"
"Truth of what sort?" Cordelia frowned. "Can it be
she is a telepath, a projective, and does not know it?"
"That, or one who does know it, but felt no need to shield her
thoughts from sleepers." Geoffrey frowned. "In either
case, it would seem that our Delilah is not what she seems."
Cordelia gave a harsh little laugh. "'Tis no great news to
me, brother. I have seen the looks she gives you when she
thinks Alain does not see."
"And that you do not see, either?"
"Oh, no! She cares not if I see. Indeed, she would
prefer that I did." Cordelia's lips thinned. "No doubt
she thinks that I believe you to be my puppy, and will be quite
wroth with her for seeking to steal your affections. But I
know you well enough to doubt that could happen."
Geoffrey looked up, offended. "Be not so certain,
sister! I, too, may fall in love."
"You may," Cordelia said acidly, "but not with such a thing as
that. Nay, Geoffrey, speak truly: I know you have felt lust
for her, but has there been the tiniest shred of love?"
Geoffrey relaxed in an easy grin. "Oh, nay! I know
what she seeks, and may well find—but no more, I assure
you." Then he sobered, frowning. "But if she orders men
to make a false home for her, what is she truly?"
"A commander," Cordelia said slowly, "though I think she is not
a lady born."
Geoffrey nodded slowly. "I have that feeling, too," he
said. "I cannot say why, for she counterfeits well. No
doubt 'tis a host of small signs that I am not aware of
consciously—but they are there nonetheless, and I read them
without knowing that I do. She is not nobly born."
"Yet she may be a telepath." Cordelia looked up at him,
feeling a sudden pang. "Oh, Geoffrey, my brother, be wary, I
pray you! For I do fear for your safety!"
For a moment, he looked grim. Then he gave a soft laugh,
and gave her a brotherly squeeze. "Do not fear for me, big
sister. I have learned in a hard school, and have been taught
by experts."
But Cordelia did not return his laughter. The statement
had an odd echo; it reminded her of something she had once heard
their older brother Magnus say, shortly before he left home.
She tried to give Geoffrey a glare, but her heart wasn't in it, and
she gave him a reluctant smile instead. His own answered
her. She sighed and looked back at the campsite. "Do
you watch these two, brother, while I step aside a moment."
"Surely, sister. And what shall I do if they arise and
walk?"
"Be sure they do not walk toward one another," she answered
drily, then turned away to step in among the leaves. In a few
seconds, she was surrounded by the rustling susurrus of greenery,
and projected her thoughts. Fess! Are you
near?
A shadow moved from under the trees, and the great black horse
stepped forward, nodding. I am, Cordelia. What do
you wish of me?
"Oh, Fess, it is so good to see you!" Cordelia rushed
forward, throwing her arms around his neck—but carefully;
that was hard metal beneath the horsehair, not flesh. He was
the companion of her childhood, the dream horse that many young
girls imagine. She had been six before she fully understood
that he was not really a living creature, like herself—but
she had always thought of him as her friend and, in the depths of
her being, still believed him to be a living, animate
consciousness.
And, suddenly, she found that she was relaxing, letting the
pressure and stress of the last few days evaporate, trembling as
she clung to the great horse. Fess sensed it through sensors
imbedded in his artificial horsehair. "What troubles you,
Cordelia? Perhaps it were best that you tell me."
She lifted a tear-streaked face. "Alain had come
a-courting—except that he did not court, he commanded me to
marry him! Dearly though I had dreamed of that moment all my
life, I could not bear to have it come in so undreamlike a
fashion!"
"I know of this," Fess said, his tone thoughtful, "and of his
quest with Geoffrey, though I confess I do not truly understand
it."
"Ohhhhhhh ... Geoffrey!" Cordelia stamped her
foot. "He has taken it upon himself to turn my callow swain
into a proper lover, to teach him the right and proper way of
courting a maid—and corrupting him betimes, I doubt not!"
"Only Geoffrey?" Fess was picking up undertones that she
hadn't intended.
"There is also a witch of alluring enchantments," Cordelia said,
seething. "She has preyed upon their kindness—and, aye,
their randy lust—and prevailed upon them to escort her to her
home, each mounted upon a horse. I have only my
broomstick. Fess, will you carry me?"
"Surely," Fess told her. "I would not miss this for the
world."
Cordelia reflected sourly that everybody but herself seemed to
find the whole episode monstrously entertaining.
They breakfasted on quail and pheasant, then saddled their
horses (of course, Alain insisted on saddling Delilah's
mount). Geoffrey had only a raised eyebrow when the great
black horse strode into the clearing. Alain looked up, then
looked again sharply. He turned to Cordelia with a look that
was an amused accusation.
But Delilah stared, taken aback.
She recovered her poise quickly, though. "Truly, so great
a stallion would be beyond my feeble horsemanship. I marvel
that you can ride him, Lady Cordelia."
"I do prefer stallions," Cordelia said.
"To ride, of course," Delilah said, with an insinuation that
made Cordelia blush, though she didn't understand why. She
covered by reaching up for pommel and cantle, setting her foot in
the stirrup, and swinging up to hook a knee around the horn of the
sidesaddle.
"How athletic," Delilah purred. "Surely I could never do
such wonders. I have no skill in this. Alain, would you
help me to mount?"
"Gladly, Lady Delilah." Alain gave her a small, courtly
bow, then set both hands about her waist and lifted her up to the
saddle. Delilah squeaked, and if Alain's hands lingered a
little longer than was strictly necessary, who was there to blame
him?
Only Cordelia.
So it came about that they rode toward Delilah's home—a
witch, a warlock, a Prince, and another whom Cordelia thought to be
more truly a witch than herself.
CHAPTER 10
Smoke exploded in the roadway in front of the four. The
real horses shied with whinnies of alarm, and the riders fought to
hold them down. Alain grasped the bridle of Delilah's palfrey
before his own mount was fully under control, and managed to calm
both.
Fess, of course, stood solid as iron, observing the situation
with interest.
The smoke blew away to reveal a woman, quite young but
unbelievably ugly, leaning on a staff. She had a huge,
curving nose, lantern jaw, small eyes like a swine's, and a sickly
pale complexion. Worse, her face had five large warts, and
her hair was dun-colored, sparse, and stringy. She was
clothed in a murky gray robe, her hood thrown back, with six
hulking men in livery of the same color behind her. Each wore
a small shield on his arm and brandished a sword.
Cordelia stared, as amazed as she was revolted. Surely
such ugliness could not be real—especially in one so
young! "Avaunt, damsel!" the ugly woman cried.
"You escaped my clutches yesterday, but you shall not escape them
now!"
"Sister!" Delilah gasped, alarmed. Then joy lit her
face, and she cried, "Lord Roland would not have you, then!"
"He would not, even for all our father's lands and
fortune." The witch's eyes narrowed. "Mayhap my dowry
would move him, though, if he knew you were dead, no longer to
beguile him. I shall see that you are!"
"Nay, sister, I beg you!" Delilah cried, shying
away. The hag went on inexorably. "Then, when all the
lands have come to me, and Roland, too, I shall bring down the King
and Queen with my magic, and rule as sovereign over a dukedom in my
own right, with no hindrance from the Crown!"
Cordelia could only stare, unable to escape the feeling that she
was watching a stage play.
The hag raised a knife, poised for throwing, and Delilah
screamed.
"You shall not!" Alain shouldered his horse between
Delilah's palfrey and the hag. His eyes blazed with anger,
and he surely had cause, for it was his own mother and father whom
the hag had threatened, as well as Delilah. "Bid your men lay
down their swords, or they shall die by mine!"
The witch threw back her head with a high, wild cackle.
"One man, against six?"
"Nay." Geoffrey smiled, drawing his sword and urging his
horse up alongside Alain's. "It will be two against
six. The odds are, I will admit, unequal. If you could
find four more men, we might call them even."
Cordelia noticed that he didn't mention his sister.
Good—it was always wise to keep a secret weapon in
reserve.
Of course, knowing Geoffrey, he probably didn't think he needed
one—and what was really galling was that he was probably
right.
"Out upon them, men of mine!" the hag shrilled.
"'Tis for me to slay my sister!"
The thugs answered with a shout and charged forward. They
were all big men, six feet or more, broadshouldered and
muscular—but Geoffrey gave a shout of glee and rode into
them. They stepped aside adroitly and slashed at him as he
went by, but he caught the blows of the two on his right on his
sword and lashed out with a kick that knocked the left-hand man's
hilt from his grasp. He howled and fell back, clutching his
hand.
The right-hand men turned as Geoffrey swerved around them, then
leaped to pull him from the saddle. Geoffrey slammed a punch
into one's jaw, using his hilt as brass knuckles. The man
shouted with pain as he fell back; then his eyes rolled up, and he
lay still. His mate was doubled over from a kick in the
belly, making strangling noises.
Meanwhile, Alain had spurred to meet the other three, who
charged him, shouting, swords waving over their heads. He
swung his horse dancing aside a split second before they reached
him; they went barrelling past, trying to slow, to stop themselves,
thrown off balance for a minute.
That was long enough. Alain slashed downward, knocking one
man's blade out of his hand. The man shouted with pain and
leaped backwards, swinging his shield up to protect his head.
Alain turned to his next assailant.
But while the boys were occupied with the henchmen, the hag
rushed at her sister, waving her staff and shrieking something
unintelligible, pointing at something overhead, something
invisible, but whatever it was, Delilah reeled in her saddle,
crying out in pain and terror.
Alain looked up in alarm, shouted, and charged the hag.
She whirled on him with a scream and threw something
invisible—but her aim was off; she hit the shield of one of
her own men, and an explosion erupted right underneath the nose of
Alain's steed. The horse reared, whinnying, terrified; Alain
shouted and fought to control the beast.
Fireballs? Cordelia thought dizzily. It was
not how a true witch would throw a fireball—it would come
streaming from her fingers.
Yes, Fess's thought answered hers, and a true witch
does not use lycopodite; I catch the telltale aroma of modern
explosive. He was, of course, equipped with sensors of
every type, including the olfactory—in his case, a chemical
analyzer.
And, suddenly, Cordelia realized the name of the game.
The hag was a fake; her magic was that of technologywhich meant
that she was a Futurian agent. She was there to create a
situation from which Alain could rescue Delilah, which would bring
all his protective feelings to the fore. Then she would hail
him as her savior. A very romantic situation indeed—and
one which just might result in his falling in love with her.
It would certainly give her the motive she needed for showing her
gratitude, in ways which would send his head spinning.
Well, Cordelia could certainly take care of that. A fake
witch was no match for the real thing.
Cordelia glared at a rock by the side of the path, and it shot
up off the ground to clip the "witch" on the shoulder. She
cried out in fright, spinning away, then turned in fury. "I
do not know how you did that, sister, but you shall die for
it! Avaunt!" She charged at Delilah again, but this
time with the staff poised as a lance, to knock her from the
saddle.
"You shall not," Cordelia cried, and Fess stepped in to come
between Delilah and her "sibling."
But Delilah cried, "Oh, spare me, sister!" and threw her
arms wide. Her left fist backhanded Cordelia in the stomach
with all the power of a trained fighter. Cordelia doubled
over, gagging, realizing that it had been no accident ...
But Fess was still dancing to head off the witch, who leaped
aside with a shout of victory—and her staff cracked into
Cordelia's head. Dimly, she heard Alain shouting her name as
she reeled in the saddle, the world swimming about her. The
day seemed to darken, and she knew she was going to lose
consciousness ...
Be of good heart, my lady. A new and strange
voice echoed inside her head. Hold to wakefulness; she
shall not prevail.
Then there was a renewed clamor of swords ringing.
Cordelia lifted her head as her vision cleared ...
And saw Forrest, the bandit chieftain, standing between herself
and the hag, parrying her blows with his quarterstaff, knocking her
rod from her hand. She screamed, falling back, crying, "Aid
me, men of mine! A rescue, a rescue!"
Two of the men stumbled toward her, but they were bare-handed,
swords gone, only their shields left. The other four lay
unconscious on the ground.
Alain rode down on them, eyes narrowed, not disposed toward
clemency.
The hag screamed and stumbled away toward the trees, her men
backing quickly behind her—but Forrest followed in hard and
fast, battering on the shield of the right-hand man, while Alain
followed closely at the left, slashing with his sword.
Dizzily, Cordelia wondered where her brother was—and her
vision cleared just in time to see the look of outrage on Delilah's
face.
Forrest, Cordelia guessed, had not been part of her plan.
The hag turned and fled with a scream of despair. Her men
stumbled after her.
Alain gave a shout of triumph, swinging his sword high, kicking
his horse into a gallop.
Delilah let out a scream of terror and slumped in her
saddle.
Geoffrey was at her side in a second, and Alain whirled about,
wide-eyed in alarm, then turned his horse and galloped back to her
side.
The witch and her henchmen disappeared in among the trees.
Alain and Geoffrey were each chafing one of Delilah's hands.
The fallen men began to crawl toward the trees at the side of
the road.
"There, now, lady, 'tis done!". "There, they shall not
harm you!"
"Come, you must revive!"
"Geoffrey, have you a dram of brandy in your saddlebag?"
"Aye, here, and more!"
Cordelia stared at the two of them in outrage, feeling very much
ignored and forgotten, reflecting bitterly that there were grave
disadvantages in being able to take care of yourself. She was
quite sure that Delilah could, tooand she was certainly proving it
now!
"My lady, are you well?"
She looked down in surprise.
It was Forrest who had remembered her after all, and had stepped
up beside her saddle. Cordelia looked down at him, instantly
grateful ...
And saw his eyes glowing up at her, glowing with a gleam that
only desire can bring; desire, and perhaps something more ...
Cordelia's smile of gratitude faltered; she felt as though his
eyes were growing larger, larger, and for a moment, his face seemed
to be all she saw. She felt a strange tingling beginning deep
inside her, radiating outward to envelop her back, legs, and scalp
like an aura. "Yes," she gasped, but her voice cracked, and
she had to wait a moment to regain control of herself. Then
she forced a smile which quickly turned real. "Yes, I am
well, thanks to you, brave Forrest. But how came you
here?"
Before he could answer, Alain remembered his courtesies and
turned to the bandit. "I thank you for assistance, sir."
"Aye, most great thanks for your assistance," Delilah purred,
far too sweetly. Her eyes glinted.
Forrest turned to her, his lips parting, no doubt for a
retort. Then he saw her face, and froze.
So did Delilah, for a moment, her eyes widening. Alain,
Cordelia, and Geoffrey all sat staring; even they could feel the
sudden tension in the air, for the long, long minutes that the two
stared at one another.
Then Delilah turned away with a look of scorn. "Why, he is
nothing but a woods-runner, an outlaw!"
"But a woods-runner on your side, Lady! Or, more aptly
... " Forrest turned quickly back to Cordelia. ".
. . on your side."
"Outlaw?" Alain frowned. "Hold! I know you, do
I not?" Then, before Forrest could answer: "Indeed I
do! You are the bandit chieftain whom I defeated and sent to
my lady!" He turned to Cordelia. "Lady Cordelia, how is
it you have let this man go free?"
"I did not." She frowned, puzzled, but kept her eyes on
Forrest. "I sent him, with his whole band, to Sir
Maris. How is it the seneschal has dispatched you,
Forrest?"
"Forrest?" Alain stared. "You know his name?"
"Indeed," she said indignantly—perhaps the more
indignantly because Alain had been fighting for another
woman. "I required his name and rank of him."
"Sir Maris bade me go, and trouble good folk no more," Forrest
explained. "He said nothing of bad folk."
Alain smiled, amused. "So you have seen your way clear to
the troubling of such as these?" He nodded after the witch
and her cronies.
"Aye, though I follow good folk." Forrest gazed up at
Cordelia, his smile so warm that she felt it with an almost
physical pressure.
Alain's eyes sparked with jealousy. He moved his horse
closer to Cordelia's. "Surely milady is indeed `good folk'the
best of the best, and the fairest of the fair—far too good
for so incorrigible a rascal as yourself to attend upon her!"
"If I am incorrigible, do not incorrige me." Forrest was
still gazing up into Cordelia's eyes. "Will you bid me
go?"
"No-o-o-o," Cordelia said, as though the words were being
dragged out of her. Then, quickly: "This pathway through the
forest seems to be hazardous; there is no saying what dangers lurk
upon it."
"Well, I can say." Forrest grinned. "I have been
through this wood before—and through it, and through
it! You speak truly, my lady—there are dangers by the
score: monsters, wild beasts of all sorts; wolves and bears are the
least of diem. There are ogres, wild men, all manner of
dangers! Nay, even with two such doughty knights to guard
you, you cannot have too many defenders."
"Nor I," said Delilah, with an air of hauteur.
"Nor yourself either, milady." The gaze Forrest had given
Cordelia had been warm, but the look he gave Delilah was a
sunburst. "Any fair ladies who travel this wood do need
protecting—and the fairer they are, the more they need
warding."
"By that token," Geoffrey said, with an edge to his tone, "the
Lady Delilah would need an army."
Forrest turned to him in surprise. "And what of the Lady
Cordelia, sir?"
"Oh, Cordelia?" Geoffrey made a dismissive gesture.
"She is my sister."
"I see." Forrest's lips quirked with humor. "And a
sister, of course, can never be beautiful to her brother." He
turned back to Cordelia, his gaze boring into hers. "But I
assure you, my lady, I am not your brother."
"No; I should have recognized you if you were." Cordelia
strove to sound cool and disinterested, but it was no use. He
knew exactly how interested she was.
"Come! Must we stand here all day chaffering?"
Delilah shook her bridle till the rings jingled. "Or shall we
not move onward toward my father's house?"
"Aye, most assuredly!" Alain turned back to Forrest and
said severely, "Thank you for your help, good fellow. Now be
off."
"Nay, I shall be on. As to calling me `fellow'..."
Forrest's face hardened as he looked up at Alain. "I am as
well born as you, I warrant, and was knighted. It is true
that I have fallen on evil days, and I may have been less than
honorable as a consequence, but that does not lessen my
quality."
Alain's mouth quirked in wry amusement. "As well born as
I, sir? To be sure, any lapse in chivalry does show you to be
of lesser quality than your birth."
"If that is so," Forrest returned, his voice hardening, "there
are many men in Gramarye who are of lower quality than that to
which they were born, yet wear duke's coronets and sit in great
houses."
Alain lost his smile.
Cordelia decided the tension was growing too thick. She
clucked to Fess, and he moved between the two men, so that she
broke their gaze. "Come, gentlemen! Let us not stand in
idle chatter; the Lady Delilah hath the right of it in that."
She stressed the word "that."
"Let us go."
"To her father's house?" the outlaw asked in
surprise. "Indeed," Cordelia answered.
"Aye," Alain said severely. "We have given our word that
we will escort the lady to her home—though I doubt that you
would understand the importance of honoring one's word, sir!"
Now it was Forrest's gaze that darkened, and Cordelia said
quickly, "Alain! That was unchivalrous of you, sir!"
Then, to both of them, "Do what you will—I am going."
She kicked her heels against Fess's sides, and the great black
horse moved off with alacrity. The two men looked up,
startled; then Alain kicked his horse and rode to come up beside
her, and Forrest ran.
Cordelia reined in Fess, and the two caught up, pacing along on
either side of her. She made sure that Fess was going slowly
enough so that Forrest wouldn't be pressed too hard.
"Nay, you must not leave me behind, fair lady!" Forrest
protested. "For this Forrest would be dark indeed without
you."
She turned to him, tilting up her chin, and said, in her coolest
tone, "Black-haired, sir, and black-bearded; how dark can you not
be?"
The outlaw stared at her a moment, then grinned, showing white
teeth. His lips, she noticed, were very red, and fuller than
most men's. "Even as you say it, my lady—but darker
tenfold for want of your smile."
"Though any man would seem dark," said Alain, "near the light of
your beauty, lovely Cordelia."
She turned, gratified. "Why, thank you, Alain. Where
have you learned such pretty manners of speech?"
"Why, from my heart," he said, gazing into her eyes. For a
moment, her heart fluttered, and she found herself
wondering if he really did mean it.
No. Surely. It was only the competition with Forrest
that had caused him to say it—though she seemed to remember a
few compliments of the night before ...
Still ...
Alain had always hated to lose, she remembered that well enough
from their childhoods, though he had learned how to pretend a
better grace as he grew older ...
"The leaf that flutters from the tree cannot be lighter than
your step!"
"The summer's sky cannot be more clear than your eyes!"
"The cherry's blossom must pale when set against your
cheek!"
"Nay, for those blossoms are your cheeks!"
Cordelia looked from one to the other, soaking up the
compliments as they settled about her. She knew better than
to trust either of them, or to think that they really meant
it—but she might as well enjoy it while it lasted. She
decided that there was definitely something to be said for
competition.
Behind her, her brother was looking decidedly grumpy.
"What do they see in her? Surely she cannot have grown into a
beauty in the space of one day!"
"Oh, it is only as Alain has said," Delilah answered,
disgusted. "A brother can never see his sister's
beauty." She turned toward him, a wicked notion coming into
her mind.
"Perhaps that means that only brothers can see truly."
Geoffrey looked at her for a moment, trying to make up his mind
whether or not to be offended. Then he decided to give
Cordelia a little of her own medicine. "You have never had a
brother?" he asked.
"Nay—only my sister." A shadow crossed her
face. Geoffrey spoke quickly to erase the thought.
"Then I must fill his place, and see you as you truly are.",
For a moment, she seemed discomfited, even alarmed; but it was
only a flicker. Her eyelids drooped, and a slow, lazy smile
curved her lips. "Come, sir! Did you not see me truly
last night?"
"What, by moonlight?" Geoffrey breathed. "Or by
starlight? Nay! Surely only the light of the sun shows
us as we truly are."
"Indeed." She lost the smile and tilted her chin up,
gazing at him in disdain. "And what has the light of the sun
shown, sir?"
"Why," said Geoffrey, "a dozen tiny features that I could not
see by night—how red your lips are, how rosy your
cheeks! Though your complexion, I note, is as flawless as
ever it was—even the alabaster that it seemed by night!
And surely the stars, that had fallen from the skies in despair of
matching your eyes, knew truth, for you outshine them all!"
Delilah gave a laugh of delight. "A very pretty speech,
sir! Nay, I think I will listen to some more—if you
have any in your repertoire."
Cordelia glanced back, frowning just in time to see Geoffrey
kissing Delilah's hand, and to hear her laugh again. "La,
sir! Pretty speeches are not enough!"
Then, more softly, so that Cordelia could not hear, "What
actions can you show me?"
"Why, what you will." Geoffrey looked up with a slow smile
that turned into a grin. "Name the deed you fancy, lady, and
I shall do it."
Delilah cocked her head to the side, evaluating him. "I
think that I shall wait to say it. Until I do, sir, you shall
lie low."
"As low as you wish," Geoffrey said, his voice husky. "But
where shall we lie? Sooth, we must wait for night!"
Delilah's eyes sparked with anger, but her mouth curved in
amusement, then in derision. "You shall show me nothing, sir,
if you must wait for night—for then there will be nothing
that shows."
"Ay de mi!" Geoffrey leaned closer. "Must I
wait? For you tell me that if I do, I shall have
nothing!"
"Why, then," she breathed, "do not."
He covered her mouth with his own, both leaning from their
saddies to bridge the gap, only their lips touching. Cordelia
glanced back again at the sudden silence, and stared in
indignation, then whipped about, eyes front, face burning.
"Why, how have I offended, beautiful lady?" Alain cried,
wounded.
Cordelia thawed a little, turning toward him, and bestowed a
smile upon him. "Why, in no way, sir, and neither has
Forrest. I am only indignant when I remember the verse."
"Then blame me not, for I have made no promises." Alain's
voice softened, and he leaned closer. "I have only asked
them, and they have not been given."
Cordelia stared at him a moment. Her own lips curved, and
she said, "Then do not ask again until you are sure they will be
granted."
"And when shall that be?" he breathed. "When will
the sun fall from the sky?"
They looked up, startled; then Alain's face darkened at what he
thought was Forrest's impertinence—and perhaps it was, but
the outlaw was gazing up through the leafy canopy at the sky.
"There cannot be so much of daylight left. Where shall we
camp?"
"There is no need." Alain's voice was stern. "Lady
Delilah has said we shall come to her father's house ere darkness
falls." He turned back to Delilah. "Shall we not,
milady?"
Delilah broke off from the kiss, though not quite as quickly as
she might have, considering how surprised she looked. Alain
stiffened, and Cordelia's heart twisted.
"Shall we not what, sir?" Delilah tucked at her hair,
though it didn't need the attention.
"Come to your father's house ere nightfall." Alain's tone
was stiffly polite. "Shall we not?"
"Nightfall?" Delilah looked up through the leaves at the
sun rays. "By suppertime, or not long after, I should
say. Indeed, there is no need to hurry."
"That is well." Alain turned back to face front, seeming
relieved. "Then let us tell tales as we go along—or
shall we sing?"
Geoffrey shrugged. "Sing, if you will—but let it be
a tune that we all know."
"Why, so I shall." Alain thought for a moment, then began
to sing in a clear, rich tenor.
"Alas, my love, you do me wrong,
To cast me off discourteously..."
" `By all the promises that e'er men broke, In number more than
women spoke.' "
Geoffrey joined in with the baritone line, and the two girls
began to sing a descant. Forrest's voice underscored them all
with a warm, resonant bass—resonating within Cordelia, giving
her shivers. She glanced down at Forrest; he glanced back at
her. Some electric current seemed to pass between them.
Cordelia shivered, and turned her gaze resolutely back to the
front. Perhaps Alain was the safest for her, after all.
But did she truly wish to be safe?
The tall stone pillars seemed to rear up very suddenly, for they
were right in the middle of the woodland. Huge iron gates
hung from them. Behind them sat a serf in tunic and
hose. Cordelia stared for a moment, startled, then glanced to
either side. The woods were so thick, the roadside trees so
intertwined with bramble and thorn, that what she had mistaken for
a thicket was really a very artfully constructed fence. It
would not deter an armored knight, of course, but it would protect
the people within from the casual trespasser or poacher, and from
most wild animals. "Willem!" Delilah carolled.
"How fare you?"
The porter jerked awake out of a doze and stared as though at an
apparition. "My lady Delilah!" He leaped from his
seat. "Is it truly you?"
"Yes, Willem. I am returned to you, thanks to the
protection of these good folk. How fares my father?"
"In anxiety and woe, my lady. He wrings his hands and
cries out every hour, that his men can be of no worth if they have
not found your trail. Ah, praise Heaven you are come!
For it has been a grievous time for all of us!"
"Why, then, I am filled with regret." Delilah bowed her
head. "But I am filled with gladness to be come home
again. Send word to my father."
"Aye, milady, as you say!" Willem unlatched the gate and
swung it wide. The party rode in, Forrest at its head.
Willem latched the gate behind them. "I shall run with the
news, milady!" He sped away.
The party followed more slowly, riding up along a gently winding
track that was overhung with graceful maples and oaks—not
planted in neat rows, Cordelia saw; rather, the roadway had been
picked out between them. Somehow, the idea struck a chord of
rightness within her.
"I have told a gardener, my lady, and he bears the word!"
Willem paused by them to duck his head in a bow before he ran back
to his post.
Through the trees, Cordelia could see hedges, flowers, and a
closely cropped lawn. The gardeners were busy indeed.
Then the road took a final turn—and there, perhaps a quarter
of a mile away, was a huge old house of stucco, half-timbered, its
leaded panes glinting in the sun. Cordelia caught her breath;
set in a border of flowers and ornamental shrubs, it was really
quite lovely. She hated to admit it, but Delilah had a
beautiful home.
As they neared the house, a gray-haired, gray-bearded man came
hurrying out to the steps, his servants streaming behind him.
They stood waiting, and cheered as the company rode up, reining in
their horses.
"Delilah!" the old man cried in a deep and resonant
basso. "Come to my arms, my child! Oh, thou hast
worried me so horribly!" He ran down the steps, reaching up;
she hopped down into his arms, and he crushed her to his breast,
then held her back to look at her, beaming. "I was so filled
with anxiety, so horribly afraid that some harm might have befallen
thee, that thou wouldst never come home!"
"Alas! I feared, too, Father!" She threw herself
into his arms again, embracing him.
Alain looked on, smiling fondly—but Cordelia glanced at
Geoffrey, and found him glancing at her, too, one eyebrow raised in
skepticism. Cordelia gave a tiny nod; it did seem rather
artificial. She decided that she would have to marry Alain,
if for no better reason than to protect him from people who would
take advantage of his good nature.
She scolded herself for the thought a moment later, of
course.
The old man held Delilah away again, looking down gravely.
"It was very wrong of thee, my dear, to worry thy father so, and to
put thyself in such peril."
"I—I know, my father." Delilah lowered her
gaze. "But Roland had sent word that I should meet him 'neath
a certain willow, deep within the wood, at dawn ... or so I
thought..."
"Young Roland?" Her father frowned. "Why, he came to
call upon thee the very day thou hadst left—but thou wert not
here!"
"No." Delilah looked up, very obviously nerving herself to
speak. "The word that had been brought to me was false, my
father. I learned that, but too late—for I sat me down
beneath the willow where he bade me meet him, and he never came
... he never..." She gulped; tears began to flow
again.
"There, there!" The old man whisked a handkerchief from
his cuff and dabbed at her cheeks. "Assuredly, he could not
come, for he did not know thou hadst gone, nor where! When we
told him thou wert fled, he was as distraught as I!" Her
father frowned. "Who brought thee this false news of him, my
dear?"
Delilah lowered her gaze again, biting her lip.
"Nay, thou must needs tell me!" her father said
sternly. But she looked away, very reluctant indeed. "I
cannot, my father. It would be ... wrong."
"Wrong? To tell me the name of one who hath betrayed thee
so? Come, child! Speak truly!"
But she shook her head, eyes still downcast.
Cordelia decided somebody was going to have to say something;
she could see the storm clouds gathering in the old man's
brow—and apparently, both her brother and her suitor were too
concerned with honor to speak a word. Forrest, of course, did
not know—he had not been there the night before to hear this
tale. "It was her sister."
The old man looked up, staring, appalled. Then he looked
down again, scowling, anger gathering. "Is this true,
Delilah?"
Delilah said nothing, only bit her lip and gave a quick
nod. "But it was her sister who waylaid you upon the
road!" Forrest exclaimed. "Sir, I came in time to help
them beat her off, she and her henchmen, so I know whereof I
speak."
The old man lifted his head. "How now, sir! What
henchmen are these?"
Forrest shrugged. "Big, hard-faced men in garb of murky
gray, with targets on their arms and swords in their hands.
Hardened men, by the look of them, but no match for two young
knights and..." He grinned. ". . . a
forest outlaw who came upon them unawares."
" 'Tis even so," Geoffrey said at last.
"I cannot believe it!" the old man said, the color
draining from his face. He looked down at Delilah, at the
misery in her eyes, and groaned. "But I see I must.
Nay, we shall have thy sister out, and hear the truth from her own
lips."
Tears trembled on Delilah's lids.
"I think, good sir," Geoffrey said softly, "you are not like to
see your other daughter again. She shall know what has passed
here, and shall stay far from home."
"Nay, never say so!" The father looked up,
distraught. "Am I to be bereft of one daughter, no matter
what I do?" Geoffrey and Cordelia exchanged glances, and
Cordelia said slowly, "There may be a way. I doubt it, sir,
but there may be. Let us sleep upon the issue, and see what
we may do."
"Why, surely, then!" But he frowned at them,
puzzled. "Be sure that I shall be grateful for whatever
thought you may give it."
He looked back at Delilah again. "Who are these good folk
who have escorted thee here, my dear? May I not know their
names?"
"As much as they have let me know, Father," she said, "for these
gentlemen have told me that they ride bound by a vow not to name
themselves fully to any but each other, until some purpose of
theirs is accomplished."
"Which, of course, must also remain a secret." The old man
nodded. "You are knights-errant, then?"
"We are." Alain inclined his head, looking faintly
puzzled. Cordelia could understand why. The old man was
clearly of the gentry—a squire at least, more probably a
knight himself, even of the petty aristocracy. It was very
unlikely that the Crown Prince would not have met him, for he had
been introduced to every nobleman in Gramarye at one time or
another. Of course, there were always a few who never came to
Court, but kept themselves buried in the country, managing their
estates.... Still, the home was not a castle, nor even a
moated grange or battle-tower; and although there was every sign of
comfort, there was no appearance of such luxury as befitted a great
lord.
"Forgive my lack of manners." Delilah turned to them, one
hand on her father's arm. "Gentlemen and lady, may I present
my father, Sir Julian LeFevre. Father, Sir Alain ...
Sir Geoffrey ... his sister, the Lady Cordelia ... and
Sir Forrest Elmsford."
Each of the young men inclined their heads. Cordelia
couldn't drop a curtsy, being still mounted, but she smiled
warmly.
"You are welcome, welcome, and with all the thanks I can
bestow!" Sir Julian cried, throwing his arms wide.
"Step down, step down! My grooms shall see to thy
horses. Come in, come into my house! You must bathe,
you must dine! You must allow me to show my thanks!
Nay, you must stay a day, two days, three, that I may lavish my
hospitality upon you in gratitude."
"The road has been long." Geoffrey and Alain exchanged
glances. "A bath would be welcome, and some little
rest." Alain turned to Cordelia, inclining his head.
"If you wish it, my lady?"
"Surely," Cordelia said quickly. She wasn't about to take
a chance that the boys would stay at Delilah's house without
her. "I, too, would be most grateful for some respite."
Alain turned back to Sir Julian with a smile. "I thank
you, sir. We accept your hospitality."
"I rejoice!" the old man cried. "Come in, come
in!"
CHAPTER 11
Hostlers took the horses to the stables. Fess's words
echoed in both the Gallowglasses' minds: Farewell, Cordelia; be
wary, Geoffrey. These people are not what they seem. If
you have the slightest need of me, call.
We shall, Fess, Cordelia promised.
Delilah and Forrest both wondered why Cordelia and her brother
were so quiet for a few seconds. They could not sense the
exchange, since Fess's remarks had been made in the encrypted mode
of telepathy that the Gallowglasses had invented for the use of
their family alone.
Servants showed them to their rooms. They looked about
them as they were led through the house—at the graceful
double stairway, and the leaded panes of tinted glass that adorned
the landing, filling the whole entry hall with light.
Up the stairway they went, to the chambers above. The
ceilings were ten feet high, the hallways broad, and the rooms
spacious. It was scarcely a castle or a palace, but it was a
good and very big house, with real glass in the windows and
featherbeds in the bedrooms—both great luxuries, in a
medieval society.
Since Fess had taught the Gallowglass children history, Cordelia
recognized the architecture as being post-Medieval—Tudor, at
least. It did not concern her terribly—she knew that
her planet's original colonists had redefined Medieval society to
incorporate whatever suited them. A Renaissance manor house
was only a century or two too late, after all.
Cordelia was delighted with the chamber—it was huge,
light, airy, and decorated with the sort of frills and pastels that
reminded her of her own room at home. She went to the windows
to see how much of a view she had, and was delighted to see an acre
or so of carefully tended garden, bright with flowers, and cut into
several smaller gardens by high hedges.
"Shall I draw your bath, milady?" the maid asked.
"Not quite yet," Cordelia answered. "I must explore this
delightful garden that I see below me! Will you show me to
it?"
The maid did, and Cordelia went out, looking about her, feeling
refreshed by the mere sight of such gay flowerbeds amidst luxurious
lawns. She bent to smell a rose—and as she
straightened, she saw Forrest watching her.
"Like will to like," he said.
She blushed and looked away, hoping he spoke only of herself and
the flower, knowing he hinted at more. "You have me at a
disadvantage, sir."
"The best way." He stepped up, proffering his arm.
"Come, shall we discover what wonders this garden holds?"
He was almost courtly about it, his manner reminding her that he
was gently born and well bred, no matter what he had become.
Almost against her will, she slipped her arm through his, knowing
it was dangerous but finding that gave spice to the stroll, making
it almost an adventure.
They strolled between beds of glorious flowers. "Truly a
riot of color," Forrest said. "Do you not find them
attractive, my lady?"
"Indeed I do," she sighed. "He who laid out such beds must
have been truly inspired."
"But why should it have been 'he'?" Forrest asked.
"Might not a woman prove as proficient at laying out beds as a
man?"
She wondered again if he meant more than he said. "I
should think a woman's taste in color and form should be equal to
any man's," she agreed.
"Nay, far more." He halted, and she realized that they
stood in a corner of the hedge, screened from view of the
house—and he stepped closer, his face coming nearer. "A
woman's taste should be far superior to a man's," he breathed.
Transfixed, she stared at him—and he lowered his face,
touching his lips to hers.
It was almost as though sparks spangled across her mouth,
seeming to sting even as they tasted amazingly sweet. For a
moment, her eyes fluttered closed, savoring the delicate, exciting
sensation ...
Then she felt the tip of his tongue touch her lips, and a stew
of emotions boiled up within her: longing and revulsion, yearning
and fright. A tickling began deep within her and spread
...
No more! She stepped back, with a gasp of surprise.
"Oh, nay!" he pleaded. "A moment more, only a second
longer . .."
Somehow, the plea frightened her, and she darted away from him,
pausing ten feet away, hands clasped at her waist, striving for
composure ...
Forrest laughed, and leaped after her. Cordelia gave a cry
of alarm and ran. Forrest gave a joyful shout and chased.
It was the joy in his voice that banished her fears, his
laughter that made it a game. Breathless, she nonetheless
found herself laughing, too, as she dodged behind a tree, then
peeked out to see if he still followed—and found herself
staring straight into his face.
She ducked back behind the tree, out the other side, found him
there before her, ducked back twice more, then ran, laughing.
Crowing with delight, he followed.
In and out among the hedges, under arches of roses they fled, he
chasing, she fleeing with a high, wild excitement singing through
her. Finally her steps began to slow, and he reached out and
caught her. She turned to fight him off with joyful squeals,
but tripped over a root and fell backwards. Unfortunately,
she caught at Forrest for support, and instead of holding her up,
he fell with her—and landed on top.
He caught himself on his forearms, so there was no
impact—none but the softest, of his body against hers,
sending wild currents of heat all through her. She panted,
her bosom heaving, staring up into his eyes, only inches
away. "Oh, sir, you must let me rise!"
"Must I?" He grinned, his face coming nearer, his voice
husky. "Wherefore?"
"If you are a gentleman, you must!"
"Oh, then, I pray I may not be a gentleman!" he breathed,
and kissed her.
She stiffened, galvanized beneath him, as the unfamiliar welter
of emotions churned up within her—but she was truly
frightened to realize that she wanted him to go on. And on,
and on. She wrenched her head aside with a little cry,
protesting in earnest. "Nay, sir, you must let me up!
Would you force a lady against her will?"
"If I must, I must," he sighed, but she wasn't sure how he meant
it. "Come, then, milady, I shall do as you askbut you must
pay a ransom."
"What ransom is that?" She regarded him warily. "One
more kiss," he breathed, and lowered his lips again.
She was taut for a moment more, then reminded herself that he
would let her go after only one more, and let herself relax a
little, let the wonderful, frightening feelings well up within her
...
Then his fingers touched her breast.
She lay rigid a moment, her whole consciousness focussed on that
one touch, turning now to a caress, trailing fire through the cloth
across her skin, the maelstrom of feelings boiling up toward it,
threatening to engulf her ...
The fright was too great. She broke away from his lips
with a gasp, then slapped his cheek with all the force she could
muster—which was not very much, given her position.
But it sufficed to startle him; he drew back just enough for her
to struggle free. She leaped to her feet and backed away,
pressing her skirts smooth and crying, "For shame, sir! You
have taken far more than the ransom you stated!"
"I have, I will own," he said, all contrition. " 'Tis only
that you are so irresistible to me, that I crave more and more of
you. I implore you, sweet lady, do not disdain me for naught
but love's labors."
"Love's labors will be lost, unless they be less free," she
replied tartly, and hurried away, face flaming.
At the opposite edge of the garden, Alain plodded moodily
along. He, too, had felt the need for a walk before bathing,
but to his eyes, the beauty of the garden seemed dimmed. He
was rapidly coming to the conclusion that Cordelia was lost to him,
if he could not learn to be more romantic—and he did not
think he could, for truly, he was not romantic by nature. All
he could do would be to learn to be false. As he was, all he
had on his side was sincerity, and what use was that?
A bunch of roses caught his eye-white, and near them, a bush of
pink ones. Behind them glowed blossoms of deep red.
Alain gazed at them moodily, reflecting how much they seemed to be
like Cordelia, and himself ...
He stiffened, struck with inspiration. He had only
sincerity to recommend him, had he? Well, mayhap sincerity
could be romantic, in its way! Kneeling, he plucked a few of
each color of rose, then hurried back toward the house, face
glowing, hoping to come upon Cordelia.
He found her almost on the threshold. She, too, seemed to
have been for a stroll, and surely, it seemed to have been good for
her. She seemed filled with energy, and her cheeks were
rosy.
"Alain!" She saw him, and brought up short. "What do
you here?"
"Only strolling in the garden," he explained, "feeling the need
to let my limbs cool ere I heat them in water." Her eyes
fastened on the bouquet. "Whence came those?"
"I found them in the garden." He pressed them into her
hands. "I could not help but pluck them for you, sweet
Cordelia, for they remind me so much of yourself—at least,
the white blooms do, for they are so pure, like yourself. The
red, alas, are steeped in passion, as I am when I gaze at
you—and the pink are, I hope, the love I feel for you: my
passion allayed by your purity."
Cordelia felt her heart melting, so touched was she by his
clumsy tenderness. She leaned forward to give him a quick
peck on the cheek, but even as she did, she remembered Forrest's
kiss, and felt leaden guilt within her. She turned away,
ashamed.
"Ah, once more I have offended!" he cried. "Say,
fair Cordelia, what have I done?"
"Only what is right," she answered, trying not to let her anger
at herself turn into anger at him. She turned back, managing
a flirtatious smile. "If only you had done it sooner!
And if only you would do it more often, my Prince, you might yet
save me from a drastic fate!"
"What fate could that be?" he asked in total
innocence. Exasperated, she almost told him—but
instead, she snapped, "Spinsterhood!" Then she spun on her
heel and sped through the door, leaving Alain to gape after her,
not understanding at all.
Cordelia splashed water on her face, then turned away to find a
beautiful afternoon dress of green and yellow laid out on the bed
for her. She stared, amazed, then took it up
reluctantly. Surely it could not be Delilah's! The lady
was too small for any of her clothing to fit Cordelia. Her
sister's, perhaps? Certainly the style, though outdated, was
not old enough for the dress to have belonged to her mother.
Cordelia wavered for a moment, but the gown was very pretty, and
her own russet travelling dress was rather dusty. With a
sudden decision, she unfastened the dress, letting it drop to the
floor, then wriggled out of her shift, took the washcloth, and gave
herself a quick sponge bath. When she was done, she waved her
arms and hands, fanning herself, to dry, and slipped into the clean
shift that had been laid out for her. She delighted at its
smoothness—not silk, perhaps, but very fine linen. And
yes, it did fit.
Then she took up the green-and-yellow gown and slipped it over
her head. She fastened the kirtle around her waist and wished
for a cheval glass to regard herself in, but of course there was
none; her brother would have to do in its place. She
projected a thought on their family's encrypted mode:
Geoffrey.
Aye, Cordelia. He answered so quickly that she
might have thought he was waiting for her call.
Let us walk in the garden. Her tone was
peremptory. Geoffrey didn't disagree for a moment,
though. In truth, a stroll among the flowers should be
most pleasant. Let us walk, sweet sister.
Lightfooted, she stepped out through the door and ran to the
garden, feeling much more presentable.
Geoffrey was there, though he too had changed garments.
Strange that they had clothing to fit him so wellalthough, coming
closer, Cordelia could see that his doublet was of an old-fashioned
cut. No doubt it was one that had belonged to Sir Julian in
his youth.
"Why, Geoffrey," she began, to compliment him, but before she
could, he grinned broadly.
"Cordelia! Why, how lovely! I would never have
thought green and yellow to be your colors, but they are most
becoming!"
"Why, thank you, sir." Suddenly, Cordelia felt even
better. She smoothed her gown, feeling more than a match for
anything Delilah might bring on.
Then she became solemn; it was time to compare notes.
"There is one chamber in this house that is shielded from thought,
brother."
"There is indeed," Geoffrey agreed. "Either there is some
telepath who is given full-time to its warding, or..."
Cordelia nodded. "There is a machine of some sort hidden
within it that cloaks it from all human thought."
"Let us assume it to be the latter," Geoffrey said, "and that
our hosts know something of advanced technology. But why
would they give themselves away in this fashion? They must
know that any telepath who chances upon them will know at once what
they do!"
"Even so," Cordelia said, "as surely Delilah must have known
that we should know her for a witch, simply for the excellence with
which she has shielded her mind."
Geoffrey lifted his head suddenly. "The shielding is
gone."
Cordelia tested the room with her own mind, and nodded.
"Mayhap it is only an esper who wards there." Geoffrey asked,
"You were not greatly surprised to learn that Delilah was a witch,
were you?"
"Nay, surely," Cordelia smiled. "And it did not take
telepathy to read my mind in that regard, brother."
"Well, then, we deal with witchfolk," Geoffrey said. "Do
we deal with aught more?"
"If the dream we shared last night was true," Geoffrey said
slowly, "we deal with a woman who has command of men, though she
would have it seem that she does not, and who could order this
house prepared for her use simply to deceive us."
Cordelia nodded. "But such a house, Geoffrey! Have
you ever seen its like?"
"A few," Geoffrey said slowly. "They are rare, but they do
exist."
"Nonetheless, there is something about it that strikes me as
anomalous."
"Anomalous indeed," Geoffrey agreed. "There is too much of
good planning here, of the well-coordinated. We must
consider, sister, that we deal with our old enemies from the
future, who may move against us in some such way as they have
before. Of course, I suppose this could be the work of a
native telepath..."
"Not so," Cordelia said, "if the telepath knew no more of
machines, or the universe outside our world, than the folk who are
born here. She could not have expected that two who have such
knowledge might visit."
Geoffrey gave her a cynical smile. "Come, sister! Do
you truly think we have deceived her any more than she has deceived
us?"
That gave Cordelia pause. "No," she said slowly, "from
what you have said thus far, she must know, must she not? Are
we not therefore in peril?"
"We must believe so," said Geoffrey, "if we are not to be taken
by surprise."
Cordelia felt a touch of fear. "Then we must be on our
guard night and day, brother."
"You may take the day," he said at once. "I shall take the
night."
"To be on guard, Geoffrey." Cordelia glared at him.
"I have seen the way in which you look upon the Lady Delilah."
Geoffrey shrugged carelessly. "I can be on guard whiles I
do other things, Cordelia."
"Oh, surely," she said, with a withering glance. "Yet bear
in mind, brother—you are only human."
Geoffrey grinned. "Well, that is so—there are some
weaknesses built into us."
Neither of them said a word about leaving. In fact,
Cordelia felt a stab of fear, and was amazed to realize that she
was more frightened for Alain than for herself.
"Truly," Geoffrey said, "you do not think they would dare
attempt to assassinate the heir to the throne?" Cordelia
shrugged impatiently. "We do very poorly at disguising
ourselves, do we not, brother? For who is there in this land
who does not know of the High Warlock and the names of his
children? Nay, especially among witchfolk, who does not know
of us?"
"True," Geoffrey agreed, "and who does not know that the Crown
Prince is named Alain, nor that he is the friend of the children of
the High Warlock? Nay, you have the right of it,
sister—we must be prepared for anything, even murder.
Yet there is this." He spread his hands. "Why have they
not already struck?"
"There is that," Cordelia said slowly. "We may yet have
some time. Still, brother, ought we not leave tomorrow, or as
soon as we may?"
"We should leave now, but Alain would never agree to it,"
Geoffrey said. "He would see it as a breach of courtesy."
Cordelia wondered if that was the only reason.
"No, we must stay at least the night—and study the
situation. It may be that we can strike a blow now that will
save us a hundred in the future. We can always call for help,
if we need it—but let us first see what this pleasant nest of
traitors does intend."
"Aye," said Cordelia. "But guard the Prince, my
brother. Ward him well. Although perhaps I should do
that—and stay close by him."
"Oh, you need not," said Geoffrey quickly.
Cordelia smiled. "Why, brother—could you fear for my
honor?"
Geoffrey took a second, and answered as delicately as he
could. "Let us say, my sister, that I know how fragile a
thing honor may be, and I would not wish to lay more stress on it
than needs be. But come—our host will be expecting us
for dinner soon enough, and we must not disappoint him."
"As you say, brother." Cordelia took Geoffrey's arm, and
they went back toward the manor house arm in arm.
They went in through the tall windowed doors that opened onto
the terrace. Sir Julian looked up as they came in. "Ah,
well met! I thought you had tired of my company so soon!"
Cordelia smiled. "Surely not, my lord." She accepted
a glass of wine from a servant and looked about her at the Great
Hall. The trestle tables were set up as they would have been
in a castle, though with many fewer places. The head table
stood on a dais only a few inches high. Behind it, painted on
the plaster and beams, was a huge coat of arms. Cordelia gave
it a glance, memorizing it for later analysis; she did not easily
remember any such tokens as these.
The rest of the hall was plastered too, between the old oaken
beams. There was a tapestry centered in the long wall across
from the windows, and another at the end.
The original colonists of Gramarye had reconstructed the Middle
Ages not as they really were, but as they should have been.
Accordingly, they had kept costumes and customs from the Seventh
Century, and mixed them in with all the succeeding centuries
through the Fifteenth. But when it came to the amenities and
courtesies, they had been more much eclectic; the range spanned
through the Nineteenth Century and into the early Twentieth.
On Gramarye, there were elements of gracious living that had never
been there in the real Middle Ages of Terra—and this
gathering for wine before dinner was certainly one of them.
So, for that matter, was the manor house itself.
They had come late; Delilah had already managed to work Alain
off to the side of the conversational grouping. Seeing
Delilah, Cordelia felt dowdy all over again, for the hussy was
attired in a demure gown of pink and cream, considerably looser
than her riding dress, only hinting at the lush contours
beneath. It complemented her blonde hair so well that
Cordelia automatically felt dimmed by comparison. But she
lifted her chin; she would not be outdone!
Even as Cordelia watched, though, the vixen took another step
toward the far corner. Alain perforce stepped with her, to
hear what she was saying. He began to respond gravely, but
Cordelia could tell, from the color of his face, that her
suggestion had not been entirely decorous. Her flirtations
had become even broader than on their journey.
Cordelia leaned over to Geoffrey and murmured, "Brother, would
you see if you can distract the Lady Delilah from my inconstant
suitor?"
Geoffrey looked up, then smiled. "He is constant,
Cordelia, or he would not be blushing. Naetheless, I am
certainly more than delighted to do as you ask." He stepped
away.
But Cordelia stopped him with a hand on his forearm. He
turned back, eyebrows raised in polite inquiry. "Only
flirtation, mind," Cordelia said sternly.
Geoffrey grinned. "I make no promises." Then he was
gone, moving over to join Alain and Delilah. She looked up
with a flash of annoyance, which turned very quickly into a
sensuous stare which she even more quickly broke, turning to Alain
with a silvery laugh.
Cordelia turned half away from them, satisfied; Delilah
certainly would not be able to keep her mind on Alain now.
She reflected that a brother with overabundant hormones could have
his uses.
For herself, she must not appear to be watching too closely
...
"Lady Cordelia! How beautiful you are!"
She turned, warmed by the sincerity in the voice—then
caught her breath.
Forrest stood beside her, resplendent in a doublet of the same
cut and period as Geoffrey's, hose clinging to his legs to show his
magnificent calves and thighs to advantage. Cordelia scolded
herself; she should not be noticing his legs so, even if they were
remarkably well turned. Or the feeling of his lips on her
hand, though they were amazingly soft, amazingly sensuous ...
He looked up, gazing into her eyes, and she managed to find
enough voice to say, "You sound surprised, sir. Is it so rare
that I am ... presentable?"
"Nay, not in the slightest!" He grinned, white teeth
flashing. "You are rare indeed, my lady! Surely there
cannot be another like you!"
"Oh, is there not?" Cordelia began to feel a bit
better. "And to how many damsels have you said that,
sir?"
"Never, milady, not to a single other woman!" Forrest
reflected that he had also never been given so good a cue
line. "I have never seen you in those colors before.
Surely they bring out highlights in the glorious auburn of your
hair that I would never have known, though 'tis so great a pleasure
to see your hair unbound in the sun's rays that come through this
window."
Cordelia blushed. "You extol my charms too much, sir."
"I speak honestly." He stepped a little closer.
"Would you have me prevaricate?"
He was so very near, the aroma of him so masculine, so
compelling ... and the strange feelings had begun within her
again... "I would have you speak only as a gentleman should,
sir!"
"Alas! Must I be a gentleman, then?"
"You must be as you were born!" They both looked up,
startled.
Alain stood by them, looking stern, wearing a russet doublet,
again of the antique cut, and fawn-colored hose. Cordelia
could not help but notice that his legs, too, looked very well,
perhaps even better than Forrest's ...
"Why, so I must!" Forrest turned to Alain with a dangerous
glint in his eye. "But who are you to tell me what I must and
must not do, sir?"
Alain began to answer, but caught himself in the' nick of
time.
Forrest noticed the pause, and lifted an eyebrow. "Only a
knight," Alain said, still stern, "but as such, 'tis my duty to
remind you of your duty to knighthood."
"Am I still a knight, then?" Forrest cocked his head to
the side. "I, who have broken the law?"
"You are still a knight!" Alain snapped, more sternly than
ever. "You are a knight, who can redeem himself, and behave
as a knight should once more."
Cordelia stepped a little closer to him. Yes, sometimes
Alain was insufferable, overbearing, and his holier-than-thou
attitude did grate upon her now and then—but she felt safer
next to him, somehow. The troubling feelings inside her were
so much less in his presence ...
She glanced up at Forrest, and knew a moment's longing. If
only he were as proper a man, as morally sound and steady a man, as
Alain!
Though if he were, she wondered, would he be so attractive?
Then Sir Julian was offering her his arm, and leading her to the
head table. "Surely you will allow your host the benefit of
your beauty and charm, my dear, if only for the space of this
dinner."
"I shall be honored, my lord." But even as she said it,
Cordelia wondered if this was a ploy to get her away from Alain, so
that Delilah might work on him at her leisure. A glance out
of the corner of her eye showed her that she had no need to worry,
though—the lady was sandwiched between Geoffrey and Alain,
and Geoffrey was definitely occupying most of her attention.
Alain was looking none too pleased about it, but he glanced up at
Cordelia longingly.
She found it very reassuring.
She turned back to Sir Julian. "I thank you, my lord."
"Then sit! Sit! And we will dine!" Sir Julian
sat down, and immediately, the servants began laying in front of
them the huge slices of bread that served as plates. Behind
them came another server, laying thick slices of beef on the
trenchers.
Sir Julian picked up his knife and began to cut at the
meat—the signal to begin.
Cordelia found it slightly disturbing that he did not start with
a blessing over the meal, but she had no choice other than to abide
by the custom of the house.
"I must honor you, my daughter's rescuers!" Sir Julian
said, lifting a cup. "Honor you with a toast tonight, and a
ball tomorrow night!"
"Ball?" Cordelia stared, appalled.
"Indeed. I have sent word to my neighbors, bidding them
come rejoice with me." He laid a hand over hers. "You
must not be upset, lady. We are rude folk here in the
country, taking any opportunity that offers to celebrate
Life—and if our dress is not elegant, why, we make up for it
with exuberance."
"My sister has left many beautiful dresses behind her," Delilah
said, all sweetness. "I shall bid my maid show them to
you."
Cordelia was certain that Delilah's maid would not show her
anything that was too lovely.
"Or if you wish," the lord said, "I have bolts of wonderful
cloth, yards of laces. Only say what you wish, and a
seamstress shall labor all this night and all tomorrow, to make a
gown that will delight you."
"Indeed she shall," Delilah said. "My own seamstress, if
you wish it, my dear."
Cordelia had a brief vision of the kind of dress Delilah's
seamstress would make for her, and smiled sweetly. "How good
of you, Lady Delilah! It will not be necessary, though.
However, my lord .. ." She turned back to Lord
Julian. "I would see your cloths and your laces. It may
be that I myself can craft a dress to my taste."
"Yourself?" The Lady Delilah tittered behind her
hand. "Why, I had thought you a lady high-born, Cordelia
surely not one who plies needle and thread in her own right!"
"Why, my dear, do you not embroider?" Cordelia asked, all
innocence.
Delilah stared at her, paling. "Aye, most assuredly, and
most excellently!"
"Why, then, so do I," Cordelia said, "and my mother was quick to
teach me the crafting of a gown—for, she said, I must know
how 'tis done, if I wish to make sure my seamstress does it
well." She turned back to Lord Julian. "Yes, my lord, I
shall see your cloths."
CHAPTER 12
The cloth, at least, was every bit as beautiful as Sir Julian
had promised. She chose an emerald green lawn, almost as fine
as silk, for the gown itself, then selected yard after yard of
intricate lace to adorn it. She was tempted to take some long
strips of embroidery they showed her, but decided that she would
not be able to compete with Delilah in ornamentation; indeed, she
remembered her mother's dictum, that when a woman resorts to an
abundance of decorations, it is because she does not believe in her
own beauty. Unfortunately, Cordelia did not.
Still, she would never admit that. The lace would have to
do—the lace, and the wonderful cloth that showed her hair and
eyes to such advantage.
Petticoats and kirtles the maid was glad to bring her,
presumably from the sister's store. Cordelia did not even
stop to think of the wonderful coincidence that they should be
almost exactly the same size.
Then she sat down with pen and paper to make a rough sketch by
candlelight—but the more she sketched, the more excited she
became, till finally, she heard a clock somewhere tolling midnight,
and told herself sternly that she must desist; she would have to
have a good night's sleep, or she would be incapable of doing
anything tomorrow, certainly not be able to be as charming as she
must be at the ball.
And so to bed.
At last, Cordelia was able to lie down to sleep, dressed in a
nightgown that she had found laid out on her bed. She nestled
into the softness of the featherbed, luxuriating in it after a
night on pine boughs. She burrowed deeper, letting her mind
roam free, letting images arise and fade of their own
accord—but the images were not of lovely gowns, or even
nightmares of the extravagant dresses Delilah might wear to the
ball tomorrow night, but of Alain ... and then Forrest
... then Alain again, then Forrest, then the two of them side
by side, then Forrest alone, looming over her, his eyes bright, his
lips moist ... She was only a little afraid of the feelings
that the picture of him aroused, almost unafraid at all,
considering that he was not really there. There was something
about his gaze, his stare, and (be honest!) his body, his muscular
build, that raised those tingling, tickling feelings inside her,
and she admitted to herself at last that it was a longing she felt,
that perhaps she was beginning to be able to understand the desire
that seemed to drive Geoffrey.
But there was something that repelled her about Forrest,
too—the very recklessness that made him appealing was also
threatening, in its way. She found herself wishing that she
could marry Alain for security and friendship, but still have
Forrest for romance ... romance, and the pleasures of his
attentions ...
She sat bolt upright in bed, staring into the darkness,
realizing what she had been wishing for, blushing furiously in the
privacy of night. Then, completely ashamed of herself, she
burst into tears and buried her face in her pillow.
The campfire was a spot of cheer in a very dark night. It
was chill indeed, very odd for August. Rod and Gwen shared
his cloak, staring at the flames.
"I don't like this," Rod said. "The three of them could be
at the mercy of whoever owns that manor house. How long has
it been here, anyway?"
"By appearances, a hundred years, at least," Gwen answered.
"By appearances," Rod agreed. "But people can build things
to look old."
"Indeed." Gwen was thinking of some of the wonders of
modern technology she had seen in her brief sojourn off-planet.
A squat shadow detached itself from the darkness under the trees
and came toward them.
Rod looked up. "Any news, Brom?"
The dwarf sat down on a rock by the fire, holding his hands out
toward the flames. "I have sent elves to keep watch
throughout the house. If anything untoward occurs, we will
know of it within minutes."
"How long do the local elves say the house has been here?"
"Only these last two years—nay, some months less. A
crew of strangers came to build it. They cleared the land
here in the center of the forest, where none might see them.
The tools with which they cut down the forest were magical, say the
elves, and the job was done in a day."
Rod pricked up his ears; he knew the sound of high
technology. "Anything about beams of fire?"
"Summat of the sort. They builded the whole of the house
in a month, again with sorcerous machines, and gave it the
appearance of age, though it was new."
Rod nodded. "Do they have any idea who lives there?"
"A lady and her retainers," Brom answered. "A most
beautiful lady, slender, not very tall." He shrugged.
"That is all they can say. Her face doth seem to change from
time to time, as does the color of her hair. She doth bear
herself as one well born, but they do sense a maliciousness about
her."
"Anything definitely bad to say about her?"
"Not from without—and they have had no wish to enter
inside that house. Not that it houseth fearsome deeds, mind
you, nor doth it repel them in any wise—'tis that it hath no
interest for them. They have other fish to fry."
"No interest?" Rod stared. "Elves, with no
curiosity?" Gwen frowned. "That doth sound little like
any elf I've ever known. Indeed, a brownie's natural
curiosity would send him prying into every corner. Or are
these elves only, and no brownies among them?"
"What difference?" Rod said. "Elves are just as
curious as brownies. Not so inclined to go indoors, I'll
admit, but still..."
"There do be brownies among them, and they too have no interest
in the house," Brom verified.
"It doth smack of enchantment," Gwen said, "of witchpower, and
mighty, too."
"Even so," Brom agreed. "It doth bespeak one who hath laid
spells of disinterest on all who come nigh."
"Is there danger to Cordelia, or to Geoffrey?" Gwen
asked.
"Or even to Alain?" Rod finished.
"There is no sign of danger yet, to any one of them," Brom
said. "There is hazard only in that they are amidst strangers
who are themselves unknown in their desires or goals. But
there is no present danger in evidence. Be sure that if there
is, the elves will warn them—and, if need be, protect them
with their own magics."
"But if there are witches in that house," said Gwen, "elfin
magics may not suffice."
Rod shivered.
"They will bear word to us, will they not?" Gwen
asked.
"Be sure that they shall," Brom promised her. "Be very
sure of that."
Morning came lustrous, cool and moist—like herself,
Delilah thought. She stretched luxuriously, treasuring the
feeling of rest, of satiation of sleep, knowing that Cordelia was
probably red-eyed and weary, her hair in disarray and her mouth
stuffed with pins, trying vainly to cobble together some sort of
dress. It made breakfast in bed so much more tasty.
Her modiste, of course, had been up all night, and was still
busy with a fabric-bonder, computer, design program, and a ROM
library of medieval style plates.
Delilah rose for her first fitting.
Cordelia had risen an hour earlier, her heart singing as she
gazed at the cloth and lace. Then she noticed the breakfast
tray by her bed, still steaming. So that was what had waked
her—the servant. She felt an instant's panic, but found
her sketches still carefully hidden away in her boots—in her
enemy's house, there would be spies everywhere.
Boots! Yes, she would have to make slippers, too.
Then she donned the riding dress, pleased to notice that the dust
had been brushed from it. Clad once again in her working
clothes, Cordelia buckled down.
Delilah came out of her bedroom into the sitting room of her
suite as her modiste was finishing running the hem through the
molecular bonder. "Nice timing, Chief." She held up the
completed dress.
Even Delilah couldn't withhold an exclamation of delight.
It was a daring confection of a dress, all pink and gold, that
would set off her peaches-and-cream complexion and blonde tresses
to perfection. "Quickly! I must see it!" She
slipped into her petticoats and stood impatiently while the modiste
fastened the gown around her. No need to trouble with a
brassiere—the Middle Ages had not had them, and any
reasonably civilized planet in the Third Millennium had them built
into the garments with tiny electronic devices that enhanced
buoyancy and line.
Of course, Delilah thought smugly, she did not really need
enhancing—but it never hurt to fire a broadside. The
modiste finished the last fastening—primitive, but they had
to be something that could have existed in the Middle Ages, whether
they truly had or not—and Delilah whirled away to stand in
front of the doorway to her bedroom. The modiste pressed a
button, an electronic circuit closed—and the surface of the
doorway swirled into silvery reflectance. Delilah gazed at
her reflection in the electronic mirror with smug satisfaction,
posing side view, back view, three-quarter profile. That
snob, Cordelia Gallowglass, could never match such a gown, not even
with the most talented seamstress on Gramarye! She was, after
all, limited to medieval technology, and certainly, mere needle and
thread were so far from the devices available to Delilah's modiste
that Cordelia could not have produced even an indifferent
dress. But she would have tried—oh, yes! She
would have stayed up all night and would stay up all day! Her
hands would be raw with pinpricks, her skin pale with fatigue, and
her eyes red. She would be snappish and insecure with
weariness.
Even if her dress were presentable, though, it could never come
within a mile of Delilah's for allure. But then, she thought
with complacency, Cordelia could never have matched her for
voluptuousness in any case. Delilah was, after all, a
projective telepath, and a very talented and very skilled one at
that—but the greatest of all her talents was the projection
of sexual desire.
Cordelia was digging into her task with verve and glee.
Never had she had such beautiful fabrics to work with! It
seemed such a self-indulgence, when there were peasant women on her
own estates who had only the one blouse and skirt, and those
patched. No matter how her parents urged her, she had never
been able to bring herself to indulge in outright luxuries.
Here, however, there was the best of reasons. She had to
save her poor Alain from the clutches of that poisonous female,
Delilah—and had to save him personally.
She had draped the cloth, marked it, then laid it out and
chalked the patterns with not a moment's hesitation, following the
diagrams in her mind's eye. Then she cut itstaring at the
lines, thinking of the separation of molecules, watching the cloth
separate itself along the lines she had drawn. Twice she made
a mistake; twice she held fabric together, stared at it, and
thought of the linen molecules moving, faster and faster until the
cloth was whole again, each separate thread having bonded itself to
its other half so that it was no longer cut, but as sound as
new.
She was as talented in telekinesis as Delilah was in
projection.
Now she held the sections of cut cloth together, staring at the
edges, watching the threads flow together so well that you could
see no seam at all. Molecule bonded to molecule, far tighter
than any thread could bind. The unfinished edges folded
themselves over, bonded, and made themselves into hems.
By noon, it was done, and she slipped it on for the first
fit. She went to the window, opening the casement and letting
out a trilling whistle. The aural call was only there to help
her concentrate; really, it was her mind that reached out and
summoned ...
A robin flew down, perching on the tree branch outside her
window. It stared at her, then cocked its head
inquisitively. Cordelia stepped back, reading the bird's
mind. The robin saw her, and she read her own image from its
mind, viewing herself through its eye, stepping back until she
could see all of herself.
She gasped with delight.
She saw a fairy-tale princess complete in every detail except
the headdress, of course; she had yet to make that. However,
it was a dress such as a fairy-tale princess would have thought
scandalous. The neckline was daringly low, and it fitted her
torso as though it had grown there. Even as she gazed, she
thought of a slight rearrangement of electrical charges, and the
skirt and petticoat moved toward her legs, clinging. She
walked toward the window opening a few steps, and the static charge
molded the cloth to her limbs—not completely, for the
petticoats muffled the outline considerably, but enough to more
than hint at her contours. She viewed them with a critical
eye, and decided that her contours might not be so insufficient,
after all—and there had been enough boys who had sought to
touch them on some of her outings. Not so lush as Delilah's
curves, perhaps—assuming that Delilah's were real but more
perfectly proportioned.
She turned, walking away from the bird, gazing at the back of
her reflection, at the neckline, scooped low enough to show her
shoulder blades, cloth clinging to hint at the smooth curves of
hips. She looked back over her shoulder, lowering her
eyelids, giving her best imitation of Delilah's alluring smile, and
tried rolling her hips as she walked. Yes, it did seem to
work.
She blushed as she thought of herself actually putting on a
performance of that sort before Alain. She would not
dare! And even if she did, surely he would not dare to
appreciate it!
But the thought did excite her.
Still, the dress was a trifle too loose here and there.
She thought at the cloth, and the seam turned inward, the darts
tightening until it fit her—well, perhaps not quite like a
glove above the waist, but certainly like a flower below.
And, too, it did need some adornment. She blew a kiss at
the bird, dismissing it, slipped out of the dress, lifted the lace,
measured it off against the cloth, and bonded it so that it filled
in the scoop of the neckline, the dip behind her shoulders.
Her mother had told her that what was imagined was more effective
than what was shown; it was only necessary to give the gentlemen
something for their imaginations to work on.
Cordelia certainly didn't intend to give them anything more.
When she was done, she summoned another bird—a bluebird
this time—to look at her while she read its mind, and caught
her breath with delight. It was quite the most lovely gown
she had ever seen, even if she did say so herself. She
dismissed the bird with a gay wave, slipped out of the dress and,
in her chemise, took up the buckram, the lawn, and the veil, and
began to make the headdress.
Somewhere in the middle of all these labors, she caught a
sudden, stray thought—a servant approaching her door.
Quickly, she dumped the dress into her lap topsy-turvy and pulled a
thread through a needle, then scrubbed fingers through her hair to
make it tousled, disarrayed.
A knock came.
Cordelia called, "Open!"
The door opened, and the serving-wench stepped in, holding a
tray in one hand. "My lady, you have not come to dine."
"Oh, I cannot!" Cordelia did her best to sound
frazzled. "See how deeply in the toils I am!"
The wench came closer, large-eyed. "Surely, my lady, the
seamstress could aid thee... "
"Mayhap, but I am loath to ask. Oh, I will be done in
time, I am sure of it! Nay, but set the wine and bread there,
on the little table—I think there is room. I shall take
it when I have a moment."
"Even as you say, my lady." The maid curtsied, roundeyed,
then stepped out, closing the door behind her. Cordelia
caught the impression of smug satisfaction, and answered it with a
vindictive smile, glaring at the door. So they thought they
would have her beaten, did they? Well, all to the
better. Let Delilah think Cordelia was in a state and could
not possibly have a decent gown. Nothing would strengthen her
so much as Delilah's overconfidence.
She was done by early afternoon. The bread, cheese, meat,
and wine were quite good. She ate lightly, not wanting to
feel sluggish when she waked.
Because, of course, she wanted to be fresh for the evening's
festivities. She lay down to nap, closing her eyes as she
sought out a finch, leaving a stern command within its mind to come
trill beneath her window in an hour. She left the same
command within her own mind—only to wake, not to
trill—hid the lovely gown in the wardrobe, locked the door,
and lay down to sleep, satisfied.
After all, she did want to look her best.
She woke at four, added one last touch—a cloak, of a
contrasting material; only a great circle of cloth that she could
throw over herself to hide the gown. When the knock on the
door came, she quickly threw the cloak over her shoulders and
called, "Enter!"
It was a servant, with a can of steaming water. Cordelia
bade her put it by the hearth, and the maid did, then left, with
many curious glances about the room.
"Oh, I had almost forgot!" The maid turned back in the
doorway and came to bring Cordelia a domino mask. "It is to
be a masked ball, my lady."
Cordelia thrilled with delight, but tried to sound worn and
exhausted. "Thank you, good soul."
"As you wish, my lady." The maid gave a little curtsy,
then left, closing the door behind her.
Alain stared, paling. "I could never behave so!"
He was watching the "neighbors" flirt with one another as they
bowed and chatted and danced. None had been introduced as
other than the character they were dressed as, most of them from
the romances, some from old myths. But they were all very
outgoing, and the dances were rather earthy.
"Of course you can," Geoffrey assured him. "It is a masked
ball, Alain. None shall know who you are."
"Well ... there is truth in that," Alain said
thoughtfully, then looked up sharply. "But hold! I have
heard of these masked balls. Is there not something about
unmasking at midnight?"
"Well, aye," Geoffrey allowed, "so, if you are careful to leave
before midnight, no one will discover your identity." Alain's
gaze wandered over the glittering company, golden in the light of
myriad candles. "Well ... true ... 'twould be a
pity to miss the last of the ball..."
"Yet mayhap would be worth it." Geoffrey took a sip of his
wine. "Bear in mind, though, that you need not decide until
it is nigh the hour of midnight. If you feel that you would
do something ... exhilarating, something ... that is
not truly evil, mind you, but only a little wicked, or no, not even
wicked, but ... daring ... why, if you have done it,
you leave before midnight!" He clinked his glass against
Alain's. "If you have not, you stay for the unmasking!
Drink up!"
Alain sipped the wine absently, his mind clearly else
where. Then he looked up, suddenly remembering what he had
been thinking before. "Hold! I should not drink wine so
early! 'Twill make me drunk, will it not?"
"What—one goblet of wine?" Geoffrey gave a
deprecating laugh. "Do not give it a thought."
But he had. He had given Alain's wine quite a lot
of thought. It was now thirty percent alcohol.
Geoffrey knew Alain of old, of course, and knew that the Prince
had grown up drinking wine, as did most noble children on
Gramarye. He would not become drunk, Geoffrey knew, but
perhaps rather ... uninhibited ...
The musicians had tuned their instruments and begun to
play. Cordelia stood in the shadow at the top of the
staircase, shrouded in her cloak, eyes wide as she stared at the
guests, feeling a strange nervousness, a strange
apprehension. How many of them were truly neighbors, and how
many Delilah's minions?
How could she hope to outshine Delilah on her own territory?
But my heavens, there were a lot of people! Admittedly,
their garb was old-fashioned by the standards of
Runnymede—but nothing was ever really out of style on
Gramarye. They were certainly jovial enough, laughing and
talking as the servants passed among them with goblets of
wine. The entire Great Hall was already filled with
company—at least half dowagers and their husbands.
But the other half were young. Probably most of them were
married, but they were young and vibrant nonetheless. They
milled about, making quite a roar. Like waves upon the beach,
they were about to engulf her.
"Surely you are not timid, Lady Cordelia!" Cordelia looked
up, alarmed.
It was Delilah, parading down the stairs in a gown so lovely
that it made Cordelia gasp. Mask or not, there was no
mistaking her—the cascade of golden hair was artfully
arranged and equally artfully displayed, as was a generous expanse
of bosom. The heart-shaped face, the voluptuous curves-all
were enhanced by the splendor of her pink-and-gold gown.
Cordelia felt a bitter stab of jealousy.
"Why, what a mouse you are!" Delilah said. "Will you
start at every shadow? Come, how can you possibly not delight
in such an evening as this?"
"I ... I will endeavor to." Cordelia summoned what
remained of her self-possession and drew herself up.
"I rejoice to hear it. Do you go before me, for I have no
wish to dim your luster."
Cordelia's eyes narrowed behind her mask. "Surely, Lady
Delilah, no gown can compare with yours tonight. Nay, do you
precede me. 'Tis your house, after all, and 'tis your
due."
"I thank you, my dear. I shall." Delilah nodded with
a pinfeather smile and stepped to the head of the stairs. She
motioned, and her maid hissed down to the majordomo. He
looked up; his eyes widened a moment; then he turned to the crowd
and bawled out, "The Lady Helen of Troy!"
Of course, Cordelia thought.
As one, the crowd turned to look, and the musicians struck up a
soft march. Delilah paraded down the stairs.
For a moment, the crowd was silent, staring. Then, as one,
they broke into applause.
Cordelia tried to remind herself that most of them must be in
Delilah's pay—but still, the jealousy burned within
her. The hussy!
Well, Cordelia would answer in her own style.
The applause turned into congratulatory conversation as Delilah
reached the foot of the stairs. The young men were pressing
forward to kiss her hands; the ladies were "oh"ing and "ah"ing and
congratulating her on so wonderful a costume, then turning away to
mutter savagely with one another.
Cordelia knew her hour had come. Her heart thumped so
painfully that she thought it would tear through her dress.
Still, she handed a note to the footman on the stairs, who handed
it down to the majordomo.
When Delilah had moved far enough away from the stairs, the
majordomo raised his voice and cried, in his clarion tones, "The
Lady Elaine of Shallot!"
It had seemed like a good idea, at the time—a silent
rebuke to Alain. Now, Cordelia wasn't so sure.
The crowd quieted a little as they turned to look at the new
arrival.
Cordelia held her breath, straightened, and stepped onto the
first step.
The crowd was totally silent, a sea of faces staring up at
her.
Cordelia nearly died inside. She descended another step,
another. There she stopped and whirled the cloak from her
shoulders.
All eyes were on her, stunned.
She began to walk again, but faltered in her step, holding on to
the handrail for dear life. Had she committed some immense
faux pas? Was she truly in enemy territory in more ways than
one?
Well, then, she would show them of what she was made! She
lifted her chin high and took another step. Suddenly, the
crowd burst into applause, cheeringmost of it masculine.
It slammed at her ears. Her eyes widened behind the mask
in amazement. Could they truly be applauding her? They
certainly could. The young men were pressing to the fore,
with the older men not far behind them. She came down the
stairs slowly, the applause and cheering ringing in her ears.
As she stepped onto the last step, some of the young gallants
pressed forward to seize her hands and kiss her fingers. She
looked down at them, amazed, then lifted her eyes ...
And saw Delilah's glare of hatred. She knew she was truly
a success.
CHAPTER 13
The look on Delilah's face was all Cordelia needed.
Obviously, her gown was far more beautiful than even she had
supposed.
She still did not realize that she was a very beautiful woman in
her own right—as beautiful as Delilah, 'really, though less
voluptuous. The severity of the gown enhanced her classical
features, and the warmth of the color set off the fairness of her
complexion marvelously, bringing out the golden highlights in her
auburn hair.
Her nervousness fled, to be replaced by gloating. She
smiled like the cat who had lapped up the cream, graciously
extending her hands to her eager admirers, stepping down into the
middle of the throng, blowing kisses to one and all, feeling a
secret, shameful thrill as they bowed low over her hand—and
her decolletage.
"You are the sun, milady!"
"Then beware that I should shine on you, milord," she returned,
"for I might burn you."
"Indeed you might," he gasped, and another man said, "Ah!
Would that I should be so roasted!"
"I should make it hot enough for you, be sure," she said.
"But I should prefer to see you by the light of the moon," said
another gallant, looking deeply into her eyes. " 'Ware, sir,"
she said. "You may lie."
"I could hope for no sweeter fate," he promised herexactly the
response she had hoped for. She felt a secret, scandalous
delight, and let her laugh cascade down low to end in a throaty
chuckle. The man's eyes burned into hers, but another man
caught her other hand. She turned, and looked directly into
...
Forrest's eyes.
Eyes that seemed to devour her, to swallow her up, and he was
breathing, "My lady, surely there could never have been such beauty
as yours!"
"Why, sir," she said, her breath catching in her throat, "you
have known me these days! And you have never told me so
before!" The strange, tickling feelings inside that his
presence always seemed to evoke were there againbut she must have
been becoming accustomed to them, for somehow, she wasn't at all
frightened. No, she found these feelings no longer so novel,
but much more exhilarating, delightful, and only wanted more of
them.
She stepped a little closer to him, and he breathed, "Sun and
moon alike you are, and they both shine upon me in your
presence."
"But I have no presents to give you, sir." She stepped a
little closer.
"Your own fair self is a wealth of gifts that would honor a
king," he returned, stepping closer too, his arm slipping about her
waist. "Will you dance?"
"Aye—f think that I shall," she said, letting her eyelids
droop and turning her head a little, so that she was eyeing him
sidelong.
He laughed, low and in his throat, but catching his breath as he
did so, and stepped away from the disappointed gallants, who
rumbled their outrage as he swept Cordelia out onto the floor.
They flowed smoothly into the motions of the age-old peasant
dance, body to body, hip to hip, for only a few moments as their
feet moved in unison—then apart, clapping, back to back, and
his shoulders brushed hers, his hips brushed hers, then back to the
front again for a few steps more, then, arm in arm, for a few paces
side by side, their gazes locked, gazing deeply into one another's
eyes. She felt herself turning warm inside, felt her knees
weakening, but that was fair enough, because he turned then and,
catching her about the waist, caught her right hand in his left,
and pressed her against him as they flowed through the steps of the
dance, and she could let herself weaken, let her limbs go limp, for
he was holding her up ...
Halfway across the floor, Alain followed their every move.
"Can she truly be as wanton as she appears, Geoffrey?"
"One can never say, my friend," Geoffrey answered. "Women
often go to great lengths to seem to be something that they are
not."
"But why should they do such a thing?" Alain demanded.
"Why," Geoffrey said, "to hold our interest by making themselves
mysterious—or simply because they wish to, because it gives
them pleasure."
Alain's eyes returned to the lady in green. "She surely
seems to take delight in it! And you say that she may be
truly virtuous, and only enjoys the pretense of wantonness?"
"Oh, quite surely! There is not a woman alive who does not
wish to be desired, to be beautiful and the center of all
attention, simply because of her beauty and her graceand her sexual
allure. No, my friend, every woman has the right to be as
attractive as she can be and wishes to be, without having to fear
men's advances becoming improper."
But though the words were fair, his expression was one of
subdued shock as he watched his sister move about the floor with
the forest outlaw—and when the dance brought them together,
moving as though they were one.
Alain's gaze still wandered. "Where is Cordelia,
though? This whole ball is empty, lackluster, if she is not
here."
Geoffrey looked up, startled. Certainly so flimsy a mask
did not really make Alain unable to recognize Cordelia! Of
course, it could—if he did not want to recognize her.
Geoffrey chewed that thought over for a moment, then said, "She
will come anon, I am sure. For the nonce, my friend, seek you
a dance with yon lady in green and lace." Alain turned to
him, staring, scandalized. "Why should I do any such
thing?"
"Why," Geoffrey said slowly, "because a dance with her would be
a delight to any man—and will teach your body ways of holding
a woman and moving with her that would delight Cordelia, and draw
her to you."
Alain looked suddenly very much on his guard. "Do you
truly think so?"
"Most truly, I assure you." Geoffrey plucked a goblet from
a passing tray and presented it to Alain. "Here, my
friend. You have not drunk wine for half an hour. Do
so, I pray you—for what is gaiety and mirth if it has no
spirit? Therefore, drink you spirits!"
"I would scarcely call wine 'spirits,' " Alain said, accepting
the cup.
"Oh, but I would," Geoffrey said, his eyes on the cup as the
Prince drank. "I would, most certainly."
The dance ended, and Cordelia was immediately besieged by a
dozen would-be partners.
"I shall never come to her," Alain said, dismayed—and,
perhaps, relieved.
"But I shall," Geoffrey assured him, "and when the dance ends,
we shall be nearest to you, be sure. Drink your wine, my
friend—it will sweeten your breath for her." And he
moved away to join the throng of Cordelia's admirers.
Cordelia, fortunately, was taking her time about accepting a
partner, laughing and parrying flirtatious sallies. Geoffrey
managed to elbow his way to the front of the rank just as the
musicians began to play again. "My lady," he said, with an
edge to his voice, "I must have this dance."
She looked up, startled—and before she could recover, he
had taken her hand and her waist and was beginning to move into the
steps of the dance. She accepted the fait accompli, but
glared daggers at him—and as soon as they were away from
other people, hissed, "How dare you intrude, brother!"
"How dare I not?" Geoffrey returned. "Surely a
brother must guard a sister, guard all of her—especially when
she is showing more of herself than she ever has before!"
Cordelia smiled, amused. "You, brother? Offended by
decolletage? When you seem to seek out the lowest that you
can find?"
"In other women, aye," he said stiffly. "In other women,
'tis pleasant, 'tis right in its way—but not in a
sister." She laughed scornfully. "For shame,
Geoffrey! Do you not realize that every woman you have ever
pursued may have been someone's sister?"
"Well ... perhaps." Actually, he never had.
"But they do not care for her nor cherish her as much as I!"
"There has been scant evidence of caring or cherishing, 'til
now."
"Cordelia!" he exclaimed, wounded. "This whole quest
is because I seek to protect you and gain you your heart's
desire!"
She gazed into his eyes, and saw that he meant what he
said. He cared for her very deeply. "For that, I thank
you, brother," she said warmly. "Yet am I, therefore, not to
be allowed to enjoy the pleasures of dancing and flirtationonly
because I have a brother who cares?"
"Indeed! Leave that to them who have none that care for
them—and therefore care naught for themselves!"
"Oh, Geoffrey, you are so prudish so suddenly!" Cordelia
said impatiently. "Do not tell me you disapprove of such
behavior—for surely you enjoy it well enough in the women you
pursue!"
"Well ... aye ... but they are not my sisters!"
"Pooh, brother! If you will not be a model of virtue,
wherefore should I?"
Geoffrey bit back the retort, and Cordelia enjoyed watching the
flush of anger rise to his face. She laughed, with a light,
ringing quality, as silver as Delilah's, and said, "Still, brother,
I shall have mercy. For this dance, at least, I shall be all
propriety."
And she was.
When the dance ended, Geoffrey dropped her hand, stepping back
with a slight bow. Cordelia curtsied, inclining her
head—and looked up to find herself facing a cavalier in gold
and scarlet, with a long, flowing scarlet cloak and golden hair
above the dark severity of a domino mask. Her heart stopped
for a moment, at his handsomeness.
"May I have this dance, my lady?" His voice was low and
sensuous.
"Surely, my lord," Cordelia murmured—and he stepped up,
arm in arm, before the music had even started, leaving a dozen
disappointed would-be partners behind.
Then, as the music started, he slipped his hand about her waist,
taking her right hand in his, holding it high. He did not
touch her body with his, did everything that was decorous—but
the reckless look in his eye, the gaze he gave her, the flashing
whiteness of his teeth as he grinned, the paces of the dance, she
found dizzying, giddy. All decorum, mind you—but there
was a sensuality to his movements, a beckoning, a yearning for
closeness, that she would never have suspected in a man. A
tingling began, deep within her, spreading through her; she began
to feel warm—and was shocked to realize she was responding to
this stranger even as she had responded to Forrest.
That scared her.
He swept her away, and finally their bodies met, hips pressing
against one another. Cordelia felt a shiver that ran through
her from head to toe. The golden stranger seemed to sense it,
too. He grinned, and his eyes grew hot, then almost
worshipful, burning into hers. She stared, transfixed.
Then, thank heavens, the moves of the dance called for them to
break apart and stroll sedately side by side—but she felt her
hips churning as she went, and knew she was not being as sedate as
she might. She looked up at the tall, handsome stranger,
wondering who he was, immensely tempted to peek into his mind and
discover ...
But, no. Let us enjoy the moment for what it is,
she thought. Seize the day.
Then they came together again, and he was murmuring, in a voice
low and husky, certainly one that she could not recognize: "My
lady, you are the most beautiful, the most luscious fruit that ever
has adorned the Tree of Life! Nay, if we were not so closely
hemmed by other people, I could not resist seeking to nibble, and
taste."
She giggled, feeling the emotions well up within her, her joints
loosening, and beamed up at him. Greatly daring, she said,
"Why do you withhold, sir? Are you so ashamed of what you
would do that the simple presence of other people will halt
you?"
"Nay, surely," he breathed, his face coming closer to hers, and
closer ... Then his lips were on hers, light as a feather,
but growing heavier. The kiss deepened; she gasped, but that
drew him deeper. For a moment, the kiss was all their
existence, and everything else went whirling away, and she was
dizzy, very, but she could feel his' body pressing against
hers.
Then, finally, he pulled away, chest heaving, gasping for
breath, and there was a wildness and an awe in his eyes; she had
never seen a man look at her that way before, not even
Forrest. She felt vulnerable, beset—but she also felt
waves of pleasure rocking her, felt the lingering taste of his lips
on hers, and knew that she wanted that sensation again, more than
anything.
Suddenly she could hear the music anew, and stepped back.
"Sir! We have missed the measure!"
"Oh, we must not do that!" he said, his voice husky, and
slid his hand beneath her palm, his forearm under hers, and they
moved on down between the ranks of the other dancers, who stared at
them gaping. They turned and strolled back, as all the
company did; then turned and were together again, whirling through
a timeless moment, his eyes her universe.
Is this love? she thought, almost
frantically. Could this be love?
Then, for some unaccountable reason, he had stopped, and she was
unutterably sad that he had. "Why, sir," she began, but he
stood a little farther away from her, lifting her hand to his
lips.
"The music is done, sweetest, most beautiful of dancers," he
breathed, "and though I would be selfish to the utmost, holding you
in my arms and dancing through the night, I would not do it without
your leave."
"Do not give him leave, my lady, I pray you!"
"Nay, lovely damsel! You could not be so cruel as to deny
me yet again!"
"Dance with me, lovely damsel, with me!"
They whirled her away, they came between her and the
scarlet-and-gold man. She chose the most handsome among them,
but he seemed to pale into insignificance next to her
cavalier. But she danced with him, feeling her limbs become
firm again, and the residual emotion from that last dance made her
laugh and flirt. The evening restored itself to
normality.
She was not sure if she regretted it or not.
She glanced about to find the golden young man again, but could
not.
Actually, he was standing beside her brother, shielded by a
curtain in a nook.
"Well! You did seem to enjoy that dance, my friendwhile
you did it," Geoffrey said, somewhat acerbically. "What a
goddess!" Alain breathed. "What an angel, what a
fairy! As light as thistledown, and her kiss..." He
laid a hand on Geoffrey's shoulder. "Forgive me, my friend,
for I have wronged your sister. I know now that my heart is
elsewhere."
"Elsewhere!" Geoffrey looked up, amused. He could
tell Alain now. "Have you no sense at all, you great
ninny? That is my sister!"
"What!" Alain stared at him.
Then he blushed furiously. "You mean I have treated the
Lady Cordelia as ... as..."
"As a woman." Geoffrey gave him a steely glare. "You
have treated her as she wants to be treated—as something
feminine, desirable. Oh, it is true that she wishes to be
loved for her mind, my friend—but it is also true that she
wishes to be loved for her body, nay, for all of herself. I
assure you that evenings of scholarly discourse are only
part of what she wants from a man."
But Alain wasn't listening. He was gazing at the dancer
who fluttered on the far side of the hall, and breathing, "It is
Cordelia! Oh, Geoffrey, I have never truly known her
before!"
An idea sprang from the fertile soil of Geoffrey's imagination,
for this was a campaign, in its way. "Then enjoy her favors
while you can, my Prince—for after this night's festivities,
she may choose a man other than yourself." Alain stared at
him, appalled.
"Oh, she well may, I assure you! There are few traits so
well sung as the fickleness of women. Nay, enjoy the dance
with her, as strongly as you can—for if anything will move
her to accept your suit, it is that above all else."
"What?!!? My enjoyment would move her? But
how could that ... how could..." Alain swallowed and
looked out across the floor. "That a woman might deign to
marry me ... because I enjoyed her?"
"That would be part of it, at least." Finally Geoffrey
could not contain his impatience any longer. "Why,
Alain—do you think she would marry you because you did
not enjoy her?"
"Oh ... her company ... yes," Alain said.
"But..."
"Company is more than sitting by the fireside in converse,
friend," Geoffrey said, and gave him a little push.
"Go! Dance with her again, when you may! And when you
cannot, seize a chance to dance with the Lady Delilah, too."
"But ... why should I do that?" Alain
turned back, wide-eyed.
"Trust me, friend," Geoffrey said, trying to hide his
exasperation. "If you wish to win the Lady Cordelia, dance
with Delilah. Then dance with Cordelia again, and if you have
more questions, ask me in the morning."
Alain shook his head, not understanding a bit of it. He
turned away to do as his mentor had bidden.
The music ended, but he was too slow. Cordelia was dancing
again by the time he came near her, dancing with that tall, dark
lout of a bandit, Forrest! Who else could it be, with that
wealth of dark hair and beard? The mask hid him scarcely at
all, although a doublet did go far to disguise him, Alain had to
admit—he was so seldom decently dressed. He could not
help but wonder if Cordelia would find the man attractive, now that
he was properly clothed.
An unworthy thought. He put it from him and turned to join
the crowd that hovered around Delilah.
Cordelia, as a matter of fact, had recognized Forrest,
and was already deep in his embrace, feeling the world spin about
her as Forrest whirled her around the floor, devouring her eyes
with his own, murmuring extravagant compliments which she was
sorely tempted to believe.
"I would know you, Lady Cordelia, through and through.
Surely you are the lady of my dreams, Lady Elaine of Shallot!
I could never have my fill of you!"
Even as he said it, she could feel the probe, the presence of
his mind hovering about her own, seeking entry. Instantly,
her own shields were up, and tight. She relaxed outwardly,
though, dissembling, trying to hide the fact that she was now on
her guard. She laughed. "You may only know me without,
sir, for surely the exterior must be enough for two who may not
become intimate."
"May I not, then?" He stared at her, wounded.
"Wherefore not?"
"Why," she said, "because you have been a thief, and have not
yet done a deed that redeems you—and because I have only
known you for two days—nay, less! We must come to know
one another slowly, Sir Bandit, from the outside inand you have
only begun to know my exterior, as yet."
"I wish to," he breathed, pressing close, and his body seemed to
fill every hollow of her own. "I wish to know every inch of
your exterior, to kiss every iota of it" His lips touched hers, his
tongue tickling, probing, exploring. Dimly, she was aware
that they still moved in the paces of the dance—but only
dimly, for those movements were churning up the tingling, the rush
of feeling within her. Her limbs had turned to water, and
only his arm bore her up.
Then the cymbals rebuked her, and she stepped away, as the dance
dictated, with a surge of self-disgust. How could she be in
love with two men at once, and not even know who one of them
was? And what of Alain, who had pledged her his troth,
however clumsily, but was devoted to her, and remained so?
"You are troubled, sweet one." Forrest touched the little
wrinkle between her eyebrows. "Let it pass. Tomorrow is
time enough to think of the world again. Tonight there will
be time to think of other men. For this moment, for these
few, brief minutes of the dance, think only of me."
Well, when he put it that way, what did she have to lose?
Just for this one dance, she decided to do as he asked, to let
herself think only of Forrest.
And she did.
But when the dance ended, and she found herself in the arms of a
youngster whom she did not know, who prattled merrily to her, she
saw the golden cavalier acrbss the room, dancing with the Lady
Delilah—or Helen of Troy, as she pretended to be tonight; but
her movements were anything but regal. Slowly churning as she
went through the dance, every gesture an invitation, her body
pliant in his arms—and certainly, from where Cordelia
watched, he seemed to be paying very close attention to
Delilah. Not kissing her, perhaps, not holding her as closely
as she was trying to be held—but he did seem to be
mesmerized. She felt a stab of jealousy, felt indignant, but
quashed the feeling quickly. He was not her property, after
all ...
Unless she chose to claim him.
Cordelia decided that she would. She had promised nothing
to Forrest, after all—or at least, had promised only to think
of nothing but him while they danced. She had, and it had
been delicious—but there were other flavors to taste.
At the end of the next dance, she kept her eye on her
gold-and-scarlet quarry, contriving to end her steps near him as he
stepped back from Delilah with a bow, and the tidal wave of young
gallants surged between him and the vixen. He looked up, saw
Cordelia, and was at her side instantly, claiming her. "You
must dance with me, sweet one. I have waited this night in
longing."
She molded herself to his arms and began to move to the measure
of the dance that had not yet begun. "You have not waited in
loneliness, sir. I have seen what excellent company you have
kept."
"I will not deny having sampled other pleasures on this Tree of
Life," he breathed, "but none could be half so sweet as
yourself."
"Oh! Must you compare me with others, then, to know my
virtues?"
"I must not." He moved closer, his body not quite touching
hers, but she felt her flesh burning as though he had. Her
body prickled in anticipation of his touch.
"If you must leave me alone," the cavalier mourned, "I have no
choice but to make the time pass as quickly as I can speed
it—but with ever a yearning to have you in my arms
again."
Almost, she might have believed him; almost, she found that she
did, as the dance caught them up again, and they moved together,
then apart, then together in perfect unison, closer and closer
until they kissed again. This time, somehow, she found
herself unable to resist, unable to break away, only meeting his
lips with her own in a kiss that went deeper and deeper, caught up
somehow in a timeless moment in which the world around them ceased
to exist, in which there was nothing but their mouths, their
bodies, their minds, touching and longing to touch more deeply.
Then cymbals clashed, and they stepped apart. He glared up
at the musicians, but she was glad of the respite, gasping, amazed
how shaken she was, not only by the surge of her own desire, but by
the realization that the last embrace had not been one of lips and
bodies alone, but one of minds as well. Whoever this gallant
young stranger was, he was a tele path of some degree, for he had
reached out and enwrapped her mind with a psionic touch, enfolded
her in his own churning emotions, blending them with hers, stirring
hers up even higher than they had boiled by themselves.
Breasts heaving, she looked up into his face. Somehow, she
was sure he had not read her thoughts—but her emotions he
most surely had, and had mingled his own with hers, his desire
fueling her own, leading her up toward ...
She broke off the thought, shivering. How could she ever
be content with any other man again, how could any other ever bring
her so close to ecstasy as he had this night?
And she did not even know who he was!
But the dance was done, and other young men were pressing in
between them, separating them, a gulf of young bodies opening to
divide them. With relief, she turned to the youngest and
stepped into the measure, bodies well apart, gradually
regaining her composure.
She had recovered nearly all when the dance ended, and she found
her brother slipping his arm about hers and moving away from the
other young men as the music began again. "I believe you
could do with a bit of rest, my sister."
"I certainly could," she said with relief. "Thank you,
brother."
"My pleasure, I'm sure. We shall have to at least begin
the dance, though, or you will have a dozen young boobies claiming
your hand."
The music began, and they moved in time to its strains—but
Geoffrey steered them closer and closer to the tall windowed doors
that opened onto the terrace. There he stopped, offering his
arm, even as she had taught him to, years before. She took it
with a pang of nostalgia and affection, and they stepped out onto
the flagstones.
She breathed in the cool air with a shuddering gasp. "It
has been—a very exciting night ... my brother."
She looked up at him. "But where is Alain?"
Geoffrey smiled, with a glint in his eye. "Why, you have
danced with him twice this evening."
"Twice?" She stopped still, staring up at him in
shock. Then her mind reeled, reviewing all the men she had
danced with that evening. No, she could not possibly say
which one had been Alain; they had all been too gallant, too
heroic; none looked like him in the slightest. "Nay, tell me
which one he was, brother!"
"I most certainly shall not!" Geoffrey drew himself up,
offended. "It is half the delight of the game, sister, not to
know with whom one dances. After all, how else are we to
discover our feelings?"
Cordelia frowned up at him. "Why, how do you mean?"
she said dangerously.
He gazed down at her, dropping his lofty manner, letting himself
be serious for the moment. "How are you to know whether you
are truly in love with Alain, if you do not let yourself enjoy the
dance with any other man?"
"Who said I was in love with Alain?" Cordelia snapped,
hands on her hips. "Indeed, I seem to recall telling you that
I was not!"
"And if you are not," Geoffrey said gently, "surely you should
be sure of it, so that you can continue to refuse his suit."
Cordelia turned away. "I did not say I would refuse his
suit—only that I did not love him."
"Being Queen is not worth a loveless marriage." Cordelia
stiffened. "I could be a good Queen to him. I could be
a good wife."
"But if you did not love him," Geoffrey murmured, "you
would cheat him, as surely as he would cheat you."
"Be still!" she blazed, turning on him. "What do you
know of it? You, who are not married, and who claim never to
have been in love!"
"But I have heard what love is," he said. "I can imagine
it, and long for it. Aye, even I, who am so busy changing
partners that I scarce have time to tread the measure."
Cordelia looked up, eyes wide in sudden panic. "But if I
might discover that I truly love someone else, might he not
discover the same?"
"He might," Geoffrey said gently, "and it is far better for him
to learn that now, than after you are wed." Cordelia turned
away, thinking of the gold-and-scarlet young man, thinking of
Forrest. "Yes," she said, her voice very low, "I suppose that
is so. Tell me—is Alain enjoying the evening?"
"He is," Geoffrey said, carefully noncommittal. "Does he
flirt with other ladies?"
"He does."
"More than one?"
"Aye, more." Geoffrey smiled, guessing which "one" she
meant. "And quite successfully, I might add."
She could hear his pride in his student, and turned on
him. "Geoffrey, why could you not have left me to my own
affairs? My life is my own; I did not need your
meddling!"
"Perhaps," he said softly, and looked straight into her
eyes. "Could it be, sister, that you have found that you,
too, are enjoying this ball? The dancing, the
flirtation?"
"Should I not?" She thrust her chin up. "Have I not
the right to enjoy being a woman, to enjoy my youth?"
"Every right," he said softly, with total conviction, "and I
rejoice to see it at last. Nay, you have also the right to be
in love. I could wish you no greater joy, sister. I
hope that you shall be."
Cordelia stared at him, shaken by his sincerity.
Then she turned away. "Let us return to the dance,
brother. I think I am quite refreshed now."
"Ready for more dancing?" Geoffrey grinned, the
seriousness dropping from him like an ill-fitting garment, like a
dark cloak. "Aye, sister, so am L"
She paused at the doors. "Geoffrey..."
"Aye, sister?"
"The man in scarlet and gold ... the tall one, with blond
hair..."
"I have seen him." His voice was carefully neutral.
"Spy upon him for me this evening, will you not? And see if
he reaches out to other women with his mind, to touch theirs as he
dances with them."
Geoffrey frowned. "A strange request—but surely,
sweet sister, I could deny you nothing."
"As long as it was something you had planned to give me
already?" Cordelia smiled, remembering the puppy he had given
her for her tenth birthday. "Surely, brother. Shall we
dance?"
They went in through the door.
Her eyes immediately sought out the tall young man in gold and
scarlet. She could see him dancing with an older woman,
bantering and laughing. She felt something twisting within
her. Had he only been being polite, then?
She turned away, and her gaze sought out Forrest. She
could only stare in shock.
He was dancing with Delilah, the two of them molded so tightly
together that they seemed almost to be one entity. His gaze
never left her face, or hers his, and even this far removed, there
was an almost palpable energy about them, a tension that seemed to
crackle all the way across the room.
Cordela turned away, shaken. Was he, then, a man for all
women, and she no more important to him than any other? Then
suddenly, the dance was ended, and the gold-and-scarlet young man
was there, elbowing his way through a crowd of her admirers, taking
her hand, saying words that pressed her into dancing. The
other young men clamored for her attention, but she let herself
move into his embrace, into the movements of the dance, let his
lips touch hers, his mind reach out to mingle with hers—not
thoughts, no, but emotions, his exultation at having her once again
in his arms, his joy at the feel of her body against his, giving
her a thrill of pleasure such as she had never known before this
night.
Therefore, she insisted on dancing once again with Forrest, and
as she did, she watched the gold-and-scarlet young man across the
hall, dancing with Delilah, hearing his laughter clearly, saw that
they were chatting, saw Delilah's flirtatious glances becoming more
and more sensuous. The young man only laughed, though, and
swung her about, with every appearance of enjoying the dance for
its own sake—but without the slightest sign of seeking to
enjoy Delilah's favors.
So she danced once more with the gold-and-scarlet cavalier that
night, and once more with Forrest. Both times she began with
her defenses up, but the music and the movements swayed her, to
make her yield to the moment. Somehow she had the feeling she
might never know such pleasure again in all her life, so she
revelled in the delight of the moment, almost desperately.
Then, suddenly, a great brazen gong was chiming, and a brazen
voice with it, booming, "Twelve strokes! Twelve
strokes! Midnight! Midnight!"
It was the majordomo, his stentorian tones blending with those
of the gong. "'Tis midnight, and the hour for
unmasking! Let truth be known! Let faces be bared,
names be declared!"
All the guests clustered together at the center of the hall,
giggling and chuckling in anticipation, wondering who would be
revealed as whom.
"Let us first introduce our guests!" The august king in
purple robes and pasteboard crown, who had been announced as the
fabled Charlemagne, stepped up onto the dais at the end of the
hall. "You have heard, my friends and neighbors, the occasion
for our celebration—my daughter's safe return, thanks to the
rescue and protection of two stalwart knights, a gentleman of the
greenwood, and a most enchanting lady who did chaperone my
daughter. Let me call them now, summon them forth, so that we
all may thank them! Sir Geoffrey!"
Geoffrey stepped up beside him on the dais and took off his
mask. There was applause all through the hall, and
cheering.
"Sir Forrest Elmsford!"
Forrest stepped up beside Geoffrey, unmasking. In the
crowd, several ladies were murmuring and "oooh"ing outright.
"Sir Alain!" Sir Julian cried. No one stepped
up.
"Is Sir Alain not here?" demanded Sir Julian. "Seek
him out, some of you!" And while the young men turned to the
hunt with a cheer, Sir Julian called, "The Lady Cordelia!
Step up beside us, and unmask!"
Most of the young men turned back to watch—every woman was
a source of fascination, until they knew who "Lady Elaine" was.
Cordelia stepped up onto the dais, and the young men ripped
loose a cheer—but as she lifted her hand to her mask, she saw
the scarlet-and-gold young man moving toward the doorway.
What! Didn't he even care to learn who she was?
It seemed he did; he was frozen in place, staring at her.
Their gazes met; she lifted her mask.
The young men cheered again. The gold-and-scarlet cavalier
stared, then moved toward the doorway again. Cordelia
pointed, her arm a spear. "Stop him!"
The young men shouted, all too glad to obey her whim—but
it was Delilah who laid hold of him first, catching his arm and
dragging him back. The young man still struggled, seeming to
be almost in a panic, but she worked her way hand-over-hand up his
arm to the shoulder, undulating as she came.
"Have we found him, then?" Sir Julian called. "Sir
Alain! Unmask, young sir!"
The gold-and-scarlet cavalier froze, and Delilah lifted his
mask.
It was Alain!
He stood frozen, staring at Cordelia, aghast.
She stood frozen too, staring at him and feeling as though the
floor had dropped out beneath her. Alain? She had been
flirting with Alain?
Alain, being so gallant, so passionate—Alain, with kisses
of fire!?! Alain, with his mind touching hers?
Her Alain, flirting so deeply with a strange woman, one
whom he had known only as the most beautiful at the ball?
Flirting so earnestly, his desire fuelling him with such ardor that
his mind had reached out to enfold hers? Alain, an
empath?
She dropped her gaze in confusion, unsure whether to rejoice or
to curse, and Alain stood frozen, his face drained of all
color.
CHAPTER 14
"How could he! How could he?" Cordelia paced back
and forth, wringing her hands. "How could he pledge his troth
to me, but pay court to a stranger whom he did not even know?
How could he do it!"
"Why, with my encouragement," Geoffrey said, leaning back and
toying with his wine goblet.
"Your encouragement!" Cordelia turned on him.
"Sir! Will you cease to meddle?"
"In this case, no." Geoffrey chose his words
carefully. Cordelia glared at him, taking in the unbuttoned
doublet, the chessboard in front of him, the bottle on the table at
the side. It seemed odd to her that he should play chess
against himself—it was more the sort of thing she would have
suspected her little brother Gregory of doing—but still, he
did. She noticed the other glass beside the bottle, but
dismissed it, being preoccupied with her own difficulties.
Surely he only wanted it in case the first glass broke.
He was sitting there grinning at her in his insolence and his
arrogance, and she would have liked to scratch his eyes
out—but then, she had felt that way about him before.
He was, after all, her brother. "How dare you meddle in my
romance!"
Geoffrey looked down into his wine goblet, reflecting that for
her to use the word "romance" in relation to Alain was a definite
improvement. "Let us not put too fine a point on it,
sister." He looked up. "Alain has never been a terribly
exciting man. In fact, one might almost say he is
stuffy."
"Well ... there is that," Cordelia agreed. "But
tonight, he was not!"
"No, not tonight." Geoffrey looked straight into her
eyes.
Cordelia stared at him a moment, feeling the blood rush to her
face. Then she said, "So that is why you encouraged him."
"Of course, that is why." Geoffrey twirled the glass's
stem between his thumb and his forefinger. "And it would seem
to me that it succeeded quite well, sister mine. Was he not
more enjoyable? Almost, one might say ...
exciting?"
Cordelia turned away, remembering the touch of the
gold-and-scarlet stranger, of his lips on hers, of his arm about
her, of his mind ... She shivered, wrapping her arms tightly
about herself. "But he did not know it was me! He
thought that I was... some strange wench. He cared
not!"
"Oh, be not such a goose," Geoffrey said crossly. "He knew
it was you."
"What!" Cordelia spun around. "How could he
know!"
"Why, the simplest way imaginable," Geoffrey replied. "I
told him."
Cordelia stared at him in outrage, growing redder and
redder. Then she exploded. "Will you cease to
meddle?" She stalked over to her brother, pounding at
him with little fists.
Geoffrey laughed, holding up his arm to fend her off.
"Nay, sister, nay, I prithee! Think not of the havoc I have
wrought, but only that I had most excellent intentions."
"And we all know which road is paved with those!"
Cordelia relented, seething; her fists did no good against him,
anyway. "At least tell me—what of your spying?
Did he make advances to any other woman?"
"We-e-e-e-ell . .."
"The truth, turtle of turpitude!" Cordelia stormed.
"Do not plague me, do not torment!"
"I shall not," he sighed. "Oh, Alain had a great deal of
fun flirting with other ladies—but only by words, and the
occasional touch of a hand. He certainly never sought to kiss
one, and never held another close."
Cordelia quieted surprisingly there, staring into his
eyes. "Was there ... ardor?"
"No, not a bit," Geoffrey assured her. "Only a sense of
play, a sense of fun. It is the first time I have seen that
in Alain. Not even when we were children did he seem to have
fun at his games. He was always so deadly serious that he
must win, or die." He shook his head. "I cannot
understand it."
This, from a man who would rather die than lose, Cordelia
knew—but you did expect it from Geoffrey, and she
had to admit that he had always had a great deal of fun at his
games.
She turned away. "Why has he not told us he is an
esper?"
"Why, because he does not know it!" Geoffrey said.
"Nay, do not look evilly at me! If he cannot hear thoughts,
but only feel emotions, how should he know that he has any talent
at all? Oh, aye, he may feel what others feelbut any person
can be empathetic, if he truly cares about others. Any person
who is at all sensitive to others can read the host of unspoken
signals in their bearing and demeanor. How should Alain have
known that he could do more, that he could actually read their
feelings, as you and I read thoughts?"
"Or make another feel his?" Cordelia's voice was very
small.
"Ah, that is a greater gift," Geoffrey said softly. "But
surely, he could not know that he had done that." He
paused a second, watching her face, then said, "Can
he?"
Cordelia was still a moment, then gave a very short nod.
"Well, well, well," Geoffrey breathed. "Mayhap there is hope
for our clay-footed suitor yet." He watched his sister for a
minute, but she said nothing, only stood with eyes downcast.
Geoffrey smiled. "Even so, he would not know that he can sway
a person to him, wrapping her in his feelings, whirling both up
into..." He broke off, seeing her shiver again. "And it
may be that he cannot project emotions unless he feels them very
strongly. Indeed, he may not realize that he does it at
all—for all he knows, 'tis what everyone feels. So if
he has the talent, sister, he probably knows it not."
"How is this?" Cordelia cried. "As he usually is, as
he has always appeared, I do not find him at all appealing but I
have found him very much so tonight! Never before has he
appeared so handsome, so gallant! Never before has he reached
out to touch me with his mind!"
"Never before has he danced with you," Geoffrey murmured.
"Oh, he has, in the Christmas reels—but always with only
the set, formal steps, never with such ardor! Indeed, he did
become, as you say, exciting. Was it simply because he wore a
mask?"
"A mask," Geoffrey said judiciously, "and because I insisted
that he drink three glasses of wine."
Cordefa frowned. "Surely three glasses of wine are not
enough to ... Oh!"
"Yes," Geoffrey confirmed. "I boosted the alcohol content
considerably."
"Alas!" Cordelia looked down into the depths of Geoffrey's
wineglass. "Is he only to be a man of romance when he is
drunk, then?"
"The wine could not bring it out if it were not there to be
brought." Geoffrey looked down into his glass, too. "Be
honest. Alain is ordinarily tremendously dull—not a bit
of fun, and deadly serious, and far too concerned with his moral
rectitude."
Cordelia reflected that a bit more such concern could do her
brother a world of good—but she had to admit it was rather
overpowering, in Alain.
Geoffrey looked up at her. "I attribute it to his having
been reared with far too great a sense of his own importance as
Heir Apparent, and too much insistence on developing his sense of
responsibility. No doubt it will make him an excellent king
. .."
"Yes," Cordelia said sadly, "but a very boring person."
"And," Geoffrey said, very, very softly, "a stultifying
husband." He clucked his tongue. "Beware,
sister—or you may lose him to Delilah."
"Oh, I do not wish that! Not that at all!" Cordelia
cried, distraught. "Not for my sake alone, no, but for his
also!"
"If he could only become fun ... ?" Geoffrey
suggested. "Exciting," Cordelia agreed. "But if he
becomes romantic only when he is half drunk? Oh, no,
Geoffrey! I cannot have that!" She turned away, chafing
her hands. "Yet I would not see him the victim of Delilah,
for I know what a vampire that woman must be!"
Geoffrey tilted his head to the side, considering her. "Is
that the only reason you do not wish to see him united with the
lady?"
Cordelia blushed, embarrassed. "I do not know. Oh,
Geoffrey, do not ask me! I do not know!" And she' fled
in confusion, away out the door.
Geoffrey sighed, gazing down into his wine. Then he
shrugged, drank what was left in the glass, and reached out for the
decanter. His gaze lighted on the other goblet, and a gleam
came into his eye. He lifted the bottle and poured, but only
a small amount.
Cordelia fled back to her bedroom and sent out her own clarion
call. Mother! Awaken, I pray you! I have need
of you! Then, a little less stridently,
Mother! Mo-o-o-o-ther!
The answer came, as though Gwen were still swimming up through
layers of sleep to consciousness. Yes, daughter.
What troubles thee? There was no irritation, no
resentment. Weariness, yes—but also alertness, and
concern, lest her child be hurt.
Mother, I am so confused! I must talk with you!
I listen. Gwen was already more wakeful.
Nay, not in this fashion. Cordelia wrung her
hands. Face to face. I must be with you, be in your
presence! I know it is a hard thing to ask, but—can you
meet me?
At Cromheld's Wood. Aye,. surely.
Gwen was fully awake now, and all compassion. In half an
hour's time. I shall fly. Aye, Mother. I
thank you. Cordelia broke the contact and, already
feeling a little better, hurried to doff her evening gown and don
her travelling dress. Cromheld's Wood was halfway between Sir
Julian's manor house and Castle Gallowglass. Cordelia caught
up her broomstick, leaped astride it. It sank half a foot,
then lifted and shot out through the window.
In the forest clearing half a mile away, Gwen prepared to do the
same.
"Don't let her see you, dear." Rod had awakened as soon as
he heard Gwen rising from her bedroll beside him in the tent.
"I shall not, husband," she assured him. "Indeed, I shall
go past Cromheld's Wood and come back. If she doth see me,
she shall think that I have come from Castle Gallowglass."
"Horrible to lie to our children this way, isn't it?"
"I do not lie, strictly," she said primly. "I merely leave
matters open for her to believe as she wishes. Good night,
husband. Do sleep—there is no need for you to be
watchful and wakeful." She bent down to kiss him, lightly and
quickly, then turned away to leap sidesaddle onto her broom.
"Good night, love," Rod called softly. He watched her go,
diminishing into the night. As to the need for watchfulness
and wakefulness, he had his own opinions. He sat up straight,
very straight, legs folded in half-lotus. Closing his eyes,
he concentrated on the mind of his son Geoffrey. It came
clear ... he could feel ...
Passion.
Instantly, Rod severed the connection. Well, he certainly
wasn't going to learn anything about what was going on in the manor
house that way.
For that matter, neither was Geoffrey. Instead, Rod
focussed on Alain's mind.
This was more difficult for Rod than for his wife or
children—he had not been born to it or learned it as he grew
up. He'd had the gift inborn within him, but it was only
contact with Gwen that had brought it to life. Even then, he
had blocked it, until Father Al had helped him to unlock it
fully.
So he eavesdropped with his eyes closed, listening, feeling,
sensing what Alain sensed ...
...sensed a dream, one that featured his daughter, and that he
had no business overhearing.
He severed that connection, too, but sat, wakeful in the dark,
waiting, listening.
From a distance, Cordelia saw her mother, a lighter shred of
cloud almost, a spark in the moonlight, circling down into
Cromheld's Wood. No one else would have thought to look, of
course. Cordelia breathed a silent prayer of thanks, and sent
her broomstick arrowing after Gwen's.
She darted down to the ground, pulling up short and leaping off,
running to her mother, saying "Oh!" and burying her face in
Gwen's bosom.
Gwen held her for a timeless moment, folding her arms around
Cordelia and holding her, a faint smile on her face. She
could feel her daughter's turmoil, could tell what her trouble
was—and it was a trouble that Gwen was delighted to discover
in Cordelia. She had wondered if the child would ever fall in
love, truly in love. There had been a few infatuations, but
not nearly enough, to Gwen's mindand certainly, nothing
serious. "Yes, child," she said softly. "Now—what
troubles thee? Speak!"
"'Tis ... Alain, Mother."
"Ah. Alain."
Then, in halting phrases, with sobs always beneath her voice but
never quite in it, Cordelia explained.
She had always been fond of Alain, as she might be of a
lapdog. She had always thought of him as being hers, but he
had made such a wretched botch of his proposal, being frankly
insulting, that she had turned him away.
Gwen found a sawn stump of a tree and sat, listening. She
had heard this part before; she waited.
"He has always been so—been so—boring!"
Cordelia clenched her fists, jamming them down at her sides.
"There is no other word for it, Mother. Oh, aye, I have
always had the comfortable feeling that I was quite his
superior—but still, he was boring."
"And this ... Forrest? The bandit?" Gwen
interjected softly.
"Aye, the bandit! But he is a gentleman born,
Mother!" Cordelia's eyes lit with enthusiasm. "He has
been knighted! Yet he has strayed from the straight and
narrow, that is quite sure. But he is—exciting.
When he holds me, when he kisses me, I melt inside!"
"Yes," Gwen breathed, "yes." But she felt a frisson of
fear for her daughter, for she knew that plans to reform a man
failed far more often than they succeeded. She knew better
than to say so at the moment, though; instead, she said only, "Does
not that decide thee, daughter? What else dost need to
know?"
"But he is so corrupted, Mother! Can I truly plight my
troth to a .knight who has abandoned his vows, and has given no
sign that he will redeem himself? Who has looks that fairly
undress me, aye—but undress every other damsel around him,
too! Can I, Mother?" The words were wrenched out of
her. "Can I trust him?"
Gwen breathed a hidden sigh of relief, then chose her words
carefully. "Looking doth not breed mistrust, daughter."
Cordelia stared, appalled. "You do not mean that Father
has regarded other women in that way! Not since he met
you!"
"Well, no," Gwen admitted, then chose her words carefully
again. "Not that I know of. If he hath, he hath
certainly been quite circumspect..."
"Oh, Mother, you bandy words!" Cordelia said
impatiently. "Father has never so much as glanced at another
woman since he met you!"
"Not since he met me, aye. But before that, he looked at
one other in that way, surely."
"Oh." Cordelia felt obscurely shocked. "Is it
... anyone I know?"
Gwen debated within herself for a moment, then nodded.
"Aye. It was Queen Catharine."
"The Queen!" Cordelia stared.
Gwen laughed softly, catching her daughter's hand with her
own. "Oh, she was beautiful once, daughter."
"But she must have been so unlike you!"
"She was," Gwen admitted, "but at the last, it seemed your
father preferred my sort, rather than hers."
"And ... has he looked at her ... again?"
"Not at all." Gwen smiled, feeling very complacent.
"Or at least, not in the way we speak of. He doth look upon
her as he would upon any friend, nothing more—and
considerably less, for he must be ever wary, never sure when she
will turn upon him."
Cordelia giggled, nodding. "Indeed, all men feel that way
with her—even King Tuan, does he not?"
"Well, mayhap," Gwen admitted. "It pleases me to think
that it may add spice to their marriage. I hope that I am
right."
Cordelia sobered again, dropping her gaze, dropping her
voice. "That is what I seek, too—one who will ever be
true to me, who will never look at another woman once he has become
my husband." She looked up at her mother. "But perhaps
I am not so alluring as you were."
"And as I still am, to thy father," Gwen told her, with some
asperity, "though only to your father, I doubt not. As to
yourself, though—you do not know the limits of your allure
yet, my dear, nor did I, at your age. Have you learned
nothing of them, on this quest of yours?"
"Well . .." Cordelia blushed, lowering her gaze
again. "Tonight ... I did seem to be ...
something of a favorite ... with the young men...."
"Show me," Gwen said.
Cordelia closed her eyes, remembering the sight of all the young
men crowding around her, clamoring for her attention, for a dance
with her. She remembered quick snatches of each dance, the
partners changing with dizzying rapidity—though Alain's
masked visage, and Forrest's, kept recurring. The scene was
very vivid; she could see it all again, almost smell the flowers
decking the hall, hear the chatter, the gay laughter ...
Gwen gave a sigh of satisfaction. "Oh, I rejoice to see
it! I knew thou wert a beauty, daughter, but I have waited
long for the men of this world to see it!"
"And Father has prayed that they will not, I am sure," Cordelia
answered, with irony. "Yet what am I to do now,
Mother?" She spread her hands. "Not only one man has
seen some beauty in me, but two!"
"Two?" Gwen frowned. "You speak of Alain?"
"Aye." Cordelia stood up and began pacing again. "I
had thought that he regarded me only as his property, even as I
thought of him. I believed that he had come to claim that
which he thought was his by right of birth—and mayhap he did
... But now..."
"Now what?" Gwen said; and again, "Show me, daughter, if
it is not too private."
Cordelia closed her eyes and let herself remember the dances
with Alain, his arm about her, his body pressing against hers
... She broke off the memory. "More than that I will
not show, Mother."
"As thou shouldst not," Gwen agreed. "I think I can guess
the rest of it." Inwardly, she was delighted. "So,
then. Two men make thee melt inside; there are two who make
thee guess at pleasures thou wottest not of, not yet."
"Two. Aye." Cordelia looked down at her twisting
hands. "I would never have thought that one of them would
have been Alain!"
" 'Tis surprising," Gwen admitted, "though pleasant. And
the other? What is he like, this paragon?"
"He is scarcely a paragon! Indeed, he is not at all
suitable!" Cordelia cried. "Oh, aye, he is well
formed—but he behaves abominably. Nay, any knight who
would stoop to outlawry should no longer be called a knight, and is
certainly no fit husband for a gentle lady!"
Gwen gazed off into space. "Do not think that thou shalt
change him, daughter. No woman can ever change a man to
become what she doth wish him to be. Marriage will
change him, aye—not all at once, not in the moment the priest
pronounces thee wed, not in a month, not even in a year, but
gradually, little by little, he will change—as wilt thou
thyself. Thou canst but hope that he will change more closely
to that which thou dost wish him to be."
She looked back at her daughter. "Though love and
affection, and thine unceasing reassurance, building him up in his
own eyes, will make him stronger inside, and will help most
wondrously. Still, when all is said and done, thou canst not
know for certain what he will become; thou mayest but be sure that
he will change, and if he doth love thee as well as thou dost love
him, then, with good fortune, thou wilt grow together, to become
more like one another."
Cordelia gazed into her eyes. "I think that you speak from
knowledge and life, not from faith."
Gwen nodded slowly. "By Gramarye's standards, thy father
was not at all suitable as a husband—nay, not suitable for
any but a peasant. He had no family here, seest thou, and
though he claimed to be nobly born; none could prove nor disprove
it, for his folk were far, far way indeed, even on another
star. And he was an adventurer—none can deny that,
though 'twas for the good of other people he adventured, not for
estates and a fortune. Surely he had no inheritance, other
than Fess and his ship, for he was a second son of a second
son."
She smiled at her daughter. "Then again, I too was not the
most eligible. I was, by all accounts, a foundling, raised by
elves, with only the knowledge that my mother had been gently born,
and had died at my birth. Her father had been a
knight, but he was dead, too, as was all her family. Oh, the
elves raised me with assurances that my father was noble, but never
told me his name—even though he still lives." For a
moment, her eyes crinkled with mirth, though she was quick to hide
it.
Cordelia was rather irritated. Whatever the jest was, her
mother was not sharing it—and it had very little to do with
her problems of the moment. "But did you and Father grow
together? Or did you grow apart?"
"By Heaven's blessing, we have grown together," Gwen answered,
"though there is no assurance that all the changes have been for
the better. At least I had no concern that he would spend
more time with friends at the tavern than he would with
me—for he had no friends here, and had become persona non
grata with the Crown, by the style in which he ended the first
rebellion against Catharine. Surely the two of us were ever
together, and rejoiced in one another's company. After our
sojourn in Tir Chlis, though, he changed, and changed very
badly."
"Yes, I remember," said Cordelia. "His temper..."
Gwen nodded. "Yet still were we in love. That, and the
madness that came upon him when he ate the witch-moss chestnut,
which still comes upon him ever and anonthose have been sore
trials. And this was a most goodly man among men when we met,
mind you!"
"These have been heavy burdens in truth," Cordelia murmured.
"They have indeed. Yet the elves had warned me as I grew
that such as this happened to the best of men, from time to
time—and women too, daughter! We are human, do not
forget!"
"Trials that ended, you could bear." Cordelia came and sat
by her mother, taking her hand to hold. "What was it that you
could not bear, then?"
"His ever-abiding conviction that he was not good enough for
me. Nay, say naught, do not deny it! It is there, and
if thou dost think on it, thou shalt see it. This is the
trial that does not end—that ever and anon must I build up
his inner picture of himself, to shore it up, lest he leave me,
ashamed of his weakness, ashamed of his lack of Talent, of his
ugliness."
"But none of those are true!" Cordelia protested.
"He is comely even now, and must have been far more so when he was
young! Aye, in a rough-hewn way, but comely still! And
his talents have kept this land of Gramarye balanced 'twixt tyranny
and lawlessness—though you have been of great aid to him
there..."
"I have," Gwen said, "though I would not have undertaken it of
myself, but would have left governance to the Queen, and I do not
think that she would have called upon me, for she did not know me
well—and I was too old to feel easy among the Royal Coven
... Nay, it is your father who has brought me to such cares
about governance, and it is his plans and strategies that have kept
Catharine and Tuan on their thrones. He is a most puissant
man, my dear, but he believes it not."
Gwen shrugged. "He doth believe that his success hath been
good fortune, or that at most, he hath been able to bring others
together, and it is they who have managed the troubles that have
arisen, not he. Left to his own devices, he doth not believe
well of himself. This has been my sorest trial—to
always, always give and give, unceasing. But what I have
received from him, in affection and outpouring of his love, is at
least as much as I have given."
For a moment, Cordelia wondered fleetingly what trials her
father would tell of in his lifelong courtship of her
mother—but the thought was fleeting indeed, for it had little
to do with her own troubles. "But such giving must be to only
one, Mother. How shall I choose? And if I choose
wrongly, how much grief shall I bring to them both?"
Gwen sighed. "This is a family disease, my
dear—being too serious, too concerned for others'
welfare. Nay, we seem to have the need, your father and I, to
take others' burdens on our shoulders—and not the burdens of
one person, or a few, but of all those on this Isle of
Gramarye. Still, 'tis what has made us noble, I
think—the feeling of obligation for others."
Cordelia became very thoughtful. "If I had not known you
were speaking of us Gallowglasses, Mother, I would have thought
'twas Alain." She lifted her head swiftly, sharply. "Am
I as dull as he?"
Gwen laughed softly. "Most certainly you are not, my
dear! Your moods change like the sun's light in a field of
sailing clouds. As soon as a man might begin to think you are
serious, you suddenly laugh, and are gay. Nay, you have
always been frolicsome, and have a sense of playfulness that Alain
doth lack. Your own mercurial temperament offsets his
stolidity quite well—and that is one of the reasons why you
are well matched."
"Well matched?" Cordelia gazed into Gwen's eyes. "We
should marry, then?"
"Oh, nay, nay!" Gwen raised a hand. "Simply because
thou dost well together, because thou canst function well in tasks
shared, does not mean you should marry. Only love can mean
that. If thou dost love him, and he doth love thee, then wed
him. If he doth not, be his friend, be one of the pillars
upon which he can rest his kingdombut do not be his wife.
What can tell you that you should marry? Only love, my
dear—only love."
Cordelia reddened. "It may be that love is telling me to
wed someone else, Mother."
"If it may be, then it is not," Gwen said firmly.
"But do I love them?" Cordelia cried. "And
do I love one, or do I love both?"
"Why, rejoice!" Gwen said softly. "Two men desire
thee, two men kindle a burning within thee—and one of them is
a rogue, while the other is a prince in every sense of the
word. What choice is there, daughter?"
"But how can I be sure of either of them?" Cordelia
cried. "I have seen how they look at that ... that cat,
Delilah! How I have matched her in beauty, I do not know, but
I seem to have, this last night—yet I can surely never be as
seductive as she! How can I be sure that either of them would
cleave unto me, and not unto such as her? Can true love be a
true defense? And which is my true love?"
"Ah." Gwen nodded slowly, her eyes glowing. "If you
do not know yet, daughter, you must not say yes to either of
them."
"Yes to which question?" Cordelia asked, guarded.
"Any question! Thou must not say yes to any question that
either doth ask thee!" Gwen said severely. "Not until
thy whole heart, and thy whole body, and thy whole soul do answer
`Yes!' before thy lips and tongue have dreamed it."
"But how shall I know when that comes?"
"Thou shalt know, daughter," Gwen assured her. "Believe
me, thou shalt know. But if thou must have some guide, here
it is: If thou dost find thyself even asking the question, 'Am I in
love?' then thou art not. When thou art in love, thou wilt
know it beyond the shadow of a doubt. If thou dost wonder if
thou art in love, then thou art not. Aye, if thou art in
love, thou wilt know it—and there is no more to be said."
"Truly, good mother?" Cordelia asked, in a very small
voice—and for a moment, Gwen saw her as a little girl again,
a five-year-old clinging to Gwen's skirts. She stood up,
smiling, and embraced her child. "It was true for me, my
daughter—oh, how it was true, and is! I cannot say what
was true for others, only for myself. If it is love, thou
wilt know it. It will not be, "Am I in love?' No, the voice
within thee shall say, "So this is love!' "
"Yet how if I love two?" Cordelia asked, still quite
small. "And how if both love me?"
"Wait," Gwen advised. "Wait until thine heart has spoken
for one, and only one, for the other is a liar. Wait,
daughter—only wait."
In the sitting room of her suite, Chief Agent Finister paced the
floor, still disguised as Lady Delilah. The mask of innocence
was dropped; the clinging vine had fallen away, to be replaced by
the whiplash. Her eyes flashed fire, every movement tense
with barely suppressed rage.
Her lieutenants stood in respectful silence against the walls of
the room, three of them men, two women. The men were nearly
salivating, feeling themselves galvanized by the mere sight of
their leader, felt every cell of their bodies respond, even now,
when the lady was not being at all seductive—even now, when
she was enraged and might very well attack one of them with lethal
intent. But she was completely beautiful; every line, every
gesture, every curve kindled desire within them.
The two women watched in mixed awe and envy—awe that a
woman had gained the foremost position of power among the
anarchists of Gramarye; envy of that power, and of the beauty that
she had used as a tool and a weapon, to rise to that position.
"How dare she outshine me!" Delilah fumed as she paced the
room. "How dare she win the Prince's eye—and how dare
he be merely courteous to me, yet burning with. ardor for
her!"
No one dared answer.
"We must do away with her!" Delilah spun on her heel,
jabbing a finger at one of the women. "Did Gerta take her
that cup of poisoned wine?"
"Five or ten minutes ago, Chief," the woman said quickly.
"As soon as you ordered it, the wine was prepared and sent up."
Delilah nodded, eyes burning. "We still dare not attempt
an open assault—these Gallowglasses have proved too powerful
in the past. But a poisoned cup, here in our headquarters,
where everyone around them is one of our agents—aye, here we
may have at them." She burst into rage again. "Where is
the silly goose?"
There was a knock at the door. One of the men reached to
swing it open, and Gerta entered.
"Well?" Delilah pounced upon her. "Did she drink
it?"
"N-n-no, Chief."
"Not drink it! Did you not press it upon her?"
"I ... I couldn't, Chief. She wasn't there."
"Not there!" Delilah halted, staring. Then, finally,
she probed with her own mind, her eyes glazing for a moment.
It was true—wherever Cordelia was, she was beyond Delilah's
range.
Chief Agent Finister was a very powerful esper, but her range
was very limited. Within that range, she was formidable,
especially in the area of projective telepathy. She excelled
at the crafting of witch-moss, and at inserting her own commands
and thoughts into another person's mind at so deep a level that it
amounted to instant hypnosis. This also made her able to
kindle passion in any man, to make herself seem infinitely
desirable. It was this last trait that she had used to win
her office—coupled with extortion and assassination.
"Her broomstick was gone, too, Chief," Gerta supplied.
"After all, she is a witch."
"She could be anywhere!" Delilah threw up her hands in
disgust, turning on her heel to pace again. "Did the sentries
not see her go? Did no one see where she sped?"
"None, Chief."
"Of course not!" Then, suddenly, Delilah stopped, lifting
her head, a strange, feral gleam coming into her eye. "She is
gone, she is fled. Now might we slay the Prince and be one
step closer to loosing anarchy upon Gramarye!"
"He has a younger brother," one of the men protested. "And
when he comes of age to be susceptible to me, I shall slay him
likewise! Then, when the King and Queen die, the barons shall
vie to see who shall have the Crown—and war shall be loosed
upon this island! Let us not waste the opportunity!
Creep into his chamber, stab your daggers into his heart, run him
through with your swords!" Her voice sank low, with an
intensity that` raised the hairs of her lieutenants. "For I
will see his blood!"
Her men stared at her, appalled. Not a single one of them
doubted the true reason for this murder. Oh, surely, it was
excellent policy for the anarchists. Baron against baron,
duke against duke—a chaos of war out of which a few strong
warlords would arise. They would tear the land apart in their
own turn until the peasants, sickened by war, would rise up and cut
them down.
Then, guided by the anarchist cells, they would establish their
own local governments which, carefully guided, would wither away,
and the land would be left without government, without law, without
oppression, guided only by custom and the natural morality inherent
in each human being, the innate nobility of the species. This
was their dream.
Of course, they blinded themselves to a few unpleasant truths
that disagreed with their vision. They ignored some of the
more base impulses of human beings, and the savage aspects of the
natural social rules that arise even in the animal kingdom, plus
the fact that there are always unbalanced humans who are motivated
more by greed than by concern for their fellows—but all
dreamers overlook a few things they do not wish to gaze upon.
Still, those reasons of policy were scarcely what had motivated
Delilah to order this assassination. All of them knew that
she had intended to captivate Alain, then marry him. What
would have happened then was open to speculation. Many of
them suspected that her real goal was personal power, and that she
would forget the anarchist cause in an instant when it had served
her purpose—or even turn against them, seek to wipe them out,
as threats to her own position.
That didn't affect their loyalty, of course. It was based
on fear and lust, on the men's side, and on the women's, on
admiration and fear.
So none of them really believed Alain's assassination was a
matter of policy. They all knew that Hell hath no fury like a
woman scorned, and that, somehow, incredibly, unbelievably, Prince
Alain had scorned their leader, the Lady Delilah, Chief Agent
Finister, whom any one of the men would have given his life
for—if, before death, he could have shared the ecstasies of
her bed.
"His comrade," one of them ventured, "Geoffrey
Gallowglass. He is a warlock, and a powerful one."
"Moreover," said another, "he is highly skilled with
weapons—perhaps the most expert in all the land."
Delilah smiled, with cruel anticipation. "I made an
appointment with him, to play a game of chess; he expects me even
now."
The men all stiffened in jealousy.
"But he shall not find me." Delilah turned to one of her
female lieutenants. "His weakness is women. Send him
your most voluptuous, most accomplished assistant—and when he
is deep in his revels with her, ignoring the world around him and
least expecting attack, drive a dagger under his ribs. Then
bring me his head."
The men all shuddered, but their jealousy was the only guarantee
she needed.
"And what of the bandit Forrest?" one of the men
protested. "Might he not come to the Prince's aid?"
"I doubt it, since they both sue for the same woman."
Delilah tossed back her head, eyelids drooping. "But we shall
make sure of him. I shall see to the bandit myself. He
is not worth killing, that one—but he is certainly worth a
few moments' attention." She glided out of the room.
The men all stared after her.
The women knew why Delilah was willing to do it—it was her
victory over Cordelia, if not as she had originally planned it.
At that moment, each of the men would have slain Forrest
happily, if by doing so, they could have changed places with
him.
But since they could not, they went to slay Alain.
CHAPTER 15
Alain dreamed that Delilah was bending over him, loosening the
fastenings of her gown—but she changed even as she loosened,
becoming Cordelia; and even as she was sliding the gown down over
her hips, she was murmuring with excitement, "Alain! Alain,
wake up!"
But why was her voice urgent instead of seductive? And why
were her ears growing into points? In fact, why was she
turning into an elf?
"Crown Prince! Awaken!"
Alain's eyelids snapped open. It must have been a
dream. Cordelia would never address him by his title.
He lay very still, and heard the voice again. "Waken, Crown
Prince!"
Alain lay unmoving, his gaze flicking about the room. Then
he saw the brownie woman, hanging from the bedpost, calling down,
"Crown Prince, awaken!" She glanced nervously up at the
door. "Waken, Prince Alain!"
"I have waked." Alain sat up.
"Praise be!" the elf breathed. "They come to slay
thee, Prince! Catch up thy sword and flee!"
More than his sword—Alain, like most medieval folk, slept
naked. He leaped out of bed and seized his hose.
Fortunately, he had left all the points tied, and had only
unbuckled the belt. Now he had only to wrestle the hose on,
not pausing to smooth them out, and buckle up.
"Quickly, quickly!" the brownie woman hissed. "Wilt
thou lose thy life for a pair of drawers? Surely 'tis better
to live naked than to die clothed!"
If they had sent a male elf, Alain probably would have
agreed—but as it was, he was embarrassed to be seen naked by
a woman. Standing up, he buckled his belt, then caught up his
baldric, throwing it over his head and drawing both sword and
dagger.
Just in time. The door swung open, slowly, without a
squeak.
Alain held his breath and stepped back against the wall.
His impulse was to leap out and start stabbing, but he needed to be
sure that the men were truly hostile before he would let himself
strike a blow that might kill. If they were, he intended to
make sure he had them all in sight before he began work.
One ... two ... and they held swords and daggers
drawn! Three ... four ... five ... none
more came in; they moved toward the bed.
Silent as a cat, Alain circled opposite their direction,
slipping behind the tapestry that hung on the wall. Peering
around its edge, he watched the five men gather around the bed in
the darkness. What cowards were they! So many men, to
slay one poor sleeping knight! Anger boiled within him at the
treachery. He tried to let it ebb, but not too far, for it
held at bay the fear that had begun to pool in his stomach.
He remembered what Geoffrey had told him—that all the
swordsmen Alain had ever fought would never have dared to beat the
Crown Prince. Had the bandits known who he was? Had the
witch's henchmen?
But these men did not, or if they did, they did not care.
Alain realized that he was about to discover whether or not he
really was a capable swordsman. Why they wished to kill him,
he did not ask—there would be time enough to understand it
later.
"Light," the first man hissed.
A beam speared out. Alain blinked with surprise—he
had not heard the sliding of a metal shutter, nor did he smell the
flame-heated tin of a lantern. What manner of men were
these?
He stepped out from behind the tapestry, circling behind their
backs toward the door.
"He is fled!" the leader hissed. "Where ...?"
"There!" another man shouted, his forger spearing at
Alain.
The leader spun wide-eyed, as Alain threw himself forward in a
lunge, howling, "Havoc!"
The nearest man fell back, barely getting his sword around in
time to parry—which was perfect, because Alain whirled his
thrust into a slash, coming in low and cutting upward. The
man cried out and fell back, holding his hands to his side.
Alain braced himself and yanked the sword free as the man
fell—but even as he did, he was catching the second
swordsman's blade on his dagger. Not quite well
enough—the blade nicked his shoulder, but Alain ignored the
pain. He didn't even take time to riposte, only pulled the
sword straight out of one man and stabbed it into the next.
The second's sword managed to parry at the very last second, but
Alain slipped his blade around the parry and thrust, scoring the
man's thigh. The man howled and collapsed.
Alain sprang aside as the third man lunged. The edge
scored the Prince's ribs and the pain burned, but he ignored it and
swung backhanded, striking the man on the back of the head with the
heel of his hilt even as he raised his dagger to block an assault
by the fourth man. He leaped back as the two remaining men
crowded him, their blades flickering. He parried, blocked,
then slammed a kick into the midriff of the nearest and spun away
toward the door.
The leader shouted and charged at him. He leaped aside at
the last second, and the man slammed into the wall. Before he
could recover, Alain was out the door.
The leader shouted a curse, and his thrown dagger struck Alain
on the back of the head. Dizzy for a second, he reeled back
against the wall. Then his head cleared, and he leaped to his
right, plastered himself back against the wall—and sure
enough, the leader came charging out, yelling, "Stop him!
Guards! Stop that man!"
Alain caught him in the right shoulder with his dagger.
The man spun around, saw Alain's blade chopping down, and sprang
aside with a howl of fright. His sword fell from numbed
fingers—and one of the other men dragged himself out the
door, gasping for breath, but cutting at Alain with his sword.
Alain leaped aside, then cut low, slicing the man's calf.
It would have been a foul blow in a foil match, but here, it spared
his opponent's life. The man cried out and collapsed.
But the leader was running away down the hall, crying, "A
rescue! A rescue! Seize him!"
Alarm, and the old instinct to chase when you're winning, almost
sent Alain after him, but prudence dictated that he find an
escape.
"Flee, King's Son!" cried the brownie from the
lintel. In answer came shouting from around the corner, and
the sound of boots running. The rattle of steel punctuated
the drumming.
Alain whirled about and ran down the hallway, not knowing where
he was going, a wild exhilaration beating in his breast, for he was
alive, and his enemies were disabled. He decided that perhaps
he was as good a swordsman as he had thought.
A section of panelled wall swung out before him. He jarred
to a halt, dagger up, sword on guard, panting, the feet and the
shouting swelling closer behind him. Alain stood, ready for
whatever danger would come at him out of this secret door ...
An elf leaped through, crying, "Inside, King's Son!
Quickly, ere they come in sight of thee!"
Alain didn't argue. He ducked down and shot into the hole
behind the panelling. The door clapped shut behind him, and
he knelt in the darkened space, holding his breath, though his
lungs clamored for air. The pounding feet came closer, the
shouting was louder and louder, and his heart was hammering within
him ...
Then the feet were fading away, and the shouting with them.
Alain let the stale air explode out of his lungs, and gasped in
fresh.
Little lights suddenly sprang up all about him. He pushed
himself back against the wall, his blades coming up to guard, then
saw elfin faces by the candle-sized flames of miniature
torches.
"We will lead you to safety, Crown Prince!" the largest of
them said. He was quite tall by their standards, a foot and a
half high, with a look of incipient mayhem in his eyes.
"You are the Puck!" Alain panted.
"I am, and come to save you from the peril into which your own
foolish glands have brought you. Will you come?"
But Alain stayed where he was, pushing himself upright slowly,
wary of a ceiling that might strike his head. "Nay," he
gasped, "I cannot flee!"
"What nonsense is this?" Puck demanded. "Let us hear
no foolishness of proving your valor, youngling! This is no
time to play games of honor! Come, and come quickly!"
"I cannot," Alain said. "The Lady Cordelia ... if
they have sought to slay me, they may seek to slay her ... I
must find her!"
Puck calmed, staring at him. "Even so," he said.
For a moment, it occurred to Alain to worry about Geoffrey
...
Then he realized that he was being ridiculous. "Follow,"
the elf told him. "I will lead you to a place that is near to
her chamber."
"I follow," Alain answered. He slipped down the
passageway after the ring of fairy lights, barely able to see where
his next step should be. "I thank you, Wee Folk." Puck
exchanged glances with one of the other elves. It was rare
that they met a mortal with a proper sense of gratitude.
"Thou dost credit to thy parents and thine upbringing," Puck
answered.
Then, suddenly, he came to a halt. Tiny feet pattered
toward them, a little torch bobbing up and down, lighting a
brownie's face.
"What moves?" Puck demanded.
"Not the Lady Cordelia," the elf answered. "Her room is
empty; she is fled."
"Thank heavens!" Alain sighed, then suddenly
stiffened. "Or has she been taken?"
"We shall seek," the elf promised.
"Aye, we shall find her, if any may," Puck said. "Come
now, King's Son. Thou must needs leave this house with
us."
"Not until I know that she is fled, not taken!" Alain
protested. "Nay, do not stay by me, good folk, but go seek
her indeed! Although, if you would be so good as to leave me
a light, I shall be safe enough here. Do you seek her
out..." Then, as an afterthought, "And you might spare a
thought for her brother. Warn him, too—I doubt not he
shall need it."
Puck regarded him for a moment, weighing his instructions
against one another. The lad was safe enough—and he did
need to prove himself to himself .. . "We shall attempt
it. Are you sure you shall be well, though, King's Son?"
"I am certain," he said. "Go. I shall amuse myself
by prowling these secret hallways, to discover where they
lead. Who knows but it may be of benefit?"
"Even as thou sayest," Puck pronounced. "Take care, and do
not seek to fight a whole army by thyself."
"I shall not," Alain promised.
Of course, he didn't say anything about a squadron. Puck
went away with his little troop, well aware that he could not
depend on the Prince to play it safe—not at his age, or with
his overdeveloped sense of responsibility (or his being in
love).
Of course, Puck wasn't about to let him really be alone.
Alain thought he was, though, and felt the sense of abandonment
creeping in. He threw it off and, lit only by the miniature
torch (which, he noticed, was not burning down at all), prowled the
secret passage. What he was really seeking, of course, was
another door into the manor house's rooms—in fact, as many
doors as he could locate. If Cordelia was in the slightest
danger, he intended to leap to her defense by the quickest route he
could find.
Cordelia, of course, was in no danger at all, except, perhaps,
from her own emotions.
She flew in through her chamber window as the sky was
lightening, feeling bone-weary, but with some measure of peace
within her. She was emotionally wrung out and ready to sleep
until noon, at the very least—but, as she was about to take
off her travelling dress, she paused, a vagrant image of Alain
drifting into her mind. It was not the Alain she had always
known, pompous and selfimportant, but the Alain she had met the
night before, the masked face with the gentle but ardent kisses
...
Then she remembered his face, staring at her aghast when he had
been unmasked. She smiled, feeling very tender. She
decided to seek him out, for she felt a sudden need to talk with
him, heart to heart, mind to mind ... perhaps even breasts to
chest ...
And if he was asleep? Well, so much the better. It
would not hurt to catch him at a bit of a disadvantage. She
laughed softly to herself and slipped out of her room.
Alain's chamber was all the way at the other end of the
hall. She wondered idly who was his neighbor, and glanced at
the panel next to Alain's.
Somehow, she was sure it was Delilah's.
Suddenly suspicious, she stepped up to Alain's door, hoping that
she would not find the chamber empty. She turned the knob
very quietly, pushed the door open, and slipped in.
The empty bed was almost a slap in her face.
For a moment, she raged inside—until she saw the
overturned chair, the slashes in the tapestry, and realized that
those stains on the floor were blood.
Jealously was instantly replaced by horror. What had
happened to Alain? She whirled out of the room. If
anyone knew, it would be Delilah.
Without the slightest attempt at discretion, she slammed through
the door and strode in, ready to beard her rival in her
den—or in her bed, which, with Delilah, was probably much the
same thing ...
But she was not there.
Cordelia stared, completely taken aback. She stepped
farther in, then halted, amazed at the splendor of the sitting
room, at its spaciousness, its silken hangings, the depth and
softness of the carpet on the floor, the grace and delicacy of the
occasional tables and upholstered chairs.
Then she looked more closely, for signs of the night's
events. There was only the one glass, with wine dregs,
sitting on a table by a chair, and another that seemed to have
scarcely been touched, by the door. Cordelia was tempted, for
she was thirsty, then remembered that Delilah might have sipped
from it, and turned her back on it.
She glanced at the hearth; there were still coals glowing
there. Then she surveyed the walls, all hung with rosecolored
silk; there might be a platoon of guards hidden behind them.
She listened with her mind, but found no one nearby, and ignored
anyone outside the room, her attention focussed only on its
mistress. The furniture was white and gold, and the carpet
was Oriental, with patterns of a dusky rose on a cream
background.
But there was no one there.
Her heart began to hammer within her breast. She wasn't
sure whether she was more afraid of not finding Alain at all, or of
finding him in Delilah's bed. Silent as a morning zephyr, she
slipped across the carpet to the door in the far wall, turned the
handle as quietly as she could, pushed it open, slipped in ...
And saw no one.
The bed had not even been slept in. Now, suddenly, the
rage of jealousy boiled up within her, but with terror right behind
it. What had the witch done with Alain!
Cordelia suddenly became tremendously afraid that when she found
Delilah, she would find Alain, too. Why else would they both
be gone from their beds?
She fled out into the hallway, then halted, in a
quandary—where could she go? Where could she
search? Forrest! He would know! The saturnine,
hot-eyed, bearded face of the bandit chieftain rose up before her
mind's eye. She could depend on him to help her, surely, as
he had in the woods, when Delilah's "sister" had attacked, with her
henchmen. Certainly, if he were really in love with Cordelia,
he would leap at the chance to help her—even if it meant
helping his rival, too.
Which door was his? She did not know, but she
suspected. She went to the other side of Delilah's door and
turned the knob, softly, ever so softly ...
She recognized Forrest's boots and the costume he had worn as
Dionysus, the night before. His doublet lay upon a
stool—but that was all there was. His bed was empty;
like Delilah's it had not been slept in.
Like Delilah's ...
Suspicion reared up in her mind again, anger roiling behind
it. Who else? What had been happening while she had
been talking with her mother?
She turned away to the door, seething. If Geoffrey was
gone, too ...
Then she told herself she strumpet could not seduce
night—or a half-night, for the midnight. She strode out
the Geoffrey's room.
She was about to burst in, but halted at the last second, though
she was not sure why. She reached out with her mind instead
...
And almost collapsed with relief. To find only a dream of
him riding, riding with the wind in his hair, wild and free, was a
vastly pleasant surprise. She sighed, then was being
silly. Surely the more than one man in a ball had ended an
hour after door and down the hall to turned the handle and opened
the door as quietly as she could. She would wake him gently,
tell him that she needed his help ...
But what of the woman who lay beside him?
And the two armed men who lay sleeping on the floor, just inside
the door?
What sort of twisted pleasures had her brother been pursuing,
anyway?
Cordelia stared, outraged. Then all the morning's anger
boiled up within her, and she strode across the floor, stepping
over the two sleeping men and hissing, "Hussy!" She reached
down, grasping a smooth, bare shoulder and snarling,
"Strumpet!"
The girl opened her eyes halfway, a lazy smile on her lips,
stretching with a sinuous undulation, turning her head up to look
...
Then she saw Cordelia, and her eyes flew wide in shock.
"Get out from here!" Cordelia snapped. "Now!
Instantly! Ere I claw your eyes blind and pull your hair out
by the roots!"
The woman sat bolt upright, but her eyes narrowed as she
clutched the bedclothes to her. She was in her early
twenties, Cordelia guessed, and was quite well put
together—lushly, in fact. "I am not your
servant..."
Cordelia's hand came around with a ringing slap. The girl
cried out and fell back, and it was Geoffrey's hands who held her
up. "Peace, sister. 'Tis not your affair, after
all."
"Nor was Alain yours!" Cordelia spat. "Out,
tearsheet, or I shall do you more mischief than a whole tribe of
elves!"
The girl darted a glance at the two men. "Bardolph!
Morley! Aid me!"
The men lay still, not even snoring.
The woman stared in horror—and, for a moment, so did
Cordelia.
"They are men who prefer to watch, not do, I suspect," Geoffrey
said, very nonchalantly. "They crept in whiles we did disport
ourselves, and I had some wish for privacy, so I put them to
sleep."
The girl's glance swung up to him in fright, and she squirmed
away from him toward the edge of the bed. "But ... your
embrace was so ardent, your kisses so fevered..."
"That I might overlook an intruder?" Geoffrey smiled,
showing his teeth. "I am never so besotted that I cannot hear
someone who fairly shouts his gloating glee, as their minds
did."
"And you cast them into sleep without even ...
even..."
"Batting an eye?" Geoffrey shrugged. "'Twas only a
moment's distraction."
"Now will you get hence!" Cordelia raged. "Nay, do
not pause to dress—take your tawdry garments with you, and
get out!"
The girl didn't stay to argue any further—she leaped out
of bed, catching up her clothing, and darted out the door with only
one backward look of fright.
Cordelia gazed after her with more than a little contempt,
seasoned by jealousy. "Your taste surely runs to the baroque,
brother."
"A good guest takes what is offered." Geoffrey sounded
amused.
Seething, Cordelia spun about, to see him propped up on one
elbow, the sheet still draped across his hips, watching with an
expression of great interest.
"You curmudgeon!" Cordelia said, with every ounce of
contempt she could muster. "You lewd man, you libertine, you
rake! How many women must you debauch before you realize the
harm you do?"
Geoffrey started to answer.
"Nay, tell me not!" Cordelia snapped. "Great affairs
of state cannot wait while you slake your desires!" Geoffrey
stared up at her, thinking that his sister was really very
impressive—and had probably saved him a deal of trouble in
disentangling him from one more set of lingering clutches.
But he said only, "You may be sure that I dally only when there is
time."
"Oh, do you indeed!" Cordelia snapped. "Nay, you are
like a dog who forgets all else when he scents one trace of a bitch
in heat, and forsakes all duties to go padding after her,
drooling!"
Geoffrey frowned. "Would you have me be a celibate?
Nay, a monk, perhaps, never to enjoy the company of any woman who
was not a nun!"
" 'Twas scarcely a nun who left here but now, and 'twas far more
than her company that you did enjoy! Nay, while you did
'dally,' your friend Alain was beset by armed men and, for all I
know, nearly slain!"
Geoffrey was out of bed, somehow contriving to slip his breeches
on without completely giving up the cover of the sheet.
"Armed men? Why, could you not fend them off, sister?
Nay, do not answer—'twas not your place! A curse upon
me, that I was not there!" He froze, staring up at her,
frowning. "Nay, surely any number of armed men who came
against him while you were watchful would have died in the
attempt!"
Cordelia felt a stab of guilt, but told herself sternly that she
was not Alain's keeper—not yet.
Geoffrey pulled on his doublet and buttoned it.
"Therefore, if he was taken, you were not there."
"No," Cordelia said, biting down on shame. "I was
not." Geoffrey stilled, watching her. "Do not blame
yourself, sister. You are not Alain's watchdog; you were not
set to that task. Nay, it is the man who is supposed to guard
the woman, not the woman the man. Yet if you did not witness
it, how do you know he was set upon?"
"Why," she said, "because his room is in disarray, with
tapestries slashed and furniture overturned—and there was
blood on the floor!"
Geoffrey was moving toward the door before she finished the
sentence, buckling his sword belt. "Proof enough. Let
us go."
"How shall we find him?" Cordelia wailed. "And we
must find him right quickly, for he may be in mortal danger!"
"His soul, mayhap," Geoffrey agreed, "but I doubt that his body
is in any peril at all, blood or no blood. The man is a most
excellent swordsman, Cordelia—he held me off for a good five
minutes! Nay, we have only to find the Lady Delilah..."
He was about to add, and we shall find Alain, but caught
himself and said instead, ". . . for she will
know where the bodies are, dead and living."
"Her chamber is empty," Cordelia said.
Geoffrey shrugged impatiently, opening the door and ushering her
through. "That means only that she is not in her
chamber. We shall find her, and she will know where Alain
lies." He didn't like the sound of that, so he added, "Or
stands and fights—where we may join him."
Alain stood deep within the manor house's bowels and had finally
found a door, larger than the others, that would let him into the
Great Hall. He opened it only a fraction of an inch, and was
assailed with the sounds of men's voices barking commands to one
another, while they scurried to put away the tables and take down
all the decorations. It seemed odd that they would be so
prompt about tidying up after the ball, but Alain didn't really
give the matter much thought, only edged the door closed again and
stood on the other side, sword in hand, waiting, listening to Sir
Julian's voice bawling orders to search and to guard. Alain's
face hardened at the words; the old man was commanding his men to
seek out the Lady Cordelia and hale her before him, and to bring
her brother with her, dead or alive.
Well. There was an outside chance that, if enough of them
leaped upon Geoffrey in his sleep, they might be able to take him
prisoner—but Alain doubted it mightily, especially since he
had no doubt the elves were guarding Geoffrey as well as they had
guarded him.
Cordelia, however, was another matter. She was so small,
so fragile! Even with all her witch-powers, she could not fly
if they kept her from her broomstick. Geoffrey, if worse came
to worse, could simply disappear—but Cordelia could not, just
as warlocks could not make brooms fly.
Alain stood in the darkness and the dank chill, shivering,
lighted only by one elf-light. He hefted his sword in his
hand, waiting for the moment when he would hear Sir Julian's voice
address the Lady Cordelia, when he would have the chance to leap to
her aid.
Until then ... ?
Well, if the commotion died down enough, if the voices faded
away, he would risk stepping out to see the lay of the land.
Perhaps he could hide behind an arras—what else were they
for? Till then, he could only stand and wait and shiver.
He did.
An elf-wife slipped out from behind the arras. "Lady
Cordelia!"
Cordelia spun about, staring down at the diminutive
person. "Hail, Wee One!" She dropped to her knee.
"Have you news of the Crown Prince?"
"One of our folk did wake him ere the murderers did fall upon
him," the elf told her. "He fought his way free. We
brought him to the tunnels within this house's walls, and he doth
prowl through them, seeking for sign of thee. We have bade
him flee to save his own life, but he will not, till he is sure
thou art safe. Canst thou move him, lady?"
"It appears I do." Cordelia blinked away mistiness.
"Brave man! Praise Heaven he is well!" Then the remark
about "tunnels" penetrated. Secret passages, obviously.
"Is there no passage from those tunnels, into the free air
outside?"
"Oh, aye! We bade him come with us, to leave this strange
place—but he will not, so long as he fears for thy
safety. In truth, he is certain that they wish to slay thee,
so even though thy chamber was empty, he still doth prowl the
passages, seeking sign of thee. He will not go out from this
place until he can take thee with him, alive and well."
Cordelia nearly melted, right then and there. Her limbs
felt weak again, and the strange warmness moved up inside
her—most strange, considering she was not even with Alain,
much less touching him. Her heart had dissolved in that
warmth, she was sure—but she felt her brother's hand on her
shoulder and pulled herself together.
"We must seek him," Geoffrey said softly.
"Aye." Cordelia smiled through a mist of tears and had to
blink it away. She turned to the elf. "Tell him I am
wellalive and well, and that I wish him to flee to safety."
"Assuredly, I shall." The elf-woman whisked back behind
the arras, and was gone.
Cordelia rose and spoke to Geoffrey without looking at
him. "Come. We must find him, protect him."
"Aye, we must indeed," said Geoffrey, loosening his sword in its
scabbard, "for if I know Alain, he will be pigheaded enough to stay
until he sees you with his own eyes."
"Oh, do you truly think he would?" she cried.
"I do not doubt it for an instant," Geoffrey said drily.
"Let us seek him out, then. Since we know where he is, let us
call back the elf-wife, find these tunnels, and seek him out
directly."
Cordelia froze at a thought. "Nay! Let us finish the
course we first set! Find the Lady Delilah."
"I am ever ready for that," he said with a grin. Cordelia
flashed him a glance of annoyance. "You are disgusting,
brother. I confess I am glad of your aid, but not of your
animal nature. Be assured that I do not wish to find the lady
for the same reason that you do."
"I would scarcely think it! But say, sweet sister, what
purpose there is in seeking her at all?"
"For that she is a shrew and destroyer beneath her beauty,
brother, and if you have not seen it, be assured that I have."
Geoffrey frowned. "But we have learned that Alain is alive
and well, and could therefore be in no danger from her.
Should we not rather be seeking to find who set these assassins
upon the Prince?" He stared, facts suddenly connecting in his
head. "Surely you do not suspect the lady of the deed!"
"I would suspect her of anything," Cordelia returned, her eyes
glittering. "Who do you think sent those men to fall
upon him?"
Geoffrey frowned. "Say."
"The Lady Delilah! Do you not remember the dream we
shared? It was she who gave the orders! If anyone
commanded Alain's death, it was she!"
"That was but a dream..."
"A dream that came from a telepath who did not shield her
thoughts, thinking we slept! She did not realize her words
would sift through our slumbers to form pictures in our minds!"
Geoffrey pursed his lips, not wanting to believe such malice of
so beautiful a lady—but by the logic of war, it was what an
enemy would do.
Cordelia's eyes narrowed as she watched the emotions pass across
Geoffrey's face. "Believe it, brother, till we have proof
otherwise—the more so since 'tis likely she gave other
commands also. Did she not whip up your lust this night, then
send a woman to satisfy it, thus holding your attention so that you
would not be aware that Alain needed your aid?"
Geoffrey's face darkened with the blow to his pride, but he had
to admit it made sense. "Aye." Then the logical
conclusion hit him. "If so, 'twas she who sent the
blackguards to slay me while I sought ecstasy!"
"I doubt it not," Cordelia agreed. Her face turned stony
at the idea of the woman actually trying to kill her little
brother. "We shall pay her back in her own coin."
There was something in the way she said it that gave even
Geoffrey chills.
"But what of Alain?"
"The elves shall bring him my word, and he shall heed it, I
hope, going out from this house. But we must make sure of
that safety in other ways."
"By choking it at its source." Geoffrey smiled like a
wolf. Cordelia gave him a curt nod. "Do you still wish
to believe the woman innocent? Then prove me wrong,
brother. Find her."
CHAPTER 16
They searched. Delilah had not come back to her room, nor
Forrest to his.
Geoffrey stood immobile in the center of Delilah's sitting room,
eyes losing focus as he probed throughout the manor house with his
mind. Finally, he nodded. "The room that was
shielded."
"Of course!" Cordelia cried. "What malice does she
brew in there?"
"Let us go see." Geoffrey turned to the door.
They ran through the hallways with no sound but the rustle of
their garments, staying to the shadows (and there were a lot of
those). Down below the Great Hall, down in the basement of
the manor house, there where there should have been storerooms,
they found an oaken door with men in livery standing sentry.
Geoffrey slipped his dagger out of its sheath, but Cordelia
stayed it with a hand. "They are weary already,
brother. They have watched through the night." She
stared at the two men for a few seconds.
One of them raised a hand to stifle a yawn. As he
finished, the other began.
"Stay awake," the first growled. "No, you stay awake."
"I need to..."
"I just got to..."
Then both slumped to the floor. After a minute, each
snored.
Cordelia and Geoffrey stole silently around the corner and up to
the door.
"Softly," Geoffrey whispered. "Let us take them
unawares."
Cordelia glared at the lock until it turned itself. Then
she gave the door a gentle push with her hand, and it swung open
silently, on well-oiled hinges.
There was only the one candle, but its glow reflected off data
screens, holo-cube readers, holo-cube files—and an improvised
bed, cushions clustered together, and on them, snorting and
heaving, shuddering and gasping ...
Cordelia froze, wide-eyed. She would have turned on her
heel if she could have, but the sight held her, horrified,
fascinated. She was intruding on a very private moment, but
...
"Take your enemy while you can," Geoffrey breathed in her
ear. "In fact, as she would have done to me." He
stepped past her, gliding toward the bed like a shadow left by a
moonbeam.
Cordelia shook off the spell, remembered the sleeping assassins
and the bloodstains on Alain's floor, and followed.
Geoffrey levelled his sword and spoke very loudly.
"Hold!"
Cordelia stood by, reaching out with her mind, ready to throw
every movable object at ...
(The man lifted his head, shocked, and found himself staring at
a sword's tip.)
...at Forrest.
Cordelia stared, appalled. Inside her, she felt something
sicken and shrivel.
The bandit chieftain saw it in her eyes. He scrambled out
of the bed, remembered himself just in time, and whipped a corner
of the sheet over his midriff, then raised his hands to
Cordelia. "My lady, forgive! A moment's impulse
... I weakened ... Never again..."
His voice ran down as he saw the look on her face. Beyond
him, Delilah lay back against the pillows, halfcovered by the rest
of the sheet, watching Cordelia with a vindictive, triumphant
smile.
Cordelia stood, stunned.
Delilah's gaze flicked to Geoffrey, filled with malice, one
finger drawing a circle on the sheet over her breast, spiralling
in. "Come, seize the moment—and me. You knew me
for what I was; use me now, for you'll never have another
chance."
Geoffrey's sword point swivelled to her throat.
She stared at him, indignant, affronted—for the look on
his face was only one of amusement.
Forrest bowed his head, shamefaced.
But Delilah's eyes glinted malice at Geoffrey, and she laughed,
low in her throat.
Geoffrey shrugged.
Suddenly, Cordelia was aware that she might not have been the
only one who had been hurt by the scene. Her gaze darted up
to her brother's face in concern.
Then she saw how the smile on his face widened, showing
teeth. "I knew you for what you were, aye, and was quite
willing to take you on those terms—nay, and still would be,
for a night or two—but for nothing more."
Storm clouds began to gather on Cordelia's brow.
Geoffrey's swordtip moved slowly down Delilah's body, as though
seeking the best point.
"Thrust, then," she said with contempt, "at least with the
symbol, since you are too much afeard to use the referent."
"Geoffrey!" Cordelia cried, appalled.
Geoffrey gave her a quick glance before he looked back at his
target. "Sister, I hope that you did not think that Forrest
was anything more than Delilah was."
Cordelia's head snapped back, as though she had been
slapped.
Geoffrey went on, circling his sword tip carelessly, nearer and
nearer to the smooth skin. "Nay, the two of them are well
matched, indeed."
Forrest rose to his knees; hands upraised in pleading.
"Lady Cordelia! Sweet lady, forgive!"
"Never could I forgive such a lapse as this!" Cordelia
retorted, infuriated. "How could you seek to humiliate me
so?"
"To put you in the same class as myself?" Delilah said
sweetly. "That is no humiliation, sweet innocent, but a
compliment of the highest order."
"Speak not to me, lightskirt!" Cordelia turned on her,
enraged. "Were I ever like you, I should wish to die ere I
was thrown on the trash heap as a worn-out plaything for any man
who wished!"
"Say rather, any man whom I wish!" Delilah writhed out of
the bed and up to her feet, her eyes sparking with anger. She
slipped past the sword's point, and her open palm cracked across
Cordelia's cheek.
"Oh!" Cordelia pressed a hand to the hurt, indignant,
anger building to an unprecedented explosion.
"Oh,' indeed!" Delilah stepped back laughing, leaning
back, hands on her hips, naked and glorious in the
candlelight. "Yes, any man I want, even yours! Any man
of yours! Stay awhile, while I go to claim your Prince!"
Cordelia sprang forward, spitting, "False and hollow
shell!" hands reaching, fingers hooked to scratch.
Alarmed, Forrest caught her, holding her wrists. "No,
lady! You shall be hurt!"
"Let me go! Oh, let me go!" Cordelia raged, twisting
and thrashing about in his hold.
"Aye, let her go!" Delilah taunted. "Let her
follow! I shall have her Prince grappling me ere she can
come!" Catching up her garments, she sprang to the door and
ran out, bare feet pattering on the floor.
"Will you let me go!" Cordelia cried, still raging.
"I must catch her, stop her, ere it is too late!"
"Why, lady, why?" Forrest implored. "You shall only
go to your own hurt—for surely, Alain is no better than
I!"
"Yes, sister, let be," Geoffrey said gently. "I would not
wish you hurted more, if she is right—and I would not wish to
spit Alain on my sword, if..."
"But do you not see?" Cordelia cried. "She knows he
is the Prince!"
Geoffrey stared.
Forrest frowned. "What matters that?"
"That her men tried to assassinate Alain this night!"
Geoffrey snapped, the implications immediately clear to him.
"And if she knows who he truly is, it is sure that we guessed
aright—it is she who set the assassins upon him! It is
not his virtue or his heart that is threatened, but his life!
Let be!"
Astounded, Forrest loosed his hold, and Cordelia sprang
free.
They leaped after her, out into the hallway ... It was
empty save for the two snoring sentries.
They stood, absolutely still, and heard the muffled sound of
bare feet padding away, somewhere out of sight ... "The
stairs!" Geoffrey snapped. "She can only have gone
upward!"
"That would be novel," Cordelia said acidly, but she ran after
Geoffrey.
Up the stairs they flew, into the entry hall, where they halted,
looking about. There was no loose clothing on the floor, no
hint as to where Delilah had gone—only the doors to the solar
on the one side, and the Great Hall on the other.
Geoffrey strode toward the Great Hall. "She will be here,
if she is anywhere. 'Tis the seat of power for a country
squire."
They threw open the doors and strode in ...
And armed men stepped out from the walls. A thicket of
swords surrounded them.
At the end of the hall, on the dais, stood Delilah, clothed
again now, hands on her hips, head thrown back, laughing long and
loud.
Cordelia looked about her, stunned. The trestles and
tables had not only been folded and set aside—they had been
taken out of the hall completely. The fire was dead, the
hearth cleaned and swept. The torches were gone from their
sconces, and the decorations had disappeared. Only bare walls
and bare floor met her gaze, bleak in the light of the false dawn
filtering through the tall windows.
Delilah laughed and laughed, revelling in their surprise.
"There is nothing here to throw, witch! How shall you fight
now, when there is nothing for your mind to move?"
Cordelia stared, aghast, realizing that she had walked into a
trap, and Geoffrey swore. "By Blue, and by all the obscene
slitherings from the dawn of time! You have laid your snare
carefully and well, lady!"
"And you are caught within it!" she cried in glee.
"You have been planning it long and well."
"Aye, since first I learned that Their Majesties would command
their son to wed! And you are caught, ensnared more
thoroughly than you could have imagined! Know that you shall
die this night, Sir Geoffrey!" Delilah's voice suddenly
softened, cozening. "Yet the condemned man may have his last
wish." Her hands went to the laces of her bodice.
"Come, take what you have sought so hard! You may at least
die in ecstasy."
Cordelia stared at her, horrified—but Geoffrey only shook
his head a little, with a knowing smile.
"Oh, do not fear for your manhood!" Delilah mocked.
"I well and truly do lust after you, and shall have my fill of you
soon enough, I warrant—you shall know a glorious death."
"I think I shall know no death at all," Geoffrey purred.
"No? Surely you do not think you can fight one against fifty,
and win! And you shall not disappear from our midst, for your
sister cannot, and you are too concerned with your piddling honor
to leave her! There is nothing here for your mind to throw,
no weapons but your single sword and dagger. How shall you
fight?"
"With me at his back!" Alain burst out of the
wainscotting, the hidden door slamming open. He leaped, sword
slashing, to wound the nearest guardsman. The man cried out,
and Alain parried a cut by another guard with his dagger, then
drove home with the sword. The man screamed and spun away,
clutching at his side—but Alain had already whirled away,
stabbing and slashing. Ten men near him shouted, and jumped
on him.
Geoffrey roared, and his sword spun, dagger stabbing with
inhuman speed and force. Three men fell back, fountains of
blood; a dozen more leaped away from the berserker. That
opened the path to Alain, and the Prince was beside him in an
instant, taking station between Cordelia and the armed men, setting
his back against Geoffrey's, who was still weaving his web of
steel. "To the death, old friend!"
"If die we must, Geoffrey!"
"No, not our deaths—theirs!"
But while they had been doing that, Cordelia had been busy with
the others. A guardsman shot up ten feet off the floor,
crying out in alarm. He had good reason; Cordelia's eyes
narrowed, and the man hurtled straight toward Delilah. She
sprang aside with a cry of fear, and two more men rocketed into the
air and spun toward her.
"Nothing to throw, you say?" Cordelia cried. "Then
have at thee!" And both soldiers slammed down onto the floor;
Lady Delilah barely stepped aside in time.
Five men shouted and leaped at Cordelia—but this time, it
was she who shot up into the air astride a spear, and the soldiers'
swords slashed at one another. Shocked, they cried out, then
turned to parrying—and from parrying, to cutting and
thrusting at one another.
Cordelia's eyes narrowed.
Suddenly, swords all over the room slashed at the men next to
them, as though they had taken on lives of their own. Their
owners shouted with fear—but so did their targets. In
moments, the whole room was a vast melee of ringing steel and cries
of anger.
"Out upon them!" Delilah cried.
That brought her men to their senses; with titanic heaves, they
wrestled back control over their weapons and leaped to strike at
the Gallowglasses and the Prince. Alain and Geoffrey met and
blunted their rush, protecting Cordelia—and leaving her free
to tend to Delilah. Her heart swelled with joy at their
loyalty, even as she focussed her mind on her fingertips, thinking
of thickening air, molecules crowding more and more closely
together, moving faster and faster—so that by the time she
swung her arm down, throwing, it was a ball of flame that leaped
from her hand.
Delilah dodged it easily, laughing, even as her hands described
a circle—and a ring of fire sprang up about Cordelia.
She cried out in alarm, then bit it off, thinking of rain, a
cloudburst.
Brief as it was, her cry was drowned in the howls of pain from
the guards, servants, and knights who were battering at Alain and
Geoffrey. They leaped back, and the two young men gasped for
breath, grinning. "The Lady Delilah fights well ... for
us," Geoffrey panted.
Apparently she realized it, too. The ring of fire died
down as suddenly as it had sprung up, but Delilah's men hung back,
wary, for a moment. Geoffrey grinned and swished his blade
through a sword drill, but Alain only glared and held his on
guard.
Cordelia, though, was ready the second the flames died. A
cloudburst broke right above Delilah, appearing from nowhere,
drenching her. Delilah coughed and spluttered in sheer
surprise, then wiped her hair out of her eyes just in time to see a
circle of rope whirling down to settle around her. She gasped
and glared at it; it burst into fire before it could tighten, and
was gone.
The response had been too quick; Cordelia hadn't been working up
her next spell.
They were all illusions, of course. The trick was to make
them seem so real that the other witch's mind would accept them
subconsciously, and really feel the heat from the flames and see
the burns blistering her skin, even though her conscious mind knew
better. Delilah, for example, was really wet—her hair
hung lank and dripping, her clothes plastered to her body; her own
mind was cooperating in keeping her so. But she knew the
moisture was harmless, and ignored it as she hurled a fireball at
Cordelia.
It was an empty gesture, of course—Cordelia damped the
flames before the sphere was halfway there. It faded into the
thin air it had been made from—but it had given Delilah time
to work up something more subtle.
Alain lurched back against Cordelia, snarling—and throwing
her off balance for a moment. His sword flashed like a
heat-haze, his opponents dropping back with wounds—but more
jumped in, in their place. There were at least three for each
of her guardians, and they were hard-pressed indeed. She
realized they couldn't last much longer ...
A high, shrill battle-scream sounded, and the great black iron
horse reared up behind the men who were slashing at Geoffrey.
Fess's steel hooves lashed out, felling Delilah's men. He had
heard the row, and broken from the castle stables, Cordelia
realized just in time to even the odds.
The men around Alain looked up, saw what was happening, and some
of those at the back ran to attack Geoffrey, then leaped aside as
steel teeth snapped at them.
Welcome as Fess was, he had distracted Cordelia too long.
Suddenly, a huge snake was coiling around her. Its coils
tightened; she couldn't breathe! Then the wedgeshaped head
hovered in front of hers, and she would have screamed, if she had
had breath. Its jaws opened, fangs curving down to tear
...
But constrictors don't have viper's fangs, and pit vipers aren't
big enough to wrap and squeeze. The fangs themselves made her
realize all over again that the snake was only an illusion,
projected by a master directly into the back of her mind; the fangs
broke her unconscious belief in its reality more effectively than
anything she could have thought of. She held her breath, eyes
narrowing, glaring into that putrid maw, thinking of another form,
another shape ...
The snake sprouted hairs, hairs that thickened even as its head
melted and shrank, reforming into the dead, sculptured face of a
fox—and it was only a fur wrap made of a dozen foxes, each
biting the other's tail, that coiled around her. She looked
up at Delilah in triumph .. .
And saw a small snake, only three feet long, but one with a
spreading hood and curving fangs, rearing up to strike at her.
Cordelia realized, in a way she never could have otherwise, that
Delilah was a Futurian agent, raised in a modern culture, no matter
where she had been born—for no native of Gramarye knew about
cobras. Even to Cordelia, they were things from
books—and she didn't doubt that they were so to Delilah,
too. The woman probably didn't have any of the details
right. It was a pitiful attempt at persuading her hindbrain,
and she ignored it, knowing that its venom couldn't really hurt
her. She thought at it, and it struck—but curved away
from her, sailing back toward Delilah, and as it went, its head
shrank into a handle, its body lengthened, its tail slimmed into a
lash—and a bullwhip cracked over Delilah's head, then lashed
about her shoulders.
Unprepared for it, Delilah cried out in pain; then she narrowed
her eyes, and the bullwhip disappeared. She, too, had
remembered that it was an illusion, though Cordelia noticed that
the rents in her dress did not heal themselves.
Delilah glared, and a giant spider scuttled across the
floor—but there was no Cordelia for it to frighten
away. Delilah stared, lost for a moment, looking wildly about
the hall, trying to find her adversary.
She never thought to look at her own men, of course, and didn't
notice the guardsman in her livery who was working his way down the
line of fighters, staying behind and only trading an occasional
blow with Alain or Geoffrey—until he turned on Delilah and
struck at her with his sword.
She screamed in fear, falling back, bleeding from a cut in her
arm.
The guardsman swung his blade up for another slash.
Delilah realized who he must be, and glared at the man. Sure
enough, his tunic stretched down, changing back into the tan and
russet of Cordelia's riding dress. His face fined down, his
helmet disappearing, and it was Cordelia who glared at her, eye to
eye. The sword shrank and dwindled; it was only her extended
index finger.
But Delilah had spent her time and effort in undoing Cordelia's
illusion. The screech of rage from overhead took her by
surprise, and the eagle that plunged to seize her gown in its claws
as it buffeted her head with its wings made her shrink back with a
scream of terror. Its dagger of a beak thrust right at
Delilah's eyes ...
...but a huge tawny paw reached up and swatted the eagle aside,
and a lioness pounced to tear the eagle apart with one quick rip of
its huge jaws. Then it turned on Cordelia, leaping ...
And caromed off the belly of a huge bear, waddling toward
Delilah on its hind legs, roaring in anger, its claws raised to
slash.
The lion roared right back and sprang, teeth reaching for the
bear's throat, but the bear swatted it aside and plunged after
it. There was a moment's flurry of fur and claws ...
then the bear rose, its jaws dripping blood, its eyes afire with
rage, a snarl ripping loose from its throat ...
A snarl that was answered by a deep, throaty laugh as a huge
man, eight feet tall and three feet wide, hideously ugly and
entirely naked, strode toward it, a huge club swinging high in his
ham of a hand.
The bear roared and struck—but the ogre swung the club in
a blur, both hands and all his weight behind it. There was a
sickening crunch, and the bear lay dead, its head caved in.
Then, drooling, the ogre reached for Cordelia with a gloating
laugh.
Cordelia shrank back with a scream.
Alain heard her and leaped between herself and the ogre, but she
knew he believed it to be real, that he could not stand against
it.
The guardsmen whooped victory and leaped in where Alain had
been.
Fess screamed and struck them down with his hooves, curving
between Cordelia and the murderous agents. Cordelia's scream
echoed inside her own mind, now as much for Alain as for
herself. In her heart, she reached out for the protection
that had always been there in her childhood—her parents and
her big brother. But her parents were miles away, and Magnus
was light-years away ... Not his image, though. It came
striding forth from behind her to do battle, as much bigger than
she as he had seemed when she was five and he eight—which
made him nine feet tall now, smiling in wicked anticipation of a
fight, shouting, "Thou wouldst, wouldst thou? Then have at
thee!"
Delilah screamed—and screamed, and screamed.
"No! It cannot be you! I have banished you, I have
maimed you, I have sent you fleeing to the farthest..."
And, for the moment, her mind was open, she was that
terrified—open and unguarded, and her memories of Magnus
clear for Cordelia to read. She stared, horrified—this
was the woman who had trapped Magnus's heart, toyed with him,
played with him, dashed his hopes and his dreams of love to
flinders, burned the belief in feminine goodness out of him ...
Then Delilah saw the huge Magnus grappling with the ogre,
swinging the howling monster high and dashing it to the floor, and
she threw back her head and laughed, mocking again,
vindictive. "Of course! It was not he! You would
call for your big brother, would you?"
"Witch!" Cordelia screamed, in full rage. "Have at
thee!" Her face twisted with fury and hatred, and a bolt of
pure energy sparked in the air between them. Then it was
gone, but a huge explosion rocked the room, and Delilah doubled
over in agony, hands pressed to her abdomen.
Cordelia strode through the smoke of that bolt of pure emotion,
eyes burning, and snatched the woman's hair, hauling her head
up. " 'Tis you who have murdered my brother's heart!
Why, then, be sure that I shall murder you!"
And there were snakes, toads, salamanders, scorpions, and
spiders, all crawling over Delilah. She screamed, swatting at
them, tearing at them—then remembered them for what they
were, and stilled, glaring at the vermin ...
The bolt cracked from Cordelia's head to Delilah's, pure energy,
overloading Delilah's system with Cordelia's rage—for when
last came to last, it was Cordelia who could feel more intensely,
far more intensely, even in hatred and anger.
Delilah staggered, and suddenly, her own hands were slapping her
face and tearing her hair.
She went crazy.
She screamed and twisted in the grip of a primal fear, turning
to tear at Cordelia with hands crooked into claws, lashing out with
a bolt of panic that startled Cordelia; it was far more than she
had expected. She leaped back, the first taste of horror
touching her as she realized that Delilah was completely out of
control.
The woman thrashed about, tearing at invisible enemies—and
a jumble of images began to appear on the floor of the Great Hall,
flickering into being, then transforming into something else, then
flickering out as new ones appeared. Snakes and worms and
maggots crawling from rotten meat; bulbous vases breaking open,
spilling rancid oil; huge nails hammering down into boards made of
flesh that screamed and writhed, and more, more, on and on and
on.
Cordelia stared, aghast, revulsed as much by what she was seeing
as by what she had done.
But Delilah recovered, slowing, stilling, the jumble of images
fading, lifting her eyes to Cordelia again—eyes that now bore
not only hatred and rage, but also madness, stark madness.
For the first time, the cold fingers of Death seemed to touch
Cordelia, and she realized that she really could die in this
fight.
Panic surged, and she threw one more bolt of mental force at
Delilah, with all her own fear and anger in it. The explosion
rocked the hall, and Delilah slammed back against the panelling
with a scream.
The guards had stilled their fight to watch; even Geoffrey and
Alain had been caught in the spell of the beautiful witch's
madness. Now, though, one of Delilah's men came back to
himself with a shout, slashing past Geoffrey's guard at
Cordelia.
She screamed and fell back, seizing his sword with a mental grip
that froze it and held it immobile, afraid that Delilah would
recover and seize her chance. Alain came out of his reverie
with a howl and turned to cut the man down, but all Delilah's men
shouted and attacked again ...
Swords lifted above them, and fell; for each man, a knight
towered over him, striking.
"Have at them!" bellowed a huge voice from the doorway,
and a stream of men thundered into the room, halberd blades
flailing. Behind them rode the King himself, sword slashing
down from horseback, with the High Warlock beside him, parrying and
cutting. Lady Gwendylon stood fiery with anger, a basket of
stones in her hands, stones that sped with unerring accuracy to
enemy swordsmen, while on a ledge above them, a grizzled,
barrel-bodied dwarf bellowed, "Hold! Surrender yourselves, or
die! Seize the false lady, seize the poisoner of hearts!"
But it was too late. Delilah was already gone.
Psionics or trickery, she had vanished from their midst.
Just in time, too—so heavily outnumbered, the guardsmen
threw up their hands and weapons with cries for mercy. In a
few minutes, the King's soldiers had all the walking enemies herded
into a corner, and a doctor and his assistants were tending to the
moaning wounded, thinlipped with disgust.
But Alain had no eyes for any of it. He leaped up beside
Cordelia, crying, "My lady! Are you hurt? Upon my
honor, if any have touched you, I shall have their heads!"
But Cordelia could only stare in amazement at this huge,
bare-chested, golden-haired Adonis whose muscles played beneath a
sheen of sweat like a statue of a young Greek god, sword in hand,
eyes wide in concern. Rooted to the spot, she could only nod
as his arm went about her waist, hugging her protectively against
the huge, hardened muscles of his chest. She gazed up at him
in mute astonishment, eyes wide, lips parted—and for a
moment, he stared down at her in equal wonder.
Then his head bowed, his lips touched hers, and she knew only
the wonder of his kiss, and the wrenching anguish and soaring
ecstasy of a heart finally given, completely, in love.
Some while later, some immeasurable time that surely must have
been only a few minutes, though it had seemed eternal bliss, Alain
lifted his head and stood staring down into her eyes. She
knew he was going to kiss her again, and willed it with her whole
being—but someone coughed, and she herd King Tuan's voice
saying, "I rejoice that the lady is well."
Alain turned to his father in surprise, and Cordelia saw before
them her brother, grinning from ear to ear, and her mother, arms
half-raised, with her father behind her, eyes glowing. She
gave a little mew of protest and sank back against Alain's chest;
his arm came up about her automatically even as he said, "My liege
and father! How came you here?"
"Why, in caution and apprehension, my son," Tuan said, smiling,
"and with the guidance of elves, alarmed at thy peril. Have
you proved yourself in the ways of battle, then? And have you
kept the lady safe?"
Alain looked down, and there was reverence in his eyes.
"You are safe, are you not, my love?"
My love! Cordelia nestled against him, eyes brimming, and
nodded, with a misty smile. Reassured, Alain answered with a
secret smile of his own that stopped time for a few minutes, almost
kissed her again, then remembered the proprieties and turned back
to his father. "She is well, my liege—and she has kept
me safe far more than I her!"
"Or as much, at least," Rod Gallowglass murmured, and his wife
added, "So should it ever be."
Alain turned to him, becoming grave and formal even as he
moved. He inclined his head and said, "My lord. My
lady. Have I your leave to court your daughter?"
Lord and Lady Gallowglass exchanged a brief and tender smile,
then turned back to nod. "You may."
"The courtship is done," Cordelia murmured. "The lady is
won."
Alain looked down at her, glowing with pride, then turned back
to her mother and father. "May I also have your leave to ask
her hand in marriage?"
Again, the secret smile. "You may."
King Tuan only beamed down. After all, he had given his
permission before all this began.
But Alain had ceased to see them all. Sinking down on one
knee, he gazed up at Cordelia, she his whole world, nothing else
existing for the moment. "My lady," he breathed, "will you
honor me, ennoble me, do me the greatest honor I can know—by
giving me your hand?"
"Oh, yes, my love!" she cried and, as he leaped up and
took her in his arms, she breathed, so softly that no one else
could hear, "And all the rest of me, too."
Then there was no chance to say anything more, for her lips were
sealed with his, and time had stopped again.
M'Lady Witch
M'Lady Witch
By Christopher Stasheff
ISBN: 0-441-00113-0
CHAPTER 1
"My son," said the King, "thy mother and I have decided that
'tis time thou wert wed."
"As thou dost wish, my father and sovereign." Alain
bowed. "I shall inform the lady straightaway."
And he turned and strode out of the solar, leaving his parents
gaping after him.
Wooden-faced, the sentry closed the door behind the
Prince. The sound jarred King Tuan and Queen Catharine out of
their shock.
"Who can he mean?" he asked, round-eyed.
"Who but Gwendylon's daughter?" It was characteristic of
Catharine that she didn't mention Rod Gallowglass, Cordelia's
father.
"The High Warlock's daughter!" Tuan had the opposite
problem. "He must be stopped!" He rose from his
chair. But Catharine restrained him with a hand on his
arm. "Let him be, husband. If he doth as I think he
will do, he may learn a most signal lesson."
Much as she loved her son, Catharine knew him to be something of
a conceited prig. Admittedly, the realization had only dawned
on her this last year, when the boy had turned twenty-one and she
had finally begun to think of him as a swain going a-wooing.
Looking at him in that light, she had begun to realize that her son
had some serious romantic defects. They all began with
attitude, of course—but if she knew Cordelia, her son might
soon have that attitude corrected.
Alain rode the high way toward the High Warlock's castle with a
high heart, enjoying the lovely spring day, the cascades of
birdsong, and the ribald chanting of his entourage—a dozen
young knights in doublet and hose, their swords at their
hips. He felt his whole being relaxing, surging upward in
delight. It was grand to be young and courting on a day such
as this—it even made him feel moderately good-looking.
Actually, he was a handsome young man, though he had been raised
with so much emphasis on modesty that he denied it to himself,
relying instead on his wardrobe. But he was well muscled,
blond, with large blue eyes, a strong chin, and a straight nose;
his face was open and ingenuous, though usually too serious.
On a day like this, though, he was perilously close to admitting
that he was attractive. He certainly felt so, for all the
world must love a lover. And it was such a relief to be away
from Runnymede and his parents' court, from intrigue and the need
to be formal and wary!
Alain didn't know it, of course, but the girl to whom he planned
to propose was even more of a hot potato than a hot tomato.
That wouldn't have stopped him—he was a trouble-magnet
himself; crown princes always are. Assassins and conspirators
lie in wait for them, ready to seduce them into plotting against
their parents, or to kill them if they aren't seducible. That
was why Alain travelled with a bodyguard of knights, and why his
father had made sure he was well trained with sword and
battle-axe.
Cordelia, on the other hand, wasn't apt to have any bodyguards
around; her parents cultivated the simple and humble image, as much
as you can when the King and Queen have insisted that you live in a
castle. But she was easily more lethal than Alain could ever
be, if she wanted to be—she was, in the eyes of the
superstitious peasants, a witch, and a very powerful one.
Actually, she was an esper, a person born with powers of
extrasensory perception and, in her case, extrasensory
activity. She was a telepath, a projective, a telekinetic
... and the list went on. About all she couldn't do was
teleport.
Of course, it was possible that she might run into something
that even she couldn't handle—say, an army or two. If
that happened, all she had to do was call for help from the Wee
Folk, and a brigade or two of elves, pixies, and brownies would pop
out of the woodwork to aid her. If anything stopped
them—such as too much Cold Iron, which tends to accumulate
around knights—she could always send out a mental call for
the rest of her family, and her father would teleport to her, with
her brothers right behind. Her mother would arrive a little
later, by broomstick. The family had not yet encountered any
enemy that could stand against them—provided, of course, that
nothing kept them apart.
Rod Gallowglass wasn't quite as adept at using his ESP powers as
his wife and children were, because he had spent half his life
under the blithe impression that he was an ordinary mortal.
Shortly after the birth of his fourth child, he had found out the
hard way that he could work "magic," as the local superstitious
peasants called the results of his ESP work. He had decided
that magic was catching.
Rod Gallowglass's late development was understandable,
considering that he hadn't even known there was a planet where
there were so many espers, until he came there; he had been born
and raised on a high-tech planetoid where the family business was
the manufacturing of robots, and had run away from home to spend
his twenties bumming around the civilized, modern planets, looking
for wrongs to right. Sometimes he wondered how he had ever
gotten into this situation. Then he would look at his wife,
even now in her fifties, and decide it had just been good luck.
Being a little more honest with himself, he would admit that it
had been a matter of needing a purpose in life. He had found
one by becoming an agent for the Society for the Conversion of
Extraterrestrial Nascent Totalitarianisms, an organization
dedicated to spreading democracy by sniffing out dictatorships and
other forms of oppressive government, and steering their societies
toward one of the many forms of democracy. Exploring the
galaxy for new totalitarian governments to topple, he had stumbled
across Gramarye. Now he was assigned here for the rest of his
life—because SCENT knew how important Gramarye was going to
be. Rod, on the other hand, had known how important the
beautiful, voluptuous "witch" Gwendylon was going to be, and had
married her, cleaving unto her forever—and therefore, of
course, to her planet and people, too.
The planet of Gramarye was the only place in the Terran sphere
of colonized planets where so many espers existed. All the
rest of the Terran planets together had produced only a few rather
weak telepaths—so Rod Gallowglass had a very important duty
guarding the planet of Gramarye from invasion and subversion by the
agents of dictatorship and anarchy.
SCENT believed that one of the prime factors in keeping a
democracy alive was speed of communications. If it takes too
long to get a message from the parliament to the frontier planets,
the frontier planets will eventually set up their own governments
and break away. The only way to prevent this is to do away
with democracy and resort to some form of government that keeps
such a tight hold over its colonies that they can't break
away—and that tight hold always turns into oppression, in one
form or another. So to keep democracy viable, the telepaths
of Gramarye were going to be absolutely essential.
Unfortunately, the future totalitarians knew that, tooand so did
the future anarchists. Each of them had its own time-travel
organization, dedicated to fostering totalitarian governments
(VETO) or to destroying governments altogether (SPITE)—and
both were directly concerned with keeping Gramarye from becoming a
democracy.
Which meant they were out to kill Rod Gallowglass, if they
could—and his family. Especially his children.
They had found out, over the last couple of decades, that they
couldn't kill Rod—no matter how hard they tried, he always
fought them off, and where he might have failed, his wife and her
elf-friends and children had beaten off his enemies for him.
Together, they were unstoppable—but the Futurians could, at
least, make sure his influence didn't go on into future
generations. They were bound and determined to kill his
children if they could or, if they couldn't, to at least keep them
from having children of their own.
So far, the new SPITE chief, Finister, had succeeded in giving
the eldest son, Magnus, a very unhealthy distaste for sex in any
form, and especially for women as sexual beings. As a result,
he had left home to go traipsing around the galaxy, looking for
wrongs to right and oppressive governments to overthrow.
Now Finister had set her sights on Cordelia. How she would
prevent Cordelia from ever being married, or even seduced, she
didn't know—but she would improvise. Half the fun of
her job, she had decided, was in finding how things came out.
So Alain rode through a golden morning, blithely unaware of the
Futurian witch who was setting her sights on himself and his
beloved. Not knowing, he was able to delight in the day.
"How shall you greet the lady, Your Highness?" asked young
Sir Devon.
"With cordiality and respect, Hall" It was such a pleasure to
speak so freely, without all that ridiculous and unnecessary
formality that the older folk used. "Thee" this and "thou"
that, when a simple "you" would suffice! "As I would greet
any fine lady!"
Sir Devon didn't seem so sure. "Mayhap, Highness, you
should treat her in some degree warmer than that."
"What? And have her forget that I am her
sovereign-to-be? Pooh, Hal! It would be beneath my
station!"
Hal started to say something more, then bit his tongue.
Alain saw. "Come, come! You must speak your mind with
me, Hal—for if my own friends do not, who will? What
had you in mind to say?"
"Only that it is a perfect day for so joyous an occasion,
Highness," Sir Devon said slowly.
"It is that." Alain looked around him with a broad
grin. Yes, it was a perfect day to become engaged, to kiss a
lucky maiden for the first time. The thought was somewhat
heady—he had always more or less planned to marry Cordelia,
and the notion of actually doing so made his heart sing, though it
also roused a nervous fluttering in his stomach. However, he
could ignore that—as he could overlook the fact that she
wasn't a princess.
He also overlooked the possibility of sending a page ahead, to
announce his coming.
Gregory looked up; pale light was beginning to lend color to the
leafy roof overhead. He folded up his notes with a satisfied
sigh; it had been a good evening's watching, and he had learned
quite a bit about the habits of the great horned owl. He rose
to his feet with a wince as cramped muscles protested, and noted
that he must not be doing enough yoga exercises. If only
eight hours of immobility for a night's watch made him stiff, how
would he endure the round-the-clock spell of meditation that he
knew was coming? His mind was working itself up to
that—when it brimmed over with new knowledge, he would have
to go into a trance to sort it all out. He didn't dare do
that when Mother and Father were home, of course—but they
travelled a good deal these days, so he was free to keep
night—long vigils in the forest if he chose, or
twenty-four-hour sessions of meditation. He knew it would
worry his sister Cordelia, but she would only hover over him, not
interrupt.
And, of course, there was the problem of trying to contact his
eldest brother Magnus, halfway across the galaxy.
He felt the need of that, too, from time to time, and it was
very demanding of both body and mind. Heaven knew the lad
wrote seldom enough!
His body was making its needs felt in other ways, too.
Gregory felt a pang of hunger, and decided, with regret, that he
would just have to devote half an hour to taking on some
food. He made his way out of the forest and off toward the
nearby village, where there was an inn that would be serving
breakfast.
As he came into the inn, the serving maid looked up, then gave
him a very, very warm smile; her lips seemed to glisten, her eyes
to grow larger. Gregory gave her an automatic smile in
return, instantly concerned—was the girl beset with a
fever? But no, on closer look, he could see no other
symptoms—the swellings in her bodice looked natural
enough.
He sat at a table, asked her for ale and porridge, then
instantly forgot her as he noticed the motion of dust motes in a
sun-ray that hinted at a pattern ...
Something tugged at his attention; irritated, he glanced at the
wench's retreating back. He noticed the exaggerated swaying
of her hips, and remembered his older brother Geoffrey telling him
that when a woman walked that way, she was seeking a
dalliance. Then Gregory finally remembered that the look on
her face had been one that Geoffrey had told him of, too—but
he also remembered his brother's caution that the lass might have a
shallow dalliance in mind, or a very deep one, or anything in
between, and that a man had to move slowly, trying to read her
intentions, for frequently she wouldn't know them herself.
It all sounded very tedious to Gregory, and singularly
unproductive. He supposed that he would have to try it some
day—but just now, he had far more interesting matters to deal
with. He was only sixteen, after all. And, to be quite
frank, he couldn't imagine how the physical pleasures Geoffrey
described could ever approach the ecstasy of intellectual insight,
the long hours of study and meditation that led to the rapture of
new understanding of natural phenomena.
Of course, women were natural phenomena, too—but somehow,
he doubted that they wanted to be analyzed. And he was quite
sure they didn't want to be understood.
The drawbridge was down, the porter sitting at his ease on a
stool in the shade of the gatehouse, cutting bits of apple and
nibbling at them. He stiffened abruptly at the cry of the
sentry in the tower above; then the troop of horsemen came into
view, and the guards snapped their halberds down. "Who
comes?"
"Alain, Prince of Gramarye!" cried the foremost knight,
and behind him, the golden Prince himself sat, cocksure and
smiling, head tilted back, resplendent in cloth of gold and velvet,
with a plume in his hat.
"Your Highness!" The porter bowed, his expressionless face
hiding his surprise, almost shock, at the suddeness of the Prince's
arrival. "I regret that Lord and Lady Gallowglass are not
within!"
"No matter, no matter," Alain said with careless generosity, "so
long as the Lady Cordelia is. Say, are there any others of
the family present?"
"His Lordship and Her Ladyship are away for the day, sir.
I regret there are none here but the servants, the steward, and
myself, saving Lady Cordelia."
"A most excellent notion," Alain said with joviality.
"Save her ladyship, indeed—and summon her!"
The porter blanched at the thought of "summoning" Lady
Cordelia. He decided to summon the steward instead, and let
him deal with the lady. After all, porters were not paid that
much.
Cordelia was in the stillery, brewing medicines to replace the
stock depleted by the winter chills and agues and fevers of all the
peasants on the Gallowglass estates. She enjoyed the work,
but it was tiring, not to say messy—her apron was spotted
with the extracts of various herbs and the mauve and purple from
the juices of various berries. Her hair was tied back in a
severe bun, to keep loose strands from being caught in the
glassware. Her face, too, was smudged with touches of
extract, bits of charcoal, and smudges of soot from tending the
burners. The solution in the alembic had just begun to boil
up into the cooling tube when ...
...the steward stepped through the door and announced, very
nervously, "Milady, Prince Alain has come to call on you. He
awaits you in the solar."
"Blast!" Cordelia cried, instantly furious. "How
dare he come unannounced! How durst he enter just as my brew
has come to the boil!"
The steward stood mute, stretching out his hands in
bewilderment.
"Well, there's no help for it!" Cordelia snapped, gaze
going back to the cooling tube. Drops of distillate had begun
to drip into a beaker. "Tell him I will come directly."
The steward bowed and left, relieved.
She would come as soon as the retort was empty and the beaker
full, Cordelia decided—two hours' preparation would not be
thrown away on a man's oafish whim! As to appearances, well,
he would just have to take her as she was.
Still, she patted her hair, wishing she had time to arrange it
properly—not to mention donning a pretty gown and washing her
hands and face.
Actually, she had very little cause for concern. Cordelia
had grown into a very beautiful woman, though she gave it very
little thought. There was so much to do—peasants with
illnesses, children who must be taught, women who must be aided in
their daily burdens. Now and then, she might snatch a few
minutes to think about a new dress, or even steal an hour to work
at making one. There were even odd moments when she would
experiment with a new hairstyle, though those tended to be very,
very early in the morning, and only on Sundays.
Makeup? She never thought of it—and never thought it
would do her much good, either.
She was half right. Her complexion was flawless, her
cheeks rosy, her lips so red that no paint could improve upon
them. Her features were those of the classic beauty, and the
curves of her body were generous and perfectly proportioned.
Her legs were long, her posture straight, almost regal.
Of course, these last were almost always hidden under a
work-dress of strong, serviceable fabric. There was, after
all, so very much to do.
Even the rough cloth could not hide her loveliness,
though—from anyone but herself. Cordelia, of course,
did not know she was a beauty.
"How dare he?" she fumed to herself, watching the last of
the solution boil out of the retort. "What the devil could
send him here at such a bad time?"
Alain paced the solar, fretting and chafing. What could be
keeping Cordelia so long? His sunny mood was beginning to
cloud over, exposing the nervousness underneath. He was
remembering that he was proposing a liaison that would last twice
as long as he had already lived, and was beginning to wonder if he
really wanted that. Still, his lieges, sovereigns, and
parents had told him he should wed, so he would.
He consoled himself with the thought that Cordelia had no doubt
rushed to dress in her finest and arrange her hair. It wasn't
at all necessary, he assured himself—but it was
flattering.
So he was jolted to his boot-soles when she bustled into the
room, unannounced and without ceremony, in a stained white
work-apron and blue broadcloth dress, her hair disordered and her
face smudged. He stared in shock as she curtsied, then
managed to force a smile. He didn't know which was
worse—the annoyance that rippled over her face as she looked
up at him, or her distracted air, as though she had something more
important on her mind. More important than him!
"Your Highness," she said. "How good of you to come."
Alain stared. "Highness?" What way was that to greet
an old friend, a companion of childhood? But the shock gave
way to a cold wave of calculation that was new to him, though quite
welcome under the circumstances—the emphasis on his exalted
station would make her even more aware of the honor he was doing
her. "Milady Cordelia." He forced a smile.
Cordelia saw, and withheld another momentary surge of
anger. Not bad enough that he had let himself show his dismay
at her appearance—now he had the gall to go chilly on
her! But she could play that game, too. She gave him a
smile of her own, making it very obvious that she was forcing it,
and gestured to an hourglass-shaped chair. "Will you sit, my
Prince?"
"I thank you, milady." Alain sat and, since they were
being formal, gestured to another chair. "I pray you, sit by
me."
"You are too kind," Cordelia said with withering sarcasm, but
took the chair that he offered her in her own solar—or her
own mother's, at least. "To what do I owe the pleasure of
this sudden visit, Prince Alain?"
Alain was surprised to feel relief at her use of his name.
He decided to unbend a bit himself. "To the beauty of your
face and the lightness of your form, Lady Cordelia." He had
rehearsed that line several times on his way from his parents'
castle, but the effect was somewhat marred by his choking on the
words as he gazed at her smudges and stains.
Inwardly, Cordelia was fuming. How dare he praise her
appearance when she knew she looked like last week's wet
wash? "My thanks, Alain—but you had little need to
journey so far to so little purpose."
"The purpose was scarcely small," he returned gallantly, "for
you are fair as a summer's day." He said it without choking,
this time. "Indeed, 'tis your beauty and sweetness that have
minded me to honor you."
"Oh, have you indeed?" she said softly, outrage kindling
within her.
"In truth, I have—for my mother and father have deemed
'tis time for me to wed. 'Tis you who are my choice, sweet
Cordelia, and 'tis you who shall be future Queen of Gramarye!"
Cordelia sat quite still, staring at him as a maelstrom of
emotions churned within her. True, she had always more or
less planned to marry Alain, and the thought of being Queen one day
was an interesting added fillip—but to be treated with such
cavalier disregard, to be the pawn of his whim rather than the
queen of his heart ... ! She felt the anger mounting
and mounting, and knew she would not be able to contain it very
long.
Alain frowned. "Have you nothing to say?"
"What should I say?" she asked in a very small voice, eyes
downcast.
"Why, that you rejoice at your good fortune, that you are
sensible of the honor I do you, that you acclaim me as your lord
and master!"
I shall acclaim you as a pompous ass, Cordelia thought, but she
didn't say so—yet. "Am I to have no voice in this
matter, my lord?"
The return to formality was like a stiletto through him.
"Assuredly, you are! 'Tis for you to say yea or nay,
surely!"
"How good of you to deign to allow me this," she said, syrupy
sweet.
Alain relaxed, complacency restored. She was sensible of
the honor after all. "'Tis nothing."
"Oh, ave, 'tis nothing!" The anger boiled up, and Cordelia
knew she could contain it no longer. "'Tis nothing to you, a
woman's feelings! 'Tis nothing to you if you humiliate where
you should elevate!"
"How now?" Alain stared, thunderstruck.
"I am nothing to you, am I? Only a brood mare, to .be
bought at your whim when you have a moment to spare from your great
concerns? Nothing to you, nothing but a minor matter that you
attend to when the mood is on you?" She rose from her
chair. "Nothing to you? Only a marriage, only a
lifetime's union, and 'tis nothing to you?"
"Nay, certainly not!" He leaped to his feet, stung to the
quick. "You twist my meaning!"
"Nay, I attend to the meaning of your tone and your actions, not
to your words alone! Why, you great gilded popinjay, you
puffed-up princeling!"
"I am your future sovereign!"
"Of my nation, but most assuredly—not of my heart!
How could you be, when you have no thought of love or
yearning?"
"Do you take me for a heartless wretch?" Alain
cried. "Surely I must love you!"
"Oh, aye, surely you must, if your parents command it! Yet
had you thought of it before I said the word? Had you never
thought to say it, never thought to woo, to court? A fine
prince are you, if you can but command!"
The absurdity of the charge struck him. "'Tis the place of
the prince to command, and of the subject to obey!"
"Oh, my apologies, sire!" Cordelia dropped an elaborate,
exaggerated curtsy. "Assuredly, if you order me to marry, I
must obey, must I not? If you command, my heart must
obediently adore you!"
"Why, you heartless witch, you storming shrew! I am your
Prince, and I do command you!" Alain shouted, then drew
himself up and glared down at her coldly. "I command you to
answer me straight! Will you be my wife, or no?"
Cordelia dropped her prettiest curtsy, bowed her head, smiled up
at him, and said, quite clearly, "No."
Then she turned on her heel and stalked off back to her
stillery.
She slammed the door behind her, leaned against it, and burst
into tears.
Alain stared at the doorway through which she had gone,
thunderstruck, distraught, and dismayed. Then he remembered
that a steward was apt to step through that doorway at any minute,
and masked his hurt in a scowl. The scowl raised up a torrent
of anger in its wake. He stalked through the archway, and the
steward stepped up. "May I fetch you anything, Your
Highness?"
"A modicum of sense in a woman's heart," Alain snarled.
"Aside, fellow! I shall seek my horse—'tis a fairer
creature than the Lady Cordelia!"
"Surely, Highness!" The steward moved aside with alacrity,
then signalled to a footman, who stepped to the stairs and
signalled down to the porter.
Alain didn't see; he was aware of nothing but a red haze, his
feet following the steps down to the Great Hall
automatically. The porter yanked the door open as the prince
came to it, and he stormed out,' his face thunderous.
In the courtyard, his escort raised a cheer that cut off as
though it had been sheared. Sir Devon stepped up, his face
dark. "Have they offered you insult, Highness?"
" `They'?" Alain cried. "No, not 'they'—only
she! An arrogant chit of a girl who holds her liege and lord
in little esteem!"
"Assuredly she has not spurned you!"
"Spurned me? Aye, as a tyrant would spurn a dog! I
shall be revenged upon her, upon their whole house!" The
leader looked shocked for a second, then masked his sudden fear
with narrowed eyes and a hard face. He turned back to his
fellows. "They have offered our Prince grave insult, sir
knights."
He was satisfied to see the same momentary dismay on every
face—all of them knew of the magical powers of the Lord
Warlock and his family. Moreover, all of them knew Cordelia's
brother Geoffrey to be the best swordsman in the kingdom. But
even as their leader had done, they all grew stone-faced, and
reached to touch the hilts of their swords.
"Say the word, Highness, and your revenge shall be executed,"
the leader said.
"Oh, not so quickly and easily!" Alain roared. "I
shall see humiliation and shame ere I see blood! 'Tis insult
I've been given, and dire insult must answer! Away, good
friends! For I must think long and hard on the manner of this
vengeance! Away!"
Out they thundered through the gatehouse. The sentry on
the wall looked up, ready to give the porter the signal that would
begin their revenge for the insults given their young
mistress. His heart sank at the thought, for he knew that if
they raised their hands against the Heir Apparent, the Royal Army
would have them sooner or later, and they would all be drawn and
quartered. But loyalty was loyalty, and Cordelia was his
young mistress, and the daughter of the Lord Warlock, to whom he
had sworn his allegiance.
Besides, he was more than a little in love with the lady, as
most of the younger men of the castle were.
The steward, however, was older, and a bit more practical.
More to the point, he had seen enough of life to recognize rash
words that would probably be atoned for in time, and to know that
young people frequently say things they do not mean. He only
shook his head—so the drawbridge stayed down, and Alain and
his young knights rode. out unharmed, across the drawbridge,
and down the road to the plain.
"What revenge is this he speaks of?" the sentry
demanded. "For if I must choose between the Lord Warlock and
the King, I know where my loyalties lie!"
"Your loyalty, and my lance," the steward agreed. "Still,
he does not speak of action yet, and the time has not come to draw
blades."
"But to speak of it to the lady?" the sentry asked, his
face uncertain.
"Not to the lady," the steward rejoined. "If I know her at
all, she is probably in tears over so disastrous an
encounter. Nay, we will. speak of it, to Lord and Lady
Gallowglass, or to either of their sons, should they come home
sooner."
Geoffrey came home sooner.
CHAPTER 2
In the Great Hall, Geoffrey stood rigid, closing his eyes,
visualizing Alain's face, trying to concentrate on it—but his
emotions were in too great a turmoil to allow him to
teleport. His own sister! That the empty-headed,
preening fool of a Prince should have had the gall to insult
Cordelia! He could scarcely throttle his rage enough to
detect the Prince's thoughts, there was such a roaring in his
head. "I shall have to seek him on horseback! Blast and
be hanged! 'Tis too slow!"
But there was no help for it, so he strode off to the stables
and saddled his roan as a groom leaped to the bridle. Minutes
later, the young warlock was pounding out across the drawbridge,
hard on the trail of the Prince who had insulted his sister.
"He spoke of what?" Geoffrey stared, incredulous.
"Surely not even Prince Alain would be so great a fool as to seek
revenge on our house!"
"I speak only of what His Highness said, sir," the steward
replied.
"And proper and loyal you are to do so." Geoffrey spun
away. "I must speak to my sister!"
He boomed through the stillery door. "Cordelia! What
has Alain done to you!"
Cordelia looked up at him, tears streaking her face. "Oh,
nothing! Only spoke a deal of nonsense, only been as lofty
and pompous as ever he was! Do go away, Geoffrey! Leave
me to cry in peace! You shame me with your gaze! Go
away!"
"Shame you!" Geoffrey spun on his heel and stalked out of
the stillery, his face dark, fists clenched.
"Geoffrey, no!" Cordelia cried, leaping to her
feet—but she was talking to the stout oaken planks of the
door. "I had not meant—oh, blast! Men are such
fools!" And she collapsed onto her stool again, weeping
afresh.
An hour later, Cordelia emerged from the stillery, face washed
but haggard. As she came into the solar, the steward stepped
up, all solicitation. "Are you well, milady?"
"As well as one might expect," Cordelia sighed, and sat down
beneath the clerestory window. "I am minded to take some tea,
Squire Bruntly."
"Aye, milady." The steward nodded to the footman, who
departed for the kitchen.
"And, Squire Bruntly..."
The steward turned back to her. "Aye, milady?"
"Where is my brother?"
"I cannot say, milady." Squire Bruntly did his best to
look apologetic. "I know only that he rode off posthaste, an
hour ago."
"An hour ago!" Cordelia stiffened. "Is it all of an
hour since he came to see me in the stillery?"
"It is, milady."
"Where has he gone?"
"I do not know." Squire Bruntly spread his hands,
beginning to have a very bad feeling about all this.
"Then I fear I do!" Cordelia leaped to her feet and began
pacing the floor. "Blast! Knows he no better than to
meddle in my affairs?"
"I am sure that your brother is quite concerned for your honor,
milady," Squire Bruntly said, vaguely shocked without knowing
why.
"My honor, forsooth! When my honor needs such defending as
a brother might do, I shall tell him! Oh, Squire
Bruntly! In which direction did he ride?"
"Why, I cannot say, milady—but I shall send for the
sentries."
"You need not. Which way did Prince Alain ride?"
"West, milady, back toward Runnymede."
"Then you need not ask which way Geoffrey rode," Cordelia said
grimly. "Blast! If only I could teleport, as he
can! Well, there's no help for it! I shall return when
I may, Squire Bruntly!"
"We shall keep the kettle hot, milady." Squire Bruntly
stared after her as she caught up her broomstick and hurried away
toward the nearest tower. Now he knew why that feeling of
dread had been building within him.
As they had ridden west, the day had darkened, and Alain had
calmed a bit, from anger into moroseness. A strange, hollow
feeling had been growing inside him; where butterflies had been
struggling out of their cocoons, there was now only echoing
darkness.
Very dark indeed. There was a lethargy, a hopelessness,
that had never been there before. Could Cordelia really have
meant so much to him?
Yes, he realized. For year after year, she had been his
playmate, when the two families had met for feast-day or parents'
conference. She had played with the boys as vigorously as
any, and Alain had fallen in love with her before he was
seven. Of course, he had told himself, that had been only a
child's infatuation—but when she had undergone the teen-age
metamorphosis from child into young woman, he had been taken all
over again; his head had seemed lighter whenever he had looked at
her, watching her move and hearing her talk had become entrancing
again. Of course, he had been tongue-tied, unable to talk
with her then, except in the old, familiar ways of friend ship,
never as boy to girl, so he had never told her of his
feelings. Instead, he had consoled himself with the thought
that, since he was a Prince and Heir Apparent, he could have his
pick of any of the girls in all his parents' kingdom, and of course
he would choose Cordelia. It had never occurred to him that
she might say no.
However, with a new and brutal self-honesty, he realized that he
had never seriously thought that she could be in love with
him. Oh, yes, he was Prince and Heir, and would some day be
King—but he was lumpen compared to her. She was a
fairy, light and dancing; he was an ox, plodding through life with
nothing but a dogged determination to do what was right—right
for his subjects, right for the kingdom, and right for her.
Not for himself, of course—that was one of the most important
principles in being a knight and a nobleman, let alone a King: to
sacrifice one's own comfort and pleasure for others' good. So
his father had taught him, and it had never occurred to him to
question it, in spite of his mother's jaundiced looks and
jibing. She had never truly denied it, only joked with Father
that he was too intent on duty, to the point of being dull and
boring. Her sallies always resulted in his giving a ball, and
spending half the evening dancing with her, jesting and chatting
and listening to her, in a strenuous attempt to prove he could be
exciting and romantic still.
He had never done very well at it, Alain thought. He had
heard that his father had been handsome and gallant in his youth,
and the son could certainly believe it when he looked at the
sire—but he noticed that no one had ever said his father was
dashing or romantic, and he could easily believe that Tuan had
never been so. Always solidly dependable, always serious and
devoted, but never much fun.
Nor was his son, Alain reflected—and never would be, in
all probability. Worse, he didn't even have the advantage of
being handsome.
But he could be gallant. Iron resolve hardened within him;
he would treat Cordelia in the future as though she were a goddess;
he would bow to her, he would speak her fair, he would shower
compliments upon her. He would even send word ahead.
A shout broke the air behind him, inarticulate, angered.
"Highness!" Sir Devon snapped.
Alain looked up, startled, and turned around, to see Geoffrey
Gallowglass pounding after them down the road, cloak flying behind
him in the wind. Alain turned his horse, a glad cry of
welcome on his lips, but Geoffrey was roaring, "Caitiff!
Hound and swine!"
"How dare you speak thus to our Prince!" Sir Devon
bellowed back at him, and the other five young knights took place
behind him, forming a living wall between Alain and Geoffrey.
Suddenly, Alain remembered that Geoffrey was the brother of the
lady who had so lately scorned him, and that in his hurt, he might
have spoken more harshly to her than he had intended.
Geoffrey crashed in between Sir Devon and Sir Langley, throwing
his weight against Sir Devon in a bodyblock. Horse and rider
shuddered; the others were knocked aside, and the horse
stumbled.
With an inarticulate roar, Geoffrey whirled to chop down with
his sword at Sir Langley, who was just recovering his balance from
the unexpected shock. He looked up, appalled, then brought up
his sword barely in time to parry. Then Geoffrey whirled his
sword down to slam against the knight's shield. The strength
of his blow knocked the blade back against its owner, slashing Sir
Langley's forehead. He fell, senseless.
Then Geoffrey was beyond the group of knights again, turning and
halting his horse, glaring at them, eyes narrowing. They
shouted and spurred their horses—but two of the stallions
collided with each other, and the third knight's sword suddenly
wrenched itself from his grasp, then rapped him sharply on the head
with its hilt. He slumped in the saddle, and his horse
slowed, feeling the loosening of the reins. He fell, limp as
a sack of meal. The horse, well trained, stepped over him to
shield him with its body.
The other two young knights had steadied their horses and
regained control—but one's shield suddenly yanked his arm up
high, then knocked him on the head. He fell.
The last knight paled as he galloped toward Geoffrey, but he
didn't rein in; he even managed a battle cry of bravado—a cry
that turned into a yawn as Geoffrey glared at him. His eyes
fluttered closed, and he fell forward in his saddle, sound
asleep.
Sir Devon struggled back up to his feet, weaving and woozy, but
game.
Geoffrey turned to him with narrowed eyes.
"Hold!" Alain was jolted back to his senses. "'Tis
me with whom he fights! Stand aside!"
Geoffrey turned toward the Prince. "But,
Highness..." Sir Devon cried.
"Aside!" Alain stormed, and the thrill of battle sang
through his veins. He turned to his erstwhile friend Geoffrey
with an almost savage delight; this would be the perfect outlet for
the rage and frustration of Cordelia's rejection. "He is
mine!"
"Then have at thee, boorish Princeling!" Geoffrey
bellowed, and slammed his horse into Alain's.
But Alain had already seen the maneuver used against Sir Devon,
and was braced for it. He rocked in the saddle but held his
seat, and parried Geoffrey's overhand slash, then parried another,
and another ... the blades rang, strokes fast and furious,
the horses dancing around one another, the knights of the bodyguard
crying out in anger and alarm.
Geoffrey was staring in surprise, and Alain felt a thrill of
satisfaction; the Gallowglass had not expected him to be so able an
opponent! The satisfaction was strong enough to urge him to
use Geoffrey's own trick against him—he spurred his horse and
slammed it into Geoffrey's mount with a suddenness that took the
young warlock by surprise.
So did Alain's shoulder in his short ribs.
Geoffrey reeled in the saddle. Alain reached over to shove
with his left hand, and with a very ungraceful scrabbling and
grasping, the young warlock fell off his horse. He landed and
rolled up to his feet, sword still in his grasp, face red with
embarrassment and fury—to see Alain dismounting and turning
to him.
"Oh, very chivalrous!" Geoffrey snarled, and was on
him.
Now the blows flew thick and fast, thrust and parry and slash
and counter. There was no use of horses as weapons now, but
only naked steel, sword and dagger against sword and dagger.
But Alain was quickly on the defensive; he gave ground, and gave
ground again, astounded to realize that he was fighting for his
life, that his sword was beaten back again and again, that
Geoffrey's blows came so thick and fast that it was all he could do
to parry, not even having time to riposte.
Sir Devon cried out and spurred in.
"Hold off, Sir Devon!" Alain cried, but not soon enough;
Geoffrey leaped aside, whirled, and caught Sir Devon's foot as the
knight galloped by. He heaved, and Sir Devon came crashing
down from the saddle. Geoffrey spun back, ready to ward off
Alain's blow, but the Prince was standing on guard. "I would
not dishonor myself by striking at a foeman's back!"
"Would you not?" Geoffrey snapped. "Then your sense
of honor shall cause you to be slain some day, Highness!" And
he leaped in to the attack again.
Alain saw his one chance to regain the offensive, and took it,
leaping aside from the blow and thrusting at full
extension—but Geoffrey twisted to parry in a gyration that
Alain would have thought impossible, and slashed backhanded at the
young Prince's chest. Alain parried in the nick of time, then
parried again and again, giving ground with each stroke. His
companions howled their alarm and pressed in, but Alain bawled at
them to hold their places.
Then, suddenly, Geoffrey's blade swirled around his own, his
hilt twisted in his hand and wrenched against the fingers, and his
sword went flying away through the air.
Aghast, he stared at the point of Geoffrey's blade, six inches
from his face.
The young knights cried out in alarm and spurred their
horses.
"Back!" Geoffrey roared. "Or my hand might
slip!" The knights reined in, hard.
"Now," grated Geoffrey, "you shall apologize to me on my
sister's behalf, Your Highness, and swear to take your apologies to
her in person, or I shall witness the color of your entrails with
my own eyes."
Alain tried to glare back at him, but he remembered the rash
words he had snapped at Cordelia, and dropped his gaze in
chagrin. "I do most humbly apologize, for those were rude
words indeed that I spoke, and the lady deserved them not in the
slightest." He lifted his head, looking back into Geoffrey's
puzzled gaze. "As to fear of yourself or your blade, why, if
you think me a coward to have apologized at sword's point, then
stab with that point, and be done! You have sneered at the
notion of honor, so I shall not be surprised you have so little of
it yourself, that you would slay an unarmed man!"
Sir Devon gasped, gathering himself for a desperate
spring—but Geoffrey's eyes only narrowed to slits.
Before he could speak, Alain went on. "Yet be advised, young
warlock, that your sister's words had a sting of their own, and did
stab me most unexpectedly."
"Did that warrant your insults and threats of revenge?"
Geoffrey countered, grim-faced.
"I spoke in anger, hurt, and shame," Alain replied. "I
spoke rashly and foolishly. Surely, Geoffrey, you know that I
would never dream of hurting Cordelia—and to realize that I
have done so is cause for great shame! I shall apologize as
honor dictates I must, apologize to the lady most abjectly!"
"Why, how now?" Geoffrey eyed him warily. "Will you
do what honor dictates, when your station contradicts it?"
"Honor is of more import than rank," Alain returned. "In
truth, I cannot honestly claim royal station if I have lost
honor. Nay, I shall apologize to your sister as soon as I may
come to her."
Geoffrey tried to maintain the glare, but had to let it drop,
and his sword's point with it. He eyed his old friend with
disgust. "Why, how can I stay angry with you, if you behave
so admirably? You are a most aggravating opponent, Prince
Alain!"
"And you a most astounding one," Alain returned, suppressing a
tremor of relief. "I have never been beaten before, save in
childhood duels with yourself. You humiliated me, for you
were two years my junior—and you have done so again now."
"You have deserved it," Geoffrey said grimly.
"I know that I have." Alain frowned. "Yet we have
not duelled since we were twelve, for my father forbade it."
"Aye." Geoffrey smiled. "He forbade it as soon as we
were old enough to be truly a danger to one another. One must
not imperil the heir to the throne."
"You would not have slain me!"
"Not with purpose, no. Accidents have happened with swords
ere now, though, and will happen again. 'Tis a dangerous
game."
"But how could you win so easily?" Alain protested.
"Partly by my own skill." Geoffrey's anger had largely
abated. "The other part was your overconfidence."
"None have won against me save you!"
"Of course they have not." With friendly exasperation,
Geoffrey explained, "Who among your courtiers would dare to defeat
the Heir Apparent, Alain?"
Alain stared. "You do not mean they have let me win!"
"Certainly they did! Would any man in the Court dare to
antagonize the future King, whose favor will determine each man's
fortune?"
Alain looked away, numb and confounded. "I had thought
myself the epitome of courtesy and chivalry!"
"Well, mayhap in your daily conduct." Geoffrey
relented. "Yet surely not when you are angered. Your
speech with my sister was somewhat less than charming,
Alain." The Prince looked up again, alarmed.
"Less! How rude was I, Geoffrey? I came so filled with
enthusiasm and excitement that I may, ah, have overlooked the
niceties."
"Niceties?" Geoffrey grinned. "Forsooth,
Alain! You did not send word of your coming, you did not ask
to be admitted, you virtually commanded the lady to appear and,
worse, informed her that she was your choice! A lover should
plead and sue, not command!"
"Should he indeed?" Alain stared. "I know naught of
this."
"That," Geoffrey said drily, "is somewhat apparent" Alain's gaze
wandered again. "I had never thought to court a lady!
Princes' marriages are arranged for them; I did not think to have
choice, nor to have to woo, and therefore never learned the way of
it."
"No, you surely have not." Geoffrey felt a stab of
sympathy for his friend. "A lad does not dictate nor
condescend to the lady whom he loves, Alain, and well she knows
it. She must be sure that he yearns for her so greatly that
he will cherish her always."
Alain frowned, puzzled. "How do you know so much of
it?"
Geoffrey answered with a knowing grin. "Ah, well, my
friend, I am not a Prince, nor do I have so exalted a sense of
forbearance as you seem to have."
"You do not mean that you have courted ladies!"
"Well, not ladies," Geoffrey allowed. "With them, I have
only flirted, stealing no more than a kiss or two. With
ladies of one's own station, one is apt to be constrained to become
a husband, if one seeks to dally. With commoners, though,
there is less expectation, and greater willingness."
"You have flirted with chambermaids and milkmaids, then?"
"I will own to that," Geoffrey admitted, "and to having won
their favors."
Alain ached to ask just how extensive those favors had been, but
it would have been rude. The sudden, overwhelming realization
struck him: any favors he had won from women had been almost by
accident—and intoxication. "Alas! If I am not the
chivalrous knight I had thought myself, however am I to win your
sister's love?"
"Chivalry does not always have a great deal to do with it,"
Geoffrey allowed. "Do you truly wish to win Cordelia,
though? Or is it only that you have been ordered to?"
"I have not been so ordered!" Alain cried
vehemently. "She is my choice, my heart's desire! I
have known that I loved her since I was fourteen!"
Geoffrey sat still a moment, absorbing the fact of his friend's
passion. Then he said quietly, "Well, well. You have
kept your own counsel well, have you not?"
"So have I been bred." Alain looked away. "My father
has taught me that a king must indeed do so, for his bosom will
need to hold many secrets."
"You have kept this one too well. I doubt that my sister
knows anything of it."
"But how am I to tell her?" Alain cried. "I cannot
merely step up to her and declare it!"
Now it was Geoffrey's gaze that wandered. "No-o-o-o," he
agreed. "That would be unwise. You must create the
right mood for such an announcement, if you wish her to believe
you."
"Why, how is this?" Alain stared, astounded. "Is
there no love arising by itself, from a woman? Might not she
fall in love with me ere I have even spoke a word?"
"She will, if she is your one true love," Geoffrey said.
"If she is not in love with you, no persuading of yours will ever
create that love, though your conduct and bearing may inspire
it. When all's said and done, it is what you are that will
win the lady—and if you wish to win her, 'tis a matter of
what you can become."
"I cannot be anything but myself!"
"That is true," Geoffrey agreed, "and you were best to wait for
the lady who loves what you are, rather than try to become what she
loves. But you may have sterling qualities that would inspire
her love, if only you could show them. When all's said and
done, winning a lass is a matter of how you present yourself.
That, and learning to be romantic."
"What is this `romance'?" Alain asked, frowning.
Geoffrey spread his hands, at a loss. "'Tis as much a fantasy
as a reality, my friend. The troubadours know it'tis not a
matter of lying, exactly, but of making the plain facts more
appealing, of surrounding the bare bones of life with a pleasing
form. 'Tis this that awakens desire in a
lady—candlelight, and viols playing, and a dance that whirls
her away."
"You speak of deliberate planning, of cozening," Alain
protested. "Must I persuade her that what I say is
true?" Geoffrey shrugged. "Her future, her entire life,
depends upon it, Alain. She must be sure."
"Then however am I to win her?" Alain cried in
despair. "For I have no gift in persuasion, no silvered
tongue, no ability to charm! I am only a blunt, plain-spoken
soldier who knows how to guard his words!"
"Guarding one's words is not altogether what the ladies want,"
Geoffrey advised him, "though you must choose those words
well. They wish you to be borne away by a flood of passion so
strong that tender, caring words burst out of you."
"And all my training has been to keep words in!" Alain
turned away in misery. "I shall never win her love,
then! I shall never win any woman's love!"
Now Geoffrey felt the first faint twinges of alarm—of
concern for his friend but, moreover, for his sister. He knew
Cordelia had always thought of Alain as her personal future
property, and frankly, the young Prince was the only man whom he
thought worthy of his sister—not because he was the future
King, but because he was as dependable as a rock and, beneath all
his pomposity, goodhearted and warm. Geoffrey didn't doubt
that, if they were married, Alain would treat Cordelia like the
precious thing she was. He felt a sudden need to boost his
friend's ego. "It is nothing inborn," he said, "no quality
within you. It is only that all your life, all your
experience, has been spent in the safe confines of your parents'
castle, the controlled and artificial world of their court."
"Artificial!" Alain looked up, amazed and affronted.
"'Tis quite a work of artifice, a thing made by people, not by
God," Geoffrey explained. "Hunger and ugliness are banished
and kept out; oppression and cruelty are veiled and harnessed by
custom and manners. You have never faced real danger without
others to ward you, nor dealt with the world on its own terms."
"What terms do you speak of?" Alain demanded sharply.
Geoffrey realized that there were suddenly more concerns than
Cordelia on his mind. "Terms of danger, my Prince—the
danger of cruel men who murder and steal, the dangers of famine and
disease. You have never seen how your future subjects live,
nor to what authority they must answer. You have never gone
through your kingdom solely as Alain, not as the Prince."
"Why, thou dost paint me as a stock of a man, a painted stick, a
hollow effigy!"
"Even so; you have said it."
"How dare you!" Alain cried, the anger of his defeat
finally bubbling over. "How dare you speak so to your
Prince!"
Geoffrey nodded with grim satisfaction. "Even now you do
it—even now you seek refuge behind your title. As to
how I dare, why—I have only answered the questions you
asked. Do you truly ask me how I dare to answer them
honestly?"
Alain stared at him, then spoke, seeming numb. "No.
I cannot fault you for that, can I? Indeed, I should praise
you for the truthfulness all others near me do lack."
Suddenly he turned away, once again in despair. "But how
can I ever face her again? If I am truly so shallow, so
puffed-up and pompous, how can I ever hope to win Cordelia's
heart? How, if I am so superficial and vain?"
"Become a true man," Geoffrey answered, "one of flesh and bone,
with hot blood in your veins."
"Why, how can I do that?"
"Go off on a quest of your own, friend, to discover what you
truly are—with none to ward you, and no sign of your true
rank."
"I would not know how to bear myself, nor where to go," Alain
protested.
Geoffrey threw up his hands in exasperation. "Why, then, I
shall show you! Come, and we shall go adventuring, you and
I—but come straightaway. Do not go to your home to
shift your clothes, nor to pack your gear, but come away now!"
"'Tis even as you say; my parents would never hear of it."
With sudden resolution, Alain said, "Why, then, I shall learn the
way of it—of courting, of living, of being true! Come,
old friend, let us go!"
Sir Devon watched, amazed, as the two young men rode off into
the forest side by side. Clearly, the Prince had forgotten
Sir Devon. The knight felt a moment's rage before he
remembered how preoccupied Alain had been, how sunk in gloom; then
Sir Devon's resentment melted like ice in tea, for he had been
raised on romances like any other young gentleman of Gramarye, and
knew that all can be forgiven the lover who is driven to
distraction. He allowed himself a moment for a sad smile,
then sighed and called his horse. Alain might have been
forgiven, but Sir Devon still had his duty—to report what had
happened to Their Majesties.
He rode away down the road. Scarcely had he passed beyond
the first bend when Cordelia came shooting into view on her
broomstick. From her higher vantage point, she could see a
break in the trees, where Alain and Geoffrey were riding away
together. For a moment, she stared; then a hot surge of
indignation reddened her cheeks, and she banked into a sharp turn,
heading back toward Castle Gallowglass, growing angrier and angrier
with every mile she flew.
CHAPTER 3
"How could he! How could he go gallivanting off with one
who has but lately given his sister insult!"
Cordelia was pacing the floor of the solarium, fuming, tiny
slippers tapping. Rod and Gwen sat by, watching their
daughter and biting their tongues. At least, Rod was biting
his.
"Perchance," Gwen suggested, "thy brother had already rebuked
Alain, and punished him."
Cordelia looked up, instantly dismayed. "Oh, say not
so! I know the manner of Geoffrey's rebuke." She
frowned. "Nay, he could not have, or there would not be
enough of Alain left to sit a horse!"
"Unless Alain apologized," Rod pointed out.
Cordelia stared. "Alain, apologize? That stuffed,
selfimportant popinjay, lower himself to apology?"
"I think thou dost wrong him in that, daughter," Gwen said
gently. "He is chivalrous enough to apologize, if he could be
brought to see that he had wronged you."
"Even if he had, 'twas to me he should have apologized—not
Geoffrey!"
"Why, that is so," Gwen said, puzzled. "Wherefore would he
not seek thee out?"
"Scared," Rod opined. "I would be, too, if a pretty girl
had just rejected me flat out."
Cordelia turned to him, puzzled. "Why should this be?"
"Just a quirk of the male mind. We're sensitive about
being told we don't matter."
Cordelia frowned. "But I did not."
"Sure—you just told him "no.' Right? No
explanations, no excuses—nothing but a flat "no.' "
"There was more than that." For the first time, a trace
of guilt crept into Cordelia's expression.
Rod was silent, waiting—but Cordelia was silent, too, lost
in recent memory, and mortified.
Finally, Gwen broke the silence. "Thou hast ever been
quick and sharp of tongue, daughter."
"Oh, but I so rarely mean what I say in the heat of the
moment!"
"Aye—'tis naught but the telling remark, the barbed
retort, that matters, is't not? Yet hast thou thought of the
hurt thy hasty words may do?"
"Surely he knows that rash words are not meant!"
"Alain? No," Rod said. "I don't think he knows
anything of the kind. Very serious young man, that. In
fact, I wouldn't be surprised if he thinks angry words show how a
person really feels."
"Oh, but he cannot!" Cordelia wrung her hands. "He
cannot truly think that I meant what I said!"
"Are you sure you don't?"
Cordelia stilled, considering. Then she said, "He is
somewhat pompous..."
"And insensitive," Rod agreed. "Are you sure he's right
for you? Shouldn't you be going after a man with a bit more
of a sense of fun?"
Gwen flashed him a glare.
"But he could be changed!" Cordelia cried. "I could
make him see his true nature, lessen his conceit, teach him to
think of others' feelings!"
Rod shook his head. "Never think you can change a man,
daughter. Oh, he will change, in time—but not
necessarily into what you want him to be."
"Marriage itself will change him!"
"Aye, marriage will," Gwen agreed, "but not on the instant, and
not always in the way thou wouldst wish." Rod cast her a
rather guilty glance. Fortunately, she wasn't looking.
"But I have always known I would wed Alain!"
"Thou art not pledged to him," Gwen said sternly. "Look at
the man he has become, daughter, and say if thou truly dost wish
him."
"I do! Oh, I know I do! Have I not lain awake
thinking of him? Have I not watched him year by year, and
considered him?"
"Hast thou ever asked thyself if thou dost love him?"
"We will love one another in time!"
Rod shook his head. "Don't ever bet on that."
"Are not all royal marriages so made?"
"Catharine's wasn't," Rod pointed out.
"Aye," Gwen agreed. "She married for love, and I doubt not
she doth hope that her sons will also."
"I know that I want him!" Cordelia cried. "Is that
not enough?"
And, "No," both her parents said together.
"Oh, be still!" Cordelia stormed. "You understand
nothing, you are too old! You have forgot what 'tis like to
be young!"
Her parents ground their teeth, and tried to remember what
Cordelia had just said about not meaning what she said in
anger.
"The worst of it is that I must now follow them." Cordelia
started pacing again.
"Follow them?" Rod stared. "In the name of Heaven,
why?"
"It might not be the course of wisdom, daughter," Gwen
hinted.
"Wisdom is for crones, old men, and Gregory! I must follow
to see that no harm befalls my Prince!"
"Surely he is safe with thy brother," Gwen objected.
"Naught could touch him there."
"Naught but Geoffrey's soldierly nonsense! He will fill
Alain with swagger and bluster, I doubt not—tell him that no
man's a man unless he can drink a gallon of wine and still bed a
wench!"
"Cordelia!" Gwen gasped.
"He will, Mother—you know he will!"
"Maybe not quite in those terms," Rod hedged.
"Terms! What matter the terms?" Cordelia stamped her
foot. "Nay, 'tis what he may do that worries me! By
your leave, my parents, I must fly!" She turned and strode
out of the solar without waiting for an answer.
It was very still behind her, for a few minutes.
Then Rod released a long breath and said, "Well! What do
you think she's really planning to protect him from, dear?"
"Wenches who are pretty and willing," Gwen retorted. "What
else?"
"I think she'll find that her usual array of witch powers
doesn't do her much good there. Think she can learn new
techniques?"
"How to enchant a lad? I have no doubt that she can, if
she wishes to."
"Yes, but knowing our daughter, she's too honest to want to, if
she isn't in love herself."
"Dost thou truly fault that?"
"Not in the slightest," Rod sighed. "But I can't help
wondering if she's going to be enchanting for Alain. What do
you think of the chances?"
"I think that she may make the greatest mistake of her life,"
Gwen answered, "or the wisest choice."
"Let's hope for wisdom, in spite of what she thinks of
it." Rod shook his head. "I'm only glad that in my
case, wisdom and love happened together." He squeezed her
hand and smiled into her eyes.
Gwen smiled back, reflecting that it had taken her a great deal
of effort to make him understand that.
"He is gone! What! Off into the forest?
Alone?"
Tuan forced down a surge of irritation. He understood that
to his wife, "alone" meant with fewer than twenty bodyguards.
"Be of good cheer, my sweet. He could not be more thoroughly
warded if he had an army with him."
"Oh, thou dost place far too much faith in this boisterous boy
of Gwendylon's! How could they stand against a whole troop of
bandits, they two alone? And they are quite like to meet
such, there in the greenwood!"
She had been carrying on like this since Sir Devon had reported
what had happened.
"To dare to strike at the Heir!" Catharine ranted.
"'Tis treason, 'tis a crime most foul, 'tis..."
"'Twas a disagreement between two youths," Tuan interrupted,
"and our own lad was not blameless, if thou wilt consider."
"Well ... aye, he may have spoken rashly and in
haste! But the Crown Prince may not be assaulted!"
Privately, Tuan thought it had probably done his son a world of
good, and was rather proud that he had stood up for so long against
Geoffrey Gallowglass—for King Tuan was a knight born, bred,
and trained, and knew well the warrior—worth of the middle
Gallowglass boy. "Blows or not, they are friends
again..."
"Through our son apologizing! A Prince, to
apologize! 'Tis unheard of, 'tis humiliation, 'tis..."
"Most chivalrous," Tuan finished for her. "Howsoe'er it
may or may not have become him as a prince, it is most fitting for
him as a knight, and I am proud of him for it."
"Oh, thou wouldst be, thou! Men! Hast thou no care
but thy game of honor?"
Tuan stiffened. "That honor is the protection of many a
lady, and giveth her the respect that is due her. If our son
hath transgressed in this, at least he hath had the grace to make
amends..."
"Or shall, if he doth live! Husband, art thou a
fool? Canst thou not see his danger?"
"Danger, when he is a swordsman most excellent himself, and is
accompanied by the best in the land?" Tuan smiled. "Be
of good cheer, my sweet. He shall come forth from this wood
hale and sound, and more sure of himself than ever he hath
been."
"Oh, to be sure! That is what our son Alain most truly
doth need—an even greater opinion of himself!"
"In truth, he doth," said Tuan quietly, "for though he may
believe himself to be good, he cannot know. He is
untried, and therefore unsure of his own worth."
"Men!" Catharine threw up her hands in disgust. "As
though naught but thy ability with the sword proves thy worth!"
Tuan reflected that she had been glad enough of his ability with
weapons, when she had stood at war with her noblemen. "There
is also the matter of his being an object of desire in the eyes of
the lady he loves—and he hath but now found that in that
regard, he is naught."
Catharine stopped abruptly, frowning down at her knotted
hands. She was silent a moment, then said, "Doth he love her,
then?"
"Be sure that he doth," Tuan said softly. "Hast thou seen
his eyes when he hath watched her at a banquet or a ball, and
thought she did not see?"
"I have," Catharine said, her voice low, "and have watched
Cordelia's face, too, as she watched him when he was engaged in
talk—or in dance, with another damsel."
"Is she too in love?"
"I cannot tell," Catharine said slowly. "She is jealous,
aye, though whether it is for love, or for others' interest in
something that she doth regard as belonging to her, I cannot
tell."
"If 'twere only a matter of property, would she have cast him
off but now?"
Catharine shrugged. "If he came upon her unannounced, when
she was in such disarray? Aye, any woman would have turned
him away."
"I know so little of women," Tuan sighed, "but to me, that hath
more of the sound of love than of covetousness." Catharine
shrugged, irritated. "I fear, husband, that our son is
lacking in gallantry."
"He is," Tuan admitted, "as he is lacking in knowledge of his
people."
That stung Catharine in one of her most tender spotsfor she was,
in spite of her willfulness and temper, a diligent ruler who tried
her best to rule for her people's good. "Thou dost speak
truth. He hath never been among the folk." Then
hysteria surged again. "But how can I risk him?"
"You must," Tuan said, gently but inexorably. "He cannot
be a good man if he hath not tested his true mettleand he cannot
become a good King if he knoweth naught of those whom he would
rule."
"But the price!" Catharine cried, anguished.
"The price must be paid." Tuan still strove to be
gentle. "He must come to know at least a little about his
people, and what their lives are truly like. He must rule
more folk than the noblemen he hath grown to know, after all, nor
must he govern only for their benefit."
"I know that thou hadst some months among the poor," Catharine
said, low—she still felt guilty for having banished her
lover, even though he had forgiven her instantly. He had
smuggled himself back in from exile, and lived in hiding among the
commoners of the capital town. Then he had proved himself in
war, for her sake.
Tuan nodded. "'Tis for this that I have ever had as much
sympathy for the poor as thy tender woman's heart hath given
thee. But our son will not, if he goeth not among them whilst
he can."
"It is true," Catharine admitted, "and I have been glad of the
caution and respect for the common folk that thou hast brought to
accompany mine ardent wish to better their lot." She looked
up at Tuan. "Dost thou truly believe he must undertake this
quest, to become a good monarch?"
"And a good lover," Tuan amended. "Aye, it is most
necessary indeed."
"Why then, let it be!" Catharine threw up her hands in
surrender. "But if he must go, husband, thou must needs
assure he will not go unguarded—or, at the least, no more so
than is necessary."
"I shall have a squadron of knights ever at hand, in case of
need," Tuan promised.
"But how shalt thou know if there is such need!"
"That," said Tuan, "I shall leave to Brom O'Berin."
Brom O'Berin was the Lord Privy Councillor, but in secret, he
was also the King of the Elves. To his human friends, he was
a dwarf—but to his elfin subjects, he was a giant. He
managed to straddle both worlds without being torn apart—but
his love for a diminutive mortal woman had nearly rent his soul,
when she died. What had kept him going was the child she had
left behind, whom he had seen raised in secret, not knowing he was
her father, for he feared she would be ashamed of him. He
swelled with pride when he saw her with her husband and her
children, for she was Gwendylon, now Gallowglass, and her halfelven
blood made her the most powerful witch of her generation.
A few years later, his caring for his natural daughter was
supplemented by his love for his foster daughter—for he was
the King's jester, and took the little princess under his
wing. She had grown up to become Catharine the Queen.
So Brom had a double interest in the current quest—his
grandson, and the son of the woman that he loved almost as much as
his daughter.
He made sure they would be very safe.
"Still, my lord," said Puck, "the Prince should concern thee as
much as the warlock."
"Should he truly, Robin?" Brom turned a dark gaze upon his
right-hand elf. "Geoffrey is my grandson, after all—and
more to the point, Cordelia is my granddaughter."
Puck's brow puckered in puzzlement. "Aye, my lord, she
is—yet wherefore is that more to the point? She is not
at risk on this quest."
"Nay, but her happiness is. I find myself wary in regard
to Alain—moreover, in his fitness as a suitor."
"He has ever been summat of a spoiled brat," Puck admitted.
Brom nodded. "He spoke with far greater anger to the lady
than a gentleman ought."
"Well, true—but she had refused his suit, and quite
abruptly, with no graciousness to cushion the blow. Still, I
will own that even a squire should have shown more selfrestraint,
let alone a prince."
"Is it so easy, then, to believe that Alain is unworthy of
her?" Brom demanded.
Well, now, Puck wasn't related—and more importantly, he
had been baby-sitter for the Gallowglass brood when they were
children. He knew their inner selves quite well. "I
love the lass dearly, as do any who know her—yet I must own
that she, too, has her faults."
"Oh, aye, a temper ever too ready! Yet should she not
thereby wed a man with great inborn patience?" Brom shook his
head. "I had thought Alain to be such."
"Why, so he is, like his father before him," Puck answered,
"under most circumstances. Yet we speak now, my lord, of a
wound to the heart—and, though 'tis not easily seen through
the maze of Alain's vanity, he is in love with her."
That brought Brom to a halt. "Aye, he is, and hath been
since that he was a child. It is well thou dost bring it to
mind, Puck, for I am like to forget it, he hath learned to hide it
so well."
"What else might he do?" Puck sighed. "The lady hath
ever been bright and cheery with him, but hath never shown a single
sign of being a-love with him. Thinking him to be her
property, aye, but in love?"
"Mayhap I should not be unhappy to see them parted," Brom
mused. "Indeed, even a prince of mortals may not be worthy of
a lass who is herself a princess of Faerie, though she knoweth it
not."
And of course, as they both knew, the folk of Faerie were worth
far more than mere mortals.
"Worthy or not, were he to die, her heart would break," Puck
pointed out.
"Aye—but would it not also break if she kept a pet dog
that were slain? For she hath a most generous heart."
Brom's visage was dark.
Puck knew the kind of storms that darkness could presage, and
quailed within—but he spoke up bravely. "There is no
question, then, my lord—they must be warded, protected."
"Even so," Brom said heavily. "'Tis my duty to the
Queen..."
"If a King of Faerie could be said to have duty to any other
monarch," Puck muttered.
"I have sworn allegiance to her, Puck, and I love her, though
not so intensely as mine own daughter. Nay, we must protect
her son—and my grandson. Go thou to watch over them,
and summon a legion of elves if need be."
"I go." Puck bounced up—then paused. "Yet how
if need not be?"
"Then I will rejoice to hear it. Send word of their
journey daily, Robin—most particularly as regards the bearing
and conduct of the Prince."
Puck eyed his sovereign with foreboding. "And if his
comportment doth not meet thine expectation?"
"Then," said Brom grimly, "I shall find some way to bring his
suit to disaster."
A devilish grin lit Puck's face.
"Aye, thou hast had a dozen manners of mischiefbringing spring
into thy mind on the instant, hast thou not?" Brom said, with
dry amusement.
"No, my lord," Puck said truthfully. He had only had six
schemes for sabotaging Alain's courtship burst fullblown into his
mind.
"Hold them in abeyance until I bid thee," Brom commanded, "and
ponder on ways to aid his suit, should I decide he is fitting."
Puck made a face; helping lovers was far less to his taste than
sabotaging them.
"Away, now, to ward!" Brom commanded.
Puck darted away down the tunnel, and was gone. Brom
turned back to the long stone staircase that would take him up to
the secret door into the royal castle. He still had to
command the seneschal to send out a troop of knights to follow an
hour's ride behind the prince. As he climbed, he considered
Puck's reliability, especially considering the elf's inability to
refuse a chance to play a practical joke, should the occasion
offer. No, everything considered, Brom decided that he should
occasionally go himself, to check up on Alain's welfare and
progress.
Tuan had similar concerns, though he wasn't about to voice them
to Brom, and certainly not to Catharine—she would have denied
his comments hotly, taking them as an attack upon her son and, more
pertinently, on her ideas about rearing him. But Tuan was the
offspring of a country lord, and had been hardened by combat in the
field. He had been worried for some time that his son was
becoming a court fop, removed from the realities of life, concerned
more with the cut of his hose than the sufferings of the poor or
the political machinations of the aristocrats. Everything
considered, the chances of any real harm befalling Alain seemed
quite small compared to the benefits he might gain from the
excursion—not the least of which was the companionship of
Geoffrey Gallowglass, who had grown up to be everything Tuan had
hoped his sons would be. Admittedly, Geoffrey was several
things Tuan would not want Alain to be, too—he had heard
tales of the boy's roistering and wenching—but he trusted to
Alain's good breeding and inborn sense of rectitude to help him
resist those traits.
Above all else was the invaluable knowledge that Alain was
travelling with a swordsman who could beat him handily, and who had
no more respect for his station than if he had been the lowest
beggar on the road. Indeed, if that beggar had been able to
put up a good fight with his quarterstaff, it was quite possible
that Geoffrey would have had more respect for him than for the
Prince. Geoffrey respected the man and his inner qualities,
not the station. Tuan wasn't entirely sure that was a good
attitude, but in the present circumstances it was ideal.
No, all in all, the King had high hopes for the trip—it
might be the making of Alain, both as a man and as a human
being.
Still, there was danger.
He couldn't come right out and say any of this to Rod
Gallowglass, of course, but he could propose a friendly hunting
trip.
"Let us leave the ladies to their own devices for a while," he
said as the two of them walked in the courtyard of Rod's
castle. "It is too long since we rode the greenwood together,
to remember the true troubles of the world."
Rod couldn't remember their ever having gone hunting together,
but he knew a cue when he heard one. "After all, what could
be more natural than that the King and his Lord High Warlock should
go hunting together?"
"My thought exactly!" Tuan grinned. "And on the way,
Rod Gallowglass, we might discuss our mutual concernsperhaps even
our hopes."
"And just happen to be going in the same general direction as
our sons." Rod nodded. "Of course, it would be beneath
our dignity to travel with fewer than a dozen knights as an honor
guard."
"Quite so," Tuan agreed. "Certes, 'tis true that each of
us hath oft gone abroad among the common folk alone, and
disguised—but this would be more in the nature of a meeting
of state."
"Of course. Any time we get together officially, it's
always a meeting of state—and the fate of our children just
happens to fall under that heading, too."
"It does. Thou art not opposed to the match, then?"
"Cordelia and Alain? Not at all—though I would have
appreciated it if Alain had followed the social formula of asking
my permission before he proposed. Might have staved off the
current disaster."
"Aye." Tuan nodded heavily. "I have told him
aforetime that being royal doth not allow him to trample on custom
. .."
"But his mother has told him that princes are above tradition,
eh? Well, I think he'll begin to see that customs grow up for
reasons." Rod frowned. "But there's another side to it,
too, my liege."
"Aye." Tuan's face darkened. "Are they in love?"
"Such a short little word," Rod sighed, "but it can create such
difficulties, can't it? Especially if it's not there."
Tuan shook his head, perplexed. "How can he have gone to ask
her to be his wife, if he did not know her to be in love with
him?"
"Oh, they have more or less grown up with the idea that of
course they'll get married some day," Rod sighed. "After all,
how many young folk of their age are there among the nobility of
Gramarye?"
"A hundred, perhaps," Tuan said slowly.
"Yes, and a properly inbred bunch they are! Besides, half
of them regard Alain as a hereditary enemy, simply because their
fathers rebelled against you and Catharine at one time or
another."
"Aye," said Tuan, "and the other half live so far from Runnymede
that 'tis a wonder we have seen them once in a year. Still,
my boy hath seen other lasses his age. I wonder that his
devotion to thy Cordelia hath never swerved."
"It would be normal," Rod admitted, "but Alain is an unusually
conscientious lad, and very loyal." He did not add "humorless
and dull," though he might have. "He may feel that once he
has pledged himself to Cordelia in his heart, he can't even look at
another lady."
Tuan shook his head. "If it is not love, then the Archer
will smite him soon or late."
"Better to have it sooner," Rod agreed. "I'll tell you
frankly that I'm not all that sure that the match would be best for
either of them; they may not be right for each other."
"Cordelia is certainly of acceptable rank to be a queen," Tuan
said quickly, "and more than acceptable in her own person.
Indeed, I would be honored to call her my daughter-in-law."
"And I couldn't ask for a more worthy or more responsible mate
for her." Rod tactfully didn't mention that he really didn't
want his daughter to marry a selfish prig like Alain. Of
course, if she had really been in love, he wouldn't have
argued. "However, though they may be of the right quality for
each other, they may not be right in personality. After all,
so far as I know, neither of them has ever fallen in love with the
other."
"Oh, I have seen the odd glance between them," Tuan said, "and
the lilt to her voice when she speaks, and the toss of her
head."
"Flirting, sure," Rod said, "but even that might have been due
more to a shortage of other young folk their own age than to any
real interest."
"So we must watch them in more ways than one, eh? Well, I
shall tell Catharine of my departure. I doubt not she will be
relieved to have some small time to herself."
Catharine might have been pleased if she hadn't seen through the
ruse in an instant. Fortunately, the Lady Gwendylon had come
to discuss the situation with her. They were sitting in
Catharine's solar when Tuan breezed in and dropped his little
bombshell.
"Surely thou wilt not be too aggrieved, my love? Thou
shalt not? Why, there's a wench for you! Come on and
kiss me!"
Catharine's protests were smothered, and by the time she caught
her breath, Tuan was out the door and gone. "Oh! The
idiocy of men!" she fumed. "Thinks he that I cannot see
through his ruse? Hunting, forsooth!"
"In a manner, they do," Gwen sighed, "though 'tis our sons they
hunt, not the deer."
"And the dear knows when we shall see them again! Pray
they do not let the boys know they are followed!"
"I shall—and I shall pray the same for Cordelia."
Catharine turned to her, stunned. "Surely she doth not follow
them, too!"
"She doth," Gwen returned. "She hath little trust in her
brother."
"Well, therein may I agree with her," Catharine said
judiciously, "for Geoffrey is more filled with masculine non sense
than most—if thou wilt forgive the observation,
Gwendylon."
"When did truth need forgiveness?" Gwen returned, though
she could have added, "Frequently."
"They are so ridiculous!" Catharine fumed. "They
will likely follow a day's pace behind—too distant to protect
'gainst assassins, too close for the boys to know they must trust
to themselves!"
"Aye, 'tis most ridiculous," Gwen agreed, "but then, so are
Geoffrey and Alain. Still, I doubt not that Brom's forces
will be near. The young men will be protected, never
fear." She knew, far better than Catharine, exactly how
ubiquitous and effective Brom's troops were—his personal
forces, at least. She had been raised by the elves, and they
had no secrets from her, except the name of her father.
"Well—I warrant the men can do the boys no harm,"
Catharine grudged.
"We must let this issue pass, as we do so many that are really
of no consequence," Gwen agreed.
"Still..." Catharine turned to her with a glint in her
eye.
Gwen braced herself. "Aye, Majesty?"
"Why should not the followers be followed?" Catharine
said, with a wicked smile.
Slowly, Gwen's own smile matched the Queen's. "Aye,
Majesty. Be assured, I shall look in now and then on mine
husband—and on thine, too."
So Alain and Geoffrey went a-wandering wild and free, two
knights errant in search of adventure, on what must surely have
been the best-supervised quest of all time. In fact, it was a
virtual parade, with Puck shadowing his lord's grandson (not to
mention his granddaughter's suitor), a dozen royal knights
following a few hours behind the Heir Apparent, the two fathers
trailing their sons with a score of knights, and the Lady Gwendylon
keeping an eye on the two husbands.
But in front of them all, of course, went Cordelia.
CHAPTER 4
They rode in under the trees, Alain saying, "But where shall
we..."
"Hist!" Geoffrey turned to him with a finger across his
lips, then beckoned. He turned his horse off the trail
—and pushed through the underbrush.
Alain stared, taken by surprise. Then he pushed on after
Geoffrey, aching to ask what they were doing, but keeping his lips
pressed tight.
The underbrush thinned out, leaving room for the horses to walk,
though Alain had to duck under boughs. Fortunately, he could
watch Geoffrey in front of him, and be ready for the next
low-hanging limb. They had to skirt a few trees that had
branches down to the ground and step carefully over fallen logs,
but they kept on going.
Finally, Geoffrey's horse half-slid, half-walked down to a
stream. He stepped in. Alain followed, dying to ask
what they were doing—or rather, why; the "what" seemed
obvious.
They walked upstream for a quarter of an hour or more; then
Geoffrey turned his horse to climb back out onto the same bank from
which they had come, though a good way farther into the
forest. He reined in and waited for Alain to come up with
him.
"Wherefore have we perambulated so?" Alain asked.
"To lose pursuit," Geoffrey told him. "I doubt not that
knight of your bodyguard may waken to find us gone, but will follow
our trail into the wood. We do not wish him to be able to
trace us far."
Alain turned thoughtful. "Aye, even so. Sir Devon
would take it as his charge to find me, whether I wished it or
no."
"And he will be most reluctant to return to your parents with
word that he has lost us," Geoffrey agreed. "Nay, he will
seek to follow—and when he cannot find our trail, he will
take word to the King and Queen."
Alain's mouth tightened. "No doubt he will, and they will
send a whole troop of knights to dog our footsteps."
"Therefore shall we leave them no footprints." Geoffrey
grinned. "Mayhap we shall muddy our trail even further, then
double back to watch—them casting about to find us.
Would that not be pleasant?"
Alain's first instinct was to protest against taking pleasure in
troubling good men who were only trying to do their duty—but
Geoffrey's smile was infectious, and he found himself
grinning. "It would be amusing to watch."
However, Geoffrey could read his mind—only figuratively,
this time, though he could easily have done it literally. "Be
easy in your heart—they will not be greatly upset.
Still, if we are to be accompanied by a small army, there is scant
purpose in wandering."
"True enough," Alain admitted. "Nay, let us lose ourselves
thoroughly."
They did.
An hour later, Geoffrey reined in and pronounced them properly
hidden. "Now, Alain, we must set to work disguising
ourselves."
"Wherefore?" The Prince frowned.
"Why, because you wish to go knight-erranting, do you not?
To seek out wicked folk to punish, and good folk to aid, and
damsels in distress to rescue?"
"Indeed I do! I must prove myself worthy of your
sister!"
"Well, what wicked knight would dare to win against you, if he
recognized you as the Crown Prince Alain?" Alain's brow
creased as he thought it over, then nodded. "Aye, there is
sense in that. How shall we disguise us, then?"
"Well, to begin, you might take off your coronet and hide it in
your saddlebag."
"Oh, aye!" Alain sheepishly tucked away his low
crown. "Now, as to your garments," Geoffrey said. "They
must be leather and broadcloth, not silk and velvet. You must
be dressed for long journeying, not for court—a good woolen
cloak against the chill of night, and stout high boots."
Alain glanced down at his low but very fashionable boots and
nodded. "Where shall we find such?"
"In a village, if it be large enough. Let us fare forth to
the nearest town."
They rode on through the forest, and as they did, Geoffrey tried
to explain the nature of courtship. "You must begin by
flirting," he counselled, "and do not yet be serious."
"But," said Alain, "if I compliment a lady and seek to kiss
her..." He blushed. ". . . what shall
I do if she says yes?"
"If the offer's made, you may treat it only as one more
flirtation, and respond with some gallantry, such as `Ah, would
that I could! But if such beauty as yours is like to blind
me, I shudder to think what more would do!' Then touch her and draw
back your hand sharply, as though from a hot griddle, crying `Ah,
fair lady! Only a touch, and my blood boils to burn me!"'
Alain goggled. "Where did you learn that bit of
extravagance?"
"Why, it came to me even now, as we spoke."
"Alack-a-day!" Alain sighed. "I have no such gift of
silver to my tongue!"
"You will be amazed how quickly it comes, Alain, most thoroughly
amazed—if you begin to play the game, and enjoy it."
Alain reddened. "I could not!"
"Of course you could, and shall. But remember—'tis
only a game, but fully a game. Enjoy it, as you would enjoy
tossing a ball—for the words are like the ball, and you've
but to toss such compliments back and forth."
"Tell me a few more, I beg you!" Alain implored.
"For I would not go unarmed into my first fray!"
Geoffrey shook his head. "You must not think of it as a
fray, mind you, but a game. If a lass eyes you, so..."
He made a moue and batted his eyelashes.
Alain burst out in laughter that mingled shock and surprise.
"Aye, that is the spirit!" Geoffrey grinned. "If she
looks at you like that, then you must look at her like this!"
His eyes widened a little, seeming to burn as his mouth curved
slightly. "Then she will respond, thus... " He made
sheep's eyes at Alain. "And you must sigh and reach out to
touch her hand, ever so gently." He pantomimed a delicate
touch.
Alain laughed heartily. Then, gasping, he said, "I never
could! I never could do so in seriousness!"
"Oh, do not! A straight face is like the side of a cold
fish, and seriousness might be mistaken for ardor! No, you
must let your amusement show, but like this . .." He
gave a low and throaty laugh.
Alain tried to imitate him, but it came out as a rusty
chuckle. Nonetheless, Geoffrey nodded encouragement.
"Well begun! Now, you must speak of her eyes and her cheeks,
saying the former are like stars and the latter like roses .
.."
"Even I have heard those a thousand times!"
"So has she, friend, and will protest such, but in truth, she
never grows tired of hearing them. Still, if there is more
novelty in your saying, she will like it all the better.
Mayhap you should take her hand upon your own, and tickle the palm
whilst you nip the fingers with your lips... "
"Surely I could not!" But Alain's eyes were glowing now,
the color was rising in his cheeks, and his seriousness seemed
banished for the moment.
Encouraged, Geoffrey went on. ". . . and
you shall tell her that her skin is smoother than the current of a
placid stream and as cool, though it inflames your blood..."
And on he went, manufacturing extravagant compliments by the
yard. Alain clung to his every word, filing each away for
future use. They rode through the forest, Geoffrey explaining
the multitude of gallantries available for the courting of a lady,
up to and including the way in which the knight Don Quixote had
sent his vanquished enemies to his lady Dulcinea as proof of his
valor and the purity and intensity of his love.
However, he did not tell Alain that Don Quixote had been mired
in delusion. All lovers are, so it did not matter. Of
course, Geoffrey was not in love when he flirted—but he hoped
ardently that Alain would be. For, although love had touched
Geoffrey only once or twice, he knew the signs, and knew also that
he saw them in Alain. In fact, he knew that he had seen them
for several years.
On the other hand, he also knew that Alain had been busily
denying them. He seemed to think that such emotion, being
swept away on such a tide, was unworthy of a man destined to be a
king. His tutors had done their job too well. Geoffrey
was determined to undo it.
Then a woman screamed, ahead of them on the trail. Men
shouted, and there was the clack of quarterstaves. Alain and
Geoffrey stiffened. Then Alain gave a gleeful shout.
"So soon!" He drew his sword.
"Be sure which side is in the right before you strike!"
Geoffrey was already spurring his horse.
"Do not slay unless we must!" Alain called back from half
a length ahead.
They crashed through the brush screen just as some outlaws
knocked the quarterstaff spinning from a carter's hands. One
of their number leaped in to seize his wrists and force them up
behind him, bending him almost double. Two others were
pulling a woman down from the seat of the cart with lascivious,
gloating laughs. She was still screaming.
There were at least a dozen bandits, and only the one carter
with his wife.
"No doubt who has set upon whom!" Alain whooped and rode
into battle with Geoffrey a step behind him. The outlaws
turned, startled, but set themselves quickly. Most had
swords—badly nicked or honed down thin, but swords
nonetheless, with bull-hide shields.
The others had bows.
Arrows flew about the two knights. They ducked and
dodged. Then they were in among the bandits, laying about
them with their swords.
Alain knocked a blade aside, then stabbed down. The
bandit, a young fellow in a jerkin with a mane of black hair and a
beard, raised his shield to block, as Alain had expected. The
Prince's sword pinned the target, holding it up as he kicked a foot
free of the saddle and lashed it lightning—quick into the
bandit's jaw. The outlaw's eyes rolled up as he fell, almost
wrenching the sword from Alain's grasp.
But quick though the Prince had been, another bandit had been
quicker. He landed on Alain's back with a howl, arms hugging
the Prince's neck, pulling him backward. Alain fought to keep
his seat even through the choking and swung back with his
blade—back and around with the flat of it. The outlaw
cried out, and abruptly the pressure was gone. Heart singing,
Alain turned—to see a sword jabbing up at his belly with a
grinning bandit behind it. He rolled aside, but the blade
sheared through his doublet, staining it with blood. Pain
stung hot along his ribs, and fueled fear—but also
anger. Alain shouted and caught the blade in a bind as the
outlaw tried to riposte, circling his own sword, twisting and
sending his enemy's blade whirling away. Other outlaws cried
out, ducking the spinning steel, as Alain turned to the next
opponent.
A staff cracked against his skull.
The world spun about him; pain wreathed his head. Alain
fought to stay in the saddle, to keep his hold on his sword.
Dimly, he heard a yell of triumph, felt hands seize his legs
...
Fortunately, they seized both legs, and the tug-of-war lasted
long enough for the world to steady about him. Then he
slapped down with his sword and pounded down with his left
fist. Both blows connected, and the outlaws fell away.
Alain turned to follow up with the point of his blade ... And
saw all the outlaws rolling about on the ground, groaning and
clutching their heads, or out cold.
Alain sat still and stared for a minute that seemed to stretch
out to ten. Then he looked up across the collection of
moaning men to Geoffrey, sitting smugly across from him,
winking. Alain grinned like an idiot.
Then he remembered his duty and his dignity, and composed his
face gravely, turning to the carter and his wife. "Are you
well, goodman, goodwife?"
"Aye, thanks to thee, Sir Knight." The middle-aged couple
huddled together, his arm about her. The woman was weeping,
but through her tears cried, "Bless thee, bless thee, good
sirs!" Then she saw the red streak along Alain's side and
gasped, "Thou'rt hurted!"
"Hurted?" Alain looked down—and stared,
shocked. He had never seen his own blood before. But he
remembered himself, and forced a smile. " 'Tis naught,
belike."
"Aye, but let us be sure!" The woman hurried over to him,
drying her tears on her apron. She pushed the slashed cloth
aside and probed carefully. "Nay, naught but the skin is
cut. Still it must be dressed, good sir!"
"I shall tend to that," Geoffrey assured her.
She looked up at him doubtfully. "Knowest thou aught of
nursing, Sir Knight?"
"As much as a knight must know," he assured her. "You may
trust him to me, goodwife."
She subsided, stepping back to her husband, but didn't look
convinced.
"Tell us thy name, that we may boast of thy deed and spread thy
fame," the man urged.
Alain opened his mouth to tell him, but felt a nudge in his
short ribs. He glanced back over his shoulder and saw
Geoffrey frowning, with a shudder that could be interpreted as
shaking his head. That was right, Alain remembered—they
were supposed to be incognito. He turned back to the
carter. "I may not tell you my name, good folk ... um
. .."
"Until his quest is done." Geoffrey stepped smoothly into
the breach.
"Even so," Alain said with relief. But how then were they
to gain glory?
"Say that 'twas the Knight of the Lady Cordelia who gave you
rescue." Then Geoffrey remembered that his sister had not
given Alain permission to claim her as his sponsor, and that their
last meeting had certainly indicated anything but. "Or one
who would be hers, at the least."
That made the woman look up to stare in wonder; then she began
to smile, softly.
Women and romance, Geoffrey thought with exasperation,
but reflected that his more clumsy friend was scarcely any better
off. He turned to the outlaws. "What shall we do with
these?"
That brought Alain to his senses. He turned; staring
down. "What indeed?"
"They must be gaoled," Geoffrey prompted.
"But we are on quest! Must we ride guard upon them, to the
nearest sheriff?"
"We cannot leave them to wander the countryside and prey upon
travellers again, my friend."
"No, we cannot," Alain sighed. "Ho!
Blackbeard!" He leaned down to prod the biggest outlaw with
his sword. The man moaned, but forced himself to sit up, one
hand pressed to his head. " 'Twas a right shrewd blow, Sir
Knight."
"Be glad he did not use the sword's edge," Geoffrey
snapped. "What is your name?"
"Forrest, sir."
"I require your name, not your haunts! Speak truly!"
"Why, so I do, sir. 'Forrest' is the name my mother gave,
and my father blessed." The bandit grinned, showing a wide,
even expanse of white teeth. "Belike 'twas the name that gave
me the thought of the life in the greenwood."
Alain surveyed the man, something about the bandit catching his
interest. Forrest was tall, six feet or more, and
broad-shouldered. His face was open and regular-featured,
with thick black hair and a black jawline beard. His eyes
were large, well spaced, and deep blue, his nose straight and well
formed. He wore hose and cross-gartered sandals, instead of
the usual peasant's leggins and buskins, and in place of a tunic
wore only a sleeveless jerkin that showed a broad expanse of chest
and the bulging muscles of arms and shoulders. Alain found
himself wondering if it was by luck that he had defeated this
man.
"You are a gentleman gone wrong," Geoffrey stated. "What
is your family's name?"
"None of any consequence, for I doubt not they have disowned
me."
"Mayhap they have not. What name?" Geoffrey added
iron to the question.
"Elmsford," the bandit sighed. "How came you to this
pass?"
Forrest shrugged. "I am a youngest son of a youngest son,
who had need to seek his living however he might."
"You could have found a way more honorable!"
"I did; I pledged my sword to a lord. He took us all to
fight his neighbor, and we lost."
Geoffrey frowned. "Here is no shame."
"So I thought—but the neighbor sought to smite down all
who had opposed him. I fled to the greenwood for, my life,
and lived as best I could."
"Wherefore you did not throw yourself upon the King's
mercy?"
The bandit grinned, teeth startlingly white in the expanse of
beard. "The King is at Runnymede, sir, and though 'tis near
to us here, 'tis far from the estates of my former lord. I
have been many months seeking this greenwood, but have now so many
crimes on my conscience that I dare go no farther."
"Certainly the King's shire-reeve was near enough!"
"Aye, and under the hand of the lord who sought my life."
"You shall go to the King now, and woe betide him who would stop
you! Do you speak for all of this band?" The bandit
looked around, but nobody seemed to want to dispute it. "Aye,
Sir Knight."
"Then go to the sheriff at..."
"Nay." Alain stopped him with a touch. "Go to Castle
Gallowglass... "
Forrest looked up sharply, and Geoffrey whirled about to stare
at Alain. The bandits scrambled to their feet with groans of
fear. "The witch-folk!"
Geoffrey turned to scowl at them. "Aye, the Lord Warlock
and his family. Mind your manners about them, or you'll have
no heads to mind with!" He turned back to Alain with a look
that clearly said his friend was mad.
" 'Tis even as your Don Quixote did," Alain reminded him.
Then, to Forrest, "Go to the Lady Cordelia, and surrender yourself
to her there. If she bids you go to the King's prison, then
you must go—for trust me, you do not wish to transgress
against her."
"Be sure I do not!" Forrest bobbed his head, not smiling
now.
"Be cautious and filled with respect," Alain admonished
him. "Say to her that ... that he who hopes to prove
himself worthy has sent you."
The carter's wife clapped her hands, eyes shining.
Geoffrey restrained an impulse to look up to Heaven for help.
" `He who hopes to prove himself worthy.' " Forrest nodded, lips
pursed in puzzlement. "Yet why not send your name, good
sir?"
"Because ... because I shall not use it again in public,
till she has heard my suit!" Alain smiled, pleased with his
first attempt at improvisation. Geoffrey nodded judicious
approval.
The bandit bowed, his face wooden, and Geoffrey guessed he was
hiding his reaction to the quixotic gesture. "As you bid me,
sir."
"Go straightaway, and do not stray from the path," Geoffrey told
him. Then he raised his voice. "You, who thread the
forest's roots and stitch the green leaves for your garments!
Come forth, I pray thee, by the pact of kindred blood!"
The outlaws stared at him as though he had gone mad, but the
wife drew back against her husband with a low moan. For a few
seconds, the whole forest seemed to be waiting, still and
silent.
Then leaves rustled, and a foot-high mannikin walked out along a
branch. "Who art thou, who dost seek to summon the Wee
Folk?"
Now it was the outlaws who moaned and shrank away, while the
wife and husband watched, spellbound.
"I shall not use my name openly again until my companion uses
his," Geoffrey told the elf, "yet I ask the favor by the bond
'twixt he who rides the iron horse, and the king who goes about
among his peers disguised."
The outlaws glanced at one another and muttered, but none knew
what he was talking about.
The elf, though, must have recognized the references to Rod
Gallowglass and Brom O'Berin, for he said, "That will
suffice. What would you have us do?"
"Accompany these men to Castle Gallowglass," Geoffrey said,
"with a whole troop of your kind—and if they stray from the
path, I prithee discourage them."
The elf's eyes glittered. "Aye, gladly, for never has a
one of them left a bowl for a brownie! How strongly would you
have us `discourage' them?"
"Well, I would not have you slay or maim them," Geoffrey
conceded. "In all other respects, whatever mischief allows,
why, do."
"Here is no work, but play! Aye, surely, young warlock,
that we shall do!"
Forrest's head lifted; he glanced sharply at Geoffrey.
"Yet do not allow any others to detain them," Geoffrey said.
"I wish them to arrive at Castle Gallowglass, not to be taken on
the way."
"We know the lord whose lands lie between this forest and that
castle, and he knows us, to his sorrow," the elf said. "None
shall trouble them, save us."
"I thank you." Geoffrey inclined his head.
"It will be our pleasure." The elf bowed, stepped back
among the leaves, and was gone.
Geoffrey turned back to the outlaws. "Get you gone,
then—and seek to despoil none, nor to flee an inch from the
path. I doubt not you have some coins about you; what food
you need, see that you pay for. Be off!"
Forrest bowed again, barked a command to his men, and set off
down the road. They straggled after him reluctantly. A
whistling sounded from one side of the road, a hooting from the
other.
The bandits jumped, and started moving considerably faster.
"Well thought, Geoffrey," Alain said. "I thank you."
Geoffrey shrugged. "The gesture was perhaps extravagant, but
will no doubt prove effective."
"I doubt it not." Alain turned back to the carter and his
wife. "Go your way, now, without fear of these
brigands. They shall not trouble you more."
"Aye!" The carter ducked his head, touching his
forelock. "I thank you, Sir Knights!"
"And I you, for the chance of glory." Alain inclined his
head, and Geoffrey was tempted to tell him chivalry could be taken
too far. "Farewell, now, and travel safely."
"And you, good sirs." The carter turned to help his wife
climb up onto the seat, followed her, sat down and picked up the
reins, then clucked to his mule, and the cart ambled off down the
forest road. The couple turned back to wave before the leaves
swallowed them up.
" 'Twas well done, Alain, and a good beginning!" Geoffrey
clapped him on the shoulder. "Come, let us ride."
"Aye!" Alain cried with zest. "Adventure waits!"
The road curved, and an elderly knight wearing a hooded robe
stepped out to bar the outlaws' way. At his back stood a
dozen knights.
The outlaws halted. "We have done as you bade, Sir Maris,"
said Forrest.
"'Tis well for thee," the old knight said grimly. "You are
free of the King's dungeon now, and thy poaching and thievery are
pardoned. See to it you do not fall into such error
again."
All the outlaws muttered denials and avowals of future honesty,
and Forrest said, "We will not, I assure you."
"Cease this talk of `you' and 'your'!" Sir Maris
snapped. "Canst not say 'thee' and 'thou' like honest
men?" Forrest composed his face gravely. "Pardon my
offense, King's Seneschal."
Sir Maris eyed him narrowly, not missing the implication that if
Sir Maris weren't the King's Seneschal, Forrest would thumb his
nose at the old knight's demands. But Sir Maris was the royal
seneschal, and had had long experience of arrogant young men,
Prince Alain and Lord Geoffrey among them. "What did the
young knights bid thee do?" he demanded.
"To surrender ourselves to the Lady Cordelia, at Castle
Gallowglass," Forrest responded.
Sir Maris heaved a sigh of exasperation. "The folly of
youth! Well-a-day, then, thou must needs go! But think
not to take a single step off the road, or my men shall fall upon
thee like hawks upon sparrows."
Forrest bowed, poker-faced. "Even as thou dost say, Sir
Maris." He straightened up, called to his band, and led them
on their way. Why should he tell Sir Maris that they were
flanked by a troop of elves? Let his knights find out for
themselves—preferably the hard way.
Ever so carefully, he opened his mind, listening to the babble
of thought that surrounded him. Yes, the elves were still
there, and rather indignant about all the Cold Iron that was going
to be keeping them company. He was rather sorry that he had
had to throw that fight with the two young knights—he was
reasonably sure that the stockier one had been Geoffrey
Gallowglass, and he would have welcomed the opportunity to try his
own "witch powers" against those of the Lord Warlock's son.
Sir Maris watched the band of ruffians out of sight. He
did not trust Forrest or his band an inch beyond his sight.
Unfortunately, they would be many inches beyond the sight of
himself or his knights; it would not do for little Cordelia to see
her suitor's trophy-offering being escorted by Royal
retainers. He sighed and turned back at the creaking of a
cart. Now for the carter and his wife.
"Here is another florin to match that which I gave thee
aforetime," he said. "Didst thou do thy part well?"
"Oh, aye!" said the wife. "The two young men
believed all that we did, by the look of them."
"By the saints," said her husband, "I believed it myself!"
Sir Maris's gaze sharpened. "Did those bandits offer thee
harm?"
"Nay," said the woman quickly. "Well, no more than was
needful. They did not truly hurt us, sir, nor would they have
meant to."
"Not with thee and thy knights so close by," the carter
grunted.
Sir Maris nodded. "So I promised—so I did. But
did they affright thee?"
"Aye, sir, even though I had known them from their
cradles." The goodwife shuddered. "They have become
rough men indeed! And all for poaching—'twas that which
sent them, every one, to the greenwood! Still, I did not
truly fear them—naught save that black-visaged scoundrel who
was not of our village, and did call himself 'Forrest.' "
"What did he?" Sir Maris snapped.
"Naught," the carter said slowly. "Naught that he
did." "Aye," said his wife. "'Twas in his
look, and in his manner of speech. Though he smiled fair,
there was something of the devil-may-care about his eyes, that did
speak of danger. Still, he did do naught."
"Well, if he did naught, then I shall do naught to him," Sir
Maris grumbled, "though I would I had some strand of excuse to hang
him by."
"Nay, no cause, truly," the carter sighed.
"And the others?" Sir Maris peered at the woman
keenly. "Didst thou think they gave thee true cause to
fear?"
"Nay." At last, she laughed a little. "I've known
them all since they were lads, and they all knew that if any among
them had truly offered me harm, I would have told their
mothers."
CHAPTER 5
"Milady!" The porter bowed a little as Cordelia strode
in. The Gallowglass servants generally didn't do more than
incline their heads, but with the mood Cordelia was in, it was best
to play it safe.
"Here, Ganir!" Cordelia tossed him her cloak. "And
thank you. Where are my parents?"
"In the solar, milady."
"Mercy." Cordelia paced up the stairs.
Rod and Gwen looked up as she came in the door. "I do not
mean to interrupt..." she began.
"Of course you do." Gwen dimpled. "And we could wish
no happier afternoon than to have you do so. Could we not,
husband?"
"Of course," Rod said. "Back so soon?"
"Oh, aye!" Cordelia threw up her hands. "What else
am I to do? That lummox of a brother of mine told Alain about
the heroes of legend, who sent their defeated enemies to their
lady-loves as proof of their worth!"
"So we are about to be hit by an invasion of defeated
enemies?" Rod fought to keep a straight face.
"A troop of bandits! Ruffians! Outlaws! And I
must be here to receive them, so I cannot follow as I should!
What other dangerous silliness will they fall into unwarded?"
She had a point, Rod decided. For a second, he wondered if
Geoffrey might have arranged it this way. Then he dismissed
the thought as unworthy—such manipulating would have been far
too subtle for his direct, brash son.
Gwen gave a slow nod of approval. "'Tis an honor not
unworthy—to see the lambs defended and the wolves caged, in
thy name."
"'Tis a plaguey nuisance! 'Tis a monstrous
inconvenience! 'Tis an imbecilic imposition!" Cordelia
paced to the fire, glowering down at it.
Rod thought the lady did protest too much—and indeed, as
he looked at her face lit by the fire, he thought he saw some glow
of pleasure, of satisfaction, albeit carefully hidden:
Gwen knew she did, and that without reading her daughter's
mind—not literally, anyway. "'Tis romantic," she
murmured.
"Aye," Cordelia admitted. Finally, she smiled.
They rode on through the forest, chatting of this and
that—but Geoffrey did most of the chatting. Alain
listened, round-eyed and constantly feeling that he should not be
hearing such things. Geoffrey was telling him all the things
he had never said at court, about revels with villagers and tavern
brawls and willing wenches at town fairs. Alain's eyes grew
larger and larger, as did the feeling that he should tell Geoffrey
to stop—but he abided, partly in fascination, partly in the
conviction that somehow, mysteriously, all this would make him a
better suitor for Cordelia.
An hour or more they passed in this study. Then the trees
thinned out, and they saw the thatched roofs of a village
ahead.
"Come!" Geoffrey cried. "There will be hot meat and
cold ale, I doubt not, and perhaps even that change of clothing you
wish!"
Alain agreed enthusiastically—it had been a long time
since breakfast—and they rode out of the forest, down the
single street of the village. A peasant who saw them looked
up in alarm, then gave a glad shout. "Knights!"
"Knights?"
"Knights!"
"War-men to aid us!"
The villagers crowded around, showering the two young men with
cries of gratitude and relief.
"Why, what is the matter?" Geoffrey called over their
clamor.
"'Tis a monster, Sir Knight! 'Tis a horrible ogre, only
this morning come upon us!"
"Only this morning, you say?" Geoffrey frowned; something
there struck him as odd.
But Alain was delighted. "Have we come to our first
adventure so quickly, then? Surely, good folk, be easy in
your hearts! We shall find the monster and slay him for
you! Shall we not, Sir Geoffrey?"
"Oh, certainly," Geoffrey seconded. He realized suddenly
that, whatever its source, this most convenient monster would
certainly give Alain a good chance to prove his courage and
skill. Geoffrey couldn't have planned it better
himself. "Yes, surely we will fight the ogre for you—if
he is evil."
"Aye, if he is evil!" Alain sobered; he might have been
about to strike a harmless being, simply because it looked
frightening. That would have been very poor behavior indeed,
for a knight-errant. "What has he done?"
Well, actually, it turned out that the ogre hadn't done
all that much, really—only knocked a haystack apart, and made
off with a sheep. Of course, he had also taken the shepherd,
a boy of about twelve, who had been hiding in the haystack with the
sheep, and that was what the townsfolk were really concerned
about.
"He will eat the lad!" one woman cried, while another
comforted the mother, who could not stop crying.
"His father has already gone out to slay the monster," an old
man said grimly. "I doubt not he will be slain, if thou dost
not speed quickly, good sirs!"
"Why, then, let us ride!" Alain cried, eyes alight with
anticipation.
"Aye! To the fray!" Geoffrey wheeled his horse about
and rode off after Alain, amazed—not so much by the Prince's
eagerness as by his total lack of fear. Was he only hiding it
well? Or didn't he really understand what he was up
against? Probably the latter, Geoffrey reflected—ogres
were nothing but pictures in books to Alain, as much fantasy as a
real fight was. The trouble was that Alain didn't know that
the battles in the books, and the monsters, weren't real. How
would he react when he came face-to-face with the genuine
article?
Pretty well, as it turned out. They followed a peasant to
the haystack in question—or what was left of it, at leastthen
tracked the ogre down. It wasn't hard—he had left
footprints in the grass an inch deep and two feet long.
"If his feet are double the length of mine," Alain said, "will
he be twice my height?"
"Likely he will," Geoffrey said, trying to sound as grim as
possible. Didn't the callow youth understand what he was
getting into?
He certainly must have understood it when they came in sight of
the ogre. Newly arrived or not, he had found a cave
already—a hole in a rocky outcrop toward the top of a hill,
and the flinty pathway led up to him in zigs and zags. He sat
by a fire where, with one of his four hands, he was turning a spit
with some sort of meat on it, while he gnawed a leg-bone with one
of the others.
Now Alain paled, reining in his horse. "Pray heaven that
is not the boy's leg he is chewing!"
"I shall." Now Geoffrey turned grim in earnest as he drew
his sword. "Ah, for a proper lance and armor! But we
shall have to manage with what we have."
The ogre heard the sound of steel whisking loose from a scabbard
and surged to his feet with a roar, brandishing the leg-bone in one
hand and catching up a huge club with another. The other two
clenched into fists and shook in the air toward the two young
men. To Geoffrey, those extra arms seemed to have life of
their own. The ogre wasn't twelve feet tall after all, but
only ten—only ten! What he lacked in height, though, he
made up in bulk. He must have been four feet wide across the
shoulders. He needed the extra shoulder room, on the other
hand—and the other hand, and the other, and the other.
Then Alain howled a battle cry and spurred his horse. He
charged up the mountainside, sword swinging high as he shouted,
"For Gramarye and the Lady Cordelia!"
The romantic fool, Geoffrey thought, alarmed, even as
he spurred his own horse—but even in his exasperation, he had
to admire Alain's bravery.
For the first time, he found himself wondering what he was going
to say to Cordelia if he had to bring back the dead body of the man
she'd been planning to marry since she was five.
The ogre roared and charged down the slope as fast as Alain was
charging up. Geoffrey cried out in alarm—there was no
possibility of a misunderstanding here; that ogre was out for
blood! The huge club lifted for a blow that would flatten the
horse like a housefly, and the leg bone shot toward Alain's
head.
But the Prince chopped the bone out of the air with a sweep of
his sword, then shouted to his charger. Undaunted and well
trained, the warhorse charged straight at the ogre.
The huge club wound up and slammed down. Alain swerved at
the last second.
The club churned up the ground. With a roar of
frustration, the ogre yanked—but the cudgel stuck.
Enraged, the monster bellowed, grabbed it with two hands, and set
itself to pull.
Alain darted in to stab the monster's bottom.
The ogre howled, snapping straight upright, one of its free
hands slapping its buttock. The other swatted at Alain as
though he were a fly.
Alain danced his horse back, but not fast enough—the huge
palm slammed into his chest, and he reeled in the saddle. His
horse leaped back beyond range. Alain struggled for
breath.
Geoffrey saw he was needed. He howled like a banshee and
came riding in, waving his sword.
The ogre looked up, startled, then roared and snatched at its
club.
The club still refused to move.
This time, the ogre grabbed it with all four hands—then,
as Geoffrey galloped in, loosed one fist to swing backhanded at
him.
Geoffrey dodged, but not far enough—the blow glanced off
his head, and he saw stars. Holding onto consciousness, he
backed his horse clear.
The ogre gave a mighty heave and pulled the club out with a
shout of triumph.
Alain caught his breath and charged in.
He swerved around to the front, being too chivalrous to attack
an opponent from behind without warning, and Geoffrey groaned at
his friend's idiocy. He set himself to gallop back to the
fight, but Alain charged in so fast that the huge club slammed down
right behind him, giving the Prince just time enough to stab up, as
high as he couldright into the ogre's midriff. It screamed, a
ghastly sound choked off as its stomach muscles gave out.
Alain darted back out, but the ogre, disabled or not, slammed a
roundhouse blow at him that cracked his shield and made him reel in
the saddle.
Strangling and gasping, the monster waddled after him, murder in
its eye, club lifting in all four hands. Geoffrey shouted and
charged.
But Alain rallied, lowered his head, extended his sword like a
lance, and charged again.
The ogre gave a strangled cry and swung, but it was so weakened
that it overbalanced and fell—right on top of Alain.
Its whole body slammed down with every ounce of its impossible size
and weight. Alain disappeared under a mountain of flesh.
"Alain!"Geoffrey cried in horror, and leaped off his horse,
sword swinging high to chop off the ogre's head ... Then a
gleaming sword-tip poked out of the monster's back, and the ogre
went limp.
Geoffrey almost went limp himself, with relief—but not
quite. A dead ogre didn't prove a live Prince, after
all. He grabbed an arm and threw all his weight against it,
rolling the ogre up on its side.
Alain scrambled clear and climbed to his feet. He looked
about, crying, "My sword!"
"There!" Geoffrey grunted, nodding toward the ogre's
chest. "Pull it out, and quickly! I do not know how
long I can hold him up!"
Alain dived for the sword, set a heel against the monster's
chest, and heaved. The blade slid free as easily as though it
had been in its scabbard, and Alain went staggering back.
Geoffrey let go with a grunt of relief.
"I did it!" Alain stared down at the huge corpse in
disbelief. "I have slain a monster!"
"That you have," Geoffrey said sourly, "and with full measure of
danger, too. Might I ask you, next time, to wait for your
reserves?"
But Alain's face was darkening, elation giving way to
remorse. "It looks so shrunken, lying there..."
"Shrunken! 'Tis ten feet long and three times the bulk of
a man—nay, more! Make no mistake, Alain—that
pigface would have slain you in an instant, if he could have!"
That lightened the Prince's mood considerably—but he
still brooded, though with puzzlement now, not guilt. "How is
it he does not bleed?"
"Well asked," Geoffrey admitted. He had been wondering
about that himself.
None of the ogre's wounds showed the slightest trace of
blood—nor of ichor, nor any other sort of bodily fluid, for
that matter. They were as clean as cuts in bread dough.
In fact, the ogre's body looked far more like that substance, than
like flesh or meat.
"Still, 'tis no wonder," Geoffrey said, searching for something
reassuring to say—and found it. "The monsters of
Gramarye are not made as you and I were, Alain."
"Not made as we were?" The Prince transferred his frown to
Geoffrey. "Why, how is that?"
"Not made by mothers and fathers," Geoffrey explained, "or if
they were, those parents, or their ancestors, sprang full-blown
from witch-moss overnight. God did not make them as He made
us, from lumps of protoplasm formed by countless eons of random
changes that were shaped by the role He planned for them. No,
they were made by the thoughts of a granny who was a protective
telepath, but did not know it, shaped as she told a bedtime story
of monsters and heroes to her babes—or by one person telling
such a tale to many others, and of the many, there were several who
were projectives but also did not know it. Their thoughts,
together, formed the monster out of witch-moss."
He had told Alain about projective telepaths years ago—and
about all the other psionic talents the espers of Gramarye had at
their disposal. Of course, his father had warned him not to,
and Geoffrey could understand why, in the case of the ignorant,
superstitious peasants who would have reacted by saying that a
witch was a witch, no matter what you called her. But Alain
was neither ignorant nor superstitious—at least, not by local
standards—and Geoffrey and his brothers and sisters had
reasoned that he needed to know what his subjects really were, if
he was to rule them well when he was grown.
So Alain understood Geoffrey's explanation, nodding, though his
brows were still knit. "Naetheless, would such witch-moss
creatures not have blood in them?" He knew that the substance
they called "witch-moss" was really a fungus that responded to the
thoughts of projectives, turning itself into whatever they were
thinking about.
"Not if the granny who told the tale did not think of
blood. Difficult to imagine, for we who loved to hear tales
of bloody deeds even in our cradles, but there are many who do
not. Nay, there's no doubt the creature was only a construct,
naught more, and one brought to life only last night, or the
villagers would have seen him ere now."
"Well, there is no glory in slaying a thing that is not real, is
there?" Alain asked, disappointed.
"Oh, it was real, Alain! Be sure, it was real—and
you would have been sure indeed, if that club had touched
you! Do you not see the hole where it plowed into the
ground? What do you think it would have done to your
head? Nay, made by grannies or by God, this was a lethal
brute, and 'twas an act of great daring to slay it!"
Alain seemed reassured, then suddenly stood bolt upright, eyes
wide. "The child! The shepherd-boy! We must find
him! Pray God it was not .. ."
He could not finish, nor did he need to. Geoffrey nodded
grimly; he had also wondered at the source of the legbone the ogre
had wielded. "Aye, let us search."
They climbed up toward the ogre's cave, Alain calling,
"Boy! Shepherd! You may come out now with safety!
We have..."
"You waste your breath." Geoffrey caught his arm,
pointing.
Alain looked, and saw the shepherd boy pelting away across the
field, already little more than a dot of dark clothing against the
amber of the wheat.
"Praise Heaven!" the Prince sighed. "He is
safe!"
"Aye. I doubt not the lad was penned in the cave, and
seized his chance to flee when the ogre charged down upon us.
He will surely bear word to the village—if he paused to look
back."
"What boy would not?" Alain smiled.
"A boy who flees for his life." Geoffrey was very glad to
see the curve of Alain's lips; he had begun to wonder if the Prince
was going into shock. "We must go tell them ourselves.
Someone must bury this mound of offal, and I have no wish to tarry
long enough to undertake the task myself."
Alain nodded; Geoffrey didn't need to explain. The Prince
knew as well as he that a royal search party was very probably
already after them, and he had no wish to cut short his
adventuring.
Geoffrey clapped Alain on the back and turned him toward his
horse. "Come, away! For what other feats of glory await
you?"
But Alain hung back, glancing' at the ogre. "Should I not
hew off its head and send it to the Lady Cordelia, as proof of my
love?"
Geoffrey tried to imagine Cordelia receiving the ugly, gruesome
trophy and shuddered. "There is no need, and I do not think
she would find it aesthetic. Be assured, she shall hear of it
soon enough!"
She didn't, as it happened. All the elves who had been
watching the encounter were too late to tell her of it before she
left Castle Gallowglass to follow the boys again. But Puck
himself brought word back to Brom O'Berin.
"'Tis well." Brom nodded, satisfied.
"The mission is accomplished, and none hurt but the ogre."
Puck strutted as he said it.
Brom eyed him askance. "Here is turpitude indeed!
Have you no remorse, no sorrow for the creature you made?"
"None at all," Puck assured him. "It had no mind, look
you, only a set of actions implanted in its excuse for a
brain. It would charge when it was charged, strike when it
was threatened, and naught more—save to die when its time was
done."
"And was very clumsy into the bargain?"
"Tremendously. It could strike no object smaller than a
horse, save by luck."
"Bad luck indeed! 'Twas with that I was concerned."
"Be easy in thine heart, O King," Puck said, grinning.
"Surely thou dost know that I would take no chance with the
Prince's life."
"Aye, unless thy sense of mischief got the better of thee!"
"Well, it did not in this case," Puck said judiciously. "A
score of elves hid with me in the bracken and all about the field
of combat, to protect the Prince and thy grandson with their magic,
should mischance befall. Yet 'twas without need; 'twas not
mischance that befell, but the ogre."
"Aye, and nearly crushed Alain in its fall!"
"'Twas not so massive as that," Puck protested. "Indeed,
for its size, 'twas quite tenuous."
"As is thy report." But approval twinkled in Brom's
eye.
The villagers cheered as soon as the two young knights came in
sight.
"I take it the shepherd boy did watch the battle," Geoffrey
said.
Then the people were on them, clustering about their stirrups,
reaching up to touch their defenders.
"All praises be upon thee, young knights!"
"Save thee, my masters!"
"A thousand blessings on they who saved the boy!"
"Blessings and praises, and what soe'er they may ask that we can
give," said one buxom, dark-haired beauty with a look in her eye
that sent a thrill through Alain, one that held his gaze riveted to
hers as hot blood coursed through him, awaking sensations that he
found both intimidating and fascinating at the same time.
Then she transferred her gaze to Geoffrey, and Alain went limp
with relief—but the sensations were still there, with a
strength that shook him.
Geoffrey had no such trouble, of course. He met the girl's
gaze and grinned slowly.
Alain turned red and cleared his throat. "Aye! You
may give the monster burial! A score of your men, with
shovels and picks!"
"We shall, we shall straightaway!" cried a man. "But
what wouldst thou have for thyselves, good sirs?"
Alain glanced at Geoffrey, saw he was still eyeing the peasant
wench, and sighed. If his father's party caught up with them,
well, they would, and that was that. "I would have a bath,"
he told the man, "and food, and strong clothes fit for
travelling. Then, though, we must be on our way."
"Must we truly?" Geoffrey said, gaze still on the wench:
"Might we not stay the night? There will be few real beds for
us in the weeks to come, Alain."
The girl's smile broadened; then she dropped her gaze
demurely.
"Why, as you will," Alain sighed—but he found himself
eyeing the peasant lass, too, and forced his gaze away. It
did no good; the sensations she had raised still shuddered through
him. He did his best to ignore the feelings and said, "Still,
my companion, let us first bathe."
The village didn't have a bathhouse, of course—such an
item would have counted as a major technological breakthrough in
the Medieval Europe after which Gramarye's society had been
modeled. Such whole-body washing as was done occurred in the
local mill pond. The villagers didn't seem to have all that
elaborate an idea of privacy, but fortunately, there was a screen
of brush around the pond that the miller hadn't gotten around to
clearing for several years. On the other hand, from the
smothered titters and giggling that rose from the scrawny leaves,
Geoffrey guessed that the brush didn't screen them all that
thoroughly. He grinned, enjoying the attention of the unseen
audience as he languorously caressed his muscles with a cake of
soap—but Alain turned magenta with embarrassment, all over,
and made sure he didn't let anything more than his torso appear
above the waterline. That did inhibit the bath, of course,
but it was an improvement over the sweat-and-grime coating with
which he had climbed into the pool.
Then, though, there was the problem of climbing out. It
didn't bother Geoffrey in the slightest—he just waded ashore,
though he did catch up the makeshift towel so quickly that his
nudity was only revealed for a second. However, that was long
enough to still the giggling chorus. It began again as a
series of hushed murmurs as he turned his back, tucking the towel
around his waist as an improvised kilt, then holding another out to
Alain.
"I thank you from the bottom of my heart, Geoffrey," the Prince
muttered as he stepped out of the pool into the cover of the
towel.
"Well, from your bottom, anyway." Geoffrey grinned.
"You look quite well in that sacking the miller provided us,
Alain."
The Prince gave him a murderous look and caught up another
towel, rubbing himself dry with furious haste. Geoffrey
grinned, taking his time about towelling, playing to his hidden
watchers. The murmuring voices were properly
appreciative.
Alain caught up his clothes and went quickly toward the cover of
the mill. Geoffrey caught up with him, and they went through
the door together.
"You are quite shameless," Alain grumbled as they dressed in the
safety of the millhouse. "How can you enjoy displaying
yourself like a joint of beef?"
"Why, I find it quite stimulating." Geoffrey was still
grinning. "My blood tickles through me when I know that
lasses do watch and admire me—tingling in every limb, at the
hint of the pleasures that may follow, if they find enough to
admire."
"Shameless, as I said," Alain growled. "Surely you are too
chivalrous to seek after such pleasures as you mention!"
"To seek after, no," Geoffrey said, "though if they are offered
freely, I am delighted to accept."
"Have you no decency, no regard for others' feelings?"
Geoffrey blinked, surprised at Alain's vehemence. Then he
said slowly, "Well, some regard, surely. I would never think
to force my attentions on a wench who did not want them, nor on a
virgin, no matter if she did wish it, nor how greatly. I seek
to give only pleasure, Alain. never hurtand if there is
reason to think the lass wants more than the sheer fun of it, I'll
not come near her, for then is there chance indeed of hurting her
heart."
"But all women believe, in their hearts, that there will be more
than a night's sport—that the man will then take care of them
forever after! They do, Geoffrey, even if they admit it not,
not even unto themselves!"
Geoffrey took his time framing the reply, choosing his words
carefully. "They want something more than the pleasure of
their senses, that is true. But marriage? Nay! No
peasant woman truly believes a lord will wed her, Alainno woman of
sound mind, at least. In this instance, what they want is a
night with a hero, that his glory may adhere to them
afterward."
"Aye, and expect him to adhere to them, too, for all their
lives!"
"Hope for it secretly, mayhap—so secretly that they admit
it not, even unto themselves. If they see him again, they
will hope for at least a nod, a few tender words, a half-hour's
intimate talk. But, `expect'? Nay. Unless she is
mad, no peasant wench would truly expect a lord to marry her."
"Still, secret or not, expectant or not, there will be mayhem
done to her heart, whether she knows it or not!"
"Or will admit it or not?" Geoffrey shrugged.
"There, I cannot say without reading her mind far below her surface
thoughts—and even I shudder at so profound an invasion of
privacy. If she knows it not, neither do L I can only judge
by her actions, by the deeds and the farewell smiles of those I
have seen, by the boasting, covert or overt, among her
friends."
"Surely a woman would not boast of being used by a man, even a
hero!"
"Well, I have never heard a woman boast of a bedding," Geoffrey
admitted, "though I have seen them cluster about a hero, and hint
most plainly to be admitted to his bedchamber."
"Mayhap." Alain scowled. "I cannot deny it.
But does not each lass hope that he will cleave unto her
forevermore, no matter how plain it is that he will not—that
to him, she is only one among many?"
"Mayhap," Geoffrey sighed. "I cannot say. There is
no accounting for the daydreams women may spin for themselves, nor
may men truly comprehend them. I only know that I count it no
shame to take what is offered freely, and think that if it is so
offered, I give no pain."
But Alain only shook his head as he buttoned his doublet,
muttering, "I cannot believe it!"
As he followed the Prince out of the mill and back toward the
village common, Geoffrey reflected that Alain's attitude paid
credit to his upbringing, but not to his understanding of the world
as it really was.
The village common was decked with streamers of cloth and
bunches of flowers around trestle tables. The village girls,
decked in bright skirts, dark bodices, and white blouses, were just
finishing putting up the decorations, chattering and exclaiming to
one another. The village youths and men raised a cheer as the
two young men came in sight.
"Hail the slayers of the monster!"
"Hail the saviors of the child!"
"Hail the courageous and mighty knights, who have saved our
village from peril!"
Alain looked about as they closed in, applauding and cheering
him. He was dazzled by all the adulation. He, who was
used to the deference and flattery of the court, had never received
so much heartfelt praise due only to his deeds, not to his
station. He turned from one to another with an incredulous,
widening smile ...
And a village wench planted a kiss on his lips, firm and
deep.
He jerked his head back, shocked, but she was turning away
herself by that time, and another was taking her place. Alain
looked up to Geoffrey for help, saw him with a girl in his arms,
mouth to mouth, and mentally shrugged. What harm could a kiss
do? And would not the girls be insulted if he refused?
Surely, he did not want to hurt their feelings! He turned
back to give the peasant lass a courteous peck on the
cheek—but she had other ideas, ones that took a bit
longer. So did the next girl, and the next.
Alain finally managed to reclaim his lips and, yes, his whole
mouth, from the last admirer, dazed and incredulous to hear the men
still cheering all about him. Were none of them
jealous? Were there no sweethearts among the girls who had
just kissed him? He realized, with a sense of amazement, that
he was rather enjoying the whole affair.
They ushered him to a table and sat him down. Before him,
a whole pig was roasting over a fire. The aroma reached him,
and he breathed it in eagerly, suddenly realizing how hungry he had
become.
And how thirsty. A girl thrust a flagon into his hand and
her mouth against his—only this time, however it may
have looked to the outside world, her tongue trickled fire slowly
over his lips.
Then she straightened up with a glad laugh, and to cover his
confusion, he took a deep draft from the tankard. It was new
ale, nutty and strong. He came up for air. Geoffrey
slapped him on the shoulder, chuckling. "Drink deeply, my
friend, you have earned it."
And Alain did, wondering whether country ale always tasted so
good, or if it was only so after a feat of valor. Indeed, all
his senses seemed to be heightened—the village lasses seemed
to be prettier, their cheeks redder, their eyes brighter and more
inviting. The aroma of the roasting meat seemed almost solid
enough to bite, and the piper's notes sounded far keener than they
ever had, stirring his toes to movement. He took another
draft of ale; then a girl was pulling him up from the bench,
laughing, and another took his other arm. They led him to a
flat, level green, and began to dance. Alain knew the
steps—he had seen them often enough, at festivals, and his
parents had seen him schooled in the more stately steps of the
court dances. He began to imitate the girls' movements,
slowly and clumsily. Then he noticed that other girls had
stepped out to dance with the young men, and he could copy the
boys' movements. He did, with increasing sureness and speed,
turning back to his partner. Her eyes glistened, her teeth
were very white against the redness of lips and tongue as she
laughed, and he found himself caught up more and more in her
movements and his own, thought suspending, sensation claiming.
Then, at some unseen signal, the girl whirled away, and another
took her place. She leaned forward to give him a quick kiss,
clapping his arm about her waist, and moved through the same steps,
but much more quickly now. He gazed down into her eyes,
feeling his own grin widening, and let himself be swept up in the
movements of the dance. Dimly, he noticed that Geoffrey was
dancing, too, but it only seemed to be of passing interest.
Then, suddenly, the dancing was done, and the girls were leading
him back to the place of honor, thrusting another tankard of ale
into his hand. He took a long, thirsty pull at it. As
he lifted his head, Geoffrey scoffed. "Pooh! That is no
way to drink village ale, Alain! You do not sip it as though
it were a rare vintage—you pour it down your throat!"
So saying, he lifted his own tankard, tilted his head up, and drank
it down—and down, and down. Finally the tankard
exploded away from his lips and thumped down onto the table,
empty.
"Aye, that is the way of it!" a village youth next to him
cried with a laugh, and lifted his own tankard to demonstrate.
"Come, confess it!" Geoffrey cried. "You cannot even
keep pace with these stalwarts!"
"Oh, can I not!" Alain retorted, and tipped up his own
tankard. The ale was good, very good—but he did begin
to wish he could breathe. Nonetheless, he was hanged if he'd
admit defeat, so he hung in there, swallowing the rich dark tide,
until suddenly he gulped air. He thumped the tankard down,
drawing a very deep and welcome breath, and was amazed to hear the
villagers all cheer. He looked up, smiling, not quite
believing it, then grinning as he saw they were delighted to see
him enjoying himself. A fresh tankard appeared next to his
hand. Across from him, Geoffrey raised his mug in salute, and
Alain felt a sudden surge of determination not to be outdone.
He clinked his tankard against Geoffrey's, then copied his motions
as he swung the vessel up. He swallowed greedily, though to
tell the truth, he was liking it less than he had at first.
When the tankard was done, he slammed it down, almost in unison
with Geoffrey. The two young men stared each other in the
eye, and Geoffrey grinned. After a moment, so did Alain.
Then the tankards were whisked away and full ones set in their
place, but Alain was saved, because a trencher of sizzling pork was
slapped down in front of him. "Eat, as a hero
deserves!" someone cried, and he did.
He ate, he drank, and the notes of the pipes filled his head,
along with the scents of the meat and the ale. Things seemed
to be blurring together a bit, but the villagers were such warm and
friendly folk that it didn't worry him. He chewed the last
sliver of pork, and a girl was pulling him from his seat, laughing,
out to the dancing. Laughing, too, he feigned reluctance,
then fell into the steps with her, mimicking the extra sinuousness
with which she moved, and if she took advantage of the dance to
thrust herself against him, why, it seemed only polite to return
the gesture.
Then Geoffrey's face was there again, laughing, raising his
tankard in salute, and Alain was raising one in return, the
nut-brown ale cascading down his throat, then the tankard gone, and
the girl back, her eyes heavy-lidded, her smile inviting, her body
constantly against his as the dance moved them, till they seemed to
churn as one. Fire threaded itself through him, tingling in
his thighs, his hips, wherever his body touched hers.
Then she was holding up another mug of ale, and he was drinking
it down, lowering it to look into her eyes, and they seemed to be
huge and seemed to draw him in, and her lips were red and moist, so
moist, but she was not holding them up to him now, but drawing him
by the arm, out and away from the dancing, away from the fire, to a
place where shadows gathered, where their bodies crushed soft
bracken beneath them, and the music of the dance was distant, so
distant, but her mouth was warm, very warm, encompassing him, and
her touch thrilled him, so it seemed only right to return that
thrill, if he could.
CHAPTER 6
The whole castle was agog, bubbling with excitement, for the
elves hadn't made any pretense of keeping a secret. A brownie
had popped up at the kitchen door to announce that their unwelcome
guests were almost upon them.
Cordelia hurried out into the courtyard and took up her position
in a patch of sunlight, doing her best to look stern and
regal. She was resplendent in a white damask gown; the
sunlight glowed in her auburn hair, carefully set off by a plain
bronze circlet.
The bandits trudged in through the gatehouse, stumbling with
weariness and coated with dust. Cordelia stared,
appalled. Had they walked all night?
Then the foremost bandit looked up, saw her, and stared.
Suddenly, the weariness fell away from him. Cordelia gazed
back, amazed. Her first view of the bandits hadn't prepared
her at all for this. He was quite the most handsome man she
had ever seen—though that may have been as much due to the
hint of wildness in his face as to the actual set of his
features.
Or it may have been some other attribute; there was a lot of him
to admire, more than six feet, and most of it muscles. His
legs were exceedingly well formed, she thought dizzily, and that
sleeveless jerkin left one in no doubt as to the bulging muscles in
his shoulders and arms, though she did have to guess at the massive
chest beneath it. His face was open, his black eyes large and
long-lashed, his nose straight though perhaps a little short, his
lips full and red through the black jawline beard which blended
into the wealth of black curls on his head. His teeth flashed
white as he smiled, and the dangerous gleam in his eye as he looked
at her struck like a crossbow bolt, arousing sensations inside her
that she had never been aware of before, and wasn't at all sure she
liked.
Of course, she wasn't at all sure that she didn't like them,
either.
She stood a little straighter and tilted her chin up, looking
down her nose at him. "What do you here, sirrah?"
"Why," said the bandit, "my men and I have come to surrender
ourselves to the Lady Cordelia Gallowglass at the behest of him who
defeated us in battle."
"Indeed," Cordelia said, with her best attempt at
frostiness. "And what is his name?"
"Ah! My lady, that would he not tell us!" the bandit
chieftain lamented. "He said only that he was a knight who
sought to be worthy of you, and would not use his name in public
until he has proven his worth."
Cordelia stared. Such a poetic flight was quite unlike
Alain—and coming from the lips of this rogue with the tilted
eyebrows and the knowing smile, it set up strange quiverings inside
her. "Indeed! You have walked all night to tell me
this, sirrah?"
"Alas! We have—for the Wee Folk would not let us
rest. Whene'er we sought to halt, or to sit for more than
five minutes, they were upon us with pinches and stings."
Cordelia tried to glare at him while she considered. "I
might pity you, if there surely had been no reason for..."
She withheld Alain's name, not quite knowing why. ".
. . for the young knight of whom you speak to beset you
so harshly. What misdeed had you done?"
"Oh, no greater than to seek to rob a poor carter of his goods,"
the bandit said, trying to look apologetic.
"And to reive his wife of her virtue," squeaked a small voice
near Cordelia.
Her eyes widened, glaring. "How durst you, sir!"
"Ah!" the bandit said, the very picture of remorse.
"I would have stopped my men ere long! We had first to subdue
her husband, though, and must needs see that she not seek to aid
him."
Cordelia's indignation boiled over. "You have deserved
every pinch and every sting that the elves have given you, sir, and
far worse, I doubt not. Mayhap I should give you some more of
them, myself!"
The bandit chief stepped back, alarmed. He had some notion
of what Cordelia might be able to do if the spirit moved her.
He braced himself, ready to defend against a telepathic attack.
Her eyes widened; she felt the stir of his mind against her
own. "You are a warlock!"
An incredulous muttering sprang up behind him. He glanced
back at his men, then shrugged and looked up at her. "I had
not sought to make it a matter of general knowledge, my
lady—but yes, I am a warlock."
"For shame, sir! A warlock, and one nobly reared, for so I
can tell by your speech alone! For you, who were born gifted
in both rank and talents, to abuse your powers thus, by preying
upon the weak when, by virtue of birth, you had ought to defend
them!" Cordelia blazed.
"I know." The bandit chieftain bowed his head. "I
had meant to spend my life in defense of they who could not defend
themselves, my lady, to use my gifts for the general good—but
circumstance has decreed otherwise."
"Circumstance? Nay, tell me!" Cordelia bit off the
words sharply. "What circumstances could these be that would
turn you from the obligations of your station?" She reddened,
suddenly incensed as she realized what the rogue was doing.
"You seek to play upon my sympathies! Be sure, sir, I am not
so easily gulled as that! But what shall I do with you?"
She narrowed her eyes. "What mischiefs might Puck himself
invent? Can I be as ingenious as he?"
"I do not doubt it!" the bandit said quickly. "But I
pray you will not! Nay, if there is a gram of woman's pity in
you, forbear! Send us to the King's dungeon, if you willset
us to a year's hard labor—but do not seek to emulate the Wee
Folk in your treatment of us, I beg of you!"
Cordelia gave him a look of contempt. (She thought she did
it rather well.)
The bandit only looked up at her with wide, pleading eyes, and a
look of intense remorse.
Cordelia made a sound of disgust. "Well, indeed, we shall
see that the punishment does fit the crime! Get you to Sir
Maris, the King's Seneschal, and tell him of your deeds. Tell
him, too, who has sent you. Then, whatsoever punishment he
shall give you, see that you bear in patience."
"Aye, my lady." The bandit chieftain bowed his head to
hide his relief. "You are generous."
"Begone," she said, "before I forget my generosity."
"Begone?" He looked up and, for a moment, his face was
drawn, exhausted. Then he recovered his poise, forced himself
to straighten, and inclined his head. "As you wish it, my
lady. Come, my men." He turned away.
"Oh, bother!" Cordelia stamped her foot, hands on her
hips. "Nay, do not play the martyr! I will not be so
cruel as to seed you out with no rest at all. Go, go sit down
against the courtyard wall! Guards!"
The Captain of the Guards stepped up beside her. "Aye, my
lady?"
"Keep watch over these men, and if they seek to move more than a
yard from the places where they sit or lie, have at them!
Steward!"
"My lady?" Everybody was on hand, of course, watching and
waiting to be called upon.
"See to it these men are given gruel and water. Let them
rest till noon, then send them out."
"In the heat of the day, my lady?" The steward looked
appropriately horrified.
"Aye, even in the heat of the day!" Cordelia declared,
with some heat herself. "'Tis the least they deserve, who
have sought to wreak havoc on the weak." She turned back to
the bandits. "Rest then, and begone." And, in a whirl
of skirts, she turned and stalked away into the castle.
Forrest watched after her, reflecting that, if this was not the
most beautiful woman he had ever seen, she was certainly not far
from it. The vivacity, the fire within her, made her quite
the most fascinating female he had ever encountered. And she
was a witch!
He had heard stories of the delights that lay in store for those
who lay in love, warlock and witch, their minds melding as their
bodies did. He wondered if such ecstasy awaited those who
found themselves in such an embrace, even if they were not in
love.
Then, with a start of dismay, he realized that for himself, at
least, the question was academic. He fell in love easily and
frequently—and he knew the signs well. He had fallen
again ... And from the look in her eyes when they first saw
each other, he thought that Cordelia might have, too.
"You make it sound as though it were a trade to which a man
might be apprenticed, Geoffrey!" Alain
complained—almost, Geoffrey thought, scandalized.
"Well, 'tis not quite so methodical as that," he said,
grinning. "'Tis more a matter of an art for which one must
have a talent."
"As you have, to be sure," Alain said wryly. "But even
given that talent, there still seems to be a great amount that is
simply knowledge."
"Knowledge for some men, instinct for others." Geoffrey
shrugged. "If you enjoy the game for its own sake, you learn
it quickly enough. If you do not, you shall never play it
well, no matter how many years of study you invest."
"It can be learned, then!"
"Me forms, at least," Geoffrey agreed, "though they are worth
little without the true spirit. If you would court a lady,
you must dine by candlelight and, if 'tis possible, with a fiddler
or three nearby, but out of sight, playing softly."
"But her duenna..."
"Ah, we are assuming that her duenna is not there."
Geoffrey raised a forefinger. "We do not speak of ladies
only, after all, but also of village wenches. Still, if you
would win the heart of a fair lady, you must need find some time to
whisk her away by herself for conversation, even if 'tis only for
the quarter of an hour. A sheltered nook in her garden will
do, or a bower—and have your fiddlers seeming to stroll by,
or mayhap a lad who shall play soft songs of love on a flute."
"This by candlelight, or the light of the moon?"
"The moon is better," Geoffrey said judiciously, "if 'tis full,
or nearly. But candles will do, and that quite well."
"But what would I say?" Alain asked.
"Why, you must praise her eyes, her hair, her lips, the roses in
her cheeks," Geoffrey said. "It would help if you had written
a poem to her beauty and committed it to memory."
"I have small gift for versing," Alain said ruefully. "Oh,
there are poets aplenty who will scribble you a whole book of
verses for a piece of gold, my friend—and if you do not trust
your memory to work in her presence, you may surely bring the paper
along to read."
"But will she not know that 'twas not I who wrote it?"
"She may suspect," Geoffrey said carelessly, "but she will not
seek to prove it—if you do not give her occasion to.
Speak of love, or if you think you have it not, speak of the
feelings that rise within you when you look upon her."
"Why, there am I in confusion." Alain frowned, gazing off
into space. "If I look at your sister as she stands today, I
do feel most strangely within—and some of those feelings, I
would not speak of to her brother." He blushed
furiously. "Nor to any other being, mayhap, save my
father."
"I rejoice to hear it," Geoffrey said softly.
"Yet most swiftly rises, over the image that she is, the face
and form of the child she was." Alain turned to him in
consternation. "For she was indeed a comely little lass,
Geoffrey, as I am sure you remember."
"I would not have called her `comely,' " Geoffrey muttered.
"Nay, of course not—you are her brother. Still, the
sauciness, the scoldings, the brightness of her laughter—all
that arises when I look upon the grown Cordelia. It
seems..." He broke off, shaking his head.
"Come now, you can say it!" Geoffrey coaxed. "Out
with it! Speak it, then—nay, speak both, speak all, for
I see you are a very welter of feelings now."
"Aye, and they go at cross-purposes." Alain scowled at the
back of his horse's head. "On the one hand, there is the
feeling that the impish girl is still within the gentle form I see
before me, and although that has its attractive side, it is also
somewhat repugnant—for she was ever as quick to turn and
scold as she was to speak in mirth."
"I would say that child is still there within her, of a
certainty," Geoffrey said slowly, "for I have heard my father say
that we all are children within, and that 'tis tragedy beyond
speaking if that child dies."
"Aye, I have heard our chaplain say that, too." Alain
gazed off at the countryside. "That we all must strive to
keep alive the child within us—for Christ said that we must
become as little children if we would enter the kingdom of
Heaven."
"Become," Geoffrey reminded, "not remain."
But Alain wasn't listening. "I am not sure how I felt
toward that child, though, Geoffrey."
"Oh, stuff and nonsense!" Geoffrey said, with a flash of
irritation. "You did trail behind her like a besotted
mooncalf when you were twelve, Alain."
"Well, aye, I mind me of that," the Prince admitted,
embarrassed. "I speak now of a younger age, though, when she
dared to speak to me as though I were a lad with an empty
head."
"Oh, aye, but she did that when you were twelve, tooand fifteen,
and seventeen, and is like as not to do it again even now!"
Geoffrey scoffed. "Be sure, she will. If that truly
does repel you, Alain, seek elsewhere for a wife."
"Well ... I would not say `repel,' " the Prince
said. "It does nettle me, though—sometimes. At
others, it is as much a matter of spice as of bitter. There
are thorns on the stem, so to speak—but the man would be a
fool who would not brave those thorns for the beauty of the
rose." Geoffrey smiled, amused. Alain did have
something of the poet's gift within him, after all. "Yet what
is the feeling that does counter such ardent praise?"
"Why, simply that she was near to being a sister!" Alain
burst out. "Or the closest that I ever had, at
least—for she was the only female child near to my own age
that I saw with any frequency. How can one be in love with a
sister? 'Tis against nature, when one has known a lass too
well, too long, and too young. Why, there may be good
fellowship, but never love—or, at least, not the sort of love
that must be between a man and a wife."
"Yes, I see," Geoffrey said, nodding, "though I am not at all
sure that you would think it against nature if we were speaking of
peasant folk who lived in a small village, where all know one
another from earliest youth. When that feeling comes upon
you, try to remember in your heart the mooncalf that you were when
you were twelve. Surely, you did not then seem to find her
too sisterly."
"Well, there is some truth in that," Alain said. "But if I
were truly in love, Geoffrey, would I not lie awake o' nights,
dreaming of her face, her form? Would I not find food to be
of small appeal? Life itself of no joy? Would I not
spend my days in moping about and sighing?"
"Aye, if you were a fool," Geoffrey said. "In truth,
whenever I see such a man, I cannot help but think that 'tis not
love he feels, but sickness. What do you feel, when you lie
awake dreaming of her face and form?"
"Why, I am near to crying out in madness, that she seems to
entice, yet mock!" Alain burst out, then broke off suddenly,
staring. "You have tricked me, Geoffrey!"
"But only for your own benefit," Geoffrey said.
Cordelia couldn't resist coming out to see her guests off.
In the end, she relented, and told the guards not to expel them at
noon, but to let them rest until two o'clock. She chafed and
fretted at the delay in following Alain and Geoffrey—but also
found herself thinking constantly about Forrest and seeing him and
his men off. She told herself the strange feelings that
churned within her were only nervousness, and anticipation of
seeing such a gang of blackguards out her gate.
Nonetheless, as the time approached, she found herself moving
across the outer bailey to where Forrest reposed, a little apart
from his men, stretched out in the shade of the kitchens. But
he opened his eyes as she came near, and for a moment, she found
herself trapped by that ebony gaze, mischievously admiring as it
traversed her from head to toe, insouciant and arrogant with the
knowledge that he was attractive to her.
Cordelia knew that so surely that she also knew it must have
been a sort of psychic leakage, an unconscious projection of his
that was bound to make a woman want to come closer—and the
most maddening thing was that it worked. She flushed and
stepped closer, her voice as cold as she could make it. "You
are no peasant. What do you among this gang of thieves?"
Forrest sat up, running a hand through his hair and
shrugging. "I live as I can, milady."
"Surely you could live better than as a robber!"
"So I thought." Forrest drew his knees up and clasped his
arms about them. "I joined a lord's retinue—but he went
to war against his neighbor, and lost. Then the neighbor
hunted down those of us who refused to turn our coats, to slay
us—so I fled to the greenwood."
It was a harrowing tale, and Cordelia found herself fascinated
as well as sympathetic. She tried not to let any sign of it
show in her face. "But you are a warlock! Surely you
could have found a way by the use of your powers!"
"Could I indeed?" Forrest's smile curdled. "We are
not all like yourself and your brothers, milady—oh, yes, we
have heard of you, all young witchfolk have heard of you, even to
the farthest corners of Gramarye, I doubt not! The sons and
daughter of the High Warlock and High Witch? Oh, aye, we all
have heard of you! But few indeed are they who have so many
talents as you, or in such strength' Myself, I can read minds, and
craft witch-moss if I concentrate my thoughts with all my might,
but little more."
Again, his gaze raked Cordelia, making her feel as though he had
touched her, lightly, caressingly.
She tried to hide a shiver. "Nay, you are not," she said
tartly. "Still, you could have accepted service with the
Crown!"
Forrest grinned. "I have said it was the eldest who was
taken to Court to learn manners and love of the King and Queen,
milady, not the youngest. No, I found myself resenting them
highly, they who had shorn my father of respect, and myself of
opportunity."
"I had not thought..."
"Did you not think the King and Queen were merciful? They
did not behead the rebel lords for traitors, after all. By
custom and precedent, they could have hanged or beheaded all the
lords, scattered their armies, and attainted their wives and
children, so that none might inherit."
"Aye." Forrest shrugged. "How could you, when the
only witchfolk you have met have been those of the Royal Coven, or
the few who dared to try to seize all that they might, no matter
whom they hurt? They had the power, milady, that most of us
lack." He shrugged. "Too little to be of use, too much
to let us feel safe in our likeness to others—that is your
garden variety of witch."
Cordelia longed to tell him that the proper word was "esper,"
for those born with psionic talents, but knew she must not, to
anyone who did not already know of the great civilization on the
Terran planets outside of Gramarye.
"But you are a gentleman, at the least, and more likely the son
of a lord, if I mistake you not!"
"You do not." Forrest inclined his head. "But I am a
youngest son, and my father is a lord attainted in the first
rebellion against Queen Catharine, before either of us were
born."
"The Crown did let the rebel lords keep their lands and
titles..."
"But they were ever suspect thereafter." Forrest raised a
finger. "And their eldest sons were taken as royal hostages,
to learn loyalty to the Crown—but not their younger. My
father told me with regret that I had my own way to make in the
world, though he would help me as he could."
"Surely there were many positions open to a lord's son!"
"Honorable positions?" Forrest shrugged. "I had a
choice between the church and the army—anything lesser was
not honorable, and I am not cut out to be a priest. The
former can be of value in telling me when my enemies are coming,
but that does not always guarantee victory. The last is too
exhausting to be of much use as more than an amusement."
Cordelia's heart went out to him. "But you are still
branded with the sign of difference."
"Only figuratively, praise Heaven!" Forrest grinned again.
"And then only if I let it show. I have become expert
in dissembling. Indeed, I warrant you would not have guessed,
had you not been a witch yourself."
"Aye, I know, and given the estates to those who had supported
them loyally in the war." Forrest nodded, chagrined.
"They were merciful, even as you say—but the shame of the
parents clung to the sons, and it was no great boon to me to have
my eldest brother set even higher above me."
Cordelia remembered how brothers could vie against one another,
and had heard of families in which the rivalry was much sharper
than in her own. "You did not at least lack for meat, nor a
roof over your head! In truth, you did not lack for
comfort!"
"'Tis true," Forrest admitted, "but only till I was
grown—which is to say, sixteen. Then was I set on mine
own, for my father died, and my eldest brother had no great love
for me. You may say 'twas bad luck that I pledged troth to
the wrong lord and had to run for my life, making a living by my
wits—or you may say 'twas mine own recklessness that drove me
to the greenwood. I could not argue, in any case." He
looked up at Cordelia, and suddenly, his eyes seemed huge, seemed
to devour her, and with alarm, she felt herself turning weak
inside, felt a warming and a thrilling in the blood, far worse than
she had felt for the very first time so short a while ago—or
far better—and his words made it even sharper. "Were I
not so attainted and so ashamed, were I not cast down to banditry
and poverty, I might dream of suing and sighing, of wooing and
courting so beautiful a lady as yourself."
The blood roared in her ears, but she knew extravagant flattery
for what it was—and loved it, in a part of herself that she
tried desperately to deny. She heard herself saying, as
though from far away, "A man's lot is never lost. Faith and
industry, and honest striving, can resurrect the fortunes of any
nobleman, no matter how low he has fallen. You must never
give up hope, sir."
His eyes fired with that hope she had spoken of. "Surely,
my lady," he breathed, "if you say it, I shall hope—and
strive to clear my name, and prove myself worthy of regard."
She stared at him, stiff, her face burning.
He added, softly, "The regard of my King, of course." But
he fooled neither of them—nor did he intend to. They
stared at each other for seconds that seemed to last for an
uncountable time, until Cordelia felt she must break from the
strain. Clutching her hands at her waist, she said, "Then go,
sir, with your men, and prove your proud words."
He stood up slowly and stepped close. His scent seemed to
enfold her, the scent of sweat and dust—and something else,
some musk she did not know. He towered over her, so close, so
close, but not close enough... "If you say it, my lady," he
breathed, "I shall." And he held her gaze for one more long,
long moment until finally she gave ground, stepping back a little,
to break the strain.
Forrest smiled sadly, and turned to bawl at his men. They
came to their feet with groans, most shaking themselves from sleep,
and a scullery boy passed among them with a bucket and a
ladle. Another stepped behind him with a basket of
rolls. Each outlaw took a roll, took a drink, and looked up
at Cordelia in gratitude, muttering, "Mercy, Lady."
"Gladly given," she answered in her most lofty manner, wondering
for the first time, with desperation verging on panic, why her
mother and father didn't come out to help her with this.
Then Forrest bawled orders at his men, chivvying them into some
sort of order and shooing them out through the gatehouse. But
before the shadows swallowed him up, he looked back for a long,
last look at Cordelia, and his eyes seemed to glow.
Then he turned away, and was gone.
The whole of the outer bailey seemed to exhale in one vast sigh
of relief.
All except Cordelia, who stood rigid, staring after him.
Above, at the solar window, her mother beamed down, and her father
scowled.
"She did that rather well, my husband," Gwendylon said.
"Yes, she did," Rod answered. "And so, unfortunately, did
he."
"Ah, yes." Gwen's voice was entirely too cool. "He
doth seem to have gained her interest. However, it will do
her no harm to find some other suitor after her affections."
"Well ... if you say so." Rod did not look
convinced. "But I don't like the look of him."
"Or the look he gave our daughter? I cannot say I am
surprised. Yet be easy in thine heart, mine husband—she
is warded against those who would use her, as well as any maiden
may be."
"And no better. Why didn't you go down there and help her
out?"
"Why did not you?"
"Mostly because of your hand on my arm restraining me, every
time I started for the door."
"Well, that is true." Gwen smiled, dimpling. "After
all, 'twas to her they were bound to surrender, not to us."
"True," Rod admitted. "Still, I think she could have used
a little support."
"She is experienced with those who would do her harm, and is
quite ready to deal with them herself, mine husband. We
cannot always shield her—but I will admit 'tis best for her
to experience such men as he, when we stand near."
"Oh, you bet it is," Rod said softly.
The bandit troop passed out from the gatehouse and down the
winding road, descending the mound on which the castle stood.
There the road split, the eastern fork straggling off into the
wood, toward Runnymede. They trooped off eastward with
it—but as soon as they were in under the trees, there were
mutterings in the ranks.
"We could go now, and none would ever be the wiser!"
"Now could we fade in among the greenwood leaves, and none
should ever find us!"
Pebbles whizzed from the roadside. One clipped the last
speaker on the pate as it passed, knocking his hat off. He
cried out, pressing a hand to his head, then bent down to pick up
his hat—and a stick popped up out of the roadway to spank him
very soundly on the rump. He straightened up with a howl,
pressing his other hand to the injured anatomy.
"I think the Wee Folk have not forgotten us," said
Forrest. "We are not quite yet free to go where we will."
"Then when shall we be?" cried one of the bandits.
"Why, you heard the lady—when we have spoken to Sir
Maris!"
Sure enough, a few rods farther on, the roadway opened out into
a small clearing, and there stood Sir Maris with his dozen knights
at his back.
"The lady bids us bring ourselves to you for punishment, Sir
Seneschal." Forrest bowed a little.
"She has done well," the old knight grated. "We are freed
of any need to require thee at the King's dungeon."
"But you promised..." one outlaw burst out, before another
clapped a hand over his mouth.
"Aye, I gave my word," said Sir Maris, "and gave it in Their
Majesties' names—so thou art free to go. But see to it
thou dost not rob, nor steal, nor poach, ever again!"
"We shall not, sir," said Forrest, and the whole band behind him
mumbled hasty denials.
"Thou, sir, most of all!" Sir Maris glared at
Forrest. "Thou, the son of a nobleman, lowering thyself to
banditry by the roadside! Thou shouldst be red with
mortification, to stand before a knight! Thou shouldst be
afeard to admit thou wert ever dubbed a knight bachelor!"
"I am ashamed." Forrest lowered his
head—coincidentally hiding his expression.
"Well, mayhap there is some saving grace left within thee," the
old knight grumbled, leaning on his staff. "Go thou, and mend
thy ways, then—and see that thou dost make better use of the
life and fortunes God hath given thee! Be mindful, whene'er
thou art tempted to despoil those weaker than thyself, or those
come for a moment within thy power—what would any one of
these men of thine give, to have been born as thou wert? Be
grateful for what thou hast, sirrah, and do not berate God for not
having given thee more."
A flash of annoyance showed in Forrest's eyeresentment, quickly
masked. He bowed again. "I shall take your words to
heart, Sir Seneschal."
"See that thou dost! Farewell—and never come before
me again with complaints of misdeeds being levied against
thee! Go, go one and all—into the greenwood! You
are pardoned, you are free to seek honest labor within the King's
domain! Go, and never stray again!" He raised staff and
hands, dismissing them.
The bandits knew when to take their chance. They faded in
among the trees, one and all.
Including Forrest. He picked his way through underbrush,
then strode quickly over last year's fallen leaves until he was a
hundred feet from the roadway. There he stopped and listened,
and heard faint sounds that must have been his men gathering
together again. He set off in the opposite direction.
At last he was freed from their weight, hanging about his
neck—at last he was freed from the need to care for
them. If they still wanted him to lead them badly enough,
they could come and find him.
He hoped they would not. He wanted the freedom to be
himself again, to try to build his own future once more. He
had decided to take Sir Maris at his word, and make better use of
his time, indeed. He strode off through the woods, circling
back toward Castle Gallowglass, the image of a lissome form and a
beautiful face under a wreath of auburn hair burning in his
mind.
He intended to court Cordelia.
CHAPTER 7
"Alain? Ala-a-ain! Alain!"
Alain opened his eyes, and the light seemed to lance through to
his brain. He squeezed them shut, then forced them open a
crack. The light still pained him, and that infernal voice
was booming in his ears, sending pain rolling through his
head. "Alain! Praise Heaven! I feared I had lost
you!"
"So did I," Alain gasped. "More softly, Geoffrey, I
prithee! There is no need to shout!"
"Why, I do not." Geoffrey grinned, recognizing the
condition. He knelt and slid a hand under his friend's back,
pulling him up. "Drink, now. 'Tis time to break your
fast."
"Bury me," Alain groaned, "for I have died." But he took
the tankard obediently and drank. Then the taste hit him, and
he yanked the tankard down and spat. "Pah! 'Tis the
same vile potion with which you slew me!"
"'Tis good country ale," Geoffrey rejoined, "and 'twill go some
way toward making you whole and sound again." He was still
grinning. "But wherefore did you hide ... Oh, I
see."
Alain frowned. What was he talking about? He
followed the direction of Geoffrey's glance, and saw the bracken
flattened in what must surely be more room than he needed by
himself—and saw the stockings that lay there, forgotten as
the wench had tiptoed home in the false dawn. Alain
stared. "But ... but I did not . .." Then
memory struck, and he buried his face in his hands and
groaned. "I did!"
"Why, then, be glad!" Geoffrey slapped him on the
shoulder, albeit gently. "You have slain a monster, you have
drunk deeply, and you have lain with a wench! You live,
Alain, you are alive as you never have been!"
"I am dead, as I never have been," the Prince groaned, "or
nearly. You do not understand, Geoffrey."
"Oh, but I do. Quite well."
"Nay, you do not! I am the Prince, it is given to me to
take care of my people, to guard their welfare—not to use or
abuse them!"
"I doubt that you did," Geoffrey said slowly. "But you
have said it yourself!"
"I have said no such thing," Geoffrey replied with
asperity. "I told you to be glad of what you have done, and I
say it still. The wench was more than willing—she was
eager! I saw myself how she passed beyond flirtation to
invitation, to leading and chivvying. What happened after she
led you away, I cannot say, for I did not see—but if you
could remember, I think you would find that she did urge you on
even then, and did never say, 'Hold!' " "Nay, she did." Alain
pressed a hand to his forehead. "The memory comes
now—she did say, "My lord, how naughty! You must not!'
"
Geoffrey smiled slowly. "And what did you do?"
"Why, I drew back, and took my hand from her, as any gentleman
would."
"And what said she to that?"
"She took my hand and pressed it back where it had been, saying,
'Nay, you must—if you wish it.' I assured her that I
did..."
"And thereafter she told you where she wished you to put your
hands."
Alain blushed furiously. "Aye, though not always with
words."
Geoffrey shook his head. "You are wrong to torment
yourself with spasms of conscience. She wished it, and you
were too drunk to refuse her, or to deny your own desires.
There is no cause for you to feel guilt in anything save having
drunk to excess—and therein must I share the blame, for I
egged you on to it."
"My guilt is my own, for whatever I have done, I could have
chosen not to!"
"Yet you would not hesitate to share the glory." Geoffrey
grinned, shaking his head. "Well, bear in mind the wench's
name, and that of this village, so that if she does prove by child,
you can see that she is provided for. That much obligation
you may claim, though I would not think it necessary. Still,
if she knew who it was had lain with her last night, I have no
doubt she would boast of it, and raise the child with pride."
Alain started to pull on his hose. "Then I must tell
her!"
"Nay, nay." Geoffrey restrained him with a hand on his
shoulder. "If she should prove by child, I said. If she
does not, she will keep the memory of this night to herself, I
doubt not—or if she chooses to share it, 'twill be as a
boast, that she shared the bed of the knight who slew the
monster." Alain hesitated, half into his hose.
"Nay, do pull on your clothes," Geoffrey urged, "for we must be
away."
"Ought I not..."
"Nay, you ought not, for she may try to presume upon your good
nature." Geoffrey did not add "and innocence."
"Did you say a single word about love, or desiring anything
further of her?"
Alain scowled, clutching his head, forcing the memories up from
the alcoholic murk. "Nay. As I remember it, I could
scarce say a word."
"Then do not seek her out again, for if you do speak of love you
do not feel, or of desiring further acquaintance with her, you
would hurt her heart when you left. As it is, she will
remember a night's sport, and so will you—and since that is
all she desired and more than you promised, she will have nothing
bitter in her heart. Speak again, and she may. Come, be
of good cheer!"
Alain stood, fastening his hose-belt about his waist, but he was
still dark of face, brooding.
Geoffrey eyed him narrowly. "What else, then?"
"What a vile excuse for a man am I!" Alain burst
out. "To bed one woman while I love another! Indeed,
how can I truly say I love Cordelia, if I go slavering after every
shapely form like a dog in heat!"
"I would scarcely say that you went slavering," Geoffrey said
drily, "or that it was you who went after her. Still, 'tis a
sad fact, Alain, and maybap the bane of our species, that a man can
desire many women, even though he loves only one."
"But does this not mean that I am not truly in love with
her?"
"Not a whit," Geoffrey assured him. "The troubadours would
have it otherwise, I know—they sing to their patronladies
that a man's desire springs from falling in love, and that the man
will only desire her with whom he is in love but the truth is
otherwise. It is for me, at least."
Alain looked up. "You have been in love with one, yet
desired others?"
Geoffrey shrugged. "Either that, or been in love with many
at one time, or never been in love at all—have it as you
will. I fear that fidelity is as much a matter of selfcontrol
as of love, Alain."
"Well—I am schooled in that, at least." The Prince
seemed somewhat reassured.
"Too much so," Geoffrey told him. "Indeed, I rejoiced most
amazingly to see you drop your armor of chivalrous discipline for a
few hours, Alain. There is more to life than rules and
duties."
"I have been told that." Alain looked him straight in the
eye. "I have been taught that a wise ruler must recognize
that impulse toward excess in his people, so that he may understand
and be merciful if they do not cleave to the letter of his
laws."
"Have you been told, too, that men may be tempted and fall?"
"Aye." Alain looked away. "But I think that I never
truly understood it before."
"That may be, that well may be," Geoffrey agreed, "but you do
understand it now."
"Oh, aye! Most thoroughly!" Alain turned away in
selfdisgust. "Surely I am not worthy of the Lady
Cordelia." Geoffrey sighed. "I thought you had but now
said that you could understand that men could fall."
"Well ... aye, but .. ."
"Then what matter this one lapse, so long as you are faithful
after you wed?"
"But how can I be sure that I will be? I had thought love
was my assurance, but ... Geoffrey! How if I am not in
love?"
"If you can even ask the question, then you are not," Geoffrey
said, with inexorable conviction, "and if you are not, then 'tis
far better you learn it now, than after the wedding."
"I am in love with her!" Alain said. "I must be, for
I have planned it for years!"
"'Twas your head did that planning, not your heart. Yet if
your love is sure, it will stand the test."
"What test is that?"
"The test of conversing with pretty maids and beauteous ladies,
even of kissing them now and again. You must risk your heart,
Alain, or you may never truly find it." Geoffrey clapped him
on the shoulder. "Come, don your doublet, for the day draws
on apace."
"Aye, if you say it." Alain shrugged into his doublet and
turned away, fastening the buttons as he went.
Geoffrey followed him, reflecting that a quick exit might be
advisable, in case the wench came back looking for her hero.
He trusted neither her, nor Alain's conscience and sense of
duty. Besides, they had a world to wander, villains to
chastise, damsels to rescue ...
Beautiful damsels, and pretty maids all in a row. A long
row, Geoffrey decided. If he was going to trust his sister's
happiness to Prince Alain's heart, he was going to make sure that
heart had been tried in the crucible first.
In the vastness of the forest, a woman cried.
Alain snapped rigid, like a bird dog hearing the flap of
wings. "A damsel in distress!"
"Aye, from the sound of it." Geoffrey turned toward the
sound, too. "Let us beware of traps, though."
"Ridiculous!" Alain scoffed. "Who would think to
trap two knights with a woman's cry?"
"Who would think to summon drakes to the arrow by simulating the
cry of a duck?" Geoffrey returned. "Nonetheless, we
must go—but with tactical soundness, shall we not? Let
one go posthaste, and the other go carefully."
"Then I shall take the posthaste." Alain grinned and
plunged into the thicket at the side of the road. His horse
neighed in protest, but fought its way through. Geoffrey
followed the path made by Alain's horse, but rather more
warily.
He could hear the sobbing through the trees—forlorn,
heart-rending, almost as though the woman who wept was trying to
choke her sobs down, but not succeeding.
Alain rode through the brush and between the trees until they
opened out into a river meadow, a broad expanse of clover dotted
with wildflowers and bordered along the stream by weeping
willows. Under the largest sat a damsel, head bowed into her
hands.
Alain slowed, going softly, wondering if he had the right to
interfere—and Geoffrey came up behind him. They were so
silent in their approach they were almost upon her before she heard
the horses' hooves. She leaped up in fright, then gasped in
fear and backed away under the willow branches.
"Fear not, fair maiden." Alain reined in his horse.
"I would not hurt a lady in any way."
"We are knights," said Geoffrey, "sworn to protect the weak and
punish the wicked."
"If any man has wronged you, tell us," said Alain, "that we may
challenge him to mortal combat."
The damsel stopped withdrawing, at least. Alain's eyes
were fast upon her, and it was scarcely a wonder. She was
slender; long lashes swept across her eyes, so pale they seemed
gossamer; her golden hair fairly glowed in the sunlight, sweeping
down to the middle of her back. Her little heart-shaped face
was the perfect setting for such huge, lustrous blue eyes and her
small, pert nose. The width and fullness of her lips were
surprising, seeming somewhat out of place—but making a man
ache to lean down and kiss them. When she looked up at him,
he felt a stirring within him, and had to fight to keep it from
emerging as a shudder. She was, after all, a
beauty—very much a beauty. She wore a bliaut and a
kirtle, highnecked, full-sleeved, that should have been very
modest, but was made of some fabric that molded itself to her body
with every gentlest breath of wind, revealing the lush contours
beneath.
Geoffrey glanced about, trying to discern some hint as to why
the damsel wept—and why a lady of gentle breeding should be
alone by a riverside. He did see a palfrey, tethered to the
willow, grazing beneath its branches. Other than that, there
was no sign.
"Lady, we shall protect you," he called out. "How is it
you have come here alone?"
"Alas, good sirs!" She stepped forward timorously, coming
out from beneath the branches of the willow—but only a little
way. "There was a man—my true love, I thought—who
bade me meet him here this morning, as the sun rose. But the
dawn has gone, the sun nears the noon, and he has not come."
Geoffrey frowned, having something of a nasty suspicion as to
what had happened—but when it came to a motive, he could only
understand the most obvious, and it didn't make sense.
"Wherefore would a gentleman fail in rendezvous with so beautiful a
lady as yourself?"
The lady lowered her eyes, blushing, then looked up with a
sigh. "Ah, sir! I can only believe that he is a true
love turned false, or was never a true love at all! I blush
with shame to think that he only toyed with my affections!"
And she heaved another sigh.
Alain caught himself staring; the heavy sigh had done
wonders. Her gown clung to her figure, after all, and her
figure was very much worth clinging to. He found a desire to
do so himself.
Indeed, a very great desire.
"The man who forswore a tryst with you must have been a fool
indeed," he breathed.
"A fool," Geoffrey agreed, "or a very shrewd villain. Have
you a sister, milady?"
"Aye, sir—a younger sister." Her eyes were wide in
wonder. "How could you know?"
"You have no brother? It is the firstborn grandson who
will inherit?"
"Nay, sir—it is she who weds first." Then the maiden
gasped, covering her mouth with her hand. "You do not
believe..."
"How did word of this tryst come to you?" Geoffrey
asked.
"Why, from my sister! 'Twas she who brought me word from
my lord ... No! You cannot think that my own sister
would betray me!"
"And that she even now importunes upon him?" Geoffrey
shook his head sadly. "It has happened before this, and will
happen again."
"But wherefore should she deal so cruelly with me?"
"Why, to have your lover for her husband, and your father's
estates for her own," Alain said gently, his eyes full of
sympathy.
The damsel stared in shock, then burst into tears.
Alain leaped down off his horse and ran to take her in his arms,
patting her back, soothing, making comforting noises. He
looked up and glared at Geoffrey over the damsel's head.
Geoffrey felt a surge of annoyance, and fought to keep his face
impassive. Was the man truly so great a fool as that?
Or, perhaps, merely inexperienced.
Geoffrey knew that Alain had had very little acquaintance with
girls his own age, and that only under the very rigid rules of
court formalities. But perhaps he was not so great a fool
after all, for it was he who was holding the beautiful maiden in
his arms—and she certainly was a beauty.
Geoffrey tried to smile, but it came out as a grimace of
distaste. "Come, maiden," he called. "Where is your
home?"
The damsel's sobs had slackened. Alain stroked her hair,
murmuring inanities, looking stunned. "There, now—life
shall go on, and you shall find a truer love than he. Come,
let us dry these tears." He pulled a handkerchief from his
own sleeve and dabbed at her cheeks. "Five years since, you
shall look back on this day with amusement, and bless the
mischance, the betrayal, that held him from you—for you shall
find your true love, I doubt not, and discover him to be a far
better man than he who turned from you to your sister only because
you were not there, and she was."
The disturbing thing, Geoffrey decided, was that Alain really
meant every word of it. In this case, it was not that he had
acquired the gift of flattery—it was a genuine sympathy, a
real caring for a person who was suffering. .
Though, Geoffrey reflected cynically, Alain's sympathy might not
have been quite so strong if the damsel had not been quite so
beautiful.
"But has he truly turned to her?" she cried, eyes brimming
full again.
Alain stared down at her, feeling his heart turn over in his
breast—but it was a heart that was pledged to Cordelia, as
his conscience reminded him.
Well, no—it wasn't, really. After all, she had
rejected his suit—spurned him, in fact. He felt a
certain kinship with this maiden, who had sought her true love and
been disappointed by him.
He shook the thought from him. It was unworthy of a
knight. "It may be that he has not turned to another," he
said. "It may be that he remains true to you."
"Oh, can you truly think so?" She stepped back from him a
pace, looking up, eyes brightening with hope.
"It may be," Alain said solemnly, "though it may be as we
suspect, too. Only by returning to your father's house shall
we discover the truth. Come, tell us—where is your
home?"
"Yonder, sir." She pointed down the roadway. "In the
West, a day's ride."
"So far as that?" Geoffrey crowded his horse up near
them. "You have come so long a way by yourself, unescorted,
through half the night, alone?"
"Aye." She looked up at him, shuddering. "I did
fear; I did start at every noise. I thought every moment to
see a band of outlaws step forth from the greenwood, to assail
me."
There was every chance that exactly that would have happened,
Geoffrey knew, and that her purse would have been the least of
which they would have reft her—if, by good luck, he and Alain
had not sent the local gang packing. "But by good fortune,
they were all abed, and you came here untouched, to wait for the
dawn. You hid till daylight, did you not?"
She nodded.
Geoffrey looked at her, court-bred and dainty, her delicate gown
soiled at the hem, and knew that any woodsman worth his salt could
have found her trail and tracked her down. It had been luck,
good luck only, that no bandit had done exactly that.
"The owl's hooting never had so much quality of menace as it did
last night," she said.
"Then 'tis only by great good fortune that you have come thus
far in safety." Alain looked down at her sternly, "You must
return to your father's house forthwith—but you must not ride
alone. Come, mount! We shall accompany you!"
"I could not ask that of you." But even as she said it,
gladness suffused her face. "Assuredly, you are bound to
other destinations."
Alain saw those huge eyes glowing up at him, and knew that he
could not do anything else. "No true knight could turn down a
request from a damsel in distress," he told her. "We shall
ride with you—and we shall not hear a word to the
contrary."
Nor was she apt to give it, Geoffrey thought—but he did
not say so. After all, he would never turn down an
opportunity to escort so voluptuous a lady, either.
"I hesitate to ask it of you." She bowed her head, looking
up at him through long lashes. "Surely you must be bound on a
mission of great importance."
"You may say that." Alain smiled. "We are two
knightserrant, wandering where we will to discover damsels in
distress, so that we may give them aid and succor. I could
not think of any mission more important. Could you, Sir
Geoffrey?"
"Oh, nay, assuredly not, Sir Alain!" Geoffrey fought to
keep both sarcasm and amusement from his voice. At least one
of them was sincere.
"Then 'tis said; 'tis done." Alain stepped away from the
lady, albeit reluctantly, and stepped over to the palfrey. He
untied it and led it out from under the willow leaves. "Come,
my lady, mount!" He dropped the horse's reins, set his hands
to her waist, and lifted her up to the saddle, amazed that she felt
so light. She gasped with surprise and fright, clinging to
his arms, then smiled tremulously as she found herself on horseback
again. She hooked a knee about the horn of the sidesaddle,
arranged her skirts, and beamed down upon him. "Bless you,
sir!"
She looked up at Geoffrey, and for a second, he was hit with the
full force of that enchanting gaze, that adorable, piquant face,
those full ruby lips... "I shall praise you in my prayers
every night! How can I thank you for your mercy, to a poor,
lost damsel and, aye, a foolish one. How foolish, how
credulous, to believe what I have believed!"
And Geoffrey found himself reassuring her, just as Alain had
done. "Your trust does you credit, even though it was
betrayed—for surely, what woman would think that her own
sister would play her false? What man could think less than
highly of a woman who would ride to meet her lover?
Assuredly, my lady, we must accompany you!"
And, as he pulled his horse into step beside hers, he realized
the truth of what he had said. Thank heavens she was an
innocent, for that face, that voice, that form gave her a power
over men that was absolutely incredible.
Somehow, it never occurred to either of them that she might not
really be so innocent, and might know exactly how much power she
had. Even more should they have believed that she knew how to
use that power, too.
They rode back onto the forest road, turning their horses away
to the west, Geoffrey and Alain vying, with witticisms and
flattery, to raise her spirits. They succeeded
admirably—within half an hour her eyes were alight with
mirth, and her laughter rang like music in their ears.
The bandits were on their way, and Cordelia resolutely forgot
about them. Yes, she had put those dark, reckless eyes, broad
shoulders, and sensuous lips firmly out of her mind, and she knew
she had, because she thought of them every now and then, just to
make sure. Her mind clear, she went soaring off on her
broomstick to track down her brother and her suitor, cursing the
delay under her breath—with far too much vehemence.
It didn't take her long to find the village in which Alain and
Geoffrey had spent the night. She searched the minds of the
villagers quickly and lightly, injecting a thought of the two
heroes who had come through the town, and reading the memories that
rose in response. Her eyes widened as she learned of the
appearance of the ogre, and of the battle. She was even more
surprised to learn that it was Alain who had slain the monster, not
her brother—or, at least, that Geoffrey had given him full
credit for the deed. She wondered, for a moment, if her
brother had lied; then decided that he probably had not. Not
that Geoffrey was above lying, mind you, or at least
prevaricating—it was merely that, in this instance, there was
more for him to gain by truth, at least in terms of his goals for
Alain. Geoffrey was not the sort to lie unless it was to give
him a military advantage, anyway, and never in matters of honor or
glory. Chivalry, to him, was sacrosanct. How silly, she
thought, but was astounded when she found no memory of their
leaving; everyone in the village seemed to have waked to find them
gone—except ...
Except the village priest, who had risen early for Matins, and
seen them ride into the forest ... Cordelia arrowed off
toward the trees.
CHAPTER 8
Cordelia sped high above the treetops, a speck in the sky,
listening for thoughts from her brother and ... yes,
suitor. But flying takes time, and broomsticks move
considerably more slowly than jet planes. The sun was
dropping toward the western horizon before Cordelia finally "heard"
Alain's mind with her own. Not Geoffrey's, of course—he
habitually kept his mind closed, his thoughts guarded, and he took
considerably more concentration to read, if he did not choke off
all contact. But Alain ...
Alain was besotted.
Cordelia sat rigid for a moment, wide-eyed, horrified, all
attention riveted to Alain's words reverberating in her mind,
gallant and flattering. Why, he had never spoken to her like
this! Through his ears, she heard the musical, belllike tones
of the female voice answering him. She sat frozen, unable to
think, unable to spare the slightest thought for anything else
...
She was falling.
She was plunging toward the earth, broomstick in a nosedive,
falling out of the sky! She truly had become distracted, not
even sparing a thought for telekinesis! Anger flowed; at
herself, for such carelessness; at Alain, for his fickleness; at
Geoffrey, for having led him into this; but most of all, at that
scarlet hussy who dared to steal the affections of her man!
Never mind that the girl probably knew nothing of Cordelia, or
Alain's proposal—she was loathsome anyway!
But Cordelia was not about to be outdone, nor to see her prize
stolen from her. She would match the hussy on her own ground,
and win! She brought the broom out of its nosedive and sped
above the treetops, scolding herself for having let Alain get
away. Surely there must have been some way to say no and
insist on a proper courtship, without packing him off to the arms
of such a vampire as this! And that, without ever having met
the girl.
There they were, on the roadway, visible for a moment between
the leaves! But neither of the boys noticed her in the
slightest, and the girl certainly didn't. Just as well,
Cordelia thought, and sped ahead of them until the road curved
close to the river in an open meadow. Cordelia decided that
they would not pass by so ideal a camping place with the sun
already low. She landed in the woods a short distance from
the edge of the clearing, leaned her broom against a tree, and
waited.
They came riding into the meadow through the shadows of trees
stretched long across the grass—a golden young knight and a
dark young knight, with a blonde beauty between them, laughing and
chatting as they came out of the woods, both men seeming mightily
pleased with themselves. Cordelia lingered a few minutes
longer under the shelter of the leaves. Both of them were
looking quite lively; their color was heightened, their eyes
sparkled. So did the woman's; she looked down with frequent
blushes—very coy, very demure, very calculating!
Cordelia hated her on sight, not only for her golden tresses and
baby-doll face—after all, the poor child could scarcely be
eighteen!—but also for her deliberate manipulation of the
men. Couldn't the fools see what she was doing?
No. Of course not. They were enjoying it too
much.
What was worse, Cordelia found herself feeling dowdy for the
first time in her life—at least, in comparison to this
paragon of pulchritude.
Oh, but what a scheming creature she was! The high
neckline seemed demure and innocent—but the clinging fabric
showed her for what she was, in every sense. Shameless,
brazen! Cordelia must learn how she achieved the
effect. The blushes, the coquettish glances, looking up at
Alain with spaniel eyes, every movement planned, every modulation
of her laugh, and no doubt, the choice of every word, though
Cordelia could not hear them. She fumed inside, but also felt
a sinking despair. How could she possibly compete with such
an accomplished man-eater?
And she had to admit, after all, that the woman had been blessed
with uncommonly good looks.
For a moment, her heart quailed, but only for a moment.
Then she saw the men dismounting, vying with one another to see who
would help the lady from her perch. Laughing, she chose
Alain—of course!—and his hands closed about her waist,
lifting her down. Of course, she slid a little too hard, a
little too far, and fetched up against his chest. For a
moment, he froze, still holding her toes off the ground, then put
her down with a little, forced laugh. She laughed, too, then
turned away to blush—each movement exactly timed, head bent
at exactly the right angle. Cordelia seethed, but she had to
admire the sheer artistry of the wench.
Well, she would learn to outdo the minx at her own game!
No, not her own, Cordelia reflected—if she tried to compete
with the woman on her own terms, she was lost. Honesty and
innocence were Cordelia's strong suit—being forthright
without being forward. She must somehow make those qualities
into advantages—and she would!
She set forth from the trees, strolling closer, waiting for them
to notice her. It was the woman who looked up first, then
looked again, surprised, staring. The men noticed and broke
off their laughing, looking up. Geoffrey stared, as startled
as though he had seen a mouse walking about on the bottom of a
river, and Cordelia had the immense satisfaction of seeing Alain
turn pale. Then he blushed beet-red and turned away—as
well he might, Cordelia thought grimly. But she smiled as
boldly as she could and stepped forward. "Well,
brother! At last I have found you!"
"Indeed!" Geoffrey smiled. "You are well met,
sister. But wherefore did you seek me?"
He knew very well who she was seeking! "I have wearied of
my duties at home, and have come to see that, if you may go
adventuring, so may I."
"A woman, adventuring?" The vixen stared,
scandalized. "It is not seemly!"
Well, she should know, if anyone should. "Quite so,"
Cordelia agreed. "A woman alone may not—but in her
brother's company, there is surely nothing improper."
She had the satisfaction of seeing the look of dismay flit
across the hussy's features, though it was quickly masked. It
was even more gratifying to see the look of delight that crossed
Alain's face, even though it was hidden so quickly as to leave
Cordelia wondering if she had really seen it. She felt a stab
of remorse—how badly had she hurt him, that he dared not show
pleasure in her company?
"Well, this will be pleasing." Geoffrey smiled,
amused. "And timely: we are about to concoct supper.
Surely you will join us—must she not, companions?"
"Oh, surely she must," said the vampire, all syrupy
sweetness. Alain mumbled something that sounded vaguely
affirmative and looked away. He certainly should, Cordelia
thought, with a flame of white-hot anger—but she suppressed
it with a self-control that was new to her; she had more important
things to fry than Alain's conscience. She advanced toward
them, doing her best to simulate the movement of a cat on the
prowl. "Do you gentleman fetch some game for us, and we shall
set about building a fire for it. We shall see what we may do
to spark a blaze among kindling—shall we not, damsel?"
"Indeed!" For a second, the minx looked startled.
Then she smiled in amused anticipation.
Geoffrey cast a dubious glance from one to the other, then
shrugged. He, protect Cordelia from another woman?
As well to think of protecting a lynx from a kitten!
Besides, he had a notion of what was about to follow. "Well
enough, then. Milady, this is my sister, the Lady
Cordelia." He almost said "Gallowglass," then thought better
of it—an instinct to caution, Heaven knew why. But they
were, after all, supposed to be incognito. "Cordelia, this is
the Lady Delilah de Fevre."
"Delighted," Delilah purred.
"The pleasure will be all mine," Cordelia assured her, carefully
not specifying what she would take pleasure in. "Come, Alain,
let us seek out game!" Geoffrey turned his horse back toward
the woods. With a dubious backward glance, Alain rode after
him.
The clearing was quiet for a moment, only birdsong and breeze,
as the two women regarded one another, both with slight
smiles. Cordelia only wished that she really felt as
confident as she looked. Well, anger would have to serve in
place of confidence, and she surely had enough of that at the
moment! "Perchance we may come to know one another," she
said. "Come, let us chat, whiles we gather firewood and
tinder."
"Gladly, if you will show me what it is," Delilah said. "I
would not know what to seek, for my servants have always done such
chores."
Cordelia held down her indignation and forced a saccharine
smile. "'Tis the curse of we who are well bred," she agreed,
"that we cannot care for ourselves when the need arises."
"The need has arisen for you, then?" Delilah said
sweetly. "And you know that it will arise again?"
"Perchance," Cordelia said between her teeth, "and then,
perchance not. It was my mother's teaching that every woman
should know how to fend for herself if she must, that she not be
dependent upon a man's whims and cruelties."
"Your mother was no doubt wise," Lady Delilah purred. "Had
she cause to know?"
That stung worse—because, of course, Gwen had had
cause to learn how to take care of herself, until Cordelia's father
Rod came into Gwen's life. Cordelia was a little hazy on the
details, knowing only the story of how they met, courted, and wed,
with very little about how Gwen had occupied her time before Rod
had come unto her life; she knew only that they had not married
until Gwen was twenty-nine—very late for a medieval
woman. "My father did not think so," she said sweetly.
"Did thine?"
A frown creased the smooth perfection of Delilah's brow.
"My what?"
"Your father," Cordelia explained. She sighed, as though
striving for patience in explaining something elementary to a
five-year-old. "Did your father find need for your mother to
be dependent upon him?"
"Surely she did rely on him, and he proved ever reliable,"
Delilah said, amused. "In truth, I thought she fended for
herself most excellently in that."
Cordelia frowned. "How so?"
"Why," said Delilah, "the lady who fends for herself, and has no
true need of a husband, will not have one." Cordelia stared
at her, frozen for a moment, fuming—but she kept the fumes
inside, forced them into a curdled smile, and said, "She who does
not need a man for living will have naught but the best of
men—and only for love, true love."
"Ah! True love!" Delilah looked away toward the
trees. "How each of us does long for it! But what if it
comes not, Lady Cordelia? How then shall we fare?"
"As well as we wish," Cordelia snapped.
"Oh, nay!" Delilah turned huge, demure eyes upon
her. "We shall do as well as we may."
Alain, Cordelia saw, was as well as Delilah had decided she
might do. A change of subject was obviously in order.
She turned away, stooping to pick up a twig here, a stick
there. "How came you here, maiden, to the company of my
brother and his friend?" She put perhaps a little more
emphasis than was necessary on the word "maiden."
"Alas!" Delilah lamented. "I came at the behest of
him whom I love—but he betrayed me, and did not come."
That snatched Cordelia's poise away from her. She stared,
aghast. "Truly he did not mislead you so!"
"Aye," Delilah sighed. "I fear I am ever too
trusting."
Cordelia knew, with dead certainty, that "trusting" was one
thing Delilah was not—except, perhaps, trusting in her own
ability to manipulate a man. "Did you not fear the outlaws of
the forest?"
"Oh, aye!" Delilah touched her eyelid, where a tear had
presumably formed. "I feared they might hurt me soreyet not
so sorely as my lord has hurt me." She looked away—and
sure enough, fat tears trembled in her eyes, then rolled
free. For a moment, Cordelia almost embraced her in a rush of
sympathy—but it was replaced with a rush of anger. So
the female serpent could actually weep on demand! Her
admiration for the woman's artistry rose one notch higher, even as
her opinion of the woman's honesty dropped even lower.
Still, she strove to sound sympathetic. "The night must
have been long indeed."
Delilah said, "Any night is long, when one's love is not near
one."
Cordelia had been wondering about Delilah's right to the title
"maiden," but she was fast becoming sure. "I would not know,"
she said sweetly.
Delilah gave her a sudden, searching stare. "Nay," she
said, nicely seasoned with scorn. "I think you would
not." Cordelia felt her cheeks flaming—why, she did not
know; to be a virgin was something to be quite proud of. How
dare this flaunting flirt make it sound like a deficiency!
"How came you here?" asked Delilah. "I see you have
no horse."
Cordelia did some quick mental jockeying, trying to decide
whether she was better served by Delilah's ignorance, or her
probable awe of esper powers. Discretion won out, and she
said, "I do not believe a beast should be tethered, but should be
free to roam as he will, till I have need of him."
"Then he must be well trained indeed, to come at your call."
Cordelia wondered at the tone of mockery in Delilah's voice, or
why it stung. "I shall whistle him up when I wish," she
assured the wench.
Delilah sighed in a parody of longing. "I have never
learned to whistle."
"Then you have not had the bittersweet fortune of having
brothers," Cordelia said, with a sardonic smile.
"I have not," Delilah said, all wide-eyed innocence. "Does
that make a lass less hungry to be wed?" And, before Cordelia
could answer, "You must forgive my asking. I am too young to
know. I am but eighteen."
Eighteen what? But Cordelia did not say it out
loud. "You shall know all that a woman needs within a year or
so," Cordelia assured her, thinking all the while that Delilah
already knew far more than a genuine lady should.
"I trust I shall," Delilah sighed. "What is this
`kindling' that you spoke of?"
Geoffrey hailed them from the edge of the wood. "Small
sticks and twigs." Cordelia displayed her skirtful of bits of
wood. "We shall let the gentlemen fetch logsbut do you
quickly catch up some tinder, for they are come with dinner."
"What is `tinder'?"
"Dried grass and leaves!" Cordelia stooped impatiently to
catch up several handfuls as she walked toward the riverbank.
Geoffrey rode down toward the river. Cordelia went to him,
with Delilah trailing behind—which was fortunate, for she
could not see how Cordelia's cheeks flamed with anger and
humiliation. For some obscure reason, Cordelia felt she had
come off the loser in that battle of wits—and was sure it had
been a battle, though most of Delilah's comments had seemed
entirely innocent.
It was doubly strange that she should feel the loser, since she
had certainly given as good as she received, when the comments had
been barbed.
Hadn't she?
"Well!" Geoffrey surveyed the heap of kindling that
Cordelia dumped onto the bare clay by the water—then the
cascade of dead leaves and dried cattails that suddenly fell on top
of them. Cordelia looked up, startled, and met Delilah's
sweetest smile. The cat had snatched them up by the handful
as they had come back to meet the boys! "'Tis a good
beginning," Geoffrey pronounced.
"'Twill do to kindle a blaze." Cordelia knelt, brushing
grasses from her skirt.
Alain came up with a six-inch rock in each hand, set them by the
tinder, and, glancing furtively at Cordelia, mumbled something
about needing to fetch more, got up, and went away. She gazed
after him for a moment, frowning. Admittedly he should be
remorseful, repentant—but how was she ever going to win him
back, if he would not talk to her?
"Here is your flame." Geoffrey had dismounted and knelt by
the tinder now, drawing his dagger and taking a piece of flint from
his pouch. He struck them against one another with an expert
touch, several times, until a fat spark fell into the tinder.
He struck another, and another. Cordelia breathed on them
gently, and they began to flame. Out of the corner of her
eye, she realized that Delilah was still standing, looking down in
contempt at the hoyden who could get down on her knees in the grass
and kindle a fire as well as any boy. Cordelia turned and
smiled sweetly up at her. "It is given to women to be the
keepers of the hearth."
"Indeed." Delilah's eyes sparked. "But for a lady,
the hearth is watched, while servants build it up."
Fortunately, Alain arrived before the two of them could go any
further, with two more rocks to set by the flames. Cordelia
looked up, about to say something about their not being overlarge,
but saw how closed his face was, the furtive glances that he
flicked at her, and decided it was not the time to say anything
that was at all critical.
There was a rustle of cloth beside her. Cordelia glanced
out of the corner of her eye to see Delilah folding herself
gracefully to sit by the fire, adjusting her skirts to cover her
legs in complete modesty—that is, if you disregarded the cut
of her bodice. Apparently, she had realized that everybody
else was sitting or kneeling. Cordelia smiled to herself as
she took kindling from her little pile and fed it to the flames,
building them up little by little, letting it grow. "What
have you found for us to eat, gentlemen?"
"A hare." Alain proudly held out a spitted blob of pink
meat that bore about as much resemblance to a rabbit as a toad to a
toadstool. He was obviously very proud of having shot,
skinned, and cleaned it himself, but Delilah shrank back with an
exclamation of frightened disgust, as a delicate maiden would when
coming face-to-face with the world's realities for the first
time.
Alain was instantly all contrition. "I pray you, look
away, milady. I had forgot that you would never have seen raw
meat as it came from the hide."
"Nay, I never have." Delilah turned away, trembling.
"I doubt if I shall be able to eat of it now."
Alain stepped over to her side. "Come, come! When
'tis done, you shall not recognize it at all!" He reached out
to her, then drew his hand back. "I would not offer a
murderer's hands to you..."
She blinked up at him, and forced a smile. "Nay, surely
not. You mean only my welfare, I know, to see that I am
fed. Forgive me that my stomach is too delicate for such a
sight." She relaxed into his arms, laying her head on his
shoulder. Alain wiped clean hands on his hose before he put
his arms around her.
"Sister," Geoffrey murmured in Cordelia's ear, "what is that
grinding noise?"
"Only my teeth," she grated back. "Can he not see through
her, Geoffrey?"
"Why, no," whispered Geoffrey, surprised, "and neither can I,
though her skin is perfectly clear."
"So is her behavior! She is positively transparent!"
Cordelia made the comment a lash. "I would have thought that
my much-experienced brother would not be so easily deceived."
"Better, or worse?" Geoffrey smiled, amused. "Few of
us are born with defenses against a pretty face or form. Be
patient, sister. If she truly is as you imagine her to be, no
doubt we shall discover it."
" `Beauty is as beauty does,' do you mean?" Cordelia's
tone was scathing. "Many a man has discovered nothing of the
sort, 'til the priest has pronounced the words."
Then, with sudden despair: "What am I to do, Geoffrey? I
have no tricks, no skill in dissembling! How shall I save him
from her?"
"Do you care about him?" Geoffrey seemed quite
surprised. Then he frowned. "Or is it only that you
fear that something belonging to you will be taken?"
The echo of their mother's words irritated Cordelia. "Nay,
'tis more than that." But the image of Forrest came up
unbidden before her inner eye.
Geoffrey was not intent on reading her mind at the moment, so he
missed the picture, but he caught the hesitation, the
uncertainty. "When you are sure, Cordelia, you shall
prosper. But I pray you, do nothing extreme until we know
whether or not she is the monster you think her to be, or is truly
as sweet and kind as she seems."
"Read her mind, brother," Cordelia said, exasperated. "I
have tried." Geoffrey's brow knit, puzzled. "There is
only a sort of swirling there."
"What—say you that she has no mind?"
"Oh, nay! She is there, surely enough. We do not
deal with a witch-moss construct." Geoffrey deliberately
mistook her meaning. "Still, her thoughts cannot be read,
though she seems to make no effort to block them."
"Truly?" Cordelia glanced up in time to see Delilah push
herself a little away from Alain, blushing, eyes downcast, then
looking up and smiling, as though thanking him for his concern.
It was like a stab to Cordelia's own heart, that he did not even
think of her enough to realize that she might be hurt by seeing him
be solicitous to her rival. Either he was so smitten that he
did not even remember that Cordelia had reason to object—or
he was truly only being chivalrous.
Kindness to a stray kitten? And, in his own mind, nothing
that she should object to?
She didn't believe that for a minute.
They chatted as the roast turned on its spit, Cordelia wondering
at the back of her mind what Delilah was going to do when it came
time to eat. She toyed with the notion of conjuring up knife,
fork, and plate, but remembered that this was the boys' affair, not
hers. She sat back, hiding a wicked smile, to see what her
brother and her besotted beau would do.
She found herself wishing that he was besotted with her.
Then she remembered that he had been, but she had turned him
down.
Well, no—the arrogance with which he had approached her
had not been besotted, by any means. But she remembered a
younger Alain, of only a year before, whose gaze had followed her
everywhere she went, and the Alain of five years before that, who
had followed her about so persistently that she had scolded him for
being a pest.
She regretted that bitterly now. Had that scolding broken
her spell over him? Or was it still there, but he, in
obedience to her sharp tongue, was no longer allowing it to
show?
Watching him closely now, she would have to say that he wasn't
besotted with Delilah, really—only very attentive. Too
attentive. Far too attentive. And not at all so to
Cordelia—though he seemed to be avoiding her out of guilt
rather than indifference.
Still, what was Cordelia to do? Feign a swoon?
Certainly he would not believe that she needed comforting or
protecting! For a moment, a tide of self-pity swept
her. For the first time in her life, she found herself
wishing that she were not so confounded capable.
Geoffrey solved the tableware problem with slabs of journey
bread—flat, round cakes eight inches across. Lady
Delilah, however, did not even have a dagger—of course.
Alain solved the problem by cutting her meat for her, presenting it
on the improvised trencher as though on a silver platter.
"Oh, sirs, you should not trouble yourselves!" Delilah
protested.
" 'Tis no trouble at all, my lady, I assure you." Then, as
an afterthought, it seemed to Cordelia, Alain turned and, for the
first time, addressed her. "Cordelia, may I serve you in like
fashion?"
She would have cheerfully served him instead—on
toast. But she kept the lid on the seething and smiled
sweetly. "Why, surely, Alain. I thank you." She
bit back a scathing comment about being second, and probably always
being second in his affections. Hot tears stung at her eyes,
but she blinked them away. It was silly indeed to think that;
Delilah was surely a passing fancy, no more. Surely ...
"I thank you." She held out her makeshift trencher with
strings of steaming rabbit meat on it. Alain took it, cut the
meat, then handed it back to her, inclining his head gravely, and
offered his knife, hilt first. "Take it, I pray you, so you
need not soil your fingers."
Delilah froze, a bit of meat halfway to her mouth, her eyes
turning cold.
Cordelia was surprised to find herself blushing with
gratitude—or was it relief? "Gramercy." She was
on the point of refusing the knife—after all, she had a
smaller one of her own—but realized she had better not; he
might take it as a refusal of himself, too. "I shall endeavor
to finish with it quickly, so that you may once again have the use
of it."
"An excellent notion!" Geoffrey proffered his own knife,
hilt first. "Will you take my point, my lady?"
"Why, thank you, sir." Delilah bestowed a very sweet smile
on Geoffrey and took his knife.
Cordelia reflected on other potential uses for the blade as she
stabbed the bits of meat and popped them into her mouth. "It
is well done, in truth. You are an excellent chef,
Alain."
"I learned something in the kitchens, from time to time."
Alain smiled, relieved at having found a neutral topic—and
wondering why Geoffrey was suddenly coughing so violently.
"I am sure you have," Cordelia said, with a touch of
sarcasm.
Alain blushed and looked away.
Oh, no! Cordelia thought. I have set
him off now! And she set herself to being pleasant, with
renewed determination. What ailed the man, anyhow? If
he felt so guilty at paying attentions to Delilah, why didn't he
simply stop?
She chatted about the weather and about events in the palace,
while Delilah found occasion after occasion for a subtle
compliment, drawing Alain into telling her more and more about
himself.
Cordelia did her best to change the topic, but not too
much. "And how have you fared, knights-errant? I see
you have saved a damsel in distress. What of the monster that
did guard her?"
She was surprised, and chagrined, when Delilah broke into peals
of laughter, and the gentlemen grinned in answer. "We seem to
have saved her only from abandonment," Geoffrey explained, "though
it may be she would have had more fell creatures than that preying
upon her, if we had not come when we did. Still, in your name
and for your glory, Alain slew an ogre."
"An ogre?" Cordelia turned, eyes huge. She
remembered hearing the villagers thinking of the event, but
recognized a chance when she saw one. "How is this,
Alain? Does he mock me?"
"He does not, I assure you," Alain said, with grave
courtesy. "It was indeed an ogre, though your brother will
not admit to his part in its defeat."
"An ogre! Oh! How brave of you, sir!" Delilah
exclaimed, clasping her hands at her breast. "But how
dangerous! Thank heavens you are returned alive!"
Definitely overdoing it, Cordelia thought—but apparently,
Alain couldn't see that. He swelled visibly at her
praise. "It was a poor thing, in its way," he said
modestly.
"A poor thing! Oh, aye, nine feet tall, with four
arms!" Geoffrey scoffed.
"Well, true," Alain allowed. "But it had very little
brain."
"Though a great deal of brawn," Geoffrey reminded him, "and it
does not require so very much brain to swing a club half the size
of a man."
Cordelia stared at Alain. "And you rode against it with
naught but your sword?"
"I did indeed." Alain looked rather happy about it.
"I will own, though, that I did take a wound of him." Delilah
gasped again.
"Though 'tis naught that a little time will not heal," Alain
said quickly.
"How gallant of you, sir!" Delilah caroled—but
Cordelia was suddenly all business.
"Let me see." Cordelia stepped around the fire and began
to unbutton Alain's doublet.
"Why, Cordelia!" he said, eyes wide. "Really,
damsel!" Delilah huffed.
"Oh, be still!" Cordelia snapped. "If he is hurt, I
must know it. Where, Alain?"
"Why, you are a forward wench indeed!" Delilah
gasped. "A wench when it pleases me, but for now, I am a
nurse!" She folded the doublet open—and stared a
moment.
My heavens, the man had a massive chest! When had he grown
all those muscles? She felt the strange feelings beginning to
churn within her again, and turned her attention to the rough
dressing held to his side by a bandage that was wrapped around and
around his abdomen. "That was only a scratch, you say?"
"In truth, it was." Geoffrey frowned. "Do you fault
my doctoring, sister?"
"Was it you who did this?" Cordelia looked up. "How
deep was the cut? Was any organ harmed?"
Delilah turned pale.
"Nay, only muscle tissue, and not much of that; it scarce passed
beyond the layer of fat. No large blood vessels cut, either,
but only a seepage from many capillaries."
Delilab turned away, a hand to her mouth.
"Peace, peace!" Alain tried to recover his doublet with a
glance at Delilah. "'Tis naught, Cordelia, truly!"
Cordelia probed the wound gently, and when Alain only gasped
lightly, she grudgingly said, "It seems well enough." She
frowned up into his eyes. "My touch does not pain you?"
For a moment, his face turned fatuous. "Not in the
slightest," he breathed. "'Tis as the petals of a flower that
brush against me."
Cordelia stared at him in complete amazement.
A slight smile touched Alain's face. "If such touch as
that be pain, may I live in torment all my days!"
Now, finally, Cordelia blushed, and turned away.
CHAPTER 9
"Why, Alain," Cordelia said, "you have never spoken so
before."
"Aye. I have been a chowderheaded fool," Alain said, with
self-disgust verging on anger.
Delilah looked up indignantly, and Geoffrey decided it was time
he took a hand—a hand he had been wanting to take for quite
some time now. He stood up and stepped over to Delilah,
reaching down. "My lady, will you walk? While we hunted
for dinner, I found a small garden by the riverside. It must
have been planted by Nature herself, but it is so sweet a sight
that it must needs be the perfect setting for such beauty as
yours." He smiled, looking deeply into her eyes. "Will
you not come see it?"
Delilah looked startled, then cast an apprehensive glance at
Alain—a glance that gained an edge.
"I am sure they will be safe by themselves," Geoffrey said, then
leaned to murmur, "as you will be quite safe with me—if you
wish to be."
Delilah turned back to him, startled—and for a moment, he
saw the naked desire in her eyes, so hot that it led him suddenly
to doubt that she was quite the virtuous maiden she seemed.
But he could also see the calculation behind her eyes, as she
glanced at Alain with a scornful smile. That smile turned to
one of amusement, not altogether pleasant, as she turned back to
Geoffrey. "Do you promise, sir?"
"Aye, surely—that you shall be safe as you please."
Passion flashed in her eyes again, but was quickly hidden.
"Then I shall come." She rose in one lithe, sinuous motion,
taking his hand. "I thank you, sir. Surely this garden
will be at its most beautiful by moonlight."
"Alas!" Geoffrey tucked her hand into the crook of his arm
and turned her away toward the trees. "The moon does not rise
for some minutes yet."
"Then we shall await it." She turned back with a
vindictive smile for Alain—but he wasn't looking, and the
smile disappeared. "We shall return anon," she informed the
couple. "Fare well in our absence."
"Farewell indeed." Cordelia tried to hide her elationand
silently thought a beam of thanks at her brother. He smiled
and winked, since Delilah still had her back to him. Cordelia
tried to remind herself how thoroughly she disapproved of
Geoffrey's womanizing—but at the moment, it didn't seem at
all bad.
Alain looked up, startled at Delilah's words, then glanced
quickly at Geoffrey, who only gave him a sly wink. Not
altogether reassured, he glanced at Delilah—but she was
already turning away to go with Geoffrey, and when she looked up at
him, her smile was dazzling. Alain stared after her,
wondering whether he should feel wounded or relieved. He
decided on relieved, and turned back to Cordelia, dismissing
Delilah from his mind—and was rather surprised at the ease
with which he did it.
He caught Cordelia watching him with a look that clearly said he
was being weighed in the balance. "She is quite
attractive—in fact, a beauty."
"She is," Alain said judiciously, "but will she remain in my
mind when she is gone from my sight?"
"A most excellent question." Cordelia's answer was
somewhat tart. "Will she, indeed?"
"I think not." Alain tilted his head to the side,
regarding her. "But then, I have been spoiled, Cordelia."
"I know." Inside, Cordelia could have screamed at herself
for the sniping remark—but it was too old a habit; it would
take her some time to break it.
To her surprise, though, Alain only smiled, amused. "No, I
do not mean only as a Prince, having had all defer to me, and
having been given ... almost all I wish."
Almost? She wondered what he had been denied, then
realized that one thing had certainly been herself. She
blushed, looking down.
"I mean spoiled in regard to loveliness," Alain said. "Now
and again during my childhood, I have been exposed to true beauty;
I have had it before me more often than not. It may be that I
have become inured to the charms of beauty alone."
He was speaking of herself, she realized, and suddenly felt
rather dizzy. Where had Alain learned to make such pretty
speeches? And were they only that, pretty speeches? Or
did he really mean what he said?
Alarmed, he moved closer, taking her arm, resting it on his,
chafing her hand. "Are you unwell, Cordelia? Or have I
given offense?"
"Nay. I am ... well." But the support of his
arm felt very good indeed. Suddenly, she realized that if she
were a little more unwell, he might put his arm around her.
"It—is simply that it has been a long day, and..." She
let herself go limp.
Alain's arm tightened about her, holding her up. "Mayhap I
should let you sleep."
Somehow, that sent alarm bells ringing through her. She
wanted him close, yes, but not too close. "Nay. Only
... hold me ... for a small space."
"Why, that I shall," he said softly.
She let herself relax into the curve of his arm, leaning against
his chest. She was surprised to discover how hard it
was. "I ... I must thank you, Alain, for your ...
gift."
He looked at her, puzzled.
"Some dozen men in rags of green and brown," she explained.
"The outlaw band!" His face cleared. "Did you truly
find it pleasing, my lady, or was it another piece of
gaucherie?"
"Well ... it did make the day ... quite
interesting," she admitted. "I found myself beset with
curiosity as to what I should do with them. But it was simple
enough—I sent them on to Sir Maris. And I own that I
did feel honored, and quite complimented that you had sent me such
a tribute."
"I scolded myself for it when it was too late, and they were out
upon the road," Alain said sadly. " 'Tis no great gift to a
lady to have a dozen filthy, ugly knaves attending upon her."
"Oh, nay! It is the kind of gift that most I wish!"
She looked up at him, eyes wide, and very, very earnest. "To
restrain the brutal, the predatory, and to protect the weak!
Giving me signs that you have done these things, Alain, is the most
that I could ask of any man!"
Alain beamed down at her, reflecting that most other women would
have been far more pleased by the gift of a diamond bracelet or a
ruby tiara. He had no doubt at all the Cordelia meant what
she had said. "How..." His voice sank almost to a
whisper. "How if I could heal the sick as a king's touch is
supposed to do? Would that be a gift to you? Or only my
duty to my subjects?"
"Your duty to your subjects would be your gift to me!" She
moved within his arm, a little away from him, so that she could
look directly up into his eyes. "Truly the greatest gift that
any woman can have is knowing that she has made a man a better
man! But, Alain..." She lowered her gaze. "I
should not accept such presents—or any presents of any sort,
for . .." She looked back up at him again, forcing
herself to be honest. ". . . I cannot be
sure that, were you to ask again, I would be willing to wed
you."
Alain gazed down at her, his victory turning to ashes in his
mouth—until he remembered her words: "I cannot be
sure..." Hope flickered in his eyes again, and he said, "Then
there may be yet some chance?"
"Oh ... aye . .." She looked down
again. "There may be some chance ... But I would have
you know, Alain, that it is only this night that you have begun to
talk to me as yourself, Alain, not the Crown Prince. How can
I know whether or not I love you yet, when we have only now
met?"
"Well," Alain said softly, cradling her closer in his arm, "I
will be very glad with that, Cordelia. Come, let us learn to
know one another—truly, if we can."
They sat by the river, his arm about her, talking of
inconsequentialities, talking of grave matters, talking of
themselves and of each other, as the moon slowly rose.
But the moon had not yet risen when Geoffrey led Delilah to the
little fairy garden. It rose where a little stream trickled
into the river—tall, feather-soft columns in a semicircle,
backing smaller flowers and ferns: anemones, poppies, spirea.
They were only varying shades of gray in the starlight, of course,
but the stream reflected glimmers back at many points, and the soft
susurrus of the leaves of the willow that overarched the whole of
the tiny garden made it seem like an undersea grotto—partly
magical, and entirely alluring.
"Oh! How wonderful!" Delilah reached out to caress
the slender stalks. "Scarcely have I ever seen anything so
lovely!"
"We should leave a bowl of milk." Geoffrey knelt beside
her. "Such a wondrous place cannot have grown by nature, and
who but the elves could have tended it?"
"Fairies, say rather." Delilah looked up at him with
excitement in her eyes—not of wonder, Geoffrey realized, but
of anticipation, almost as though she were a hunter tracking
quarry—eager, eyes dancing with mischief. "For what
have you brought me to this place, sir?"
"Why," said Geoffrey, "to admire beauty."
"Then admire! Admire all you wish!" In a smooth,
continuous motion, she rose to her feet, skirts belling around her
as she pirouetted. "Gaze your fill—but you shall not
touch!" And she fled, laughing.
Geoffrey rose, grinning; he knew the game, and understood
it. He was on his feet, stalking her.
With a gay laugh, she disappeared among the trees. He
echoed her laugh with a deeper tone of his own, and followed.
In and out among the trees they darted, playing at nymph and
faun. Her laughter was not the pure, innocent trilling of a
maiden, but the mocking taunts of a woman of experience.
Geoffrey's blood flowed hotter for hearing it, and he followed
hard and close.
Several times he lunged out, grasping for a handful of cloth,
but she whirled aside at the last second, and the fabric slid out
from between his fingers.
Finally, she tired—or tired of the game. She
tripped, and stumbled back against a huge old oak. Geoffrey
was on her in a second, one hand slapping the trunk to either side
of her, boxing her between his arms, his face only a few inches
from hers, both of them laughing with delight—but not sheer
delight. No, delight and anticipation, as his lips came
closer ...
At the last second, she caught her breath and ducked out under
his arm, fleeing again, but not quite so fast as she should have,
and he caught her wrist. She pulled against it, but not too
hard. "Oh, sir, leave off! Let me flee!"
"Why, I shall let you do whatever you please." Geoffrey
stepped lightly around, circling her into the crook of his arm and
pressing her close. "But what do you truly desire?"
"Why sir, for shame!" She lowered her gaze, but only as
far as his doublet. She reached up as though to pluck a piece
of lint from it—but her fingers ended by fumbling with the
fastenings. "Have you no shame?"
"Shame?" Geoffrey wrinkled his brow, puzzled. "What
is that?"
"It is something that you do not have, but should," she reproved
him.
"It does come undone, you know," he said.
"Do you?" She rolled her eyes up to look at him through
long lashes. "Ah, sir! You might prove my undoing!"
He loosed the fastener and began the next. "Why, so I
shall. Have you never heard that you should do as you are
done by?" He reached around to the nape of her neck and let
his fingers trail down her back. She gasped, with a wriggle,
then laughed. "You are deceived, sir! I have no
fastenings of any kind; this dress is all of one piece."
"Why, then." His fingers traced under the curve of her
breast, to the lacings of her kirtle. "I shall have to undo
here, instead."
She laughed, twirling away, but he held onto the lace, and the
bow came undone.
"Sir! How dare you!" She put her hands to the
kirtle, pulling it tight, even though it had scarcely opened at
all. Geoffrey let the end of the lace slip of out of his
fingers. "What would you have me do?"
"Why, whatever you will." She tilted her chin up.
"But my sights are set higher than yourself."
"That takes not overmuch doing," Geoffrey countered, "for my
sights are set low—very low indeed."
"Nay, nay!" She stepped away with a wicked glance.
"I pursue one of higher station than your own."
Geoffrey was still for a second, then gave her a wicked
grin. "Why, think you I am but a squire?"
"Why, are you more?" she returned. "And is not your
friend a knight?"
"Am I not knight enough for you?" he countered. "Or
enough for a night?"
"I think perhaps you might be." Her voice was low and
throaty, and she stepped close to him, so close that he could have
sworn he had felt the touch of her body, though there was still an
inch of space between them—and for a second, her eyes burned
with the heat of desire.
Then she whirled away again, and when she turned back to regard
him from a distance of five feet, her eyes had cooled to the chill
of icebergs, and she gave him her most haughty look. "I think
you are not all that you seem."
"My friend, though, is?"
She shrugged elaborately. "I think that he is
more. Certainly I shall discover it."
"Will you truly?" Geoffrey grinned. "And will you
discover how much of me is substance?"
She gave him a cool, appraising stare, then flashed a wicked
smile. "If it pleases me—for surely, I know that I
would please you."
Then she turned and fled again.
He followed her, running fast, dodging in and out among the
trees. There was no laughter this time, only hot breath
panting in their throats, until finally he reached out and caught
her by the sleeve. She spun about, tripped, and fell to the
ground. He dropped down by her side, fingers trailing fire
across her cheek, down her neck, and across the swelling curve of
her breast, breathing hard. "Ah, lass, pray do as you
please! Fulfill your desires, and care not how base they may
be! Know that I am a man for all you might wish!"
"Aye, well might you be," she sighed, and her breath was
perfume, perfumed smoke from a fire where incense burns. "Yet
still shall I withhold, till I have taught another man delights of
which he shall never have his fill!"
"He shall cleave unto you always?" Geoffrey raised an
eyebrow.
"In truth! Then may you court me to the end, to the
finish! But for now, sir, I pray you—leave off!"
It cost him dearly, it required a huge effort—but Geoffrey
had sworn to himself, very early, that he would never pursue a
woman farther than she wished. He forced himself away with a
sigh, reflecting that if she had really wanted him to continue, it
was her own hard luck that she had bade him hold. She would
have to pursue him more fervently, and be more open and more
sincere in her flirtations, if she wished a different ending to the
game. "As you wish, then. Come, sit beside me for a
moment or two. I promise I shall touch naught but your
hand."
"Why then should I sit beside you?" But slowly, she sat
up, her eyes wary, weighing him, gauging him, not understanding,
not believing.
"Why," he said softly, "to look at this fairy grotto in the
moonlight. Only see!"
She sat up beside him, staring, then clasped her hands and
gasped in delight.
They had come full circle, had returned to the elfin
grotto—and surely, it was no surprise to her. The moon
had risen while they played at nymph and faun. The garden
glittered in the moonlight like the agglomeration of turrets and
spires that form a fairy palace.
She stared at it, spellbound, but as conscious of his hand
tickling fire across her own as she was of the magical
garden. He was true to his word—he touched no more than
he had said he would—but the way in which he did it made her
bitterly regret the course that she had chosen. She promised
herself that, when she had captured Alain, she would visit upon
Geoffrey every ounce of pleasure of which he dreamed, and more, far
more, until it was torment. She would use him, she would
drain him, then revive him to use him again—but only at her
pleasure.
When they returned to the campfire, they had assumed demeanors
that were properly chaste and sober. Alain and Cordelia,
though not quite so demure, seemed rather content with each other's
company.
Alain, for his part, wondered whether Delilah's eyes were really
glittering in the moonlight. Delilah, in turn, exulted within
to see that Cordelia and Alain were not talking to one
another. She had given her rival her chance, and, as Delilah
had expected, Cordelia had made a hash of it. She sat down by
the fireside with a sigh that was perfectly balanced between
boredom and gloating satisfaction.
Cordelia looked up with a spark in her eye. "Was the
garden so pretty, then?"
"By moonlight," Delilah purred, "one would have thought it was a
mermaid's grotto beneath the waves." Cordelia felt a burning
anger within her. What had the cat been doing with her
brother? What had she done to him?
From the look of him, though, she might have asked him the
reverse: what had he been doing with her?
However, there was still an edged and whetted hunger to him, a
devil-may-care, reckless, barbed delight about him. She did
not have to wonder long about what they had been doing, but only
how far the game had gone. Not too far, or Geoffrey would not
still look famished—but somehow, the notion was not
reassuring.
"Where shall we fare tomorrow?" she asked.
Delilah turned her head, locking gazes with Cordelia; she had
not missed the "we."
"The gentlemen shall escort me to my home," she purred, "or so
they have promised."
"And so we shall do," Alain said stoutly. "We could not
let so gentle a lady wend her way unescorted."
"Oh, aye!" Cordelia said, with a smile of her own.
"I shall join you."
"And what shall you ride, then?" Delilah asked
gaily. "For I see you have no horse! Perchance you
shall ride a broomstick!"
"Perchance." Cordelia's tone flowed like honey.
"Though perhaps I should leave it for you."
Delilah threw her head back with a tinkling cascade of
laughter. "Do not trouble yourself—for I have an
excellent palfrey."
"Why, then," said Cordelia, "I shall have to find a
stallion."
Cordelia waited until the others were asleep, then rose and
moved quietly off into the wood, but only a few paces. She
directed a thought at her sleeping mother, asking her to send her
father's great black robot-horse, Fess—with a sidesaddle.
Gwen agreed, and so did Rod, easily. Cordelia couldn't
tell they were only a mile away.
The sound of movement waked her. She opened her eyes,
lying still to avoid surprises. She frowned, feeling
muzzy-headed, and pressed a hand to her temple, but it would not
drive the shreds of dream away. A patched and ragged dream,
surely ...
Alain lay to one side of her—good. She muttered and
turned over as though she were still asleep, then peeked through
her lashes and saw Delilah, eyes closed, breathing deeply and
evenly.
You need not pretend, sister. Only I await
you.
As well you might, Cordelia returned. To be
sure, none has the advantage of you.
There is some truth in that, Geoffrey admitted.
Cordelia sat up, slowly, carefully, pressing a hand to her head
again. I had the strangest dream ...
I too. Let us go.
He was sitting on his heels across the campfire from her, but
now he rose silently, stepped around the coals, holding out his
hand. She took it and rose to her feet, then stepped away
from Alain and Delilah. Brother and sister wrapped their
cloaks about them, for the morning was chill. They moved
silently away from the sleepers and in among the trees, but not so
far they could not watch the campsite.
"Tell me your dream first," Geoffrey said.
"'Twas a dream of this Lady Delilah," Cordelia said, watching
his face—but he only nodded. No look of guilt, no look
of keen interest—no look of surprise. Heartened,
Cordelia went on. "I dreamt that in the deep of the night,
she did come into these trees and meet with several men."
Again, Geoffrey nodded, and did not look surprised.
Cordelia took a deep breath. "She did give them
orders—orders, Geoffrey! She did command! And not
a one of them disputed!"
Geoffrey still nodded, very intent.
"She did command them to prepare her home for her. She
spoke of a manor house and staff, but she bade them dress as
servants, and named one to impersonate her father. Nay, it
did seem that she had already given such orders, for these commands
were only in the nature of asking if all was in readiness—and
they told her nay, but nearly." She watched her brother out
of the corner of her eye. "What would you say to that?"
"I would say," Geoffrey replied slowly, "that it was the product
of spleen, envy and jealousy that one woman might have for
another—had I not had the same dream. Not only
like yours, mind you, but the same."
Cordelia stared at him in surprise.
"Aye," said Geoffrey. "And what would you say to
that?"
Cordelia turned away, walking very slowly. "I would say
'tis not the sort of dream I would have thought a randy young man
like yourself would have dreamt, of a beautiful woman."
"Cordelia!"
Cordelia shrugged impatiently. "A spade is a spade,
brother, and a lecher is a lecher. I will own I had some
intent to speak to you of that anon—and aye, I have seen the
covetous looks you cast upon the Lady Delilah, so I was not so
surprised as I might have been, to learn that you had dreamed of
her. But such a dream as this is not the sort I had
expected."
"Nay, I am sure it is not," Geoffrey said, with a sardonic
smile.
"How is this, brother?" Cordelia spread her hands.
"How is it we have both dreamed the same dream, even though it is
quite inappropriate to yourself?"
"Why, you know as well as I," Geoffrey countered. "What
could it be, but truth?"
"Truth of what sort?" Cordelia frowned. "Can it be
she is a telepath, a projective, and does not know it?"
"That, or one who does know it, but felt no need to shield her
thoughts from sleepers." Geoffrey frowned. "In either
case, it would seem that our Delilah is not what she seems."
Cordelia gave a harsh little laugh. "'Tis no great news to
me, brother. I have seen the looks she gives you when she
thinks Alain does not see."
"And that you do not see, either?"
"Oh, no! She cares not if I see. Indeed, she would
prefer that I did." Cordelia's lips thinned. "No doubt
she thinks that I believe you to be my puppy, and will be quite
wroth with her for seeking to steal your affections. But I
know you well enough to doubt that could happen."
Geoffrey looked up, offended. "Be not so certain,
sister! I, too, may fall in love."
"You may," Cordelia said acidly, "but not with such a thing as
that. Nay, Geoffrey, speak truly: I know you have felt lust
for her, but has there been the tiniest shred of love?"
Geoffrey relaxed in an easy grin. "Oh, nay! I know
what she seeks, and may well find—but no more, I assure
you." Then he sobered, frowning. "But if she orders men
to make a false home for her, what is she truly?"
"A commander," Cordelia said slowly, "though I think she is not
a lady born."
Geoffrey nodded slowly. "I have that feeling, too," he
said. "I cannot say why, for she counterfeits well. No
doubt 'tis a host of small signs that I am not aware of
consciously—but they are there nonetheless, and I read them
without knowing that I do. She is not nobly born."
"Yet she may be a telepath." Cordelia looked up at him,
feeling a sudden pang. "Oh, Geoffrey, my brother, be wary, I
pray you! For I do fear for your safety!"
For a moment, he looked grim. Then he gave a soft laugh,
and gave her a brotherly squeeze. "Do not fear for me, big
sister. I have learned in a hard school, and have been taught
by experts."
But Cordelia did not return his laughter. The statement
had an odd echo; it reminded her of something she had once heard
their older brother Magnus say, shortly before he left home.
She tried to give Geoffrey a glare, but her heart wasn't in it, and
she gave him a reluctant smile instead. His own answered
her. She sighed and looked back at the campsite. "Do
you watch these two, brother, while I step aside a moment."
"Surely, sister. And what shall I do if they arise and
walk?"
"Be sure they do not walk toward one another," she answered
drily, then turned away to step in among the leaves. In a few
seconds, she was surrounded by the rustling susurrus of greenery,
and projected her thoughts. Fess! Are you
near?
A shadow moved from under the trees, and the great black horse
stepped forward, nodding. I am, Cordelia. What do
you wish of me?
"Oh, Fess, it is so good to see you!" Cordelia rushed
forward, throwing her arms around his neck—but carefully;
that was hard metal beneath the horsehair, not flesh. He was
the companion of her childhood, the dream horse that many young
girls imagine. She had been six before she fully understood
that he was not really a living creature, like herself—but
she had always thought of him as her friend and, in the depths of
her being, still believed him to be a living, animate
consciousness.
And, suddenly, she found that she was relaxing, letting the
pressure and stress of the last few days evaporate, trembling as
she clung to the great horse. Fess sensed it through sensors
imbedded in his artificial horsehair. "What troubles you,
Cordelia? Perhaps it were best that you tell me."
She lifted a tear-streaked face. "Alain had come
a-courting—except that he did not court, he commanded me to
marry him! Dearly though I had dreamed of that moment all my
life, I could not bear to have it come in so undreamlike a
fashion!"
"I know of this," Fess said, his tone thoughtful, "and of his
quest with Geoffrey, though I confess I do not truly understand
it."
"Ohhhhhhh ... Geoffrey!" Cordelia stamped her
foot. "He has taken it upon himself to turn my callow swain
into a proper lover, to teach him the right and proper way of
courting a maid—and corrupting him betimes, I doubt not!"
"Only Geoffrey?" Fess was picking up undertones that she
hadn't intended.
"There is also a witch of alluring enchantments," Cordelia said,
seething. "She has preyed upon their kindness—and, aye,
their randy lust—and prevailed upon them to escort her to her
home, each mounted upon a horse. I have only my
broomstick. Fess, will you carry me?"
"Surely," Fess told her. "I would not miss this for the
world."
Cordelia reflected sourly that everybody but herself seemed to
find the whole episode monstrously entertaining.
They breakfasted on quail and pheasant, then saddled their
horses (of course, Alain insisted on saddling Delilah's
mount). Geoffrey had only a raised eyebrow when the great
black horse strode into the clearing. Alain looked up, then
looked again sharply. He turned to Cordelia with a look that
was an amused accusation.
But Delilah stared, taken aback.
She recovered her poise quickly, though. "Truly, so great
a stallion would be beyond my feeble horsemanship. I marvel
that you can ride him, Lady Cordelia."
"I do prefer stallions," Cordelia said.
"To ride, of course," Delilah said, with an insinuation that
made Cordelia blush, though she didn't understand why. She
covered by reaching up for pommel and cantle, setting her foot in
the stirrup, and swinging up to hook a knee around the horn of the
sidesaddle.
"How athletic," Delilah purred. "Surely I could never do
such wonders. I have no skill in this. Alain, would you
help me to mount?"
"Gladly, Lady Delilah." Alain gave her a small, courtly
bow, then set both hands about her waist and lifted her up to the
saddle. Delilah squeaked, and if Alain's hands lingered a
little longer than was strictly necessary, who was there to blame
him?
Only Cordelia.
So it came about that they rode toward Delilah's home—a
witch, a warlock, a Prince, and another whom Cordelia thought to be
more truly a witch than herself.
CHAPTER 10
Smoke exploded in the roadway in front of the four. The
real horses shied with whinnies of alarm, and the riders fought to
hold them down. Alain grasped the bridle of Delilah's palfrey
before his own mount was fully under control, and managed to calm
both.
Fess, of course, stood solid as iron, observing the situation
with interest.
The smoke blew away to reveal a woman, quite young but
unbelievably ugly, leaning on a staff. She had a huge,
curving nose, lantern jaw, small eyes like a swine's, and a sickly
pale complexion. Worse, her face had five large warts, and
her hair was dun-colored, sparse, and stringy. She was
clothed in a murky gray robe, her hood thrown back, with six
hulking men in livery of the same color behind her. Each wore
a small shield on his arm and brandished a sword.
Cordelia stared, as amazed as she was revolted. Surely
such ugliness could not be real—especially in one so
young! "Avaunt, damsel!" the ugly woman cried.
"You escaped my clutches yesterday, but you shall not escape them
now!"
"Sister!" Delilah gasped, alarmed. Then joy lit her
face, and she cried, "Lord Roland would not have you, then!"
"He would not, even for all our father's lands and
fortune." The witch's eyes narrowed. "Mayhap my dowry
would move him, though, if he knew you were dead, no longer to
beguile him. I shall see that you are!"
"Nay, sister, I beg you!" Delilah cried, shying
away. The hag went on inexorably. "Then, when all the
lands have come to me, and Roland, too, I shall bring down the King
and Queen with my magic, and rule as sovereign over a dukedom in my
own right, with no hindrance from the Crown!"
Cordelia could only stare, unable to escape the feeling that she
was watching a stage play.
The hag raised a knife, poised for throwing, and Delilah
screamed.
"You shall not!" Alain shouldered his horse between
Delilah's palfrey and the hag. His eyes blazed with anger,
and he surely had cause, for it was his own mother and father whom
the hag had threatened, as well as Delilah. "Bid your men lay
down their swords, or they shall die by mine!"
The witch threw back her head with a high, wild cackle.
"One man, against six?"
"Nay." Geoffrey smiled, drawing his sword and urging his
horse up alongside Alain's. "It will be two against
six. The odds are, I will admit, unequal. If you could
find four more men, we might call them even."
Cordelia noticed that he didn't mention his sister.
Good—it was always wise to keep a secret weapon in
reserve.
Of course, knowing Geoffrey, he probably didn't think he needed
one—and what was really galling was that he was probably
right.
"Out upon them, men of mine!" the hag shrilled.
"'Tis for me to slay my sister!"
The thugs answered with a shout and charged forward. They
were all big men, six feet or more, broadshouldered and
muscular—but Geoffrey gave a shout of glee and rode into
them. They stepped aside adroitly and slashed at him as he
went by, but he caught the blows of the two on his right on his
sword and lashed out with a kick that knocked the left-hand man's
hilt from his grasp. He howled and fell back, clutching his
hand.
The right-hand men turned as Geoffrey swerved around them, then
leaped to pull him from the saddle. Geoffrey slammed a punch
into one's jaw, using his hilt as brass knuckles. The man
shouted with pain as he fell back; then his eyes rolled up, and he
lay still. His mate was doubled over from a kick in the
belly, making strangling noises.
Meanwhile, Alain had spurred to meet the other three, who
charged him, shouting, swords waving over their heads. He
swung his horse dancing aside a split second before they reached
him; they went barrelling past, trying to slow, to stop themselves,
thrown off balance for a minute.
That was long enough. Alain slashed downward, knocking one
man's blade out of his hand. The man shouted with pain and
leaped backwards, swinging his shield up to protect his head.
Alain turned to his next assailant.
But while the boys were occupied with the henchmen, the hag
rushed at her sister, waving her staff and shrieking something
unintelligible, pointing at something overhead, something
invisible, but whatever it was, Delilah reeled in her saddle,
crying out in pain and terror.
Alain looked up in alarm, shouted, and charged the hag.
She whirled on him with a scream and threw something
invisible—but her aim was off; she hit the shield of one of
her own men, and an explosion erupted right underneath the nose of
Alain's steed. The horse reared, whinnying, terrified; Alain
shouted and fought to control the beast.
Fireballs? Cordelia thought dizzily. It was
not how a true witch would throw a fireball—it would come
streaming from her fingers.
Yes, Fess's thought answered hers, and a true witch
does not use lycopodite; I catch the telltale aroma of modern
explosive. He was, of course, equipped with sensors of
every type, including the olfactory—in his case, a chemical
analyzer.
And, suddenly, Cordelia realized the name of the game.
The hag was a fake; her magic was that of technologywhich meant
that she was a Futurian agent. She was there to create a
situation from which Alain could rescue Delilah, which would bring
all his protective feelings to the fore. Then she would hail
him as her savior. A very romantic situation indeed—and
one which just might result in his falling in love with her.
It would certainly give her the motive she needed for showing her
gratitude, in ways which would send his head spinning.
Well, Cordelia could certainly take care of that. A fake
witch was no match for the real thing.
Cordelia glared at a rock by the side of the path, and it shot
up off the ground to clip the "witch" on the shoulder. She
cried out in fright, spinning away, then turned in fury. "I
do not know how you did that, sister, but you shall die for
it! Avaunt!" She charged at Delilah again, but this
time with the staff poised as a lance, to knock her from the
saddle.
"You shall not," Cordelia cried, and Fess stepped in to come
between Delilah and her "sibling."
But Delilah cried, "Oh, spare me, sister!" and threw her
arms wide. Her left fist backhanded Cordelia in the stomach
with all the power of a trained fighter. Cordelia doubled
over, gagging, realizing that it had been no accident ...
But Fess was still dancing to head off the witch, who leaped
aside with a shout of victory—and her staff cracked into
Cordelia's head. Dimly, she heard Alain shouting her name as
she reeled in the saddle, the world swimming about her. The
day seemed to darken, and she knew she was going to lose
consciousness ...
Be of good heart, my lady. A new and strange
voice echoed inside her head. Hold to wakefulness; she
shall not prevail.
Then there was a renewed clamor of swords ringing.
Cordelia lifted her head as her vision cleared ...
And saw Forrest, the bandit chieftain, standing between herself
and the hag, parrying her blows with his quarterstaff, knocking her
rod from her hand. She screamed, falling back, crying, "Aid
me, men of mine! A rescue, a rescue!"
Two of the men stumbled toward her, but they were bare-handed,
swords gone, only their shields left. The other four lay
unconscious on the ground.
Alain rode down on them, eyes narrowed, not disposed toward
clemency.
The hag screamed and stumbled away toward the trees, her men
backing quickly behind her—but Forrest followed in hard and
fast, battering on the shield of the right-hand man, while Alain
followed closely at the left, slashing with his sword.
Dizzily, Cordelia wondered where her brother was—and her
vision cleared just in time to see the look of outrage on Delilah's
face.
Forrest, Cordelia guessed, had not been part of her plan.
The hag turned and fled with a scream of despair. Her men
stumbled after her.
Alain gave a shout of triumph, swinging his sword high, kicking
his horse into a gallop.
Delilah let out a scream of terror and slumped in her
saddle.
Geoffrey was at her side in a second, and Alain whirled about,
wide-eyed in alarm, then turned his horse and galloped back to her
side.
The witch and her henchmen disappeared in among the trees.
Alain and Geoffrey were each chafing one of Delilah's hands.
The fallen men began to crawl toward the trees at the side of
the road.
"There, now, lady, 'tis done!". "There, they shall not
harm you!"
"Come, you must revive!"
"Geoffrey, have you a dram of brandy in your saddlebag?"
"Aye, here, and more!"
Cordelia stared at the two of them in outrage, feeling very much
ignored and forgotten, reflecting bitterly that there were grave
disadvantages in being able to take care of yourself. She was
quite sure that Delilah could, tooand she was certainly proving it
now!
"My lady, are you well?"
She looked down in surprise.
It was Forrest who had remembered her after all, and had stepped
up beside her saddle. Cordelia looked down at him, instantly
grateful ...
And saw his eyes glowing up at her, glowing with a gleam that
only desire can bring; desire, and perhaps something more ...
Cordelia's smile of gratitude faltered; she felt as though his
eyes were growing larger, larger, and for a moment, his face seemed
to be all she saw. She felt a strange tingling beginning deep
inside her, radiating outward to envelop her back, legs, and scalp
like an aura. "Yes," she gasped, but her voice cracked, and
she had to wait a moment to regain control of herself. Then
she forced a smile which quickly turned real. "Yes, I am
well, thanks to you, brave Forrest. But how came you
here?"
Before he could answer, Alain remembered his courtesies and
turned to the bandit. "I thank you for assistance, sir."
"Aye, most great thanks for your assistance," Delilah purred,
far too sweetly. Her eyes glinted.
Forrest turned to her, his lips parting, no doubt for a
retort. Then he saw her face, and froze.
So did Delilah, for a moment, her eyes widening. Alain,
Cordelia, and Geoffrey all sat staring; even they could feel the
sudden tension in the air, for the long, long minutes that the two
stared at one another.
Then Delilah turned away with a look of scorn. "Why, he is
nothing but a woods-runner, an outlaw!"
"But a woods-runner on your side, Lady! Or, more aptly
... " Forrest turned quickly back to Cordelia. ".
. . on your side."
"Outlaw?" Alain frowned. "Hold! I know you, do
I not?" Then, before Forrest could answer: "Indeed I
do! You are the bandit chieftain whom I defeated and sent to
my lady!" He turned to Cordelia. "Lady Cordelia, how is
it you have let this man go free?"
"I did not." She frowned, puzzled, but kept her eyes on
Forrest. "I sent him, with his whole band, to Sir
Maris. How is it the seneschal has dispatched you,
Forrest?"
"Forrest?" Alain stared. "You know his name?"
"Indeed," she said indignantly—perhaps the more
indignantly because Alain had been fighting for another
woman. "I required his name and rank of him."
"Sir Maris bade me go, and trouble good folk no more," Forrest
explained. "He said nothing of bad folk."
Alain smiled, amused. "So you have seen your way clear to
the troubling of such as these?" He nodded after the witch
and her cronies.
"Aye, though I follow good folk." Forrest gazed up at
Cordelia, his smile so warm that she felt it with an almost
physical pressure.
Alain's eyes sparked with jealousy. He moved his horse
closer to Cordelia's. "Surely milady is indeed `good folk'the
best of the best, and the fairest of the fair—far too good
for so incorrigible a rascal as yourself to attend upon her!"
"If I am incorrigible, do not incorrige me." Forrest was
still gazing up into Cordelia's eyes. "Will you bid me
go?"
"No-o-o-o," Cordelia said, as though the words were being
dragged out of her. Then, quickly: "This pathway through the
forest seems to be hazardous; there is no saying what dangers lurk
upon it."
"Well, I can say." Forrest grinned. "I have been
through this wood before—and through it, and through
it! You speak truly, my lady—there are dangers by the
score: monsters, wild beasts of all sorts; wolves and bears are the
least of diem. There are ogres, wild men, all manner of
dangers! Nay, even with two such doughty knights to guard
you, you cannot have too many defenders."
"Nor I," said Delilah, with an air of hauteur.
"Nor yourself either, milady." The gaze Forrest had given
Cordelia had been warm, but the look he gave Delilah was a
sunburst. "Any fair ladies who travel this wood do need
protecting—and the fairer they are, the more they need
warding."
"By that token," Geoffrey said, with an edge to his tone, "the
Lady Delilah would need an army."
Forrest turned to him in surprise. "And what of the Lady
Cordelia, sir?"
"Oh, Cordelia?" Geoffrey made a dismissive gesture.
"She is my sister."
"I see." Forrest's lips quirked with humor. "And a
sister, of course, can never be beautiful to her brother." He
turned back to Cordelia, his gaze boring into hers. "But I
assure you, my lady, I am not your brother."
"No; I should have recognized you if you were." Cordelia
strove to sound cool and disinterested, but it was no use. He
knew exactly how interested she was.
"Come! Must we stand here all day chaffering?"
Delilah shook her bridle till the rings jingled. "Or shall we
not move onward toward my father's house?"
"Aye, most assuredly!" Alain turned back to Forrest and
said severely, "Thank you for your help, good fellow. Now be
off."
"Nay, I shall be on. As to calling me `fellow'..."
Forrest's face hardened as he looked up at Alain. "I am as
well born as you, I warrant, and was knighted. It is true
that I have fallen on evil days, and I may have been less than
honorable as a consequence, but that does not lessen my
quality."
Alain's mouth quirked in wry amusement. "As well born as
I, sir? To be sure, any lapse in chivalry does show you to be
of lesser quality than your birth."
"If that is so," Forrest returned, his voice hardening, "there
are many men in Gramarye who are of lower quality than that to
which they were born, yet wear duke's coronets and sit in great
houses."
Alain lost his smile.
Cordelia decided the tension was growing too thick. She
clucked to Fess, and he moved between the two men, so that she
broke their gaze. "Come, gentlemen! Let us not stand in
idle chatter; the Lady Delilah hath the right of it in that."
She stressed the word "that."
"Let us go."
"To her father's house?" the outlaw asked in
surprise. "Indeed," Cordelia answered.
"Aye," Alain said severely. "We have given our word that
we will escort the lady to her home—though I doubt that you
would understand the importance of honoring one's word, sir!"
Now it was Forrest's gaze that darkened, and Cordelia said
quickly, "Alain! That was unchivalrous of you, sir!"
Then, to both of them, "Do what you will—I am going."
She kicked her heels against Fess's sides, and the great black
horse moved off with alacrity. The two men looked up,
startled; then Alain kicked his horse and rode to come up beside
her, and Forrest ran.
Cordelia reined in Fess, and the two caught up, pacing along on
either side of her. She made sure that Fess was going slowly
enough so that Forrest wouldn't be pressed too hard.
"Nay, you must not leave me behind, fair lady!" Forrest
protested. "For this Forrest would be dark indeed without
you."
She turned to him, tilting up her chin, and said, in her coolest
tone, "Black-haired, sir, and black-bearded; how dark can you not
be?"
The outlaw stared at her a moment, then grinned, showing white
teeth. His lips, she noticed, were very red, and fuller than
most men's. "Even as you say it, my lady—but darker
tenfold for want of your smile."
"Though any man would seem dark," said Alain, "near the light of
your beauty, lovely Cordelia."
She turned, gratified. "Why, thank you, Alain. Where
have you learned such pretty manners of speech?"
"Why, from my heart," he said, gazing into her eyes. For a
moment, her heart fluttered, and she found herself
wondering if he really did mean it.
No. Surely. It was only the competition with Forrest
that had caused him to say it—though she seemed to remember a
few compliments of the night before ...
Still ...
Alain had always hated to lose, she remembered that well enough
from their childhoods, though he had learned how to pretend a
better grace as he grew older ...
"The leaf that flutters from the tree cannot be lighter than
your step!"
"The summer's sky cannot be more clear than your eyes!"
"The cherry's blossom must pale when set against your
cheek!"
"Nay, for those blossoms are your cheeks!"
Cordelia looked from one to the other, soaking up the
compliments as they settled about her. She knew better than
to trust either of them, or to think that they really meant
it—but she might as well enjoy it while it lasted. She
decided that there was definitely something to be said for
competition.
Behind her, her brother was looking decidedly grumpy.
"What do they see in her? Surely she cannot have grown into a
beauty in the space of one day!"
"Oh, it is only as Alain has said," Delilah answered,
disgusted. "A brother can never see his sister's
beauty." She turned toward him, a wicked notion coming into
her mind.
"Perhaps that means that only brothers can see truly."
Geoffrey looked at her for a moment, trying to make up his mind
whether or not to be offended. Then he decided to give
Cordelia a little of her own medicine. "You have never had a
brother?" he asked.
"Nay—only my sister." A shadow crossed her
face. Geoffrey spoke quickly to erase the thought.
"Then I must fill his place, and see you as you truly are.",
For a moment, she seemed discomfited, even alarmed; but it was
only a flicker. Her eyelids drooped, and a slow, lazy smile
curved her lips. "Come, sir! Did you not see me truly
last night?"
"What, by moonlight?" Geoffrey breathed. "Or by
starlight? Nay! Surely only the light of the sun shows
us as we truly are."
"Indeed." She lost the smile and tilted her chin up,
gazing at him in disdain. "And what has the light of the sun
shown, sir?"
"Why," said Geoffrey, "a dozen tiny features that I could not
see by night—how red your lips are, how rosy your
cheeks! Though your complexion, I note, is as flawless as
ever it was—even the alabaster that it seemed by night!
And surely the stars, that had fallen from the skies in despair of
matching your eyes, knew truth, for you outshine them all!"
Delilah gave a laugh of delight. "A very pretty speech,
sir! Nay, I think I will listen to some more—if you
have any in your repertoire."
Cordelia glanced back, frowning just in time to see Geoffrey
kissing Delilah's hand, and to hear her laugh again. "La,
sir! Pretty speeches are not enough!"
Then, more softly, so that Cordelia could not hear, "What
actions can you show me?"
"Why, what you will." Geoffrey looked up with a slow smile
that turned into a grin. "Name the deed you fancy, lady, and
I shall do it."
Delilah cocked her head to the side, evaluating him. "I
think that I shall wait to say it. Until I do, sir, you shall
lie low."
"As low as you wish," Geoffrey said, his voice husky. "But
where shall we lie? Sooth, we must wait for night!"
Delilah's eyes sparked with anger, but her mouth curved in
amusement, then in derision. "You shall show me nothing, sir,
if you must wait for night—for then there will be nothing
that shows."
"Ay de mi!" Geoffrey leaned closer. "Must I
wait? For you tell me that if I do, I shall have
nothing!"
"Why, then," she breathed, "do not."
He covered her mouth with his own, both leaning from their
saddies to bridge the gap, only their lips touching. Cordelia
glanced back again at the sudden silence, and stared in
indignation, then whipped about, eyes front, face burning.
"Why, how have I offended, beautiful lady?" Alain cried,
wounded.
Cordelia thawed a little, turning toward him, and bestowed a
smile upon him. "Why, in no way, sir, and neither has
Forrest. I am only indignant when I remember the verse."
"Then blame me not, for I have made no promises." Alain's
voice softened, and he leaned closer. "I have only asked
them, and they have not been given."
Cordelia stared at him a moment. Her own lips curved, and
she said, "Then do not ask again until you are sure they will be
granted."
"And when shall that be?" he breathed. "When will
the sun fall from the sky?"
They looked up, startled; then Alain's face darkened at what he
thought was Forrest's impertinence—and perhaps it was, but
the outlaw was gazing up through the leafy canopy at the sky.
"There cannot be so much of daylight left. Where shall we
camp?"
"There is no need." Alain's voice was stern. "Lady
Delilah has said we shall come to her father's house ere darkness
falls." He turned back to Delilah. "Shall we not,
milady?"
Delilah broke off from the kiss, though not quite as quickly as
she might have, considering how surprised she looked. Alain
stiffened, and Cordelia's heart twisted.
"Shall we not what, sir?" Delilah tucked at her hair,
though it didn't need the attention.
"Come to your father's house ere nightfall." Alain's tone
was stiffly polite. "Shall we not?"
"Nightfall?" Delilah looked up through the leaves at the
sun rays. "By suppertime, or not long after, I should
say. Indeed, there is no need to hurry."
"That is well." Alain turned back to face front, seeming
relieved. "Then let us tell tales as we go along—or
shall we sing?"
Geoffrey shrugged. "Sing, if you will—but let it be
a tune that we all know."
"Why, so I shall." Alain thought for a moment, then began
to sing in a clear, rich tenor.
"Alas, my love, you do me wrong,
To cast me off discourteously..."
" `By all the promises that e'er men broke, In number more than
women spoke.' "
Geoffrey joined in with the baritone line, and the two girls
began to sing a descant. Forrest's voice underscored them all
with a warm, resonant bass—resonating within Cordelia, giving
her shivers. She glanced down at Forrest; he glanced back at
her. Some electric current seemed to pass between them.
Cordelia shivered, and turned her gaze resolutely back to the
front. Perhaps Alain was the safest for her, after all.
But did she truly wish to be safe?
The tall stone pillars seemed to rear up very suddenly, for they
were right in the middle of the woodland. Huge iron gates
hung from them. Behind them sat a serf in tunic and
hose. Cordelia stared for a moment, startled, then glanced to
either side. The woods were so thick, the roadside trees so
intertwined with bramble and thorn, that what she had mistaken for
a thicket was really a very artfully constructed fence. It
would not deter an armored knight, of course, but it would protect
the people within from the casual trespasser or poacher, and from
most wild animals. "Willem!" Delilah carolled.
"How fare you?"
The porter jerked awake out of a doze and stared as though at an
apparition. "My lady Delilah!" He leaped from his
seat. "Is it truly you?"
"Yes, Willem. I am returned to you, thanks to the
protection of these good folk. How fares my father?"
"In anxiety and woe, my lady. He wrings his hands and
cries out every hour, that his men can be of no worth if they have
not found your trail. Ah, praise Heaven you are come!
For it has been a grievous time for all of us!"
"Why, then, I am filled with regret." Delilah bowed her
head. "But I am filled with gladness to be come home
again. Send word to my father."
"Aye, milady, as you say!" Willem unlatched the gate and
swung it wide. The party rode in, Forrest at its head.
Willem latched the gate behind them. "I shall run with the
news, milady!" He sped away.
The party followed more slowly, riding up along a gently winding
track that was overhung with graceful maples and oaks—not
planted in neat rows, Cordelia saw; rather, the roadway had been
picked out between them. Somehow, the idea struck a chord of
rightness within her.
"I have told a gardener, my lady, and he bears the word!"
Willem paused by them to duck his head in a bow before he ran back
to his post.
Through the trees, Cordelia could see hedges, flowers, and a
closely cropped lawn. The gardeners were busy indeed.
Then the road took a final turn—and there, perhaps a quarter
of a mile away, was a huge old house of stucco, half-timbered, its
leaded panes glinting in the sun. Cordelia caught her breath;
set in a border of flowers and ornamental shrubs, it was really
quite lovely. She hated to admit it, but Delilah had a
beautiful home.
As they neared the house, a gray-haired, gray-bearded man came
hurrying out to the steps, his servants streaming behind him.
They stood waiting, and cheered as the company rode up, reining in
their horses.
"Delilah!" the old man cried in a deep and resonant
basso. "Come to my arms, my child! Oh, thou hast
worried me so horribly!" He ran down the steps, reaching up;
she hopped down into his arms, and he crushed her to his breast,
then held her back to look at her, beaming. "I was so filled
with anxiety, so horribly afraid that some harm might have befallen
thee, that thou wouldst never come home!"
"Alas! I feared, too, Father!" She threw herself
into his arms again, embracing him.
Alain looked on, smiling fondly—but Cordelia glanced at
Geoffrey, and found him glancing at her, too, one eyebrow raised in
skepticism. Cordelia gave a tiny nod; it did seem rather
artificial. She decided that she would have to marry Alain,
if for no better reason than to protect him from people who would
take advantage of his good nature.
She scolded herself for the thought a moment later, of
course.
The old man held Delilah away again, looking down gravely.
"It was very wrong of thee, my dear, to worry thy father so, and to
put thyself in such peril."
"I—I know, my father." Delilah lowered her
gaze. "But Roland had sent word that I should meet him 'neath
a certain willow, deep within the wood, at dawn ... or so I
thought..."
"Young Roland?" Her father frowned. "Why, he came to
call upon thee the very day thou hadst left—but thou wert not
here!"
"No." Delilah looked up, very obviously nerving herself to
speak. "The word that had been brought to me was false, my
father. I learned that, but too late—for I sat me down
beneath the willow where he bade me meet him, and he never came
... he never..." She gulped; tears began to flow
again.
"There, there!" The old man whisked a handkerchief from
his cuff and dabbed at her cheeks. "Assuredly, he could not
come, for he did not know thou hadst gone, nor where! When we
told him thou wert fled, he was as distraught as I!" Her
father frowned. "Who brought thee this false news of him, my
dear?"
Delilah lowered her gaze again, biting her lip.
"Nay, thou must needs tell me!" her father said
sternly. But she looked away, very reluctant indeed. "I
cannot, my father. It would be ... wrong."
"Wrong? To tell me the name of one who hath betrayed thee
so? Come, child! Speak truly!"
But she shook her head, eyes still downcast.
Cordelia decided somebody was going to have to say something;
she could see the storm clouds gathering in the old man's
brow—and apparently, both her brother and her suitor were too
concerned with honor to speak a word. Forrest, of course, did
not know—he had not been there the night before to hear this
tale. "It was her sister."
The old man looked up, staring, appalled. Then he looked
down again, scowling, anger gathering. "Is this true,
Delilah?"
Delilah said nothing, only bit her lip and gave a quick
nod. "But it was her sister who waylaid you upon the
road!" Forrest exclaimed. "Sir, I came in time to help
them beat her off, she and her henchmen, so I know whereof I
speak."
The old man lifted his head. "How now, sir! What
henchmen are these?"
Forrest shrugged. "Big, hard-faced men in garb of murky
gray, with targets on their arms and swords in their hands.
Hardened men, by the look of them, but no match for two young
knights and..." He grinned. ". . . a
forest outlaw who came upon them unawares."
" 'Tis even so," Geoffrey said at last.
"I cannot believe it!" the old man said, the color
draining from his face. He looked down at Delilah, at the
misery in her eyes, and groaned. "But I see I must.
Nay, we shall have thy sister out, and hear the truth from her own
lips."
Tears trembled on Delilah's lids.
"I think, good sir," Geoffrey said softly, "you are not like to
see your other daughter again. She shall know what has passed
here, and shall stay far from home."
"Nay, never say so!" The father looked up,
distraught. "Am I to be bereft of one daughter, no matter
what I do?" Geoffrey and Cordelia exchanged glances, and
Cordelia said slowly, "There may be a way. I doubt it, sir,
but there may be. Let us sleep upon the issue, and see what
we may do."
"Why, surely, then!" But he frowned at them,
puzzled. "Be sure that I shall be grateful for whatever
thought you may give it."
He looked back at Delilah again. "Who are these good folk
who have escorted thee here, my dear? May I not know their
names?"
"As much as they have let me know, Father," she said, "for these
gentlemen have told me that they ride bound by a vow not to name
themselves fully to any but each other, until some purpose of
theirs is accomplished."
"Which, of course, must also remain a secret." The old man
nodded. "You are knights-errant, then?"
"We are." Alain inclined his head, looking faintly
puzzled. Cordelia could understand why. The old man was
clearly of the gentry—a squire at least, more probably a
knight himself, even of the petty aristocracy. It was very
unlikely that the Crown Prince would not have met him, for he had
been introduced to every nobleman in Gramarye at one time or
another. Of course, there were always a few who never came to
Court, but kept themselves buried in the country, managing their
estates.... Still, the home was not a castle, nor even a
moated grange or battle-tower; and although there was every sign of
comfort, there was no appearance of such luxury as befitted a great
lord.
"Forgive my lack of manners." Delilah turned to them, one
hand on her father's arm. "Gentlemen and lady, may I present
my father, Sir Julian LeFevre. Father, Sir Alain ...
Sir Geoffrey ... his sister, the Lady Cordelia ... and
Sir Forrest Elmsford."
Each of the young men inclined their heads. Cordelia
couldn't drop a curtsy, being still mounted, but she smiled
warmly.
"You are welcome, welcome, and with all the thanks I can
bestow!" Sir Julian cried, throwing his arms wide.
"Step down, step down! My grooms shall see to thy
horses. Come in, come into my house! You must bathe,
you must dine! You must allow me to show my thanks!
Nay, you must stay a day, two days, three, that I may lavish my
hospitality upon you in gratitude."
"The road has been long." Geoffrey and Alain exchanged
glances. "A bath would be welcome, and some little
rest." Alain turned to Cordelia, inclining his head.
"If you wish it, my lady?"
"Surely," Cordelia said quickly. She wasn't about to take
a chance that the boys would stay at Delilah's house without
her. "I, too, would be most grateful for some respite."
Alain turned back to Sir Julian with a smile. "I thank
you, sir. We accept your hospitality."
"I rejoice!" the old man cried. "Come in, come
in!"
CHAPTER 11
Hostlers took the horses to the stables. Fess's words
echoed in both the Gallowglasses' minds: Farewell, Cordelia; be
wary, Geoffrey. These people are not what they seem. If
you have the slightest need of me, call.
We shall, Fess, Cordelia promised.
Delilah and Forrest both wondered why Cordelia and her brother
were so quiet for a few seconds. They could not sense the
exchange, since Fess's remarks had been made in the encrypted mode
of telepathy that the Gallowglasses had invented for the use of
their family alone.
Servants showed them to their rooms. They looked about
them as they were led through the house—at the graceful
double stairway, and the leaded panes of tinted glass that adorned
the landing, filling the whole entry hall with light.
Up the stairway they went, to the chambers above. The
ceilings were ten feet high, the hallways broad, and the rooms
spacious. It was scarcely a castle or a palace, but it was a
good and very big house, with real glass in the windows and
featherbeds in the bedrooms—both great luxuries, in a
medieval society.
Since Fess had taught the Gallowglass children history, Cordelia
recognized the architecture as being post-Medieval—Tudor, at
least. It did not concern her terribly—she knew that
her planet's original colonists had redefined Medieval society to
incorporate whatever suited them. A Renaissance manor house
was only a century or two too late, after all.
Cordelia was delighted with the chamber—it was huge,
light, airy, and decorated with the sort of frills and pastels that
reminded her of her own room at home. She went to the windows
to see how much of a view she had, and was delighted to see an acre
or so of carefully tended garden, bright with flowers, and cut into
several smaller gardens by high hedges.
"Shall I draw your bath, milady?" the maid asked.
"Not quite yet," Cordelia answered. "I must explore this
delightful garden that I see below me! Will you show me to
it?"
The maid did, and Cordelia went out, looking about her, feeling
refreshed by the mere sight of such gay flowerbeds amidst luxurious
lawns. She bent to smell a rose—and as she
straightened, she saw Forrest watching her.
"Like will to like," he said.
She blushed and looked away, hoping he spoke only of herself and
the flower, knowing he hinted at more. "You have me at a
disadvantage, sir."
"The best way." He stepped up, proffering his arm.
"Come, shall we discover what wonders this garden holds?"
He was almost courtly about it, his manner reminding her that he
was gently born and well bred, no matter what he had become.
Almost against her will, she slipped her arm through his, knowing
it was dangerous but finding that gave spice to the stroll, making
it almost an adventure.
They strolled between beds of glorious flowers. "Truly a
riot of color," Forrest said. "Do you not find them
attractive, my lady?"
"Indeed I do," she sighed. "He who laid out such beds must
have been truly inspired."
"But why should it have been 'he'?" Forrest asked.
"Might not a woman prove as proficient at laying out beds as a
man?"
She wondered again if he meant more than he said. "I
should think a woman's taste in color and form should be equal to
any man's," she agreed.
"Nay, far more." He halted, and she realized that they
stood in a corner of the hedge, screened from view of the
house—and he stepped closer, his face coming nearer. "A
woman's taste should be far superior to a man's," he breathed.
Transfixed, she stared at him—and he lowered his face,
touching his lips to hers.
It was almost as though sparks spangled across her mouth,
seeming to sting even as they tasted amazingly sweet. For a
moment, her eyes fluttered closed, savoring the delicate, exciting
sensation ...
Then she felt the tip of his tongue touch her lips, and a stew
of emotions boiled up within her: longing and revulsion, yearning
and fright. A tickling began deep within her and spread
...
No more! She stepped back, with a gasp of surprise.
"Oh, nay!" he pleaded. "A moment more, only a second
longer . .."
Somehow, the plea frightened her, and she darted away from him,
pausing ten feet away, hands clasped at her waist, striving for
composure ...
Forrest laughed, and leaped after her. Cordelia gave a cry
of alarm and ran. Forrest gave a joyful shout and chased.
It was the joy in his voice that banished her fears, his
laughter that made it a game. Breathless, she nonetheless
found herself laughing, too, as she dodged behind a tree, then
peeked out to see if he still followed—and found herself
staring straight into his face.
She ducked back behind the tree, out the other side, found him
there before her, ducked back twice more, then ran, laughing.
Crowing with delight, he followed.
In and out among the hedges, under arches of roses they fled, he
chasing, she fleeing with a high, wild excitement singing through
her. Finally her steps began to slow, and he reached out and
caught her. She turned to fight him off with joyful squeals,
but tripped over a root and fell backwards. Unfortunately,
she caught at Forrest for support, and instead of holding her up,
he fell with her—and landed on top.
He caught himself on his forearms, so there was no
impact—none but the softest, of his body against hers,
sending wild currents of heat all through her. She panted,
her bosom heaving, staring up into his eyes, only inches
away. "Oh, sir, you must let me rise!"
"Must I?" He grinned, his face coming nearer, his voice
husky. "Wherefore?"
"If you are a gentleman, you must!"
"Oh, then, I pray I may not be a gentleman!" he breathed,
and kissed her.
She stiffened, galvanized beneath him, as the unfamiliar welter
of emotions churned up within her—but she was truly
frightened to realize that she wanted him to go on. And on,
and on. She wrenched her head aside with a little cry,
protesting in earnest. "Nay, sir, you must let me up!
Would you force a lady against her will?"
"If I must, I must," he sighed, but she wasn't sure how he meant
it. "Come, then, milady, I shall do as you askbut you must
pay a ransom."
"What ransom is that?" She regarded him warily. "One
more kiss," he breathed, and lowered his lips again.
She was taut for a moment more, then reminded herself that he
would let her go after only one more, and let herself relax a
little, let the wonderful, frightening feelings well up within her
...
Then his fingers touched her breast.
She lay rigid a moment, her whole consciousness focussed on that
one touch, turning now to a caress, trailing fire through the cloth
across her skin, the maelstrom of feelings boiling up toward it,
threatening to engulf her ...
The fright was too great. She broke away from his lips
with a gasp, then slapped his cheek with all the force she could
muster—which was not very much, given her position.
But it sufficed to startle him; he drew back just enough for her
to struggle free. She leaped to her feet and backed away,
pressing her skirts smooth and crying, "For shame, sir! You
have taken far more than the ransom you stated!"
"I have, I will own," he said, all contrition. " 'Tis only
that you are so irresistible to me, that I crave more and more of
you. I implore you, sweet lady, do not disdain me for naught
but love's labors."
"Love's labors will be lost, unless they be less free," she
replied tartly, and hurried away, face flaming.
At the opposite edge of the garden, Alain plodded moodily
along. He, too, had felt the need for a walk before bathing,
but to his eyes, the beauty of the garden seemed dimmed. He
was rapidly coming to the conclusion that Cordelia was lost to him,
if he could not learn to be more romantic—and he did not
think he could, for truly, he was not romantic by nature. All
he could do would be to learn to be false. As he was, all he
had on his side was sincerity, and what use was that?
A bunch of roses caught his eye-white, and near them, a bush of
pink ones. Behind them glowed blossoms of deep red.
Alain gazed at them moodily, reflecting how much they seemed to be
like Cordelia, and himself ...
He stiffened, struck with inspiration. He had only
sincerity to recommend him, had he? Well, mayhap sincerity
could be romantic, in its way! Kneeling, he plucked a few of
each color of rose, then hurried back toward the house, face
glowing, hoping to come upon Cordelia.
He found her almost on the threshold. She, too, seemed to
have been for a stroll, and surely, it seemed to have been good for
her. She seemed filled with energy, and her cheeks were
rosy.
"Alain!" She saw him, and brought up short. "What do
you here?"
"Only strolling in the garden," he explained, "feeling the need
to let my limbs cool ere I heat them in water." Her eyes
fastened on the bouquet. "Whence came those?"
"I found them in the garden." He pressed them into her
hands. "I could not help but pluck them for you, sweet
Cordelia, for they remind me so much of yourself—at least,
the white blooms do, for they are so pure, like yourself. The
red, alas, are steeped in passion, as I am when I gaze at
you—and the pink are, I hope, the love I feel for you: my
passion allayed by your purity."
Cordelia felt her heart melting, so touched was she by his
clumsy tenderness. She leaned forward to give him a quick
peck on the cheek, but even as she did, she remembered Forrest's
kiss, and felt leaden guilt within her. She turned away,
ashamed.
"Ah, once more I have offended!" he cried. "Say,
fair Cordelia, what have I done?"
"Only what is right," she answered, trying not to let her anger
at herself turn into anger at him. She turned back, managing
a flirtatious smile. "If only you had done it sooner!
And if only you would do it more often, my Prince, you might yet
save me from a drastic fate!"
"What fate could that be?" he asked in total
innocence. Exasperated, she almost told him—but
instead, she snapped, "Spinsterhood!" Then she spun on her
heel and sped through the door, leaving Alain to gape after her,
not understanding at all.
Cordelia splashed water on her face, then turned away to find a
beautiful afternoon dress of green and yellow laid out on the bed
for her. She stared, amazed, then took it up
reluctantly. Surely it could not be Delilah's! The lady
was too small for any of her clothing to fit Cordelia. Her
sister's, perhaps? Certainly the style, though outdated, was
not old enough for the dress to have belonged to her mother.
Cordelia wavered for a moment, but the gown was very pretty, and
her own russet travelling dress was rather dusty. With a
sudden decision, she unfastened the dress, letting it drop to the
floor, then wriggled out of her shift, took the washcloth, and gave
herself a quick sponge bath. When she was done, she waved her
arms and hands, fanning herself, to dry, and slipped into the clean
shift that had been laid out for her. She delighted at its
smoothness—not silk, perhaps, but very fine linen. And
yes, it did fit.
Then she took up the green-and-yellow gown and slipped it over
her head. She fastened the kirtle around her waist and wished
for a cheval glass to regard herself in, but of course there was
none; her brother would have to do in its place. She
projected a thought on their family's encrypted mode:
Geoffrey.
Aye, Cordelia. He answered so quickly that she
might have thought he was waiting for her call.
Let us walk in the garden. Her tone was
peremptory. Geoffrey didn't disagree for a moment,
though. In truth, a stroll among the flowers should be
most pleasant. Let us walk, sweet sister.
Lightfooted, she stepped out through the door and ran to the
garden, feeling much more presentable.
Geoffrey was there, though he too had changed garments.
Strange that they had clothing to fit him so wellalthough, coming
closer, Cordelia could see that his doublet was of an old-fashioned
cut. No doubt it was one that had belonged to Sir Julian in
his youth.
"Why, Geoffrey," she began, to compliment him, but before she
could, he grinned broadly.
"Cordelia! Why, how lovely! I would never have
thought green and yellow to be your colors, but they are most
becoming!"
"Why, thank you, sir." Suddenly, Cordelia felt even
better. She smoothed her gown, feeling more than a match for
anything Delilah might bring on.
Then she became solemn; it was time to compare notes.
"There is one chamber in this house that is shielded from thought,
brother."
"There is indeed," Geoffrey agreed. "Either there is some
telepath who is given full-time to its warding, or..."
Cordelia nodded. "There is a machine of some sort hidden
within it that cloaks it from all human thought."
"Let us assume it to be the latter," Geoffrey said, "and that
our hosts know something of advanced technology. But why
would they give themselves away in this fashion? They must
know that any telepath who chances upon them will know at once what
they do!"
"Even so," Cordelia said, "as surely Delilah must have known
that we should know her for a witch, simply for the excellence with
which she has shielded her mind."
Geoffrey lifted his head suddenly. "The shielding is
gone."
Cordelia tested the room with her own mind, and nodded.
"Mayhap it is only an esper who wards there." Geoffrey asked,
"You were not greatly surprised to learn that Delilah was a witch,
were you?"
"Nay, surely," Cordelia smiled. "And it did not take
telepathy to read my mind in that regard, brother."
"Well, then, we deal with witchfolk," Geoffrey said. "Do
we deal with aught more?"
"If the dream we shared last night was true," Geoffrey said
slowly, "we deal with a woman who has command of men, though she
would have it seem that she does not, and who could order this
house prepared for her use simply to deceive us."
Cordelia nodded. "But such a house, Geoffrey! Have
you ever seen its like?"
"A few," Geoffrey said slowly. "They are rare, but they do
exist."
"Nonetheless, there is something about it that strikes me as
anomalous."
"Anomalous indeed," Geoffrey agreed. "There is too much of
good planning here, of the well-coordinated. We must
consider, sister, that we deal with our old enemies from the
future, who may move against us in some such way as they have
before. Of course, I suppose this could be the work of a
native telepath..."
"Not so," Cordelia said, "if the telepath knew no more of
machines, or the universe outside our world, than the folk who are
born here. She could not have expected that two who have such
knowledge might visit."
Geoffrey gave her a cynical smile. "Come, sister! Do
you truly think we have deceived her any more than she has deceived
us?"
That gave Cordelia pause. "No," she said slowly, "from
what you have said thus far, she must know, must she not? Are
we not therefore in peril?"
"We must believe so," said Geoffrey, "if we are not to be taken
by surprise."
Cordelia felt a touch of fear. "Then we must be on our
guard night and day, brother."
"You may take the day," he said at once. "I shall take the
night."
"To be on guard, Geoffrey." Cordelia glared at him.
"I have seen the way in which you look upon the Lady Delilah."
Geoffrey shrugged carelessly. "I can be on guard whiles I
do other things, Cordelia."
"Oh, surely," she said, with a withering glance. "Yet bear
in mind, brother—you are only human."
Geoffrey grinned. "Well, that is so—there are some
weaknesses built into us."
Neither of them said a word about leaving. In fact,
Cordelia felt a stab of fear, and was amazed to realize that she
was more frightened for Alain than for herself.
"Truly," Geoffrey said, "you do not think they would dare
attempt to assassinate the heir to the throne?" Cordelia
shrugged impatiently. "We do very poorly at disguising
ourselves, do we not, brother? For who is there in this land
who does not know of the High Warlock and the names of his
children? Nay, especially among witchfolk, who does not know
of us?"
"True," Geoffrey agreed, "and who does not know that the Crown
Prince is named Alain, nor that he is the friend of the children of
the High Warlock? Nay, you have the right of it,
sister—we must be prepared for anything, even murder.
Yet there is this." He spread his hands. "Why have they
not already struck?"
"There is that," Cordelia said slowly. "We may yet have
some time. Still, brother, ought we not leave tomorrow, or as
soon as we may?"
"We should leave now, but Alain would never agree to it,"
Geoffrey said. "He would see it as a breach of courtesy."
Cordelia wondered if that was the only reason.
"No, we must stay at least the night—and study the
situation. It may be that we can strike a blow now that will
save us a hundred in the future. We can always call for help,
if we need it—but let us first see what this pleasant nest of
traitors does intend."
"Aye," said Cordelia. "But guard the Prince, my
brother. Ward him well. Although perhaps I should do
that—and stay close by him."
"Oh, you need not," said Geoffrey quickly.
Cordelia smiled. "Why, brother—could you fear for my
honor?"
Geoffrey took a second, and answered as delicately as he
could. "Let us say, my sister, that I know how fragile a
thing honor may be, and I would not wish to lay more stress on it
than needs be. But come—our host will be expecting us
for dinner soon enough, and we must not disappoint him."
"As you say, brother." Cordelia took Geoffrey's arm, and
they went back toward the manor house arm in arm.
They went in through the tall windowed doors that opened onto
the terrace. Sir Julian looked up as they came in. "Ah,
well met! I thought you had tired of my company so soon!"
Cordelia smiled. "Surely not, my lord." She accepted
a glass of wine from a servant and looked about her at the Great
Hall. The trestle tables were set up as they would have been
in a castle, though with many fewer places. The head table
stood on a dais only a few inches high. Behind it, painted on
the plaster and beams, was a huge coat of arms. Cordelia gave
it a glance, memorizing it for later analysis; she did not easily
remember any such tokens as these.
The rest of the hall was plastered too, between the old oaken
beams. There was a tapestry centered in the long wall across
from the windows, and another at the end.
The original colonists of Gramarye had reconstructed the Middle
Ages not as they really were, but as they should have been.
Accordingly, they had kept costumes and customs from the Seventh
Century, and mixed them in with all the succeeding centuries
through the Fifteenth. But when it came to the amenities and
courtesies, they had been more much eclectic; the range spanned
through the Nineteenth Century and into the early Twentieth.
On Gramarye, there were elements of gracious living that had never
been there in the real Middle Ages of Terra—and this
gathering for wine before dinner was certainly one of them.
So, for that matter, was the manor house itself.
They had come late; Delilah had already managed to work Alain
off to the side of the conversational grouping. Seeing
Delilah, Cordelia felt dowdy all over again, for the hussy was
attired in a demure gown of pink and cream, considerably looser
than her riding dress, only hinting at the lush contours
beneath. It complemented her blonde hair so well that
Cordelia automatically felt dimmed by comparison. But she
lifted her chin; she would not be outdone!
Even as Cordelia watched, though, the vixen took another step
toward the far corner. Alain perforce stepped with her, to
hear what she was saying. He began to respond gravely, but
Cordelia could tell, from the color of his face, that her
suggestion had not been entirely decorous. Her flirtations
had become even broader than on their journey.
Cordelia leaned over to Geoffrey and murmured, "Brother, would
you see if you can distract the Lady Delilah from my inconstant
suitor?"
Geoffrey looked up, then smiled. "He is constant,
Cordelia, or he would not be blushing. Naetheless, I am
certainly more than delighted to do as you ask." He stepped
away.
But Cordelia stopped him with a hand on his forearm. He
turned back, eyebrows raised in polite inquiry. "Only
flirtation, mind," Cordelia said sternly.
Geoffrey grinned. "I make no promises." Then he was
gone, moving over to join Alain and Delilah. She looked up
with a flash of annoyance, which turned very quickly into a
sensuous stare which she even more quickly broke, turning to Alain
with a silvery laugh.
Cordelia turned half away from them, satisfied; Delilah
certainly would not be able to keep her mind on Alain now.
She reflected that a brother with overabundant hormones could have
his uses.
For herself, she must not appear to be watching too closely
...
"Lady Cordelia! How beautiful you are!"
She turned, warmed by the sincerity in the voice—then
caught her breath.
Forrest stood beside her, resplendent in a doublet of the same
cut and period as Geoffrey's, hose clinging to his legs to show his
magnificent calves and thighs to advantage. Cordelia scolded
herself; she should not be noticing his legs so, even if they were
remarkably well turned. Or the feeling of his lips on her
hand, though they were amazingly soft, amazingly sensuous ...
He looked up, gazing into her eyes, and she managed to find
enough voice to say, "You sound surprised, sir. Is it so rare
that I am ... presentable?"
"Nay, not in the slightest!" He grinned, white teeth
flashing. "You are rare indeed, my lady! Surely there
cannot be another like you!"
"Oh, is there not?" Cordelia began to feel a bit
better. "And to how many damsels have you said that,
sir?"
"Never, milady, not to a single other woman!" Forrest
reflected that he had also never been given so good a cue
line. "I have never seen you in those colors before.
Surely they bring out highlights in the glorious auburn of your
hair that I would never have known, though 'tis so great a pleasure
to see your hair unbound in the sun's rays that come through this
window."
Cordelia blushed. "You extol my charms too much, sir."
"I speak honestly." He stepped a little closer.
"Would you have me prevaricate?"
He was so very near, the aroma of him so masculine, so
compelling ... and the strange feelings had begun within her
again... "I would have you speak only as a gentleman should,
sir!"
"Alas! Must I be a gentleman, then?"
"You must be as you were born!" They both looked up,
startled.
Alain stood by them, looking stern, wearing a russet doublet,
again of the antique cut, and fawn-colored hose. Cordelia
could not help but notice that his legs, too, looked very well,
perhaps even better than Forrest's ...
"Why, so I must!" Forrest turned to Alain with a dangerous
glint in his eye. "But who are you to tell me what I must and
must not do, sir?"
Alain began to answer, but caught himself in the' nick of
time.
Forrest noticed the pause, and lifted an eyebrow. "Only a
knight," Alain said, still stern, "but as such, 'tis my duty to
remind you of your duty to knighthood."
"Am I still a knight, then?" Forrest cocked his head to
the side. "I, who have broken the law?"
"You are still a knight!" Alain snapped, more sternly than
ever. "You are a knight, who can redeem himself, and behave
as a knight should once more."
Cordelia stepped a little closer to him. Yes, sometimes
Alain was insufferable, overbearing, and his holier-than-thou
attitude did grate upon her now and then—but she felt safer
next to him, somehow. The troubling feelings inside her were
so much less in his presence ...
She glanced up at Forrest, and knew a moment's longing. If
only he were as proper a man, as morally sound and steady a man, as
Alain!
Though if he were, she wondered, would he be so attractive?
Then Sir Julian was offering her his arm, and leading her to the
head table. "Surely you will allow your host the benefit of
your beauty and charm, my dear, if only for the space of this
dinner."
"I shall be honored, my lord." But even as she said it,
Cordelia wondered if this was a ploy to get her away from Alain, so
that Delilah might work on him at her leisure. A glance out
of the corner of her eye showed her that she had no need to worry,
though—the lady was sandwiched between Geoffrey and Alain,
and Geoffrey was definitely occupying most of her attention.
Alain was looking none too pleased about it, but he glanced up at
Cordelia longingly.
She found it very reassuring.
She turned back to Sir Julian. "I thank you, my lord."
"Then sit! Sit! And we will dine!" Sir Julian
sat down, and immediately, the servants began laying in front of
them the huge slices of bread that served as plates. Behind
them came another server, laying thick slices of beef on the
trenchers.
Sir Julian picked up his knife and began to cut at the
meat—the signal to begin.
Cordelia found it slightly disturbing that he did not start with
a blessing over the meal, but she had no choice other than to abide
by the custom of the house.
"I must honor you, my daughter's rescuers!" Sir Julian
said, lifting a cup. "Honor you with a toast tonight, and a
ball tomorrow night!"
"Ball?" Cordelia stared, appalled.
"Indeed. I have sent word to my neighbors, bidding them
come rejoice with me." He laid a hand over hers. "You
must not be upset, lady. We are rude folk here in the
country, taking any opportunity that offers to celebrate
Life—and if our dress is not elegant, why, we make up for it
with exuberance."
"My sister has left many beautiful dresses behind her," Delilah
said, all sweetness. "I shall bid my maid show them to
you."
Cordelia was certain that Delilah's maid would not show her
anything that was too lovely.
"Or if you wish," the lord said, "I have bolts of wonderful
cloth, yards of laces. Only say what you wish, and a
seamstress shall labor all this night and all tomorrow, to make a
gown that will delight you."
"Indeed she shall," Delilah said. "My own seamstress, if
you wish it, my dear."
Cordelia had a brief vision of the kind of dress Delilah's
seamstress would make for her, and smiled sweetly. "How good
of you, Lady Delilah! It will not be necessary, though.
However, my lord .. ." She turned back to Lord
Julian. "I would see your cloths and your laces. It may
be that I myself can craft a dress to my taste."
"Yourself?" The Lady Delilah tittered behind her
hand. "Why, I had thought you a lady high-born, Cordelia
surely not one who plies needle and thread in her own right!"
"Why, my dear, do you not embroider?" Cordelia asked, all
innocence.
Delilah stared at her, paling. "Aye, most assuredly, and
most excellently!"
"Why, then, so do I," Cordelia said, "and my mother was quick to
teach me the crafting of a gown—for, she said, I must know
how 'tis done, if I wish to make sure my seamstress does it
well." She turned back to Lord Julian. "Yes, my lord, I
shall see your cloths."
CHAPTER 12
The cloth, at least, was every bit as beautiful as Sir Julian
had promised. She chose an emerald green lawn, almost as fine
as silk, for the gown itself, then selected yard after yard of
intricate lace to adorn it. She was tempted to take some long
strips of embroidery they showed her, but decided that she would
not be able to compete with Delilah in ornamentation; indeed, she
remembered her mother's dictum, that when a woman resorts to an
abundance of decorations, it is because she does not believe in her
own beauty. Unfortunately, Cordelia did not.
Still, she would never admit that. The lace would have to
do—the lace, and the wonderful cloth that showed her hair and
eyes to such advantage.
Petticoats and kirtles the maid was glad to bring her,
presumably from the sister's store. Cordelia did not even
stop to think of the wonderful coincidence that they should be
almost exactly the same size.
Then she sat down with pen and paper to make a rough sketch by
candlelight—but the more she sketched, the more excited she
became, till finally, she heard a clock somewhere tolling midnight,
and told herself sternly that she must desist; she would have to
have a good night's sleep, or she would be incapable of doing
anything tomorrow, certainly not be able to be as charming as she
must be at the ball.
And so to bed.
At last, Cordelia was able to lie down to sleep, dressed in a
nightgown that she had found laid out on her bed. She nestled
into the softness of the featherbed, luxuriating in it after a
night on pine boughs. She burrowed deeper, letting her mind
roam free, letting images arise and fade of their own
accord—but the images were not of lovely gowns, or even
nightmares of the extravagant dresses Delilah might wear to the
ball tomorrow night, but of Alain ... and then Forrest
... then Alain again, then Forrest, then the two of them side
by side, then Forrest alone, looming over her, his eyes bright, his
lips moist ... She was only a little afraid of the feelings
that the picture of him aroused, almost unafraid at all,
considering that he was not really there. There was something
about his gaze, his stare, and (be honest!) his body, his muscular
build, that raised those tingling, tickling feelings inside her,
and she admitted to herself at last that it was a longing she felt,
that perhaps she was beginning to be able to understand the desire
that seemed to drive Geoffrey.
But there was something that repelled her about Forrest,
too—the very recklessness that made him appealing was also
threatening, in its way. She found herself wishing that she
could marry Alain for security and friendship, but still have
Forrest for romance ... romance, and the pleasures of his
attentions ...
She sat bolt upright in bed, staring into the darkness,
realizing what she had been wishing for, blushing furiously in the
privacy of night. Then, completely ashamed of herself, she
burst into tears and buried her face in her pillow.
The campfire was a spot of cheer in a very dark night. It
was chill indeed, very odd for August. Rod and Gwen shared
his cloak, staring at the flames.
"I don't like this," Rod said. "The three of them could be
at the mercy of whoever owns that manor house. How long has
it been here, anyway?"
"By appearances, a hundred years, at least," Gwen answered.
"By appearances," Rod agreed. "But people can build things
to look old."
"Indeed." Gwen was thinking of some of the wonders of
modern technology she had seen in her brief sojourn off-planet.
A squat shadow detached itself from the darkness under the trees
and came toward them.
Rod looked up. "Any news, Brom?"
The dwarf sat down on a rock by the fire, holding his hands out
toward the flames. "I have sent elves to keep watch
throughout the house. If anything untoward occurs, we will
know of it within minutes."
"How long do the local elves say the house has been here?"
"Only these last two years—nay, some months less. A
crew of strangers came to build it. They cleared the land
here in the center of the forest, where none might see them.
The tools with which they cut down the forest were magical, say the
elves, and the job was done in a day."
Rod pricked up his ears; he knew the sound of high
technology. "Anything about beams of fire?"
"Summat of the sort. They builded the whole of the house
in a month, again with sorcerous machines, and gave it the
appearance of age, though it was new."
Rod nodded. "Do they have any idea who lives there?"
"A lady and her retainers," Brom answered. "A most
beautiful lady, slender, not very tall." He shrugged.
"That is all they can say. Her face doth seem to change from
time to time, as does the color of her hair. She doth bear
herself as one well born, but they do sense a maliciousness about
her."
"Anything definitely bad to say about her?"
"Not from without—and they have had no wish to enter
inside that house. Not that it houseth fearsome deeds, mind
you, nor doth it repel them in any wise—'tis that it hath no
interest for them. They have other fish to fry."
"No interest?" Rod stared. "Elves, with no
curiosity?" Gwen frowned. "That doth sound little like
any elf I've ever known. Indeed, a brownie's natural
curiosity would send him prying into every corner. Or are
these elves only, and no brownies among them?"
"What difference?" Rod said. "Elves are just as
curious as brownies. Not so inclined to go indoors, I'll
admit, but still..."
"There do be brownies among them, and they too have no interest
in the house," Brom verified.
"It doth smack of enchantment," Gwen said, "of witchpower, and
mighty, too."
"Even so," Brom agreed. "It doth bespeak one who hath laid
spells of disinterest on all who come nigh."
"Is there danger to Cordelia, or to Geoffrey?" Gwen
asked.
"Or even to Alain?" Rod finished.
"There is no sign of danger yet, to any one of them," Brom
said. "There is hazard only in that they are amidst strangers
who are themselves unknown in their desires or goals. But
there is no present danger in evidence. Be sure that if there
is, the elves will warn them—and, if need be, protect them
with their own magics."
"But if there are witches in that house," said Gwen, "elfin
magics may not suffice."
Rod shivered.
"They will bear word to us, will they not?" Gwen
asked.
"Be sure that they shall," Brom promised her. "Be very
sure of that."
Morning came lustrous, cool and moist—like herself,
Delilah thought. She stretched luxuriously, treasuring the
feeling of rest, of satiation of sleep, knowing that Cordelia was
probably red-eyed and weary, her hair in disarray and her mouth
stuffed with pins, trying vainly to cobble together some sort of
dress. It made breakfast in bed so much more tasty.
Her modiste, of course, had been up all night, and was still
busy with a fabric-bonder, computer, design program, and a ROM
library of medieval style plates.
Delilah rose for her first fitting.
Cordelia had risen an hour earlier, her heart singing as she
gazed at the cloth and lace. Then she noticed the breakfast
tray by her bed, still steaming. So that was what had waked
her—the servant. She felt an instant's panic, but found
her sketches still carefully hidden away in her boots—in her
enemy's house, there would be spies everywhere.
Boots! Yes, she would have to make slippers, too.
Then she donned the riding dress, pleased to notice that the dust
had been brushed from it. Clad once again in her working
clothes, Cordelia buckled down.
Delilah came out of her bedroom into the sitting room of her
suite as her modiste was finishing running the hem through the
molecular bonder. "Nice timing, Chief." She held up the
completed dress.
Even Delilah couldn't withhold an exclamation of delight.
It was a daring confection of a dress, all pink and gold, that
would set off her peaches-and-cream complexion and blonde tresses
to perfection. "Quickly! I must see it!" She
slipped into her petticoats and stood impatiently while the modiste
fastened the gown around her. No need to trouble with a
brassiere—the Middle Ages had not had them, and any
reasonably civilized planet in the Third Millennium had them built
into the garments with tiny electronic devices that enhanced
buoyancy and line.
Of course, Delilah thought smugly, she did not really need
enhancing—but it never hurt to fire a broadside. The
modiste finished the last fastening—primitive, but they had
to be something that could have existed in the Middle Ages, whether
they truly had or not—and Delilah whirled away to stand in
front of the doorway to her bedroom. The modiste pressed a
button, an electronic circuit closed—and the surface of the
doorway swirled into silvery reflectance. Delilah gazed at
her reflection in the electronic mirror with smug satisfaction,
posing side view, back view, three-quarter profile. That
snob, Cordelia Gallowglass, could never match such a gown, not even
with the most talented seamstress on Gramarye! She was, after
all, limited to medieval technology, and certainly, mere needle and
thread were so far from the devices available to Delilah's modiste
that Cordelia could not have produced even an indifferent
dress. But she would have tried—oh, yes! She
would have stayed up all night and would stay up all day! Her
hands would be raw with pinpricks, her skin pale with fatigue, and
her eyes red. She would be snappish and insecure with
weariness.
Even if her dress were presentable, though, it could never come
within a mile of Delilah's for allure. But then, she thought
with complacency, Cordelia could never have matched her for
voluptuousness in any case. Delilah was, after all, a
projective telepath, and a very talented and very skilled one at
that—but the greatest of all her talents was the projection
of sexual desire.
Cordelia was digging into her task with verve and glee.
Never had she had such beautiful fabrics to work with! It
seemed such a self-indulgence, when there were peasant women on her
own estates who had only the one blouse and skirt, and those
patched. No matter how her parents urged her, she had never
been able to bring herself to indulge in outright luxuries.
Here, however, there was the best of reasons. She had to
save her poor Alain from the clutches of that poisonous female,
Delilah—and had to save him personally.
She had draped the cloth, marked it, then laid it out and
chalked the patterns with not a moment's hesitation, following the
diagrams in her mind's eye. Then she cut itstaring at the
lines, thinking of the separation of molecules, watching the cloth
separate itself along the lines she had drawn. Twice she made
a mistake; twice she held fabric together, stared at it, and
thought of the linen molecules moving, faster and faster until the
cloth was whole again, each separate thread having bonded itself to
its other half so that it was no longer cut, but as sound as
new.
She was as talented in telekinesis as Delilah was in
projection.
Now she held the sections of cut cloth together, staring at the
edges, watching the threads flow together so well that you could
see no seam at all. Molecule bonded to molecule, far tighter
than any thread could bind. The unfinished edges folded
themselves over, bonded, and made themselves into hems.
By noon, it was done, and she slipped it on for the first
fit. She went to the window, opening the casement and letting
out a trilling whistle. The aural call was only there to help
her concentrate; really, it was her mind that reached out and
summoned ...
A robin flew down, perching on the tree branch outside her
window. It stared at her, then cocked its head
inquisitively. Cordelia stepped back, reading the bird's
mind. The robin saw her, and she read her own image from its
mind, viewing herself through its eye, stepping back until she
could see all of herself.
She gasped with delight.
She saw a fairy-tale princess complete in every detail except
the headdress, of course; she had yet to make that. However,
it was a dress such as a fairy-tale princess would have thought
scandalous. The neckline was daringly low, and it fitted her
torso as though it had grown there. Even as she gazed, she
thought of a slight rearrangement of electrical charges, and the
skirt and petticoat moved toward her legs, clinging. She
walked toward the window opening a few steps, and the static charge
molded the cloth to her limbs—not completely, for the
petticoats muffled the outline considerably, but enough to more
than hint at her contours. She viewed them with a critical
eye, and decided that her contours might not be so insufficient,
after all—and there had been enough boys who had sought to
touch them on some of her outings. Not so lush as Delilah's
curves, perhaps—assuming that Delilah's were real but more
perfectly proportioned.
She turned, walking away from the bird, gazing at the back of
her reflection, at the neckline, scooped low enough to show her
shoulder blades, cloth clinging to hint at the smooth curves of
hips. She looked back over her shoulder, lowering her
eyelids, giving her best imitation of Delilah's alluring smile, and
tried rolling her hips as she walked. Yes, it did seem to
work.
She blushed as she thought of herself actually putting on a
performance of that sort before Alain. She would not
dare! And even if she did, surely he would not dare to
appreciate it!
But the thought did excite her.
Still, the dress was a trifle too loose here and there.
She thought at the cloth, and the seam turned inward, the darts
tightening until it fit her—well, perhaps not quite like a
glove above the waist, but certainly like a flower below.
And, too, it did need some adornment. She blew a kiss at
the bird, dismissing it, slipped out of the dress, lifted the lace,
measured it off against the cloth, and bonded it so that it filled
in the scoop of the neckline, the dip behind her shoulders.
Her mother had told her that what was imagined was more effective
than what was shown; it was only necessary to give the gentlemen
something for their imaginations to work on.
Cordelia certainly didn't intend to give them anything more.
When she was done, she summoned another bird—a bluebird
this time—to look at her while she read its mind, and caught
her breath with delight. It was quite the most lovely gown
she had ever seen, even if she did say so herself. She
dismissed the bird with a gay wave, slipped out of the dress and,
in her chemise, took up the buckram, the lawn, and the veil, and
began to make the headdress.
Somewhere in the middle of all these labors, she caught a
sudden, stray thought—a servant approaching her door.
Quickly, she dumped the dress into her lap topsy-turvy and pulled a
thread through a needle, then scrubbed fingers through her hair to
make it tousled, disarrayed.
A knock came.
Cordelia called, "Open!"
The door opened, and the serving-wench stepped in, holding a
tray in one hand. "My lady, you have not come to dine."
"Oh, I cannot!" Cordelia did her best to sound
frazzled. "See how deeply in the toils I am!"
The wench came closer, large-eyed. "Surely, my lady, the
seamstress could aid thee... "
"Mayhap, but I am loath to ask. Oh, I will be done in
time, I am sure of it! Nay, but set the wine and bread there,
on the little table—I think there is room. I shall take
it when I have a moment."
"Even as you say, my lady." The maid curtsied, roundeyed,
then stepped out, closing the door behind her. Cordelia
caught the impression of smug satisfaction, and answered it with a
vindictive smile, glaring at the door. So they thought they
would have her beaten, did they? Well, all to the
better. Let Delilah think Cordelia was in a state and could
not possibly have a decent gown. Nothing would strengthen her
so much as Delilah's overconfidence.
She was done by early afternoon. The bread, cheese, meat,
and wine were quite good. She ate lightly, not wanting to
feel sluggish when she waked.
Because, of course, she wanted to be fresh for the evening's
festivities. She lay down to nap, closing her eyes as she
sought out a finch, leaving a stern command within its mind to come
trill beneath her window in an hour. She left the same
command within her own mind—only to wake, not to
trill—hid the lovely gown in the wardrobe, locked the door,
and lay down to sleep, satisfied.
After all, she did want to look her best.
She woke at four, added one last touch—a cloak, of a
contrasting material; only a great circle of cloth that she could
throw over herself to hide the gown. When the knock on the
door came, she quickly threw the cloak over her shoulders and
called, "Enter!"
It was a servant, with a can of steaming water. Cordelia
bade her put it by the hearth, and the maid did, then left, with
many curious glances about the room.
"Oh, I had almost forgot!" The maid turned back in the
doorway and came to bring Cordelia a domino mask. "It is to
be a masked ball, my lady."
Cordelia thrilled with delight, but tried to sound worn and
exhausted. "Thank you, good soul."
"As you wish, my lady." The maid gave a little curtsy,
then left, closing the door behind her.
Alain stared, paling. "I could never behave so!"
He was watching the "neighbors" flirt with one another as they
bowed and chatted and danced. None had been introduced as
other than the character they were dressed as, most of them from
the romances, some from old myths. But they were all very
outgoing, and the dances were rather earthy.
"Of course you can," Geoffrey assured him. "It is a masked
ball, Alain. None shall know who you are."
"Well ... there is truth in that," Alain said
thoughtfully, then looked up sharply. "But hold! I have
heard of these masked balls. Is there not something about
unmasking at midnight?"
"Well, aye," Geoffrey allowed, "so, if you are careful to leave
before midnight, no one will discover your identity." Alain's
gaze wandered over the glittering company, golden in the light of
myriad candles. "Well ... true ... 'twould be a
pity to miss the last of the ball..."
"Yet mayhap would be worth it." Geoffrey took a sip of his
wine. "Bear in mind, though, that you need not decide until
it is nigh the hour of midnight. If you feel that you would
do something ... exhilarating, something ... that is
not truly evil, mind you, but only a little wicked, or no, not even
wicked, but ... daring ... why, if you have done it,
you leave before midnight!" He clinked his glass against
Alain's. "If you have not, you stay for the unmasking!
Drink up!"
Alain sipped the wine absently, his mind clearly else
where. Then he looked up, suddenly remembering what he had
been thinking before. "Hold! I should not drink wine so
early! 'Twill make me drunk, will it not?"
"What—one goblet of wine?" Geoffrey gave a
deprecating laugh. "Do not give it a thought."
But he had. He had given Alain's wine quite a lot
of thought. It was now thirty percent alcohol.
Geoffrey knew Alain of old, of course, and knew that the Prince
had grown up drinking wine, as did most noble children on
Gramarye. He would not become drunk, Geoffrey knew, but
perhaps rather ... uninhibited ...
The musicians had tuned their instruments and begun to
play. Cordelia stood in the shadow at the top of the
staircase, shrouded in her cloak, eyes wide as she stared at the
guests, feeling a strange nervousness, a strange
apprehension. How many of them were truly neighbors, and how
many Delilah's minions?
How could she hope to outshine Delilah on her own territory?
But my heavens, there were a lot of people! Admittedly,
their garb was old-fashioned by the standards of
Runnymede—but nothing was ever really out of style on
Gramarye. They were certainly jovial enough, laughing and
talking as the servants passed among them with goblets of
wine. The entire Great Hall was already filled with
company—at least half dowagers and their husbands.
But the other half were young. Probably most of them were
married, but they were young and vibrant nonetheless. They
milled about, making quite a roar. Like waves upon the beach,
they were about to engulf her.
"Surely you are not timid, Lady Cordelia!" Cordelia looked
up, alarmed.
It was Delilah, parading down the stairs in a gown so lovely
that it made Cordelia gasp. Mask or not, there was no
mistaking her—the cascade of golden hair was artfully
arranged and equally artfully displayed, as was a generous expanse
of bosom. The heart-shaped face, the voluptuous curves-all
were enhanced by the splendor of her pink-and-gold gown.
Cordelia felt a bitter stab of jealousy.
"Why, what a mouse you are!" Delilah said. "Will you
start at every shadow? Come, how can you possibly not delight
in such an evening as this?"
"I ... I will endeavor to." Cordelia summoned what
remained of her self-possession and drew herself up.
"I rejoice to hear it. Do you go before me, for I have no
wish to dim your luster."
Cordelia's eyes narrowed behind her mask. "Surely, Lady
Delilah, no gown can compare with yours tonight. Nay, do you
precede me. 'Tis your house, after all, and 'tis your
due."
"I thank you, my dear. I shall." Delilah nodded with
a pinfeather smile and stepped to the head of the stairs. She
motioned, and her maid hissed down to the majordomo. He
looked up; his eyes widened a moment; then he turned to the crowd
and bawled out, "The Lady Helen of Troy!"
Of course, Cordelia thought.
As one, the crowd turned to look, and the musicians struck up a
soft march. Delilah paraded down the stairs.
For a moment, the crowd was silent, staring. Then, as one,
they broke into applause.
Cordelia tried to remind herself that most of them must be in
Delilah's pay—but still, the jealousy burned within
her. The hussy!
Well, Cordelia would answer in her own style.
The applause turned into congratulatory conversation as Delilah
reached the foot of the stairs. The young men were pressing
forward to kiss her hands; the ladies were "oh"ing and "ah"ing and
congratulating her on so wonderful a costume, then turning away to
mutter savagely with one another.
Cordelia knew her hour had come. Her heart thumped so
painfully that she thought it would tear through her dress.
Still, she handed a note to the footman on the stairs, who handed
it down to the majordomo.
When Delilah had moved far enough away from the stairs, the
majordomo raised his voice and cried, in his clarion tones, "The
Lady Elaine of Shallot!"
It had seemed like a good idea, at the time—a silent
rebuke to Alain. Now, Cordelia wasn't so sure.
The crowd quieted a little as they turned to look at the new
arrival.
Cordelia held her breath, straightened, and stepped onto the
first step.
The crowd was totally silent, a sea of faces staring up at
her.
Cordelia nearly died inside. She descended another step,
another. There she stopped and whirled the cloak from her
shoulders.
All eyes were on her, stunned.
She began to walk again, but faltered in her step, holding on to
the handrail for dear life. Had she committed some immense
faux pas? Was she truly in enemy territory in more ways than
one?
Well, then, she would show them of what she was made! She
lifted her chin high and took another step. Suddenly, the
crowd burst into applause, cheeringmost of it masculine.
It slammed at her ears. Her eyes widened behind the mask
in amazement. Could they truly be applauding her? They
certainly could. The young men were pressing to the fore,
with the older men not far behind them. She came down the
stairs slowly, the applause and cheering ringing in her ears.
As she stepped onto the last step, some of the young gallants
pressed forward to seize her hands and kiss her fingers. She
looked down at them, amazed, then lifted her eyes ...
And saw Delilah's glare of hatred. She knew she was truly
a success.
CHAPTER 13
The look on Delilah's face was all Cordelia needed.
Obviously, her gown was far more beautiful than even she had
supposed.
She still did not realize that she was a very beautiful woman in
her own right—as beautiful as Delilah, 'really, though less
voluptuous. The severity of the gown enhanced her classical
features, and the warmth of the color set off the fairness of her
complexion marvelously, bringing out the golden highlights in her
auburn hair.
Her nervousness fled, to be replaced by gloating. She
smiled like the cat who had lapped up the cream, graciously
extending her hands to her eager admirers, stepping down into the
middle of the throng, blowing kisses to one and all, feeling a
secret, shameful thrill as they bowed low over her hand—and
her decolletage.
"You are the sun, milady!"
"Then beware that I should shine on you, milord," she returned,
"for I might burn you."
"Indeed you might," he gasped, and another man said, "Ah!
Would that I should be so roasted!"
"I should make it hot enough for you, be sure," she said.
"But I should prefer to see you by the light of the moon," said
another gallant, looking deeply into her eyes. " 'Ware, sir,"
she said. "You may lie."
"I could hope for no sweeter fate," he promised herexactly the
response she had hoped for. She felt a secret, scandalous
delight, and let her laugh cascade down low to end in a throaty
chuckle. The man's eyes burned into hers, but another man
caught her other hand. She turned, and looked directly into
...
Forrest's eyes.
Eyes that seemed to devour her, to swallow her up, and he was
breathing, "My lady, surely there could never have been such beauty
as yours!"
"Why, sir," she said, her breath catching in her throat, "you
have known me these days! And you have never told me so
before!" The strange, tickling feelings inside that his
presence always seemed to evoke were there againbut she must have
been becoming accustomed to them, for somehow, she wasn't at all
frightened. No, she found these feelings no longer so novel,
but much more exhilarating, delightful, and only wanted more of
them.
She stepped a little closer to him, and he breathed, "Sun and
moon alike you are, and they both shine upon me in your
presence."
"But I have no presents to give you, sir." She stepped a
little closer.
"Your own fair self is a wealth of gifts that would honor a
king," he returned, stepping closer too, his arm slipping about her
waist. "Will you dance?"
"Aye—f think that I shall," she said, letting her eyelids
droop and turning her head a little, so that she was eyeing him
sidelong.
He laughed, low and in his throat, but catching his breath as he
did so, and stepped away from the disappointed gallants, who
rumbled their outrage as he swept Cordelia out onto the floor.
They flowed smoothly into the motions of the age-old peasant
dance, body to body, hip to hip, for only a few moments as their
feet moved in unison—then apart, clapping, back to back, and
his shoulders brushed hers, his hips brushed hers, then back to the
front again for a few steps more, then, arm in arm, for a few paces
side by side, their gazes locked, gazing deeply into one another's
eyes. She felt herself turning warm inside, felt her knees
weakening, but that was fair enough, because he turned then and,
catching her about the waist, caught her right hand in his left,
and pressed her against him as they flowed through the steps of the
dance, and she could let herself weaken, let her limbs go limp, for
he was holding her up ...
Halfway across the floor, Alain followed their every move.
"Can she truly be as wanton as she appears, Geoffrey?"
"One can never say, my friend," Geoffrey answered. "Women
often go to great lengths to seem to be something that they are
not."
"But why should they do such a thing?" Alain demanded.
"Why," Geoffrey said, "to hold our interest by making themselves
mysterious—or simply because they wish to, because it gives
them pleasure."
Alain's eyes returned to the lady in green. "She surely
seems to take delight in it! And you say that she may be
truly virtuous, and only enjoys the pretense of wantonness?"
"Oh, quite surely! There is not a woman alive who does not
wish to be desired, to be beautiful and the center of all
attention, simply because of her beauty and her graceand her sexual
allure. No, my friend, every woman has the right to be as
attractive as she can be and wishes to be, without having to fear
men's advances becoming improper."
But though the words were fair, his expression was one of
subdued shock as he watched his sister move about the floor with
the forest outlaw—and when the dance brought them together,
moving as though they were one.
Alain's gaze still wandered. "Where is Cordelia,
though? This whole ball is empty, lackluster, if she is not
here."
Geoffrey looked up, startled. Certainly so flimsy a mask
did not really make Alain unable to recognize Cordelia! Of
course, it could—if he did not want to recognize her.
Geoffrey chewed that thought over for a moment, then said, "She
will come anon, I am sure. For the nonce, my friend, seek you
a dance with yon lady in green and lace." Alain turned to
him, staring, scandalized. "Why should I do any such
thing?"
"Why," Geoffrey said slowly, "because a dance with her would be
a delight to any man—and will teach your body ways of holding
a woman and moving with her that would delight Cordelia, and draw
her to you."
Alain looked suddenly very much on his guard. "Do you
truly think so?"
"Most truly, I assure you." Geoffrey plucked a goblet from
a passing tray and presented it to Alain. "Here, my
friend. You have not drunk wine for half an hour. Do
so, I pray you—for what is gaiety and mirth if it has no
spirit? Therefore, drink you spirits!"
"I would scarcely call wine 'spirits,' " Alain said, accepting
the cup.
"Oh, but I would," Geoffrey said, his eyes on the cup as the
Prince drank. "I would, most certainly."
The dance ended, and Cordelia was immediately besieged by a
dozen would-be partners.
"I shall never come to her," Alain said, dismayed—and,
perhaps, relieved.
"But I shall," Geoffrey assured him, "and when the dance ends,
we shall be nearest to you, be sure. Drink your wine, my
friend—it will sweeten your breath for her." And he
moved away to join the throng of Cordelia's admirers.
Cordelia, fortunately, was taking her time about accepting a
partner, laughing and parrying flirtatious sallies. Geoffrey
managed to elbow his way to the front of the rank just as the
musicians began to play again. "My lady," he said, with an
edge to his voice, "I must have this dance."
She looked up, startled—and before she could recover, he
had taken her hand and her waist and was beginning to move into the
steps of the dance. She accepted the fait accompli, but
glared daggers at him—and as soon as they were away from
other people, hissed, "How dare you intrude, brother!"
"How dare I not?" Geoffrey returned. "Surely a
brother must guard a sister, guard all of her—especially when
she is showing more of herself than she ever has before!"
Cordelia smiled, amused. "You, brother? Offended by
decolletage? When you seem to seek out the lowest that you
can find?"
"In other women, aye," he said stiffly. "In other women,
'tis pleasant, 'tis right in its way—but not in a
sister." She laughed scornfully. "For shame,
Geoffrey! Do you not realize that every woman you have ever
pursued may have been someone's sister?"
"Well ... perhaps." Actually, he never had.
"But they do not care for her nor cherish her as much as I!"
"There has been scant evidence of caring or cherishing, 'til
now."
"Cordelia!" he exclaimed, wounded. "This whole quest
is because I seek to protect you and gain you your heart's
desire!"
She gazed into his eyes, and saw that he meant what he
said. He cared for her very deeply. "For that, I thank
you, brother," she said warmly. "Yet am I, therefore, not to
be allowed to enjoy the pleasures of dancing and flirtationonly
because I have a brother who cares?"
"Indeed! Leave that to them who have none that care for
them—and therefore care naught for themselves!"
"Oh, Geoffrey, you are so prudish so suddenly!" Cordelia
said impatiently. "Do not tell me you disapprove of such
behavior—for surely you enjoy it well enough in the women you
pursue!"
"Well ... aye ... but they are not my sisters!"
"Pooh, brother! If you will not be a model of virtue,
wherefore should I?"
Geoffrey bit back the retort, and Cordelia enjoyed watching the
flush of anger rise to his face. She laughed, with a light,
ringing quality, as silver as Delilah's, and said, "Still, brother,
I shall have mercy. For this dance, at least, I shall be all
propriety."
And she was.
When the dance ended, Geoffrey dropped her hand, stepping back
with a slight bow. Cordelia curtsied, inclining her
head—and looked up to find herself facing a cavalier in gold
and scarlet, with a long, flowing scarlet cloak and golden hair
above the dark severity of a domino mask. Her heart stopped
for a moment, at his handsomeness.
"May I have this dance, my lady?" His voice was low and
sensuous.
"Surely, my lord," Cordelia murmured—and he stepped up,
arm in arm, before the music had even started, leaving a dozen
disappointed would-be partners behind.
Then, as the music started, he slipped his hand about her waist,
taking her right hand in his, holding it high. He did not
touch her body with his, did everything that was decorous—but
the reckless look in his eye, the gaze he gave her, the flashing
whiteness of his teeth as he grinned, the paces of the dance, she
found dizzying, giddy. All decorum, mind you—but there
was a sensuality to his movements, a beckoning, a yearning for
closeness, that she would never have suspected in a man. A
tingling began, deep within her, spreading through her; she began
to feel warm—and was shocked to realize she was responding to
this stranger even as she had responded to Forrest.
That scared her.
He swept her away, and finally their bodies met, hips pressing
against one another. Cordelia felt a shiver that ran through
her from head to toe. The golden stranger seemed to sense it,
too. He grinned, and his eyes grew hot, then almost
worshipful, burning into hers. She stared, transfixed.
Then, thank heavens, the moves of the dance called for them to
break apart and stroll sedately side by side—but she felt her
hips churning as she went, and knew she was not being as sedate as
she might. She looked up at the tall, handsome stranger,
wondering who he was, immensely tempted to peek into his mind and
discover ...
But, no. Let us enjoy the moment for what it is,
she thought. Seize the day.
Then they came together again, and he was murmuring, in a voice
low and husky, certainly one that she could not recognize: "My
lady, you are the most beautiful, the most luscious fruit that ever
has adorned the Tree of Life! Nay, if we were not so closely
hemmed by other people, I could not resist seeking to nibble, and
taste."
She giggled, feeling the emotions well up within her, her joints
loosening, and beamed up at him. Greatly daring, she said,
"Why do you withhold, sir? Are you so ashamed of what you
would do that the simple presence of other people will halt
you?"
"Nay, surely," he breathed, his face coming closer to hers, and
closer ... Then his lips were on hers, light as a feather,
but growing heavier. The kiss deepened; she gasped, but that
drew him deeper. For a moment, the kiss was all their
existence, and everything else went whirling away, and she was
dizzy, very, but she could feel his' body pressing against
hers.
Then, finally, he pulled away, chest heaving, gasping for
breath, and there was a wildness and an awe in his eyes; she had
never seen a man look at her that way before, not even
Forrest. She felt vulnerable, beset—but she also felt
waves of pleasure rocking her, felt the lingering taste of his lips
on hers, and knew that she wanted that sensation again, more than
anything.
Suddenly she could hear the music anew, and stepped back.
"Sir! We have missed the measure!"
"Oh, we must not do that!" he said, his voice husky, and
slid his hand beneath her palm, his forearm under hers, and they
moved on down between the ranks of the other dancers, who stared at
them gaping. They turned and strolled back, as all the
company did; then turned and were together again, whirling through
a timeless moment, his eyes her universe.
Is this love? she thought, almost
frantically. Could this be love?
Then, for some unaccountable reason, he had stopped, and she was
unutterably sad that he had. "Why, sir," she began, but he
stood a little farther away from her, lifting her hand to his
lips.
"The music is done, sweetest, most beautiful of dancers," he
breathed, "and though I would be selfish to the utmost, holding you
in my arms and dancing through the night, I would not do it without
your leave."
"Do not give him leave, my lady, I pray you!"
"Nay, lovely damsel! You could not be so cruel as to deny
me yet again!"
"Dance with me, lovely damsel, with me!"
They whirled her away, they came between her and the
scarlet-and-gold man. She chose the most handsome among them,
but he seemed to pale into insignificance next to her
cavalier. But she danced with him, feeling her limbs become
firm again, and the residual emotion from that last dance made her
laugh and flirt. The evening restored itself to
normality.
She was not sure if she regretted it or not.
She glanced about to find the golden young man again, but could
not.
Actually, he was standing beside her brother, shielded by a
curtain in a nook.
"Well! You did seem to enjoy that dance, my friendwhile
you did it," Geoffrey said, somewhat acerbically. "What a
goddess!" Alain breathed. "What an angel, what a
fairy! As light as thistledown, and her kiss..." He
laid a hand on Geoffrey's shoulder. "Forgive me, my friend,
for I have wronged your sister. I know now that my heart is
elsewhere."
"Elsewhere!" Geoffrey looked up, amused. He could
tell Alain now. "Have you no sense at all, you great
ninny? That is my sister!"
"What!" Alain stared at him.
Then he blushed furiously. "You mean I have treated the
Lady Cordelia as ... as..."
"As a woman." Geoffrey gave him a steely glare. "You
have treated her as she wants to be treated—as something
feminine, desirable. Oh, it is true that she wishes to be
loved for her mind, my friend—but it is also true that she
wishes to be loved for her body, nay, for all of herself. I
assure you that evenings of scholarly discourse are only
part of what she wants from a man."
But Alain wasn't listening. He was gazing at the dancer
who fluttered on the far side of the hall, and breathing, "It is
Cordelia! Oh, Geoffrey, I have never truly known her
before!"
An idea sprang from the fertile soil of Geoffrey's imagination,
for this was a campaign, in its way. "Then enjoy her favors
while you can, my Prince—for after this night's festivities,
she may choose a man other than yourself." Alain stared at
him, appalled.
"Oh, she well may, I assure you! There are few traits so
well sung as the fickleness of women. Nay, enjoy the dance
with her, as strongly as you can—for if anything will move
her to accept your suit, it is that above all else."
"What?!!? My enjoyment would move her? But
how could that ... how could..." Alain swallowed and
looked out across the floor. "That a woman might deign to
marry me ... because I enjoyed her?"
"That would be part of it, at least." Finally Geoffrey
could not contain his impatience any longer. "Why,
Alain—do you think she would marry you because you did
not enjoy her?"
"Oh ... her company ... yes," Alain said.
"But..."
"Company is more than sitting by the fireside in converse,
friend," Geoffrey said, and gave him a little push.
"Go! Dance with her again, when you may! And when you
cannot, seize a chance to dance with the Lady Delilah, too."
"But ... why should I do that?" Alain
turned back, wide-eyed.
"Trust me, friend," Geoffrey said, trying to hide his
exasperation. "If you wish to win the Lady Cordelia, dance
with Delilah. Then dance with Cordelia again, and if you have
more questions, ask me in the morning."
Alain shook his head, not understanding a bit of it. He
turned away to do as his mentor had bidden.
The music ended, but he was too slow. Cordelia was dancing
again by the time he came near her, dancing with that tall, dark
lout of a bandit, Forrest! Who else could it be, with that
wealth of dark hair and beard? The mask hid him scarcely at
all, although a doublet did go far to disguise him, Alain had to
admit—he was so seldom decently dressed. He could not
help but wonder if Cordelia would find the man attractive, now that
he was properly clothed.
An unworthy thought. He put it from him and turned to join
the crowd that hovered around Delilah.
Cordelia, as a matter of fact, had recognized Forrest,
and was already deep in his embrace, feeling the world spin about
her as Forrest whirled her around the floor, devouring her eyes
with his own, murmuring extravagant compliments which she was
sorely tempted to believe.
"I would know you, Lady Cordelia, through and through.
Surely you are the lady of my dreams, Lady Elaine of Shallot!
I could never have my fill of you!"
Even as he said it, she could feel the probe, the presence of
his mind hovering about her own, seeking entry. Instantly,
her own shields were up, and tight. She relaxed outwardly,
though, dissembling, trying to hide the fact that she was now on
her guard. She laughed. "You may only know me without,
sir, for surely the exterior must be enough for two who may not
become intimate."
"May I not, then?" He stared at her, wounded.
"Wherefore not?"
"Why," she said, "because you have been a thief, and have not
yet done a deed that redeems you—and because I have only
known you for two days—nay, less! We must come to know
one another slowly, Sir Bandit, from the outside inand you have
only begun to know my exterior, as yet."
"I wish to," he breathed, pressing close, and his body seemed to
fill every hollow of her own. "I wish to know every inch of
your exterior, to kiss every iota of it" His lips touched hers, his
tongue tickling, probing, exploring. Dimly, she was aware
that they still moved in the paces of the dance—but only
dimly, for those movements were churning up the tingling, the rush
of feeling within her. Her limbs had turned to water, and
only his arm bore her up.
Then the cymbals rebuked her, and she stepped away, as the dance
dictated, with a surge of self-disgust. How could she be in
love with two men at once, and not even know who one of them
was? And what of Alain, who had pledged her his troth,
however clumsily, but was devoted to her, and remained so?
"You are troubled, sweet one." Forrest touched the little
wrinkle between her eyebrows. "Let it pass. Tomorrow is
time enough to think of the world again. Tonight there will
be time to think of other men. For this moment, for these
few, brief minutes of the dance, think only of me."
Well, when he put it that way, what did she have to lose?
Just for this one dance, she decided to do as he asked, to let
herself think only of Forrest.
And she did.
But when the dance ended, and she found herself in the arms of a
youngster whom she did not know, who prattled merrily to her, she
saw the golden cavalier acrbss the room, dancing with the Lady
Delilah—or Helen of Troy, as she pretended to be tonight; but
her movements were anything but regal. Slowly churning as she
went through the dance, every gesture an invitation, her body
pliant in his arms—and certainly, from where Cordelia
watched, he seemed to be paying very close attention to
Delilah. Not kissing her, perhaps, not holding her as closely
as she was trying to be held—but he did seem to be
mesmerized. She felt a stab of jealousy, felt indignant, but
quashed the feeling quickly. He was not her property, after
all ...
Unless she chose to claim him.
Cordelia decided that she would. She had promised nothing
to Forrest, after all—or at least, had promised only to think
of nothing but him while they danced. She had, and it had
been delicious—but there were other flavors to taste.
At the end of the next dance, she kept her eye on her
gold-and-scarlet quarry, contriving to end her steps near him as he
stepped back from Delilah with a bow, and the tidal wave of young
gallants surged between him and the vixen. He looked up, saw
Cordelia, and was at her side instantly, claiming her. "You
must dance with me, sweet one. I have waited this night in
longing."
She molded herself to his arms and began to move to the measure
of the dance that had not yet begun. "You have not waited in
loneliness, sir. I have seen what excellent company you have
kept."
"I will not deny having sampled other pleasures on this Tree of
Life," he breathed, "but none could be half so sweet as
yourself."
"Oh! Must you compare me with others, then, to know my
virtues?"
"I must not." He moved closer, his body not quite touching
hers, but she felt her flesh burning as though he had. Her
body prickled in anticipation of his touch.
"If you must leave me alone," the cavalier mourned, "I have no
choice but to make the time pass as quickly as I can speed
it—but with ever a yearning to have you in my arms
again."
Almost, she might have believed him; almost, she found that she
did, as the dance caught them up again, and they moved together,
then apart, then together in perfect unison, closer and closer
until they kissed again. This time, somehow, she found
herself unable to resist, unable to break away, only meeting his
lips with her own in a kiss that went deeper and deeper, caught up
somehow in a timeless moment in which the world around them ceased
to exist, in which there was nothing but their mouths, their
bodies, their minds, touching and longing to touch more deeply.
Then cymbals clashed, and they stepped apart. He glared up
at the musicians, but she was glad of the respite, gasping, amazed
how shaken she was, not only by the surge of her own desire, but by
the realization that the last embrace had not been one of lips and
bodies alone, but one of minds as well. Whoever this gallant
young stranger was, he was a tele path of some degree, for he had
reached out and enwrapped her mind with a psionic touch, enfolded
her in his own churning emotions, blending them with hers, stirring
hers up even higher than they had boiled by themselves.
Breasts heaving, she looked up into his face. Somehow, she
was sure he had not read her thoughts—but her emotions he
most surely had, and had mingled his own with hers, his desire
fueling her own, leading her up toward ...
She broke off the thought, shivering. How could she ever
be content with any other man again, how could any other ever bring
her so close to ecstasy as he had this night?
And she did not even know who he was!
But the dance was done, and other young men were pressing in
between them, separating them, a gulf of young bodies opening to
divide them. With relief, she turned to the youngest and
stepped into the measure, bodies well apart, gradually
regaining her composure.
She had recovered nearly all when the dance ended, and she found
her brother slipping his arm about hers and moving away from the
other young men as the music began again. "I believe you
could do with a bit of rest, my sister."
"I certainly could," she said with relief. "Thank you,
brother."
"My pleasure, I'm sure. We shall have to at least begin
the dance, though, or you will have a dozen young boobies claiming
your hand."
The music began, and they moved in time to its strains—but
Geoffrey steered them closer and closer to the tall windowed doors
that opened onto the terrace. There he stopped, offering his
arm, even as she had taught him to, years before. She took it
with a pang of nostalgia and affection, and they stepped out onto
the flagstones.
She breathed in the cool air with a shuddering gasp. "It
has been—a very exciting night ... my brother."
She looked up at him. "But where is Alain?"
Geoffrey smiled, with a glint in his eye. "Why, you have
danced with him twice this evening."
"Twice?" She stopped still, staring up at him in
shock. Then her mind reeled, reviewing all the men she had
danced with that evening. No, she could not possibly say
which one had been Alain; they had all been too gallant, too
heroic; none looked like him in the slightest. "Nay, tell me
which one he was, brother!"
"I most certainly shall not!" Geoffrey drew himself up,
offended. "It is half the delight of the game, sister, not to
know with whom one dances. After all, how else are we to
discover our feelings?"
Cordelia frowned up at him. "Why, how do you mean?"
she said dangerously.
He gazed down at her, dropping his lofty manner, letting himself
be serious for the moment. "How are you to know whether you
are truly in love with Alain, if you do not let yourself enjoy the
dance with any other man?"
"Who said I was in love with Alain?" Cordelia snapped,
hands on her hips. "Indeed, I seem to recall telling you that
I was not!"
"And if you are not," Geoffrey said gently, "surely you should
be sure of it, so that you can continue to refuse his suit."
Cordelia turned away. "I did not say I would refuse his
suit—only that I did not love him."
"Being Queen is not worth a loveless marriage." Cordelia
stiffened. "I could be a good Queen to him. I could be
a good wife."
"But if you did not love him," Geoffrey murmured, "you
would cheat him, as surely as he would cheat you."
"Be still!" she blazed, turning on him. "What do you
know of it? You, who are not married, and who claim never to
have been in love!"
"But I have heard what love is," he said. "I can imagine
it, and long for it. Aye, even I, who am so busy changing
partners that I scarce have time to tread the measure."
Cordelia looked up, eyes wide in sudden panic. "But if I
might discover that I truly love someone else, might he not
discover the same?"
"He might," Geoffrey said gently, "and it is far better for him
to learn that now, than after you are wed." Cordelia turned
away, thinking of the gold-and-scarlet young man, thinking of
Forrest. "Yes," she said, her voice very low, "I suppose that
is so. Tell me—is Alain enjoying the evening?"
"He is," Geoffrey said, carefully noncommittal. "Does he
flirt with other ladies?"
"He does."
"More than one?"
"Aye, more." Geoffrey smiled, guessing which "one" she
meant. "And quite successfully, I might add."
She could hear his pride in his student, and turned on
him. "Geoffrey, why could you not have left me to my own
affairs? My life is my own; I did not need your
meddling!"
"Perhaps," he said softly, and looked straight into her
eyes. "Could it be, sister, that you have found that you,
too, are enjoying this ball? The dancing, the
flirtation?"
"Should I not?" She thrust her chin up. "Have I not
the right to enjoy being a woman, to enjoy my youth?"
"Every right," he said softly, with total conviction, "and I
rejoice to see it at last. Nay, you have also the right to be
in love. I could wish you no greater joy, sister. I
hope that you shall be."
Cordelia stared at him, shaken by his sincerity.
Then she turned away. "Let us return to the dance,
brother. I think I am quite refreshed now."
"Ready for more dancing?" Geoffrey grinned, the
seriousness dropping from him like an ill-fitting garment, like a
dark cloak. "Aye, sister, so am L"
She paused at the doors. "Geoffrey..."
"Aye, sister?"
"The man in scarlet and gold ... the tall one, with blond
hair..."
"I have seen him." His voice was carefully neutral.
"Spy upon him for me this evening, will you not? And see if
he reaches out to other women with his mind, to touch theirs as he
dances with them."
Geoffrey frowned. "A strange request—but surely,
sweet sister, I could deny you nothing."
"As long as it was something you had planned to give me
already?" Cordelia smiled, remembering the puppy he had given
her for her tenth birthday. "Surely, brother. Shall we
dance?"
They went in through the door.
Her eyes immediately sought out the tall young man in gold and
scarlet. She could see him dancing with an older woman,
bantering and laughing. She felt something twisting within
her. Had he only been being polite, then?
She turned away, and her gaze sought out Forrest. She
could only stare in shock.
He was dancing with Delilah, the two of them molded so tightly
together that they seemed almost to be one entity. His gaze
never left her face, or hers his, and even this far removed, there
was an almost palpable energy about them, a tension that seemed to
crackle all the way across the room.
Cordela turned away, shaken. Was he, then, a man for all
women, and she no more important to him than any other? Then
suddenly, the dance was ended, and the gold-and-scarlet young man
was there, elbowing his way through a crowd of her admirers, taking
her hand, saying words that pressed her into dancing. The
other young men clamored for her attention, but she let herself
move into his embrace, into the movements of the dance, let his
lips touch hers, his mind reach out to mingle with hers—not
thoughts, no, but emotions, his exultation at having her once again
in his arms, his joy at the feel of her body against his, giving
her a thrill of pleasure such as she had never known before this
night.
Therefore, she insisted on dancing once again with Forrest, and
as she did, she watched the gold-and-scarlet young man across the
hall, dancing with Delilah, hearing his laughter clearly, saw that
they were chatting, saw Delilah's flirtatious glances becoming more
and more sensuous. The young man only laughed, though, and
swung her about, with every appearance of enjoying the dance for
its own sake—but without the slightest sign of seeking to
enjoy Delilah's favors.
So she danced once more with the gold-and-scarlet cavalier that
night, and once more with Forrest. Both times she began with
her defenses up, but the music and the movements swayed her, to
make her yield to the moment. Somehow she had the feeling she
might never know such pleasure again in all her life, so she
revelled in the delight of the moment, almost desperately.
Then, suddenly, a great brazen gong was chiming, and a brazen
voice with it, booming, "Twelve strokes! Twelve
strokes! Midnight! Midnight!"
It was the majordomo, his stentorian tones blending with those
of the gong. "'Tis midnight, and the hour for
unmasking! Let truth be known! Let faces be bared,
names be declared!"
All the guests clustered together at the center of the hall,
giggling and chuckling in anticipation, wondering who would be
revealed as whom.
"Let us first introduce our guests!" The august king in
purple robes and pasteboard crown, who had been announced as the
fabled Charlemagne, stepped up onto the dais at the end of the
hall. "You have heard, my friends and neighbors, the occasion
for our celebration—my daughter's safe return, thanks to the
rescue and protection of two stalwart knights, a gentleman of the
greenwood, and a most enchanting lady who did chaperone my
daughter. Let me call them now, summon them forth, so that we
all may thank them! Sir Geoffrey!"
Geoffrey stepped up beside him on the dais and took off his
mask. There was applause all through the hall, and
cheering.
"Sir Forrest Elmsford!"
Forrest stepped up beside Geoffrey, unmasking. In the
crowd, several ladies were murmuring and "oooh"ing outright.
"Sir Alain!" Sir Julian cried. No one stepped
up.
"Is Sir Alain not here?" demanded Sir Julian. "Seek
him out, some of you!" And while the young men turned to the
hunt with a cheer, Sir Julian called, "The Lady Cordelia!
Step up beside us, and unmask!"
Most of the young men turned back to watch—every woman was
a source of fascination, until they knew who "Lady Elaine" was.
Cordelia stepped up onto the dais, and the young men ripped
loose a cheer—but as she lifted her hand to her mask, she saw
the scarlet-and-gold young man moving toward the doorway.
What! Didn't he even care to learn who she was?
It seemed he did; he was frozen in place, staring at her.
Their gazes met; she lifted her mask.
The young men cheered again. The gold-and-scarlet cavalier
stared, then moved toward the doorway again. Cordelia
pointed, her arm a spear. "Stop him!"
The young men shouted, all too glad to obey her whim—but
it was Delilah who laid hold of him first, catching his arm and
dragging him back. The young man still struggled, seeming to
be almost in a panic, but she worked her way hand-over-hand up his
arm to the shoulder, undulating as she came.
"Have we found him, then?" Sir Julian called. "Sir
Alain! Unmask, young sir!"
The gold-and-scarlet cavalier froze, and Delilah lifted his
mask.
It was Alain!
He stood frozen, staring at Cordelia, aghast.
She stood frozen too, staring at him and feeling as though the
floor had dropped out beneath her. Alain? She had been
flirting with Alain?
Alain, being so gallant, so passionate—Alain, with kisses
of fire!?! Alain, with his mind touching hers?
Her Alain, flirting so deeply with a strange woman, one
whom he had known only as the most beautiful at the ball?
Flirting so earnestly, his desire fuelling him with such ardor that
his mind had reached out to enfold hers? Alain, an
empath?
She dropped her gaze in confusion, unsure whether to rejoice or
to curse, and Alain stood frozen, his face drained of all
color.
CHAPTER 14
"How could he! How could he?" Cordelia paced back
and forth, wringing her hands. "How could he pledge his troth
to me, but pay court to a stranger whom he did not even know?
How could he do it!"
"Why, with my encouragement," Geoffrey said, leaning back and
toying with his wine goblet.
"Your encouragement!" Cordelia turned on him.
"Sir! Will you cease to meddle?"
"In this case, no." Geoffrey chose his words
carefully. Cordelia glared at him, taking in the unbuttoned
doublet, the chessboard in front of him, the bottle on the table at
the side. It seemed odd to her that he should play chess
against himself—it was more the sort of thing she would have
suspected her little brother Gregory of doing—but still, he
did. She noticed the other glass beside the bottle, but
dismissed it, being preoccupied with her own difficulties.
Surely he only wanted it in case the first glass broke.
He was sitting there grinning at her in his insolence and his
arrogance, and she would have liked to scratch his eyes
out—but then, she had felt that way about him before.
He was, after all, her brother. "How dare you meddle in my
romance!"
Geoffrey looked down into his wine goblet, reflecting that for
her to use the word "romance" in relation to Alain was a definite
improvement. "Let us not put too fine a point on it,
sister." He looked up. "Alain has never been a terribly
exciting man. In fact, one might almost say he is
stuffy."
"Well ... there is that," Cordelia agreed. "But
tonight, he was not!"
"No, not tonight." Geoffrey looked straight into her
eyes.
Cordelia stared at him a moment, feeling the blood rush to her
face. Then she said, "So that is why you encouraged him."
"Of course, that is why." Geoffrey twirled the glass's
stem between his thumb and his forefinger. "And it would seem
to me that it succeeded quite well, sister mine. Was he not
more enjoyable? Almost, one might say ...
exciting?"
Cordelia turned away, remembering the touch of the
gold-and-scarlet stranger, of his lips on hers, of his arm about
her, of his mind ... She shivered, wrapping her arms tightly
about herself. "But he did not know it was me! He
thought that I was... some strange wench. He cared
not!"
"Oh, be not such a goose," Geoffrey said crossly. "He knew
it was you."
"What!" Cordelia spun around. "How could he
know!"
"Why, the simplest way imaginable," Geoffrey replied. "I
told him."
Cordelia stared at him in outrage, growing redder and
redder. Then she exploded. "Will you cease to
meddle?" She stalked over to her brother, pounding at
him with little fists.
Geoffrey laughed, holding up his arm to fend her off.
"Nay, sister, nay, I prithee! Think not of the havoc I have
wrought, but only that I had most excellent intentions."
"And we all know which road is paved with those!"
Cordelia relented, seething; her fists did no good against him,
anyway. "At least tell me—what of your spying?
Did he make advances to any other woman?"
"We-e-e-e-ell . .."
"The truth, turtle of turpitude!" Cordelia stormed.
"Do not plague me, do not torment!"
"I shall not," he sighed. "Oh, Alain had a great deal of
fun flirting with other ladies—but only by words, and the
occasional touch of a hand. He certainly never sought to kiss
one, and never held another close."
Cordelia quieted surprisingly there, staring into his
eyes. "Was there ... ardor?"
"No, not a bit," Geoffrey assured her. "Only a sense of
play, a sense of fun. It is the first time I have seen that
in Alain. Not even when we were children did he seem to have
fun at his games. He was always so deadly serious that he
must win, or die." He shook his head. "I cannot
understand it."
This, from a man who would rather die than lose, Cordelia
knew—but you did expect it from Geoffrey, and she
had to admit that he had always had a great deal of fun at his
games.
She turned away. "Why has he not told us he is an
esper?"
"Why, because he does not know it!" Geoffrey said.
"Nay, do not look evilly at me! If he cannot hear thoughts,
but only feel emotions, how should he know that he has any talent
at all? Oh, aye, he may feel what others feelbut any person
can be empathetic, if he truly cares about others. Any person
who is at all sensitive to others can read the host of unspoken
signals in their bearing and demeanor. How should Alain have
known that he could do more, that he could actually read their
feelings, as you and I read thoughts?"
"Or make another feel his?" Cordelia's voice was very
small.
"Ah, that is a greater gift," Geoffrey said softly. "But
surely, he could not know that he had done that." He
paused a second, watching her face, then said, "Can
he?"
Cordelia was still a moment, then gave a very short nod.
"Well, well, well," Geoffrey breathed. "Mayhap there is hope
for our clay-footed suitor yet." He watched his sister for a
minute, but she said nothing, only stood with eyes downcast.
Geoffrey smiled. "Even so, he would not know that he can sway
a person to him, wrapping her in his feelings, whirling both up
into..." He broke off, seeing her shiver again. "And it
may be that he cannot project emotions unless he feels them very
strongly. Indeed, he may not realize that he does it at
all—for all he knows, 'tis what everyone feels. So if
he has the talent, sister, he probably knows it not."
"How is this?" Cordelia cried. "As he usually is, as
he has always appeared, I do not find him at all appealing but I
have found him very much so tonight! Never before has he
appeared so handsome, so gallant! Never before has he reached
out to touch me with his mind!"
"Never before has he danced with you," Geoffrey murmured.
"Oh, he has, in the Christmas reels—but always with only
the set, formal steps, never with such ardor! Indeed, he did
become, as you say, exciting. Was it simply because he wore a
mask?"
"A mask," Geoffrey said judiciously, "and because I insisted
that he drink three glasses of wine."
Cordefa frowned. "Surely three glasses of wine are not
enough to ... Oh!"
"Yes," Geoffrey confirmed. "I boosted the alcohol content
considerably."
"Alas!" Cordelia looked down into the depths of Geoffrey's
wineglass. "Is he only to be a man of romance when he is
drunk, then?"
"The wine could not bring it out if it were not there to be
brought." Geoffrey looked down into his glass, too. "Be
honest. Alain is ordinarily tremendously dull—not a bit
of fun, and deadly serious, and far too concerned with his moral
rectitude."
Cordelia reflected that a bit more such concern could do her
brother a world of good—but she had to admit it was rather
overpowering, in Alain.
Geoffrey looked up at her. "I attribute it to his having
been reared with far too great a sense of his own importance as
Heir Apparent, and too much insistence on developing his sense of
responsibility. No doubt it will make him an excellent king
. .."
"Yes," Cordelia said sadly, "but a very boring person."
"And," Geoffrey said, very, very softly, "a stultifying
husband." He clucked his tongue. "Beware,
sister—or you may lose him to Delilah."
"Oh, I do not wish that! Not that at all!" Cordelia
cried, distraught. "Not for my sake alone, no, but for his
also!"
"If he could only become fun ... ?" Geoffrey
suggested. "Exciting," Cordelia agreed. "But if he
becomes romantic only when he is half drunk? Oh, no,
Geoffrey! I cannot have that!" She turned away, chafing
her hands. "Yet I would not see him the victim of Delilah,
for I know what a vampire that woman must be!"
Geoffrey tilted his head to the side, considering her. "Is
that the only reason you do not wish to see him united with the
lady?"
Cordelia blushed, embarrassed. "I do not know. Oh,
Geoffrey, do not ask me! I do not know!" And she' fled
in confusion, away out the door.
Geoffrey sighed, gazing down into his wine. Then he
shrugged, drank what was left in the glass, and reached out for the
decanter. His gaze lighted on the other goblet, and a gleam
came into his eye. He lifted the bottle and poured, but only
a small amount.
Cordelia fled back to her bedroom and sent out her own clarion
call. Mother! Awaken, I pray you! I have need
of you! Then, a little less stridently,
Mother! Mo-o-o-o-ther!
The answer came, as though Gwen were still swimming up through
layers of sleep to consciousness. Yes, daughter.
What troubles thee? There was no irritation, no
resentment. Weariness, yes—but also alertness, and
concern, lest her child be hurt.
Mother, I am so confused! I must talk with you!
I listen. Gwen was already more wakeful.
Nay, not in this fashion. Cordelia wrung her
hands. Face to face. I must be with you, be in your
presence! I know it is a hard thing to ask, but—can you
meet me?
At Cromheld's Wood. Aye,. surely.
Gwen was fully awake now, and all compassion. In half an
hour's time. I shall fly. Aye, Mother. I
thank you. Cordelia broke the contact and, already
feeling a little better, hurried to doff her evening gown and don
her travelling dress. Cromheld's Wood was halfway between Sir
Julian's manor house and Castle Gallowglass. Cordelia caught
up her broomstick, leaped astride it. It sank half a foot,
then lifted and shot out through the window.
In the forest clearing half a mile away, Gwen prepared to do the
same.
"Don't let her see you, dear." Rod had awakened as soon as
he heard Gwen rising from her bedroll beside him in the tent.
"I shall not, husband," she assured him. "Indeed, I shall
go past Cromheld's Wood and come back. If she doth see me,
she shall think that I have come from Castle Gallowglass."
"Horrible to lie to our children this way, isn't it?"
"I do not lie, strictly," she said primly. "I merely leave
matters open for her to believe as she wishes. Good night,
husband. Do sleep—there is no need for you to be
watchful and wakeful." She bent down to kiss him, lightly and
quickly, then turned away to leap sidesaddle onto her broom.
"Good night, love," Rod called softly. He watched her go,
diminishing into the night. As to the need for watchfulness
and wakefulness, he had his own opinions. He sat up straight,
very straight, legs folded in half-lotus. Closing his eyes,
he concentrated on the mind of his son Geoffrey. It came
clear ... he could feel ...
Passion.
Instantly, Rod severed the connection. Well, he certainly
wasn't going to learn anything about what was going on in the manor
house that way.
For that matter, neither was Geoffrey. Instead, Rod
focussed on Alain's mind.
This was more difficult for Rod than for his wife or
children—he had not been born to it or learned it as he grew
up. He'd had the gift inborn within him, but it was only
contact with Gwen that had brought it to life. Even then, he
had blocked it, until Father Al had helped him to unlock it
fully.
So he eavesdropped with his eyes closed, listening, feeling,
sensing what Alain sensed ...
...sensed a dream, one that featured his daughter, and that he
had no business overhearing.
He severed that connection, too, but sat, wakeful in the dark,
waiting, listening.
From a distance, Cordelia saw her mother, a lighter shred of
cloud almost, a spark in the moonlight, circling down into
Cromheld's Wood. No one else would have thought to look, of
course. Cordelia breathed a silent prayer of thanks, and sent
her broomstick arrowing after Gwen's.
She darted down to the ground, pulling up short and leaping off,
running to her mother, saying "Oh!" and burying her face in
Gwen's bosom.
Gwen held her for a timeless moment, folding her arms around
Cordelia and holding her, a faint smile on her face. She
could feel her daughter's turmoil, could tell what her trouble
was—and it was a trouble that Gwen was delighted to discover
in Cordelia. She had wondered if the child would ever fall in
love, truly in love. There had been a few infatuations, but
not nearly enough, to Gwen's mindand certainly, nothing
serious. "Yes, child," she said softly. "Now—what
troubles thee? Speak!"
"'Tis ... Alain, Mother."
"Ah. Alain."
Then, in halting phrases, with sobs always beneath her voice but
never quite in it, Cordelia explained.
She had always been fond of Alain, as she might be of a
lapdog. She had always thought of him as being hers, but he
had made such a wretched botch of his proposal, being frankly
insulting, that she had turned him away.
Gwen found a sawn stump of a tree and sat, listening. She
had heard this part before; she waited.
"He has always been so—been so—boring!"
Cordelia clenched her fists, jamming them down at her sides.
"There is no other word for it, Mother. Oh, aye, I have
always had the comfortable feeling that I was quite his
superior—but still, he was boring."
"And this ... Forrest? The bandit?" Gwen
interjected softly.
"Aye, the bandit! But he is a gentleman born,
Mother!" Cordelia's eyes lit with enthusiasm. "He has
been knighted! Yet he has strayed from the straight and
narrow, that is quite sure. But he is—exciting.
When he holds me, when he kisses me, I melt inside!"
"Yes," Gwen breathed, "yes." But she felt a frisson of
fear for her daughter, for she knew that plans to reform a man
failed far more often than they succeeded. She knew better
than to say so at the moment, though; instead, she said only, "Does
not that decide thee, daughter? What else dost need to
know?"
"But he is so corrupted, Mother! Can I truly plight my
troth to a .knight who has abandoned his vows, and has given no
sign that he will redeem himself? Who has looks that fairly
undress me, aye—but undress every other damsel around him,
too! Can I, Mother?" The words were wrenched out of
her. "Can I trust him?"
Gwen breathed a hidden sigh of relief, then chose her words
carefully. "Looking doth not breed mistrust, daughter."
Cordelia stared, appalled. "You do not mean that Father
has regarded other women in that way! Not since he met
you!"
"Well, no," Gwen admitted, then chose her words carefully
again. "Not that I know of. If he hath, he hath
certainly been quite circumspect..."
"Oh, Mother, you bandy words!" Cordelia said
impatiently. "Father has never so much as glanced at another
woman since he met you!"
"Not since he met me, aye. But before that, he looked at
one other in that way, surely."
"Oh." Cordelia felt obscurely shocked. "Is it
... anyone I know?"
Gwen debated within herself for a moment, then nodded.
"Aye. It was Queen Catharine."
"The Queen!" Cordelia stared.
Gwen laughed softly, catching her daughter's hand with her
own. "Oh, she was beautiful once, daughter."
"But she must have been so unlike you!"
"She was," Gwen admitted, "but at the last, it seemed your
father preferred my sort, rather than hers."
"And ... has he looked at her ... again?"
"Not at all." Gwen smiled, feeling very complacent.
"Or at least, not in the way we speak of. He doth look upon
her as he would upon any friend, nothing more—and
considerably less, for he must be ever wary, never sure when she
will turn upon him."
Cordelia giggled, nodding. "Indeed, all men feel that way
with her—even King Tuan, does he not?"
"Well, mayhap," Gwen admitted. "It pleases me to think
that it may add spice to their marriage. I hope that I am
right."
Cordelia sobered again, dropping her gaze, dropping her
voice. "That is what I seek, too—one who will ever be
true to me, who will never look at another woman once he has become
my husband." She looked up at her mother. "But perhaps
I am not so alluring as you were."
"And as I still am, to thy father," Gwen told her, with some
asperity, "though only to your father, I doubt not. As to
yourself, though—you do not know the limits of your allure
yet, my dear, nor did I, at your age. Have you learned
nothing of them, on this quest of yours?"
"Well . .." Cordelia blushed, lowering her gaze
again. "Tonight ... I did seem to be ...
something of a favorite ... with the young men...."
"Show me," Gwen said.
Cordelia closed her eyes, remembering the sight of all the young
men crowding around her, clamoring for her attention, for a dance
with her. She remembered quick snatches of each dance, the
partners changing with dizzying rapidity—though Alain's
masked visage, and Forrest's, kept recurring. The scene was
very vivid; she could see it all again, almost smell the flowers
decking the hall, hear the chatter, the gay laughter ...
Gwen gave a sigh of satisfaction. "Oh, I rejoice to see
it! I knew thou wert a beauty, daughter, but I have waited
long for the men of this world to see it!"
"And Father has prayed that they will not, I am sure," Cordelia
answered, with irony. "Yet what am I to do now,
Mother?" She spread her hands. "Not only one man has
seen some beauty in me, but two!"
"Two?" Gwen frowned. "You speak of Alain?"
"Aye." Cordelia stood up and began pacing again. "I
had thought that he regarded me only as his property, even as I
thought of him. I believed that he had come to claim that
which he thought was his by right of birth—and mayhap he did
... But now..."
"Now what?" Gwen said; and again, "Show me, daughter, if
it is not too private."
Cordelia closed her eyes and let herself remember the dances
with Alain, his arm about her, his body pressing against hers
... She broke off the memory. "More than that I will
not show, Mother."
"As thou shouldst not," Gwen agreed. "I think I can guess
the rest of it." Inwardly, she was delighted. "So,
then. Two men make thee melt inside; there are two who make
thee guess at pleasures thou wottest not of, not yet."
"Two. Aye." Cordelia looked down at her twisting
hands. "I would never have thought that one of them would
have been Alain!"
" 'Tis surprising," Gwen admitted, "though pleasant. And
the other? What is he like, this paragon?"
"He is scarcely a paragon! Indeed, he is not at all
suitable!" Cordelia cried. "Oh, aye, he is well
formed—but he behaves abominably. Nay, any knight who
would stoop to outlawry should no longer be called a knight, and is
certainly no fit husband for a gentle lady!"
Gwen gazed off into space. "Do not think that thou shalt
change him, daughter. No woman can ever change a man to
become what she doth wish him to be. Marriage will
change him, aye—not all at once, not in the moment the priest
pronounces thee wed, not in a month, not even in a year, but
gradually, little by little, he will change—as wilt thou
thyself. Thou canst but hope that he will change more closely
to that which thou dost wish him to be."
She looked back at her daughter. "Though love and
affection, and thine unceasing reassurance, building him up in his
own eyes, will make him stronger inside, and will help most
wondrously. Still, when all is said and done, thou canst not
know for certain what he will become; thou mayest but be sure that
he will change, and if he doth love thee as well as thou dost love
him, then, with good fortune, thou wilt grow together, to become
more like one another."
Cordelia gazed into her eyes. "I think that you speak from
knowledge and life, not from faith."
Gwen nodded slowly. "By Gramarye's standards, thy father
was not at all suitable as a husband—nay, not suitable for
any but a peasant. He had no family here, seest thou, and
though he claimed to be nobly born; none could prove nor disprove
it, for his folk were far, far way indeed, even on another
star. And he was an adventurer—none can deny that,
though 'twas for the good of other people he adventured, not for
estates and a fortune. Surely he had no inheritance, other
than Fess and his ship, for he was a second son of a second
son."
She smiled at her daughter. "Then again, I too was not the
most eligible. I was, by all accounts, a foundling, raised by
elves, with only the knowledge that my mother had been gently born,
and had died at my birth. Her father had been a
knight, but he was dead, too, as was all her family. Oh, the
elves raised me with assurances that my father was noble, but never
told me his name—even though he still lives." For a
moment, her eyes crinkled with mirth, though she was quick to hide
it.
Cordelia was rather irritated. Whatever the jest was, her
mother was not sharing it—and it had very little to do with
her problems of the moment. "But did you and Father grow
together? Or did you grow apart?"
"By Heaven's blessing, we have grown together," Gwen answered,
"though there is no assurance that all the changes have been for
the better. At least I had no concern that he would spend
more time with friends at the tavern than he would with
me—for he had no friends here, and had become persona non
grata with the Crown, by the style in which he ended the first
rebellion against Catharine. Surely the two of us were ever
together, and rejoiced in one another's company. After our
sojourn in Tir Chlis, though, he changed, and changed very
badly."
"Yes, I remember," said Cordelia. "His temper..."
Gwen nodded. "Yet still were we in love. That, and the
madness that came upon him when he ate the witch-moss chestnut,
which still comes upon him ever and anonthose have been sore
trials. And this was a most goodly man among men when we met,
mind you!"
"These have been heavy burdens in truth," Cordelia murmured.
"They have indeed. Yet the elves had warned me as I grew
that such as this happened to the best of men, from time to
time—and women too, daughter! We are human, do not
forget!"
"Trials that ended, you could bear." Cordelia came and sat
by her mother, taking her hand to hold. "What was it that you
could not bear, then?"
"His ever-abiding conviction that he was not good enough for
me. Nay, say naught, do not deny it! It is there, and
if thou dost think on it, thou shalt see it. This is the
trial that does not end—that ever and anon must I build up
his inner picture of himself, to shore it up, lest he leave me,
ashamed of his weakness, ashamed of his lack of Talent, of his
ugliness."
"But none of those are true!" Cordelia protested.
"He is comely even now, and must have been far more so when he was
young! Aye, in a rough-hewn way, but comely still! And
his talents have kept this land of Gramarye balanced 'twixt tyranny
and lawlessness—though you have been of great aid to him
there..."
"I have," Gwen said, "though I would not have undertaken it of
myself, but would have left governance to the Queen, and I do not
think that she would have called upon me, for she did not know me
well—and I was too old to feel easy among the Royal Coven
... Nay, it is your father who has brought me to such cares
about governance, and it is his plans and strategies that have kept
Catharine and Tuan on their thrones. He is a most puissant
man, my dear, but he believes it not."
Gwen shrugged. "He doth believe that his success hath been
good fortune, or that at most, he hath been able to bring others
together, and it is they who have managed the troubles that have
arisen, not he. Left to his own devices, he doth not believe
well of himself. This has been my sorest trial—to
always, always give and give, unceasing. But what I have
received from him, in affection and outpouring of his love, is at
least as much as I have given."
For a moment, Cordelia wondered fleetingly what trials her
father would tell of in his lifelong courtship of her
mother—but the thought was fleeting indeed, for it had little
to do with her own troubles. "But such giving must be to only
one, Mother. How shall I choose? And if I choose
wrongly, how much grief shall I bring to them both?"
Gwen sighed. "This is a family disease, my
dear—being too serious, too concerned for others'
welfare. Nay, we seem to have the need, your father and I, to
take others' burdens on our shoulders—and not the burdens of
one person, or a few, but of all those on this Isle of
Gramarye. Still, 'tis what has made us noble, I
think—the feeling of obligation for others."
Cordelia became very thoughtful. "If I had not known you
were speaking of us Gallowglasses, Mother, I would have thought
'twas Alain." She lifted her head swiftly, sharply. "Am
I as dull as he?"
Gwen laughed softly. "Most certainly you are not, my
dear! Your moods change like the sun's light in a field of
sailing clouds. As soon as a man might begin to think you are
serious, you suddenly laugh, and are gay. Nay, you have
always been frolicsome, and have a sense of playfulness that Alain
doth lack. Your own mercurial temperament offsets his
stolidity quite well—and that is one of the reasons why you
are well matched."
"Well matched?" Cordelia gazed into Gwen's eyes. "We
should marry, then?"
"Oh, nay, nay!" Gwen raised a hand. "Simply because
thou dost well together, because thou canst function well in tasks
shared, does not mean you should marry. Only love can mean
that. If thou dost love him, and he doth love thee, then wed
him. If he doth not, be his friend, be one of the pillars
upon which he can rest his kingdombut do not be his wife.
What can tell you that you should marry? Only love, my
dear—only love."
Cordelia reddened. "It may be that love is telling me to
wed someone else, Mother."
"If it may be, then it is not," Gwen said firmly.
"But do I love them?" Cordelia cried. "And
do I love one, or do I love both?"
"Why, rejoice!" Gwen said softly. "Two men desire
thee, two men kindle a burning within thee—and one of them is
a rogue, while the other is a prince in every sense of the
word. What choice is there, daughter?"
"But how can I be sure of either of them?" Cordelia
cried. "I have seen how they look at that ... that cat,
Delilah! How I have matched her in beauty, I do not know, but
I seem to have, this last night—yet I can surely never be as
seductive as she! How can I be sure that either of them would
cleave unto me, and not unto such as her? Can true love be a
true defense? And which is my true love?"
"Ah." Gwen nodded slowly, her eyes glowing. "If you
do not know yet, daughter, you must not say yes to either of
them."
"Yes to which question?" Cordelia asked, guarded.
"Any question! Thou must not say yes to any question that
either doth ask thee!" Gwen said severely. "Not until
thy whole heart, and thy whole body, and thy whole soul do answer
`Yes!' before thy lips and tongue have dreamed it."
"But how shall I know when that comes?"
"Thou shalt know, daughter," Gwen assured her. "Believe
me, thou shalt know. But if thou must have some guide, here
it is: If thou dost find thyself even asking the question, 'Am I in
love?' then thou art not. When thou art in love, thou wilt
know it beyond the shadow of a doubt. If thou dost wonder if
thou art in love, then thou art not. Aye, if thou art in
love, thou wilt know it—and there is no more to be said."
"Truly, good mother?" Cordelia asked, in a very small
voice—and for a moment, Gwen saw her as a little girl again,
a five-year-old clinging to Gwen's skirts. She stood up,
smiling, and embraced her child. "It was true for me, my
daughter—oh, how it was true, and is! I cannot say what
was true for others, only for myself. If it is love, thou
wilt know it. It will not be, "Am I in love?' No, the voice
within thee shall say, "So this is love!' "
"Yet how if I love two?" Cordelia asked, still quite
small. "And how if both love me?"
"Wait," Gwen advised. "Wait until thine heart has spoken
for one, and only one, for the other is a liar. Wait,
daughter—only wait."
In the sitting room of her suite, Chief Agent Finister paced the
floor, still disguised as Lady Delilah. The mask of innocence
was dropped; the clinging vine had fallen away, to be replaced by
the whiplash. Her eyes flashed fire, every movement tense
with barely suppressed rage.
Her lieutenants stood in respectful silence against the walls of
the room, three of them men, two women. The men were nearly
salivating, feeling themselves galvanized by the mere sight of
their leader, felt every cell of their bodies respond, even now,
when the lady was not being at all seductive—even now, when
she was enraged and might very well attack one of them with lethal
intent. But she was completely beautiful; every line, every
gesture, every curve kindled desire within them.
The two women watched in mixed awe and envy—awe that a
woman had gained the foremost position of power among the
anarchists of Gramarye; envy of that power, and of the beauty that
she had used as a tool and a weapon, to rise to that position.
"How dare she outshine me!" Delilah fumed as she paced the
room. "How dare she win the Prince's eye—and how dare
he be merely courteous to me, yet burning with. ardor for
her!"
No one dared answer.
"We must do away with her!" Delilah spun on her heel,
jabbing a finger at one of the women. "Did Gerta take her
that cup of poisoned wine?"
"Five or ten minutes ago, Chief," the woman said quickly.
"As soon as you ordered it, the wine was prepared and sent up."
Delilah nodded, eyes burning. "We still dare not attempt
an open assault—these Gallowglasses have proved too powerful
in the past. But a poisoned cup, here in our headquarters,
where everyone around them is one of our agents—aye, here we
may have at them." She burst into rage again. "Where is
the silly goose?"
There was a knock at the door. One of the men reached to
swing it open, and Gerta entered.
"Well?" Delilah pounced upon her. "Did she drink
it?"
"N-n-no, Chief."
"Not drink it! Did you not press it upon her?"
"I ... I couldn't, Chief. She wasn't there."
"Not there!" Delilah halted, staring. Then, finally,
she probed with her own mind, her eyes glazing for a moment.
It was true—wherever Cordelia was, she was beyond Delilah's
range.
Chief Agent Finister was a very powerful esper, but her range
was very limited. Within that range, she was formidable,
especially in the area of projective telepathy. She excelled
at the crafting of witch-moss, and at inserting her own commands
and thoughts into another person's mind at so deep a level that it
amounted to instant hypnosis. This also made her able to
kindle passion in any man, to make herself seem infinitely
desirable. It was this last trait that she had used to win
her office—coupled with extortion and assassination.
"Her broomstick was gone, too, Chief," Gerta supplied.
"After all, she is a witch."
"She could be anywhere!" Delilah threw up her hands in
disgust, turning on her heel to pace again. "Did the sentries
not see her go? Did no one see where she sped?"
"None, Chief."
"Of course not!" Then, suddenly, Delilah stopped, lifting
her head, a strange, feral gleam coming into her eye. "She is
gone, she is fled. Now might we slay the Prince and be one
step closer to loosing anarchy upon Gramarye!"
"He has a younger brother," one of the men protested. "And
when he comes of age to be susceptible to me, I shall slay him
likewise! Then, when the King and Queen die, the barons shall
vie to see who shall have the Crown—and war shall be loosed
upon this island! Let us not waste the opportunity!
Creep into his chamber, stab your daggers into his heart, run him
through with your swords!" Her voice sank low, with an
intensity that` raised the hairs of her lieutenants. "For I
will see his blood!"
Her men stared at her, appalled. Not a single one of them
doubted the true reason for this murder. Oh, surely, it was
excellent policy for the anarchists. Baron against baron,
duke against duke—a chaos of war out of which a few strong
warlords would arise. They would tear the land apart in their
own turn until the peasants, sickened by war, would rise up and cut
them down.
Then, guided by the anarchist cells, they would establish their
own local governments which, carefully guided, would wither away,
and the land would be left without government, without law, without
oppression, guided only by custom and the natural morality inherent
in each human being, the innate nobility of the species. This
was their dream.
Of course, they blinded themselves to a few unpleasant truths
that disagreed with their vision. They ignored some of the
more base impulses of human beings, and the savage aspects of the
natural social rules that arise even in the animal kingdom, plus
the fact that there are always unbalanced humans who are motivated
more by greed than by concern for their fellows—but all
dreamers overlook a few things they do not wish to gaze upon.
Still, those reasons of policy were scarcely what had motivated
Delilah to order this assassination. All of them knew that
she had intended to captivate Alain, then marry him. What
would have happened then was open to speculation. Many of
them suspected that her real goal was personal power, and that she
would forget the anarchist cause in an instant when it had served
her purpose—or even turn against them, seek to wipe them out,
as threats to her own position.
That didn't affect their loyalty, of course. It was based
on fear and lust, on the men's side, and on the women's, on
admiration and fear.
So none of them really believed Alain's assassination was a
matter of policy. They all knew that Hell hath no fury like a
woman scorned, and that, somehow, incredibly, unbelievably, Prince
Alain had scorned their leader, the Lady Delilah, Chief Agent
Finister, whom any one of the men would have given his life
for—if, before death, he could have shared the ecstasies of
her bed.
"His comrade," one of them ventured, "Geoffrey
Gallowglass. He is a warlock, and a powerful one."
"Moreover," said another, "he is highly skilled with
weapons—perhaps the most expert in all the land."
Delilah smiled, with cruel anticipation. "I made an
appointment with him, to play a game of chess; he expects me even
now."
The men all stiffened in jealousy.
"But he shall not find me." Delilah turned to one of her
female lieutenants. "His weakness is women. Send him
your most voluptuous, most accomplished assistant—and when he
is deep in his revels with her, ignoring the world around him and
least expecting attack, drive a dagger under his ribs. Then
bring me his head."
The men all shuddered, but their jealousy was the only guarantee
she needed.
"And what of the bandit Forrest?" one of the men
protested. "Might he not come to the Prince's aid?"
"I doubt it, since they both sue for the same woman."
Delilah tossed back her head, eyelids drooping. "But we shall
make sure of him. I shall see to the bandit myself. He
is not worth killing, that one—but he is certainly worth a
few moments' attention." She glided out of the room.
The men all stared after her.
The women knew why Delilah was willing to do it—it was her
victory over Cordelia, if not as she had originally planned it.
At that moment, each of the men would have slain Forrest
happily, if by doing so, they could have changed places with
him.
But since they could not, they went to slay Alain.
CHAPTER 15
Alain dreamed that Delilah was bending over him, loosening the
fastenings of her gown—but she changed even as she loosened,
becoming Cordelia; and even as she was sliding the gown down over
her hips, she was murmuring with excitement, "Alain! Alain,
wake up!"
But why was her voice urgent instead of seductive? And why
were her ears growing into points? In fact, why was she
turning into an elf?
"Crown Prince! Awaken!"
Alain's eyelids snapped open. It must have been a
dream. Cordelia would never address him by his title.
He lay very still, and heard the voice again. "Waken, Crown
Prince!"
Alain lay unmoving, his gaze flicking about the room. Then
he saw the brownie woman, hanging from the bedpost, calling down,
"Crown Prince, awaken!" She glanced nervously up at the
door. "Waken, Prince Alain!"
"I have waked." Alain sat up.
"Praise be!" the elf breathed. "They come to slay
thee, Prince! Catch up thy sword and flee!"
More than his sword—Alain, like most medieval folk, slept
naked. He leaped out of bed and seized his hose.
Fortunately, he had left all the points tied, and had only
unbuckled the belt. Now he had only to wrestle the hose on,
not pausing to smooth them out, and buckle up.
"Quickly, quickly!" the brownie woman hissed. "Wilt
thou lose thy life for a pair of drawers? Surely 'tis better
to live naked than to die clothed!"
If they had sent a male elf, Alain probably would have
agreed—but as it was, he was embarrassed to be seen naked by
a woman. Standing up, he buckled his belt, then caught up his
baldric, throwing it over his head and drawing both sword and
dagger.
Just in time. The door swung open, slowly, without a
squeak.
Alain held his breath and stepped back against the wall.
His impulse was to leap out and start stabbing, but he needed to be
sure that the men were truly hostile before he would let himself
strike a blow that might kill. If they were, he intended to
make sure he had them all in sight before he began work.
One ... two ... and they held swords and daggers
drawn! Three ... four ... five ... none
more came in; they moved toward the bed.
Silent as a cat, Alain circled opposite their direction,
slipping behind the tapestry that hung on the wall. Peering
around its edge, he watched the five men gather around the bed in
the darkness. What cowards were they! So many men, to
slay one poor sleeping knight! Anger boiled within him at the
treachery. He tried to let it ebb, but not too far, for it
held at bay the fear that had begun to pool in his stomach.
He remembered what Geoffrey had told him—that all the
swordsmen Alain had ever fought would never have dared to beat the
Crown Prince. Had the bandits known who he was? Had the
witch's henchmen?
But these men did not, or if they did, they did not care.
Alain realized that he was about to discover whether or not he
really was a capable swordsman. Why they wished to kill him,
he did not ask—there would be time enough to understand it
later.
"Light," the first man hissed.
A beam speared out. Alain blinked with surprise—he
had not heard the sliding of a metal shutter, nor did he smell the
flame-heated tin of a lantern. What manner of men were
these?
He stepped out from behind the tapestry, circling behind their
backs toward the door.
"He is fled!" the leader hissed. "Where ...?"
"There!" another man shouted, his forger spearing at
Alain.
The leader spun wide-eyed, as Alain threw himself forward in a
lunge, howling, "Havoc!"
The nearest man fell back, barely getting his sword around in
time to parry—which was perfect, because Alain whirled his
thrust into a slash, coming in low and cutting upward. The
man cried out and fell back, holding his hands to his side.
Alain braced himself and yanked the sword free as the man
fell—but even as he did, he was catching the second
swordsman's blade on his dagger. Not quite well
enough—the blade nicked his shoulder, but Alain ignored the
pain. He didn't even take time to riposte, only pulled the
sword straight out of one man and stabbed it into the next.
The second's sword managed to parry at the very last second, but
Alain slipped his blade around the parry and thrust, scoring the
man's thigh. The man howled and collapsed.
Alain sprang aside as the third man lunged. The edge
scored the Prince's ribs and the pain burned, but he ignored it and
swung backhanded, striking the man on the back of the head with the
heel of his hilt even as he raised his dagger to block an assault
by the fourth man. He leaped back as the two remaining men
crowded him, their blades flickering. He parried, blocked,
then slammed a kick into the midriff of the nearest and spun away
toward the door.
The leader shouted and charged at him. He leaped aside at
the last second, and the man slammed into the wall. Before he
could recover, Alain was out the door.
The leader shouted a curse, and his thrown dagger struck Alain
on the back of the head. Dizzy for a second, he reeled back
against the wall. Then his head cleared, and he leaped to his
right, plastered himself back against the wall—and sure
enough, the leader came charging out, yelling, "Stop him!
Guards! Stop that man!"
Alain caught him in the right shoulder with his dagger.
The man spun around, saw Alain's blade chopping down, and sprang
aside with a howl of fright. His sword fell from numbed
fingers—and one of the other men dragged himself out the
door, gasping for breath, but cutting at Alain with his sword.
Alain leaped aside, then cut low, slicing the man's calf.
It would have been a foul blow in a foil match, but here, it spared
his opponent's life. The man cried out and collapsed.
But the leader was running away down the hall, crying, "A
rescue! A rescue! Seize him!"
Alarm, and the old instinct to chase when you're winning, almost
sent Alain after him, but prudence dictated that he find an
escape.
"Flee, King's Son!" cried the brownie from the
lintel. In answer came shouting from around the corner, and
the sound of boots running. The rattle of steel punctuated
the drumming.
Alain whirled about and ran down the hallway, not knowing where
he was going, a wild exhilaration beating in his breast, for he was
alive, and his enemies were disabled. He decided that perhaps
he was as good a swordsman as he had thought.
A section of panelled wall swung out before him. He jarred
to a halt, dagger up, sword on guard, panting, the feet and the
shouting swelling closer behind him. Alain stood, ready for
whatever danger would come at him out of this secret door ...
An elf leaped through, crying, "Inside, King's Son!
Quickly, ere they come in sight of thee!"
Alain didn't argue. He ducked down and shot into the hole
behind the panelling. The door clapped shut behind him, and
he knelt in the darkened space, holding his breath, though his
lungs clamored for air. The pounding feet came closer, the
shouting was louder and louder, and his heart was hammering within
him ...
Then the feet were fading away, and the shouting with them.
Alain let the stale air explode out of his lungs, and gasped in
fresh.
Little lights suddenly sprang up all about him. He pushed
himself back against the wall, his blades coming up to guard, then
saw elfin faces by the candle-sized flames of miniature
torches.
"We will lead you to safety, Crown Prince!" the largest of
them said. He was quite tall by their standards, a foot and a
half high, with a look of incipient mayhem in his eyes.
"You are the Puck!" Alain panted.
"I am, and come to save you from the peril into which your own
foolish glands have brought you. Will you come?"
But Alain stayed where he was, pushing himself upright slowly,
wary of a ceiling that might strike his head. "Nay," he
gasped, "I cannot flee!"
"What nonsense is this?" Puck demanded. "Let us hear
no foolishness of proving your valor, youngling! This is no
time to play games of honor! Come, and come quickly!"
"I cannot," Alain said. "The Lady Cordelia ... if
they have sought to slay me, they may seek to slay her ... I
must find her!"
Puck calmed, staring at him. "Even so," he said.
For a moment, it occurred to Alain to worry about Geoffrey
...
Then he realized that he was being ridiculous. "Follow,"
the elf told him. "I will lead you to a place that is near to
her chamber."
"I follow," Alain answered. He slipped down the
passageway after the ring of fairy lights, barely able to see where
his next step should be. "I thank you, Wee Folk." Puck
exchanged glances with one of the other elves. It was rare
that they met a mortal with a proper sense of gratitude.
"Thou dost credit to thy parents and thine upbringing," Puck
answered.
Then, suddenly, he came to a halt. Tiny feet pattered
toward them, a little torch bobbing up and down, lighting a
brownie's face.
"What moves?" Puck demanded.
"Not the Lady Cordelia," the elf answered. "Her room is
empty; she is fled."
"Thank heavens!" Alain sighed, then suddenly
stiffened. "Or has she been taken?"
"We shall seek," the elf promised.
"Aye, we shall find her, if any may," Puck said. "Come
now, King's Son. Thou must needs leave this house with
us."
"Not until I know that she is fled, not taken!" Alain
protested. "Nay, do not stay by me, good folk, but go seek
her indeed! Although, if you would be so good as to leave me
a light, I shall be safe enough here. Do you seek her
out..." Then, as an afterthought, "And you might spare a
thought for her brother. Warn him, too—I doubt not he
shall need it."
Puck regarded him for a moment, weighing his instructions
against one another. The lad was safe enough—and he did
need to prove himself to himself .. . "We shall attempt
it. Are you sure you shall be well, though, King's Son?"
"I am certain," he said. "Go. I shall amuse myself
by prowling these secret hallways, to discover where they
lead. Who knows but it may be of benefit?"
"Even as thou sayest," Puck pronounced. "Take care, and do
not seek to fight a whole army by thyself."
"I shall not," Alain promised.
Of course, he didn't say anything about a squadron. Puck
went away with his little troop, well aware that he could not
depend on the Prince to play it safe—not at his age, or with
his overdeveloped sense of responsibility (or his being in
love).
Of course, Puck wasn't about to let him really be alone.
Alain thought he was, though, and felt the sense of abandonment
creeping in. He threw it off and, lit only by the miniature
torch (which, he noticed, was not burning down at all), prowled the
secret passage. What he was really seeking, of course, was
another door into the manor house's rooms—in fact, as many
doors as he could locate. If Cordelia was in the slightest
danger, he intended to leap to her defense by the quickest route he
could find.
Cordelia, of course, was in no danger at all, except, perhaps,
from her own emotions.
She flew in through her chamber window as the sky was
lightening, feeling bone-weary, but with some measure of peace
within her. She was emotionally wrung out and ready to sleep
until noon, at the very least—but, as she was about to take
off her travelling dress, she paused, a vagrant image of Alain
drifting into her mind. It was not the Alain she had always
known, pompous and selfimportant, but the Alain she had met the
night before, the masked face with the gentle but ardent kisses
...
Then she remembered his face, staring at her aghast when he had
been unmasked. She smiled, feeling very tender. She
decided to seek him out, for she felt a sudden need to talk with
him, heart to heart, mind to mind ... perhaps even breasts to
chest ...
And if he was asleep? Well, so much the better. It
would not hurt to catch him at a bit of a disadvantage. She
laughed softly to herself and slipped out of her room.
Alain's chamber was all the way at the other end of the
hall. She wondered idly who was his neighbor, and glanced at
the panel next to Alain's.
Somehow, she was sure it was Delilah's.
Suddenly suspicious, she stepped up to Alain's door, hoping that
she would not find the chamber empty. She turned the knob
very quietly, pushed the door open, and slipped in.
The empty bed was almost a slap in her face.
For a moment, she raged inside—until she saw the
overturned chair, the slashes in the tapestry, and realized that
those stains on the floor were blood.
Jealously was instantly replaced by horror. What had
happened to Alain? She whirled out of the room. If
anyone knew, it would be Delilah.
Without the slightest attempt at discretion, she slammed through
the door and strode in, ready to beard her rival in her
den—or in her bed, which, with Delilah, was probably much the
same thing ...
But she was not there.
Cordelia stared, completely taken aback. She stepped
farther in, then halted, amazed at the splendor of the sitting
room, at its spaciousness, its silken hangings, the depth and
softness of the carpet on the floor, the grace and delicacy of the
occasional tables and upholstered chairs.
Then she looked more closely, for signs of the night's
events. There was only the one glass, with wine dregs,
sitting on a table by a chair, and another that seemed to have
scarcely been touched, by the door. Cordelia was tempted, for
she was thirsty, then remembered that Delilah might have sipped
from it, and turned her back on it.
She glanced at the hearth; there were still coals glowing
there. Then she surveyed the walls, all hung with rosecolored
silk; there might be a platoon of guards hidden behind them.
She listened with her mind, but found no one nearby, and ignored
anyone outside the room, her attention focussed only on its
mistress. The furniture was white and gold, and the carpet
was Oriental, with patterns of a dusky rose on a cream
background.
But there was no one there.
Her heart began to hammer within her breast. She wasn't
sure whether she was more afraid of not finding Alain at all, or of
finding him in Delilah's bed. Silent as a morning zephyr, she
slipped across the carpet to the door in the far wall, turned the
handle as quietly as she could, pushed it open, slipped in ...
And saw no one.
The bed had not even been slept in. Now, suddenly, the
rage of jealousy boiled up within her, but with terror right behind
it. What had the witch done with Alain!
Cordelia suddenly became tremendously afraid that when she found
Delilah, she would find Alain, too. Why else would they both
be gone from their beds?
She fled out into the hallway, then halted, in a
quandary—where could she go? Where could she
search? Forrest! He would know! The saturnine,
hot-eyed, bearded face of the bandit chieftain rose up before her
mind's eye. She could depend on him to help her, surely, as
he had in the woods, when Delilah's "sister" had attacked, with her
henchmen. Certainly, if he were really in love with Cordelia,
he would leap at the chance to help her—even if it meant
helping his rival, too.
Which door was his? She did not know, but she
suspected. She went to the other side of Delilah's door and
turned the knob, softly, ever so softly ...
She recognized Forrest's boots and the costume he had worn as
Dionysus, the night before. His doublet lay upon a
stool—but that was all there was. His bed was empty;
like Delilah's it had not been slept in.
Like Delilah's ...
Suspicion reared up in her mind again, anger roiling behind
it. Who else? What had been happening while she had
been talking with her mother?
She turned away to the door, seething. If Geoffrey was
gone, too ...
Then she told herself she strumpet could not seduce
night—or a half-night, for the midnight. She strode out
the Geoffrey's room.
She was about to burst in, but halted at the last second, though
she was not sure why. She reached out with her mind instead
...
And almost collapsed with relief. To find only a dream of
him riding, riding with the wind in his hair, wild and free, was a
vastly pleasant surprise. She sighed, then was being
silly. Surely the more than one man in a ball had ended an
hour after door and down the hall to turned the handle and opened
the door as quietly as she could. She would wake him gently,
tell him that she needed his help ...
But what of the woman who lay beside him?
And the two armed men who lay sleeping on the floor, just inside
the door?
What sort of twisted pleasures had her brother been pursuing,
anyway?
Cordelia stared, outraged. Then all the morning's anger
boiled up within her, and she strode across the floor, stepping
over the two sleeping men and hissing, "Hussy!" She reached
down, grasping a smooth, bare shoulder and snarling,
"Strumpet!"
The girl opened her eyes halfway, a lazy smile on her lips,
stretching with a sinuous undulation, turning her head up to look
...
Then she saw Cordelia, and her eyes flew wide in shock.
"Get out from here!" Cordelia snapped. "Now!
Instantly! Ere I claw your eyes blind and pull your hair out
by the roots!"
The woman sat bolt upright, but her eyes narrowed as she
clutched the bedclothes to her. She was in her early
twenties, Cordelia guessed, and was quite well put
together—lushly, in fact. "I am not your
servant..."
Cordelia's hand came around with a ringing slap. The girl
cried out and fell back, and it was Geoffrey's hands who held her
up. "Peace, sister. 'Tis not your affair, after
all."
"Nor was Alain yours!" Cordelia spat. "Out,
tearsheet, or I shall do you more mischief than a whole tribe of
elves!"
The girl darted a glance at the two men. "Bardolph!
Morley! Aid me!"
The men lay still, not even snoring.
The woman stared in horror—and, for a moment, so did
Cordelia.
"They are men who prefer to watch, not do, I suspect," Geoffrey
said, very nonchalantly. "They crept in whiles we did disport
ourselves, and I had some wish for privacy, so I put them to
sleep."
The girl's glance swung up to him in fright, and she squirmed
away from him toward the edge of the bed. "But ... your
embrace was so ardent, your kisses so fevered..."
"That I might overlook an intruder?" Geoffrey smiled,
showing his teeth. "I am never so besotted that I cannot hear
someone who fairly shouts his gloating glee, as their minds
did."
"And you cast them into sleep without even ...
even..."
"Batting an eye?" Geoffrey shrugged. "'Twas only a
moment's distraction."
"Now will you get hence!" Cordelia raged. "Nay, do
not pause to dress—take your tawdry garments with you, and
get out!"
The girl didn't stay to argue any further—she leaped out
of bed, catching up her clothing, and darted out the door with only
one backward look of fright.
Cordelia gazed after her with more than a little contempt,
seasoned by jealousy. "Your taste surely runs to the baroque,
brother."
"A good guest takes what is offered." Geoffrey sounded
amused.
Seething, Cordelia spun about, to see him propped up on one
elbow, the sheet still draped across his hips, watching with an
expression of great interest.
"You curmudgeon!" Cordelia said, with every ounce of
contempt she could muster. "You lewd man, you libertine, you
rake! How many women must you debauch before you realize the
harm you do?"
Geoffrey started to answer.
"Nay, tell me not!" Cordelia snapped. "Great affairs
of state cannot wait while you slake your desires!" Geoffrey
stared up at her, thinking that his sister was really very
impressive—and had probably saved him a deal of trouble in
disentangling him from one more set of lingering clutches.
But he said only, "You may be sure that I dally only when there is
time."
"Oh, do you indeed!" Cordelia snapped. "Nay, you are
like a dog who forgets all else when he scents one trace of a bitch
in heat, and forsakes all duties to go padding after her,
drooling!"
Geoffrey frowned. "Would you have me be a celibate?
Nay, a monk, perhaps, never to enjoy the company of any woman who
was not a nun!"
" 'Twas scarcely a nun who left here but now, and 'twas far more
than her company that you did enjoy! Nay, while you did
'dally,' your friend Alain was beset by armed men and, for all I
know, nearly slain!"
Geoffrey was out of bed, somehow contriving to slip his breeches
on without completely giving up the cover of the sheet.
"Armed men? Why, could you not fend them off, sister?
Nay, do not answer—'twas not your place! A curse upon
me, that I was not there!" He froze, staring up at her,
frowning. "Nay, surely any number of armed men who came
against him while you were watchful would have died in the
attempt!"
Cordelia felt a stab of guilt, but told herself sternly that she
was not Alain's keeper—not yet.
Geoffrey pulled on his doublet and buttoned it.
"Therefore, if he was taken, you were not there."
"No," Cordelia said, biting down on shame. "I was
not." Geoffrey stilled, watching her. "Do not blame
yourself, sister. You are not Alain's watchdog; you were not
set to that task. Nay, it is the man who is supposed to guard
the woman, not the woman the man. Yet if you did not witness
it, how do you know he was set upon?"
"Why," she said, "because his room is in disarray, with
tapestries slashed and furniture overturned—and there was
blood on the floor!"
Geoffrey was moving toward the door before she finished the
sentence, buckling his sword belt. "Proof enough. Let
us go."
"How shall we find him?" Cordelia wailed. "And we
must find him right quickly, for he may be in mortal danger!"
"His soul, mayhap," Geoffrey agreed, "but I doubt that his body
is in any peril at all, blood or no blood. The man is a most
excellent swordsman, Cordelia—he held me off for a good five
minutes! Nay, we have only to find the Lady Delilah..."
He was about to add, and we shall find Alain, but caught
himself and said instead, ". . . for she will
know where the bodies are, dead and living."
"Her chamber is empty," Cordelia said.
Geoffrey shrugged impatiently, opening the door and ushering her
through. "That means only that she is not in her
chamber. We shall find her, and she will know where Alain
lies." He didn't like the sound of that, so he added, "Or
stands and fights—where we may join him."
Alain stood deep within the manor house's bowels and had finally
found a door, larger than the others, that would let him into the
Great Hall. He opened it only a fraction of an inch, and was
assailed with the sounds of men's voices barking commands to one
another, while they scurried to put away the tables and take down
all the decorations. It seemed odd that they would be so
prompt about tidying up after the ball, but Alain didn't really
give the matter much thought, only edged the door closed again and
stood on the other side, sword in hand, waiting, listening to Sir
Julian's voice bawling orders to search and to guard. Alain's
face hardened at the words; the old man was commanding his men to
seek out the Lady Cordelia and hale her before him, and to bring
her brother with her, dead or alive.
Well. There was an outside chance that, if enough of them
leaped upon Geoffrey in his sleep, they might be able to take him
prisoner—but Alain doubted it mightily, especially since he
had no doubt the elves were guarding Geoffrey as well as they had
guarded him.
Cordelia, however, was another matter. She was so small,
so fragile! Even with all her witch-powers, she could not fly
if they kept her from her broomstick. Geoffrey, if worse came
to worse, could simply disappear—but Cordelia could not, just
as warlocks could not make brooms fly.
Alain stood in the darkness and the dank chill, shivering,
lighted only by one elf-light. He hefted his sword in his
hand, waiting for the moment when he would hear Sir Julian's voice
address the Lady Cordelia, when he would have the chance to leap to
her aid.
Until then ... ?
Well, if the commotion died down enough, if the voices faded
away, he would risk stepping out to see the lay of the land.
Perhaps he could hide behind an arras—what else were they
for? Till then, he could only stand and wait and shiver.
He did.
An elf-wife slipped out from behind the arras. "Lady
Cordelia!"
Cordelia spun about, staring down at the diminutive
person. "Hail, Wee One!" She dropped to her knee.
"Have you news of the Crown Prince?"
"One of our folk did wake him ere the murderers did fall upon
him," the elf told her. "He fought his way free. We
brought him to the tunnels within this house's walls, and he doth
prowl through them, seeking for sign of thee. We have bade
him flee to save his own life, but he will not, till he is sure
thou art safe. Canst thou move him, lady?"
"It appears I do." Cordelia blinked away mistiness.
"Brave man! Praise Heaven he is well!" Then the remark
about "tunnels" penetrated. Secret passages, obviously.
"Is there no passage from those tunnels, into the free air
outside?"
"Oh, aye! We bade him come with us, to leave this strange
place—but he will not, so long as he fears for thy
safety. In truth, he is certain that they wish to slay thee,
so even though thy chamber was empty, he still doth prowl the
passages, seeking sign of thee. He will not go out from this
place until he can take thee with him, alive and well."
Cordelia nearly melted, right then and there. Her limbs
felt weak again, and the strange warmness moved up inside
her—most strange, considering she was not even with Alain,
much less touching him. Her heart had dissolved in that
warmth, she was sure—but she felt her brother's hand on her
shoulder and pulled herself together.
"We must seek him," Geoffrey said softly.
"Aye." Cordelia smiled through a mist of tears and had to
blink it away. She turned to the elf. "Tell him I am
wellalive and well, and that I wish him to flee to safety."
"Assuredly, I shall." The elf-woman whisked back behind
the arras, and was gone.
Cordelia rose and spoke to Geoffrey without looking at
him. "Come. We must find him, protect him."
"Aye, we must indeed," said Geoffrey, loosening his sword in its
scabbard, "for if I know Alain, he will be pigheaded enough to stay
until he sees you with his own eyes."
"Oh, do you truly think he would?" she cried.
"I do not doubt it for an instant," Geoffrey said drily.
"Let us seek him out, then. Since we know where he is, let us
call back the elf-wife, find these tunnels, and seek him out
directly."
Cordelia froze at a thought. "Nay! Let us finish the
course we first set! Find the Lady Delilah."
"I am ever ready for that," he said with a grin. Cordelia
flashed him a glance of annoyance. "You are disgusting,
brother. I confess I am glad of your aid, but not of your
animal nature. Be assured that I do not wish to find the lady
for the same reason that you do."
"I would scarcely think it! But say, sweet sister, what
purpose there is in seeking her at all?"
"For that she is a shrew and destroyer beneath her beauty,
brother, and if you have not seen it, be assured that I have."
Geoffrey frowned. "But we have learned that Alain is alive
and well, and could therefore be in no danger from her.
Should we not rather be seeking to find who set these assassins
upon the Prince?" He stared, facts suddenly connecting in his
head. "Surely you do not suspect the lady of the deed!"
"I would suspect her of anything," Cordelia returned, her eyes
glittering. "Who do you think sent those men to fall
upon him?"
Geoffrey frowned. "Say."
"The Lady Delilah! Do you not remember the dream we
shared? It was she who gave the orders! If anyone
commanded Alain's death, it was she!"
"That was but a dream..."
"A dream that came from a telepath who did not shield her
thoughts, thinking we slept! She did not realize her words
would sift through our slumbers to form pictures in our minds!"
Geoffrey pursed his lips, not wanting to believe such malice of
so beautiful a lady—but by the logic of war, it was what an
enemy would do.
Cordelia's eyes narrowed as she watched the emotions pass across
Geoffrey's face. "Believe it, brother, till we have proof
otherwise—the more so since 'tis likely she gave other
commands also. Did she not whip up your lust this night, then
send a woman to satisfy it, thus holding your attention so that you
would not be aware that Alain needed your aid?"
Geoffrey's face darkened with the blow to his pride, but he had
to admit it made sense. "Aye." Then the logical
conclusion hit him. "If so, 'twas she who sent the
blackguards to slay me while I sought ecstasy!"
"I doubt it not," Cordelia agreed. Her face turned stony
at the idea of the woman actually trying to kill her little
brother. "We shall pay her back in her own coin."
There was something in the way she said it that gave even
Geoffrey chills.
"But what of Alain?"
"The elves shall bring him my word, and he shall heed it, I
hope, going out from this house. But we must make sure of
that safety in other ways."
"By choking it at its source." Geoffrey smiled like a
wolf. Cordelia gave him a curt nod. "Do you still wish
to believe the woman innocent? Then prove me wrong,
brother. Find her."
CHAPTER 16
They searched. Delilah had not come back to her room, nor
Forrest to his.
Geoffrey stood immobile in the center of Delilah's sitting room,
eyes losing focus as he probed throughout the manor house with his
mind. Finally, he nodded. "The room that was
shielded."
"Of course!" Cordelia cried. "What malice does she
brew in there?"
"Let us go see." Geoffrey turned to the door.
They ran through the hallways with no sound but the rustle of
their garments, staying to the shadows (and there were a lot of
those). Down below the Great Hall, down in the basement of
the manor house, there where there should have been storerooms,
they found an oaken door with men in livery standing sentry.
Geoffrey slipped his dagger out of its sheath, but Cordelia
stayed it with a hand. "They are weary already,
brother. They have watched through the night." She
stared at the two men for a few seconds.
One of them raised a hand to stifle a yawn. As he
finished, the other began.
"Stay awake," the first growled. "No, you stay awake."
"I need to..."
"I just got to..."
Then both slumped to the floor. After a minute, each
snored.
Cordelia and Geoffrey stole silently around the corner and up to
the door.
"Softly," Geoffrey whispered. "Let us take them
unawares."
Cordelia glared at the lock until it turned itself. Then
she gave the door a gentle push with her hand, and it swung open
silently, on well-oiled hinges.
There was only the one candle, but its glow reflected off data
screens, holo-cube readers, holo-cube files—and an improvised
bed, cushions clustered together, and on them, snorting and
heaving, shuddering and gasping ...
Cordelia froze, wide-eyed. She would have turned on her
heel if she could have, but the sight held her, horrified,
fascinated. She was intruding on a very private moment, but
...
"Take your enemy while you can," Geoffrey breathed in her
ear. "In fact, as she would have done to me." He
stepped past her, gliding toward the bed like a shadow left by a
moonbeam.
Cordelia shook off the spell, remembered the sleeping assassins
and the bloodstains on Alain's floor, and followed.
Geoffrey levelled his sword and spoke very loudly.
"Hold!"
Cordelia stood by, reaching out with her mind, ready to throw
every movable object at ...
(The man lifted his head, shocked, and found himself staring at
a sword's tip.)
...at Forrest.
Cordelia stared, appalled. Inside her, she felt something
sicken and shrivel.
The bandit chieftain saw it in her eyes. He scrambled out
of the bed, remembered himself just in time, and whipped a corner
of the sheet over his midriff, then raised his hands to
Cordelia. "My lady, forgive! A moment's impulse
... I weakened ... Never again..."
His voice ran down as he saw the look on her face. Beyond
him, Delilah lay back against the pillows, halfcovered by the rest
of the sheet, watching Cordelia with a vindictive, triumphant
smile.
Cordelia stood, stunned.
Delilah's gaze flicked to Geoffrey, filled with malice, one
finger drawing a circle on the sheet over her breast, spiralling
in. "Come, seize the moment—and me. You knew me
for what I was; use me now, for you'll never have another
chance."
Geoffrey's sword point swivelled to her throat.
She stared at him, indignant, affronted—for the look on
his face was only one of amusement.
Forrest bowed his head, shamefaced.
But Delilah's eyes glinted malice at Geoffrey, and she laughed,
low in her throat.
Geoffrey shrugged.
Suddenly, Cordelia was aware that she might not have been the
only one who had been hurt by the scene. Her gaze darted up
to her brother's face in concern.
Then she saw how the smile on his face widened, showing
teeth. "I knew you for what you were, aye, and was quite
willing to take you on those terms—nay, and still would be,
for a night or two—but for nothing more."
Storm clouds began to gather on Cordelia's brow.
Geoffrey's swordtip moved slowly down Delilah's body, as though
seeking the best point.
"Thrust, then," she said with contempt, "at least with the
symbol, since you are too much afeard to use the referent."
"Geoffrey!" Cordelia cried, appalled.
Geoffrey gave her a quick glance before he looked back at his
target. "Sister, I hope that you did not think that Forrest
was anything more than Delilah was."
Cordelia's head snapped back, as though she had been
slapped.
Geoffrey went on, circling his sword tip carelessly, nearer and
nearer to the smooth skin. "Nay, the two of them are well
matched, indeed."
Forrest rose to his knees; hands upraised in pleading.
"Lady Cordelia! Sweet lady, forgive!"
"Never could I forgive such a lapse as this!" Cordelia
retorted, infuriated. "How could you seek to humiliate me
so?"
"To put you in the same class as myself?" Delilah said
sweetly. "That is no humiliation, sweet innocent, but a
compliment of the highest order."
"Speak not to me, lightskirt!" Cordelia turned on her,
enraged. "Were I ever like you, I should wish to die ere I
was thrown on the trash heap as a worn-out plaything for any man
who wished!"
"Say rather, any man whom I wish!" Delilah writhed out of
the bed and up to her feet, her eyes sparking with anger. She
slipped past the sword's point, and her open palm cracked across
Cordelia's cheek.
"Oh!" Cordelia pressed a hand to the hurt, indignant,
anger building to an unprecedented explosion.
"Oh,' indeed!" Delilah stepped back laughing, leaning
back, hands on her hips, naked and glorious in the
candlelight. "Yes, any man I want, even yours! Any man
of yours! Stay awhile, while I go to claim your Prince!"
Cordelia sprang forward, spitting, "False and hollow
shell!" hands reaching, fingers hooked to scratch.
Alarmed, Forrest caught her, holding her wrists. "No,
lady! You shall be hurt!"
"Let me go! Oh, let me go!" Cordelia raged, twisting
and thrashing about in his hold.
"Aye, let her go!" Delilah taunted. "Let her
follow! I shall have her Prince grappling me ere she can
come!" Catching up her garments, she sprang to the door and
ran out, bare feet pattering on the floor.
"Will you let me go!" Cordelia cried, still raging.
"I must catch her, stop her, ere it is too late!"
"Why, lady, why?" Forrest implored. "You shall only
go to your own hurt—for surely, Alain is no better than
I!"
"Yes, sister, let be," Geoffrey said gently. "I would not
wish you hurted more, if she is right—and I would not wish to
spit Alain on my sword, if..."
"But do you not see?" Cordelia cried. "She knows he
is the Prince!"
Geoffrey stared.
Forrest frowned. "What matters that?"
"That her men tried to assassinate Alain this night!"
Geoffrey snapped, the implications immediately clear to him.
"And if she knows who he truly is, it is sure that we guessed
aright—it is she who set the assassins upon him! It is
not his virtue or his heart that is threatened, but his life!
Let be!"
Astounded, Forrest loosed his hold, and Cordelia sprang
free.
They leaped after her, out into the hallway ... It was
empty save for the two snoring sentries.
They stood, absolutely still, and heard the muffled sound of
bare feet padding away, somewhere out of sight ... "The
stairs!" Geoffrey snapped. "She can only have gone
upward!"
"That would be novel," Cordelia said acidly, but she ran after
Geoffrey.
Up the stairs they flew, into the entry hall, where they halted,
looking about. There was no loose clothing on the floor, no
hint as to where Delilah had gone—only the doors to the solar
on the one side, and the Great Hall on the other.
Geoffrey strode toward the Great Hall. "She will be here,
if she is anywhere. 'Tis the seat of power for a country
squire."
They threw open the doors and strode in ...
And armed men stepped out from the walls. A thicket of
swords surrounded them.
At the end of the hall, on the dais, stood Delilah, clothed
again now, hands on her hips, head thrown back, laughing long and
loud.
Cordelia looked about her, stunned. The trestles and
tables had not only been folded and set aside—they had been
taken out of the hall completely. The fire was dead, the
hearth cleaned and swept. The torches were gone from their
sconces, and the decorations had disappeared. Only bare walls
and bare floor met her gaze, bleak in the light of the false dawn
filtering through the tall windows.
Delilah laughed and laughed, revelling in their surprise.
"There is nothing here to throw, witch! How shall you fight
now, when there is nothing for your mind to move?"
Cordelia stared, aghast, realizing that she had walked into a
trap, and Geoffrey swore. "By Blue, and by all the obscene
slitherings from the dawn of time! You have laid your snare
carefully and well, lady!"
"And you are caught within it!" she cried in glee.
"You have been planning it long and well."
"Aye, since first I learned that Their Majesties would command
their son to wed! And you are caught, ensnared more
thoroughly than you could have imagined! Know that you shall
die this night, Sir Geoffrey!" Delilah's voice suddenly
softened, cozening. "Yet the condemned man may have his last
wish." Her hands went to the laces of her bodice.
"Come, take what you have sought so hard! You may at least
die in ecstasy."
Cordelia stared at her, horrified—but Geoffrey only shook
his head a little, with a knowing smile.
"Oh, do not fear for your manhood!" Delilah mocked.
"I well and truly do lust after you, and shall have my fill of you
soon enough, I warrant—you shall know a glorious death."
"I think I shall know no death at all," Geoffrey purred.
"No? Surely you do not think you can fight one against fifty,
and win! And you shall not disappear from our midst, for your
sister cannot, and you are too concerned with your piddling honor
to leave her! There is nothing here for your mind to throw,
no weapons but your single sword and dagger. How shall you
fight?"
"With me at his back!" Alain burst out of the
wainscotting, the hidden door slamming open. He leaped, sword
slashing, to wound the nearest guardsman. The man cried out,
and Alain parried a cut by another guard with his dagger, then
drove home with the sword. The man screamed and spun away,
clutching at his side—but Alain had already whirled away,
stabbing and slashing. Ten men near him shouted, and jumped
on him.
Geoffrey roared, and his sword spun, dagger stabbing with
inhuman speed and force. Three men fell back, fountains of
blood; a dozen more leaped away from the berserker. That
opened the path to Alain, and the Prince was beside him in an
instant, taking station between Cordelia and the armed men, setting
his back against Geoffrey's, who was still weaving his web of
steel. "To the death, old friend!"
"If die we must, Geoffrey!"
"No, not our deaths—theirs!"
But while they had been doing that, Cordelia had been busy with
the others. A guardsman shot up ten feet off the floor,
crying out in alarm. He had good reason; Cordelia's eyes
narrowed, and the man hurtled straight toward Delilah. She
sprang aside with a cry of fear, and two more men rocketed into the
air and spun toward her.
"Nothing to throw, you say?" Cordelia cried. "Then
have at thee!" And both soldiers slammed down onto the floor;
Lady Delilah barely stepped aside in time.
Five men shouted and leaped at Cordelia—but this time, it
was she who shot up into the air astride a spear, and the soldiers'
swords slashed at one another. Shocked, they cried out, then
turned to parrying—and from parrying, to cutting and
thrusting at one another.
Cordelia's eyes narrowed.
Suddenly, swords all over the room slashed at the men next to
them, as though they had taken on lives of their own. Their
owners shouted with fear—but so did their targets. In
moments, the whole room was a vast melee of ringing steel and cries
of anger.
"Out upon them!" Delilah cried.
That brought her men to their senses; with titanic heaves, they
wrestled back control over their weapons and leaped to strike at
the Gallowglasses and the Prince. Alain and Geoffrey met and
blunted their rush, protecting Cordelia—and leaving her free
to tend to Delilah. Her heart swelled with joy at their
loyalty, even as she focussed her mind on her fingertips, thinking
of thickening air, molecules crowding more and more closely
together, moving faster and faster—so that by the time she
swung her arm down, throwing, it was a ball of flame that leaped
from her hand.
Delilah dodged it easily, laughing, even as her hands described
a circle—and a ring of fire sprang up about Cordelia.
She cried out in alarm, then bit it off, thinking of rain, a
cloudburst.
Brief as it was, her cry was drowned in the howls of pain from
the guards, servants, and knights who were battering at Alain and
Geoffrey. They leaped back, and the two young men gasped for
breath, grinning. "The Lady Delilah fights well ... for
us," Geoffrey panted.
Apparently she realized it, too. The ring of fire died
down as suddenly as it had sprung up, but Delilah's men hung back,
wary, for a moment. Geoffrey grinned and swished his blade
through a sword drill, but Alain only glared and held his on
guard.
Cordelia, though, was ready the second the flames died. A
cloudburst broke right above Delilah, appearing from nowhere,
drenching her. Delilah coughed and spluttered in sheer
surprise, then wiped her hair out of her eyes just in time to see a
circle of rope whirling down to settle around her. She gasped
and glared at it; it burst into fire before it could tighten, and
was gone.
The response had been too quick; Cordelia hadn't been working up
her next spell.
They were all illusions, of course. The trick was to make
them seem so real that the other witch's mind would accept them
subconsciously, and really feel the heat from the flames and see
the burns blistering her skin, even though her conscious mind knew
better. Delilah, for example, was really wet—her hair
hung lank and dripping, her clothes plastered to her body; her own
mind was cooperating in keeping her so. But she knew the
moisture was harmless, and ignored it as she hurled a fireball at
Cordelia.
It was an empty gesture, of course—Cordelia damped the
flames before the sphere was halfway there. It faded into the
thin air it had been made from—but it had given Delilah time
to work up something more subtle.
Alain lurched back against Cordelia, snarling—and throwing
her off balance for a moment. His sword flashed like a
heat-haze, his opponents dropping back with wounds—but more
jumped in, in their place. There were at least three for each
of her guardians, and they were hard-pressed indeed. She
realized they couldn't last much longer ...
A high, shrill battle-scream sounded, and the great black iron
horse reared up behind the men who were slashing at Geoffrey.
Fess's steel hooves lashed out, felling Delilah's men. He had
heard the row, and broken from the castle stables, Cordelia
realized just in time to even the odds.
The men around Alain looked up, saw what was happening, and some
of those at the back ran to attack Geoffrey, then leaped aside as
steel teeth snapped at them.
Welcome as Fess was, he had distracted Cordelia too long.
Suddenly, a huge snake was coiling around her. Its coils
tightened; she couldn't breathe! Then the wedgeshaped head
hovered in front of hers, and she would have screamed, if she had
had breath. Its jaws opened, fangs curving down to tear
...
But constrictors don't have viper's fangs, and pit vipers aren't
big enough to wrap and squeeze. The fangs themselves made her
realize all over again that the snake was only an illusion,
projected by a master directly into the back of her mind; the fangs
broke her unconscious belief in its reality more effectively than
anything she could have thought of. She held her breath, eyes
narrowing, glaring into that putrid maw, thinking of another form,
another shape ...
The snake sprouted hairs, hairs that thickened even as its head
melted and shrank, reforming into the dead, sculptured face of a
fox—and it was only a fur wrap made of a dozen foxes, each
biting the other's tail, that coiled around her. She looked
up at Delilah in triumph .. .
And saw a small snake, only three feet long, but one with a
spreading hood and curving fangs, rearing up to strike at her.
Cordelia realized, in a way she never could have otherwise, that
Delilah was a Futurian agent, raised in a modern culture, no matter
where she had been born—for no native of Gramarye knew about
cobras. Even to Cordelia, they were things from
books—and she didn't doubt that they were so to Delilah,
too. The woman probably didn't have any of the details
right. It was a pitiful attempt at persuading her hindbrain,
and she ignored it, knowing that its venom couldn't really hurt
her. She thought at it, and it struck—but curved away
from her, sailing back toward Delilah, and as it went, its head
shrank into a handle, its body lengthened, its tail slimmed into a
lash—and a bullwhip cracked over Delilah's head, then lashed
about her shoulders.
Unprepared for it, Delilah cried out in pain; then she narrowed
her eyes, and the bullwhip disappeared. She, too, had
remembered that it was an illusion, though Cordelia noticed that
the rents in her dress did not heal themselves.
Delilah glared, and a giant spider scuttled across the
floor—but there was no Cordelia for it to frighten
away. Delilah stared, lost for a moment, looking wildly about
the hall, trying to find her adversary.
She never thought to look at her own men, of course, and didn't
notice the guardsman in her livery who was working his way down the
line of fighters, staying behind and only trading an occasional
blow with Alain or Geoffrey—until he turned on Delilah and
struck at her with his sword.
She screamed in fear, falling back, bleeding from a cut in her
arm.
The guardsman swung his blade up for another slash.
Delilah realized who he must be, and glared at the man. Sure
enough, his tunic stretched down, changing back into the tan and
russet of Cordelia's riding dress. His face fined down, his
helmet disappearing, and it was Cordelia who glared at her, eye to
eye. The sword shrank and dwindled; it was only her extended
index finger.
But Delilah had spent her time and effort in undoing Cordelia's
illusion. The screech of rage from overhead took her by
surprise, and the eagle that plunged to seize her gown in its claws
as it buffeted her head with its wings made her shrink back with a
scream of terror. Its dagger of a beak thrust right at
Delilah's eyes ...
...but a huge tawny paw reached up and swatted the eagle aside,
and a lioness pounced to tear the eagle apart with one quick rip of
its huge jaws. Then it turned on Cordelia, leaping ...
And caromed off the belly of a huge bear, waddling toward
Delilah on its hind legs, roaring in anger, its claws raised to
slash.
The lion roared right back and sprang, teeth reaching for the
bear's throat, but the bear swatted it aside and plunged after
it. There was a moment's flurry of fur and claws ...
then the bear rose, its jaws dripping blood, its eyes afire with
rage, a snarl ripping loose from its throat ...
A snarl that was answered by a deep, throaty laugh as a huge
man, eight feet tall and three feet wide, hideously ugly and
entirely naked, strode toward it, a huge club swinging high in his
ham of a hand.
The bear roared and struck—but the ogre swung the club in
a blur, both hands and all his weight behind it. There was a
sickening crunch, and the bear lay dead, its head caved in.
Then, drooling, the ogre reached for Cordelia with a gloating
laugh.
Cordelia shrank back with a scream.
Alain heard her and leaped between herself and the ogre, but she
knew he believed it to be real, that he could not stand against
it.
The guardsmen whooped victory and leaped in where Alain had
been.
Fess screamed and struck them down with his hooves, curving
between Cordelia and the murderous agents. Cordelia's scream
echoed inside her own mind, now as much for Alain as for
herself. In her heart, she reached out for the protection
that had always been there in her childhood—her parents and
her big brother. But her parents were miles away, and Magnus
was light-years away ... Not his image, though. It came
striding forth from behind her to do battle, as much bigger than
she as he had seemed when she was five and he eight—which
made him nine feet tall now, smiling in wicked anticipation of a
fight, shouting, "Thou wouldst, wouldst thou? Then have at
thee!"
Delilah screamed—and screamed, and screamed.
"No! It cannot be you! I have banished you, I have
maimed you, I have sent you fleeing to the farthest..."
And, for the moment, her mind was open, she was that
terrified—open and unguarded, and her memories of Magnus
clear for Cordelia to read. She stared, horrified—this
was the woman who had trapped Magnus's heart, toyed with him,
played with him, dashed his hopes and his dreams of love to
flinders, burned the belief in feminine goodness out of him ...
Then Delilah saw the huge Magnus grappling with the ogre,
swinging the howling monster high and dashing it to the floor, and
she threw back her head and laughed, mocking again,
vindictive. "Of course! It was not he! You would
call for your big brother, would you?"
"Witch!" Cordelia screamed, in full rage. "Have at
thee!" Her face twisted with fury and hatred, and a bolt of
pure energy sparked in the air between them. Then it was
gone, but a huge explosion rocked the room, and Delilah doubled
over in agony, hands pressed to her abdomen.
Cordelia strode through the smoke of that bolt of pure emotion,
eyes burning, and snatched the woman's hair, hauling her head
up. " 'Tis you who have murdered my brother's heart!
Why, then, be sure that I shall murder you!"
And there were snakes, toads, salamanders, scorpions, and
spiders, all crawling over Delilah. She screamed, swatting at
them, tearing at them—then remembered them for what they
were, and stilled, glaring at the vermin ...
The bolt cracked from Cordelia's head to Delilah's, pure energy,
overloading Delilah's system with Cordelia's rage—for when
last came to last, it was Cordelia who could feel more intensely,
far more intensely, even in hatred and anger.
Delilah staggered, and suddenly, her own hands were slapping her
face and tearing her hair.
She went crazy.
She screamed and twisted in the grip of a primal fear, turning
to tear at Cordelia with hands crooked into claws, lashing out with
a bolt of panic that startled Cordelia; it was far more than she
had expected. She leaped back, the first taste of horror
touching her as she realized that Delilah was completely out of
control.
The woman thrashed about, tearing at invisible enemies—and
a jumble of images began to appear on the floor of the Great Hall,
flickering into being, then transforming into something else, then
flickering out as new ones appeared. Snakes and worms and
maggots crawling from rotten meat; bulbous vases breaking open,
spilling rancid oil; huge nails hammering down into boards made of
flesh that screamed and writhed, and more, more, on and on and
on.
Cordelia stared, aghast, revulsed as much by what she was seeing
as by what she had done.
But Delilah recovered, slowing, stilling, the jumble of images
fading, lifting her eyes to Cordelia again—eyes that now bore
not only hatred and rage, but also madness, stark madness.
For the first time, the cold fingers of Death seemed to touch
Cordelia, and she realized that she really could die in this
fight.
Panic surged, and she threw one more bolt of mental force at
Delilah, with all her own fear and anger in it. The explosion
rocked the hall, and Delilah slammed back against the panelling
with a scream.
The guards had stilled their fight to watch; even Geoffrey and
Alain had been caught in the spell of the beautiful witch's
madness. Now, though, one of Delilah's men came back to
himself with a shout, slashing past Geoffrey's guard at
Cordelia.
She screamed and fell back, seizing his sword with a mental grip
that froze it and held it immobile, afraid that Delilah would
recover and seize her chance. Alain came out of his reverie
with a howl and turned to cut the man down, but all Delilah's men
shouted and attacked again ...
Swords lifted above them, and fell; for each man, a knight
towered over him, striking.
"Have at them!" bellowed a huge voice from the doorway,
and a stream of men thundered into the room, halberd blades
flailing. Behind them rode the King himself, sword slashing
down from horseback, with the High Warlock beside him, parrying and
cutting. Lady Gwendylon stood fiery with anger, a basket of
stones in her hands, stones that sped with unerring accuracy to
enemy swordsmen, while on a ledge above them, a grizzled,
barrel-bodied dwarf bellowed, "Hold! Surrender yourselves, or
die! Seize the false lady, seize the poisoner of hearts!"
But it was too late. Delilah was already gone.
Psionics or trickery, she had vanished from their midst.
Just in time, too—so heavily outnumbered, the guardsmen
threw up their hands and weapons with cries for mercy. In a
few minutes, the King's soldiers had all the walking enemies herded
into a corner, and a doctor and his assistants were tending to the
moaning wounded, thinlipped with disgust.
But Alain had no eyes for any of it. He leaped up beside
Cordelia, crying, "My lady! Are you hurt? Upon my
honor, if any have touched you, I shall have their heads!"
But Cordelia could only stare in amazement at this huge,
bare-chested, golden-haired Adonis whose muscles played beneath a
sheen of sweat like a statue of a young Greek god, sword in hand,
eyes wide in concern. Rooted to the spot, she could only nod
as his arm went about her waist, hugging her protectively against
the huge, hardened muscles of his chest. She gazed up at him
in mute astonishment, eyes wide, lips parted—and for a
moment, he stared down at her in equal wonder.
Then his head bowed, his lips touched hers, and she knew only
the wonder of his kiss, and the wrenching anguish and soaring
ecstasy of a heart finally given, completely, in love.
Some while later, some immeasurable time that surely must have
been only a few minutes, though it had seemed eternal bliss, Alain
lifted his head and stood staring down into her eyes. She
knew he was going to kiss her again, and willed it with her whole
being—but someone coughed, and she herd King Tuan's voice
saying, "I rejoice that the lady is well."
Alain turned to his father in surprise, and Cordelia saw before
them her brother, grinning from ear to ear, and her mother, arms
half-raised, with her father behind her, eyes glowing. She
gave a little mew of protest and sank back against Alain's chest;
his arm came up about her automatically even as he said, "My liege
and father! How came you here?"
"Why, in caution and apprehension, my son," Tuan said, smiling,
"and with the guidance of elves, alarmed at thy peril. Have
you proved yourself in the ways of battle, then? And have you
kept the lady safe?"
Alain looked down, and there was reverence in his eyes.
"You are safe, are you not, my love?"
My love! Cordelia nestled against him, eyes brimming, and
nodded, with a misty smile. Reassured, Alain answered with a
secret smile of his own that stopped time for a few minutes, almost
kissed her again, then remembered the proprieties and turned back
to his father. "She is well, my liege—and she has kept
me safe far more than I her!"
"Or as much, at least," Rod Gallowglass murmured, and his wife
added, "So should it ever be."
Alain turned to him, becoming grave and formal even as he
moved. He inclined his head and said, "My lord. My
lady. Have I your leave to court your daughter?"
Lord and Lady Gallowglass exchanged a brief and tender smile,
then turned back to nod. "You may."
"The courtship is done," Cordelia murmured. "The lady is
won."
Alain looked down at her, glowing with pride, then turned back
to her mother and father. "May I also have your leave to ask
her hand in marriage?"
Again, the secret smile. "You may."
King Tuan only beamed down. After all, he had given his
permission before all this began.
But Alain had ceased to see them all. Sinking down on one
knee, he gazed up at Cordelia, she his whole world, nothing else
existing for the moment. "My lady," he breathed, "will you
honor me, ennoble me, do me the greatest honor I can know—by
giving me your hand?"
"Oh, yes, my love!" she cried and, as he leaped up and
took her in his arms, she breathed, so softly that no one else
could hear, "And all the rest of me, too."
Then there was no chance to say anything more, for her lips were
sealed with his, and time had stopped again.
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