The
following is a work of fanfiction, and is not intended to infringe on the
copyrights held by ABC Television, Gil Grant Productions, or any other holder
of Covington Cross Copyrights. No profit
is being made from this story the author is simply continuing the saga of the
Greys(particularly one curly-haired second son) in her own warped way.
++++++++++++++++++++=This
one is for Karen who waited patiently (a very, very long time) for a story I
promised oh, so many moons ago. Okay,
so maybe this *isn't* exactly the plot we discussed, but it's still filled with
lots and lots of scenes involving "that curly-haired guy" ;-)
And to anyone who remembers Penelope Brandleford from "Chance
Encounter" she makes a repeat visit.++++++++++++++++++++++
RATED:
PG-13 (There is nothing explicit in this story . . . no sex, language or
violence, but there's plenty of innuendo, and some of the subject-matter may
not appeal to everyone). Comments welcome at [email protected]
WHEW! Now get busy reading!
+++++
Wraith
by
Cathryn Mortenz-Teal ("Kate")
Thomas
Grey raised his goblet, offering yet another ingratiating grin over the top of
the ornate pewter object. Beside him,
his second eldest son, Richard uttered a half-vocal groan, bowing his head to
avoid commenting on the latest witticism voiced by Sir Gervase Woodward, Lord
of Glenchase. With a reprimanding
glare, Thomas nudged Richard in the ribs.
Woodward, who was
too
drunk to notice, guffawed loudly at his own crassness and bellowed for more
wine.
Seated
at a long table carved from sturdy oak, Woodward, Thomas and Richard shared a sumptuous
late-day feast with eighteen other guests in the Great Hall of Candlemyre
Manor. Home to Stanton Brandleford, the stately edifice was approximately four
days ride from Covington Cross--a journey the Greys had completed only that
morning. Though Armus, and Lady
Elizabeth Leland had accompanied Thomas and Richard on the trek, both were
presently engaged in conversation at the opposite end of the table.
"Ah,
Brandleford, you throw a mighty fine Mayfest," the brawny Woodward
commented to his host, who was seated three chairs away at the head of the
table. Snatching the wine pitcher from a
wary serving girl, the inebriated noble sloshed blood-red liquid into his
heavy-footed goblet. "I haven't
seen half your guests in much too long."
"Not
long enough for my taste," Richard muttered.
Thomas,
who heard, pressed his lips into a tight line.
Much to his chagrin, his twenty-two year old son was frequently
disrespectful. "I heartily agree,
Gervase. It's far too long between
visits." Dropping his hand in a seeming gesture of camaraderie, Thomas clapped
Richard sharply on the leg. "Not
to overshadow our host, but my son was just commenting how pleased he'd be to
have
you
provide a lesson in swordmanship."
"Father." Richard's glance was quick-silver and sharp.
"Would
he now?" Woodward puffed beneath
the compliment. Leaning heavily on the
table, he stared directly at Richard, his deep-sunken eyes struggling to focus. "I've heard about this whippet. Quick and cunning with a blade, they say,
but there's always room for young knights to learn from old warmongers, eh
Thomas?"
"Well
said." Straightening his shoulders, Thomas paused. His posture, annoyed and vaguely combative,
made the flow of conversation slow around him.
"That's the problem with our younger knights." His eyes sidled
to his son. "They lack respect."
Clearly
perturbed, Richard tensed. Ignoring
Woodward, he stared at Thomas. Perhaps because respect needs to be earned,
rather than assumed."
In the
din of the room, Richard's precisely enunciated words carried across the table,
drawing all remaining conversation to an end.
Shocked by the tone of voice he'd taken with their father, Armus
half-rose from his chair. Placing her
hand lightly over his wrist, Lady Elizabeth shook her head, drawing him to an
immediate halt. Mortified, he watched
the embarrassing scene unfold.
Thomas's
face darkened swiftly. Woodward,
banishing the edge of inebriation, narrowed his eyes on Richard. "Perhaps *you* should give the boy a
lesson in swordsmanship, Thomas. He's clearly
forgotten the meaning of courtesy, not to mention the admiration a son should
hold for his father."
Richard
snorted. "When there's something
to admire, I'll reconsider."
Pushing back his chair, he stood, oblivious to the sudden chorus of
shocked gasps around him.
Thomas
gripped his arm before he could turn. The
older man's face was white, his blue eyes dark
with
fury. "Sit down!" the Lord of
Covington Cross ordered between tightly clenched teeth.
Enraged,
he struck Richard an open-handed blow.
Painfully
aware all eyes in the room were focused on him, Richard wrenched free.
"I'll do as I
please,"
he spat. Face flushing with
embarrassment and anger, he turned crisply and strode from
the
room. Behind him the awkward silence
was shattered by the savage fury of Thomas's
condemning
curse.
Richard
never slowed as he strode down the stone corridor. He felt heat on his face, a nervous
trickle
of sweat on the back of his neck. His
heart bumped against his ribs, sudden and furious as
the
after-effects of the ugly scene flowed through his body. He hadn't expected Thomas to strike
him,
but knew it was deserved. *Did I really say those things to my father?* Briefly closing his
eyes,
he relived Thomas's departing curse.
Though he'd only caught part of it, it had been
concise
enough for Brandleford's guests to realize
irreparable damage had been done.
There
could
be no doubt father and son had reached a crossroads.
Breath
quickening, Richard passed from the castle, into the outer courtyard. A spring breeze
caressed
his face, drying cold sweat beneath the long fringe of his bangs. To the east, the sun
melted
against the horizon, washing ground, trees and pitted gray stone with a veil of
red and
gold. Richard followed a short path to the
gardens. He'd visited frequently enough
over the
years to
know the twists and turns of Candlemyre.
Avoiding the large, sprawling haven where
Lady
Brandleford often entertained female guests, Richard entered a small box garden
on the west
side of
the manor. Brandleford had constructed
it specifically for his daughter Penelope, hoping
to
soften her hard edges amid an oasis of heather, daylilies, and jasmine. Knowing how much the
younger
Lady Brandleford detested anything construed to make her behave
"properly" Richard
deemed
it the last place she or anyone else would visit.
Feeling
disoriented after the abominable scene in the Great Hall, he craved solace and
privacy to
examine
his feelings without interruption.
Entering the garden through a narrow gate, Richard
was
surprised to find it in a state of disarray.
Weeds sprouted among wilted flowers and crawling
vines,
choking feeble life from once-thriving blossoms. Bowers were untended and overgrown,
infested
with dried leaves and broken twigs. It
was as though a windstorm had ravaged the
garden,
and no one had bothered to remove the debris.
Surprised,
Richard walked slowly to a stone bench.
Once the focal point of the garden, it too had
fallen
victim to neglect. Crowded by weeds,
it's pitted surface fouled with lichen and mold, the
bench appeared
uninviting and old. As he bent to brush
his hands over the cracked surface, the
sharp
tang of decay rose to Richard's nostrils.
Grimacing, he glanced at the ground, expecting to
find
the remains of some small animal in the process of decomposition. Though the soil was soft
and
spongy, sucking at the heels of his leather boots, there was no evidence of
carrion.
"Have
you found my locket?"
Richard
jerked at the unexpected voice.
Startled, he realized a woman had slipped from the
bower of
vines and twining hedgerows behind him.
She was perhaps a few years older than
Armus. Long, blonde hair hung unbound about her
shoulders, her face sharp and inquisitive, like
that of
a bird. Though far from beautiful, the
large pools of her black eyes and the sheer, almost
alabaster
cast of her skin made her oddly intoxicating.
Failing to recognize her, Richard guessed
she was
one of Brandleford's many guests, come for the Mayfest.
"I'm
sorry." Though he couldn't put his
finger on it, something about her sudden appearance left
him
flustered. "I didn't realize
anyone else was here."
As
though transfixed, she stepped nearer, her eyes wide and engulfing. A strange sense of alarm
skittered
along the edge of Richard's nerves.
"I can't find my locket," she repeated. "Will you
help
me?"
Richard
wet his lips. Up close he could see
fine blue veins under the near-white cast of her oval
face. Her blonde hair was pale, like milk and
butter, her eyes black as midnight.
Frail, almost
insubstantial,
she seemed like something the wind would carry away. For one strange, unbalanced
moment
he wanted to protect her--to shelter her from some unnamed force dancing
mockingly
beyond
his grasp. His throat tightened, his mouth suddenly dry. "What is your name?" he asked.
Raising
her hand, the woman stroked gentle fingers across his cheek. Her touch was unnaturally
cold,
icy as morning air conjured from a high mountain lake. Like her gaze, the brush of her
fingers
was riveting, and Richard found he could not move. Every muscle in his body tensed as
she
leaned forward and kissed him lightly on the lips. "I am Rowena," she whispered. "Promise
to help
me, Richard of Covington Cross."
He
didn't remember telling her his name.
There was a sudden ache in his head--a twinge of pain,
that
scuttled down his neck with the feather-light legs of a spider. "I--" But no words would
come to
his cumbersome tongue. Her arms slipped
behind his neck, her fingers tangling in the
long
strands of his hair. Richard gasped,
feeling the renewed infusion of cold in his body. And
then
her lips were on his again, and all he wanted to do was kiss her--to surrender
his warmth in
the
shattering influx of sensation she stirred.
Wrapping his arms about her, Richard drew her
slender
body closer, crushing her lips beneath his as he took control of the kiss.
Abruptly
she jerked away. "Someone's
coming."
Confused,
he grappled with the hollow sensation of emptiness her departure inspired. "Rowena--
"
Her
fingers slipped from his. With a single
glance over her shoulder, she vanished among the
tangled
trunks of interlocking trees.
Richard
swallowed, his throat dry. The crunch
of twigs and leaves echoed through the air as
footsteps
approached behind him. Whirling, he
came face to face with Armus, as his brother
emerged
around a hedgerow.
"There
you are." Armus's voice was flat,
his expression unforgiving. One glance
at his set face,
and
Richard had little doubt as to his motive.
After the scene in the Great Hall, it was expected
his
brother would have a word or two of unwelcome advice.
Sighing,
surrendering to the inevitable, Richard laced a hand through his unruly
curls. "I'm not in
the
mood for a lecture, if that's why you're here."
Frowning,
Armus crossed his arms over his chest.
Between his height, and the stony set of his
features,
his presence was intimidating. Nettled
by his stance, Richard began to pace, his own
posture
growing defensive. Muscles tightened
across his shoulders and neck.
"This doesn't
concern
you, Armus. It's between me and
father."
"What
is wrong with you?" Incensed,
Armus shook his head. "You were at
father's throat even
before
we left Covington. I know you've had
moments in the past when you didn't always see
eye-to-eye,
but Richard--" Spreading his hands wide, Armus groped for words "If I hadn't heard
it with
my own ears, I'd strangle any man crass enough to imply you'd degrade father in
public."
When
the rebuff brought no response, Armus snagged his brother by the arm, wrenching
him to
an
immediate halt. "Richard, have you
lost all sanity?"
"Apparently." Irked, Richard pulled free. Still disoriented over Rowena's sudden
appearance and
hasty
departure, he found it difficult to concentrate on anything. Something unnamed gnawed at
his
insides, sending a prickle down his spine.
Frigid, damp air wafted across the back of his neck,
prompting
the sudden, irrational urge to leave the garden. "Armus, I don't want to argue about
this. Let's just go back inside."
"You're
not welcome inside, Richard."
It was
true. Most of the nobles would shun him
after the disparaging remarks he'd made to his
father. It was a wonder Armus was even speaking to
him, but then Armus was the diplomat in the
family,
always trying to sow peace where there was discord. "I don't want to stay here, Armus."
Chilled
by the crisp air, Richard shivered.
"I'll listen to what you have to say, if that's what you
want. But not here."
Unaffected,
Armus studied his brother. He wanted to
shout, to throttle him, to tell him his
behavior
had been nothing short of reprehensible, but the look on Richard's face stopped
him. It
was not
the look of a man who only moments before had callously tossed insults with
little regard.
"Armus--"
Lost in
thought, the older man failed to respond.
Richard touched his arm, and he jerked, startled
by the
abnormally chill feel of his brother's fingers. Troubled without understanding why, Armus
gave a
terse nod. "I think you know what
I have to say. An apology is in order,
a public one.
For
father to regain face, you must humble yourself."
Deciding
he could say no more to sway his headstrong younger brother, Armus walked
stiffly
from
the garden. Almost simultaneously, the
anxiety Richard had been experiencing faded.
Dismissing
the encounter with Armus, he turned back into the garden, glancing in the
direction
Rowena
had vanished. Now that his brother had
left, the unnatural urge to depart had also
evaporated. Though he scoured the area, looking for the
soulful, blonde-haired woman, he found
no
trace.
Eventually,
he gave up and returned to the castle.
The reception he received was notably frigid,
even
curt. Women snubbed their noses, while
men openly glared. He had little doubt
each and
every
Lord present wanted a turn with him in the tlting field, sword in hand, if only
to teach him
manners. Deciding it was safest in his room, Richard
passed the time until nightfall, hoping to
avoid confrontation. It was one matter slighting his father,
another having every attending knight
wanting
to take a swing at him.
Slipping
into the hallway, Richard moved quietly through the concealing shadows. Night clung to
the
stone walls in soft whorls of black, broken now and again, by sputtering pools
of torch-light.
Candlemyre
Manor was quiet, draped in the folds of a star-dusted night. Reaching the lower
level,
Richard
stepped into the yawning outdoor blackness, drawing the folds of his burgundy
cloak
against
the night air. A crisp breeze teased
his long hair, tumbling ragged curls against his brow
and
collar. Creeping along the edge of the
keep, Richard moved through the gloaming into the
stable. Within, the air was warmer, thick with the
odors of horse, straw and leather. As
he
stepped
beneath the overhang, a hand slid onto his shoulder.
Startled,
Richard whirled. "Father."
Sir
Thomas's face broke with a craggy smile.
"You're a little jumpy, aren't you, Richard?"
The
younger man exhaled, visibly relaxing.
"You would be too, if every yokel with a longsword
wanted
to take a whack at you."
The
edge of Thomas's smile dipped in a frown.
"Yes. About that--" A
crease appeared between
his
brows. Extending his hand, he touched
his son's face. "I'm sorry I hit
you. It seemed
prudent
at the time."
"As
did the words I said." Catching
Thomas's wrist, Richard drew his arm down, smiling ever so
slightly..
"You would have enjoyed the lecture Armus gave me. He says I have to apologize to
you. Publically."
Thomas
chuckled. "Ever the diplomat. He doesn't realize that would ruin
everything. I detest
having
to deceive him and Lady Elizabeth with this ridiculous charade, but there's no
other way
to
flush Woodward to the fore. After the
incident we staged, he should be contacting you
directly."
Richard
nodded. He'd known from the beginning,
when the King had first contacted Thomas,
requesting
aid in flushing out a suspected traitor, matters would grow difficult. Even Thomas had
been
reluctant in asking for his assistance, hoping to handle the situation on his
own. But
Thomas's
credibility and his staunch loyalty to the King were well known, thus he wasn't
a likely
candidate
for treasonous involvement. Richard, on the other hand, had a reputation for
willfulness
and
arrogance, and had been known to be at cross purposes with his father on more
than one
occasion.
Over the last few weeks both men had fed that allusion, feigning bouts of
short-temper
and
biting remarks. Word had spread they'd been increasingly at odds, even before
departing
Covington
Cross. By publically slurring his
father, Richard hoped Woodward would view him as
someone
with little scruples, ready to do anything for the right price.
Sighing,
Richard sagged against the stable wall.
"I feel horrible when we argue.
This is no
different,
even if it is staged."
Quirking
a grin, Thomas laced an affectionate hand through his son's long hair. Snagged in a
beam of
moonlight, bleeding through the overhang, Richard's unruly curls were tinted
with gold.
"What? You mean you don't like having a free hand
to spout off at me, without fear of
recrimination?"
Amused,
Richard glanced sideways through slitted lashes. "I think it's probably best I don't
answer
that."
"A
wise decision," Thomas agreed.
Stepping away from the wall, he glanced outside. Though
their
surroundings were dark and cloaked in shadow, cloud-filtered moonlight
illuminated traces
of
ground, rock and tree. Clasping his
hands behind his back, Thomas glanced at his son. "I
don't
like having the whole castle ready to draw and quarter you, Richard. As soon as
Woodward
makes any overture remotely treasonous, we'll turn the matter over to the
King's
Guards. I'll wait each night at this time, but don't
risk coming here, unless you have something to
report. Woodward isn't a fool. He was drunk tonight, but he might not be so
willing to buy our
quarrel
come morning. You're going to have to
convince him you're without principle."
Richard
grinned cockily. "That shouldn't
be too difficult."
Disturbed,
Thomas frowned. "Don't be so sure
of yourself, Richard. If the King is
right about
Woodward,
he's far more dangerous then he appears.
I didn't want you involved in the first
place. It's that damnable attitude of yours, that
made you the likely choice."
Frustrated, Thomas
scraped
a hand through his beard and began to pace.
"I'd feel better if our positions were
reversed
and it was my neck on the line, instead of yours."
Richard's
eyes dipped momentarily, a sensation of warmth spreading across his
middle. Despite
the
many times he'd truly been at odds with Sir Thomas, there was no question of
his father's
loyalty
or devotion. As the older man paused,
Richard slipped a hand onto his shoulder.
"I'll be
fine. After today's performance, we shouldn't have
to play-act much longer. It should be
over
quickly."
Grim-faced,
Thomas nodded. "It has to end
before the Mayfest at least. After
that, contact with
Woodward
would appear suspicious."
"Agreed." Richard's smile was warm and
reassuring. Pausing, he bit his
lip. "Father . . . about
the
Mayfest . . . you wouldn't happen to know if Brandleford has a guest named Lady
Rowena?"
Cautious,
Thomas narrowed his eyes.
"Richard, you can't afford the distraction of female
companionship--"
"I
didn't say--"
"You
didn't have to. I know you too
well. Get your mind back on
Woodward."
"You
misinterpret--"
"--nothing." Thomas's voice was sharp. Suddenly brusque, he hiked his cloak closer
on his
shoulders. "We've dallied here too long. I'll leave and enter the castle by the east
gate. You
wait a
few minutes and go the opposite direction.
And Richard--" Thomas cast his son a pointed
glance.
"--be careful."
With a
silent nod, Richard watched his father depart.
Sighing, he braced a hip against the nearest
stall. It was empty; warm and heady with the scent
of fresh straw. Further away a horse
snorted,
stamping
restlessly in the darkness. Richard
listened to the soft sound of its breath, the minute
shuffling
of its hooves, comforted by the familiarity.
It had been difficult concentrating on much
of
anything since his encounter with Rowena.
Something about the strange blonde-haired woman
nibbled
at his subconscious, dancing just beyond the fringe of his thoughts. She'd been unusually
forward,
while managing to project an aura of innocence and helplessness. Was it possible a
woman
who acted so boldly, could also be naive?
She had obviously learned his name from one
of the
other guests at the castle, but why trouble to do so? On another occasion he might have
been
flattered by her attention, but tonight it felt wrong. His father was right--he
couldn't afford
the
distraction.
Shaken
from his thoughts, Richard realized the clinging odors of stable, horse and
straw had
abruptly
soured. The air smelled loamy and damp,
festering with mold at the edges. The
very
atmosphere
was weighted, trapped in a fragile prism without sound or motion. Wrapped in eerie
silence,
the stable grew deathly still. Richard
tensed, the hair on his neck prickling as the scent of
decay
drifted to his nostrils. An infusion of
ice bled through his bones.
"Richard."
He
turned, finding Rowena standing just behind him. As in the garden, her abrupt appearance left
him
oddly unbalanced. She was dressed as
she had been earlier, in a gown of soft blue with a
foam-colored
sash. Her white-blonde hair, still
unbound, flowed about her shoulders, the
luxurious
cascade of curls almost as pale as her milky flesh. Her eyes, large and black, appeared
to have
no pupils at all. Richard found he
could not look away from her bottomless gaze.
Struggling
for words, he wet his lips. His mind
felt slow and confused, his movements stiff.
"Rowena
. . . what are you doing here?"
She
tilted her head, looking at him quizzically as though the answer were
obvious. "Looking for
my
locket, though I'm sure it's in the garden.
I'd rather be in the garden, Richard, wouldn't
you?"
"I--"
The words stuck in his throat as she stepped nearer. Her smile was winter-white with the
promise
of innocence and spring, lingering beneath.
When she raised a delicate hand, brushing icy
fingers
across his cheek, Richard closed his eyes.
"Your
skin is so warm," she whispered, leaning closer. "You want to kiss me, don't you?"
"Yes." He couldn't say the word quickly
enough. Couldn't move fast enough to
hold her in his
arms,
claiming her pale lips beneath his. He jerked
at the contact--at the hungry intrusion of her
tongue,
the startling burst of cold invading his body.
"Not
here," she whispered, drawing away, twining her fingers with his. Riveted by her compelling
black
eyes, Richard followed mutely as she led him to the garden. Buried deep in his mind, a
nerve
of warning screamed for him to leave.
But one whispering touch of her icy fingertips . . .
one
lash-veiled glance of her eyes, quelled the shrill insistence.
Draped
with the bloated shadows of deepest night, the abandoned garden seemed the
fantastical
creation
of a twisted mind. Trees and hedgerows
twined in nightmarish contortions--groping
silhouettes
splattered with moonlight, like streamers of celestial blood. The scent of decay was
stronger
than before, reeking of black earth, mold, and diseased flesh. Overcome by the stench,
Richard
gagged.
Rowena
raised her hand, lightly touching his brow.
"It will pass," she assured.
Her fingertips
lingered,
savoring the contact with his skin. A
sliver of yearning entered her eyes.
"You're flesh
is so
warm," she marveled again.
Richard
breathed easier, as the stench faded to vague distraction. The prickling along his neck
traveled
down his spine, fanning alive every nerve of warning he possessed. "I . . .I should leave,"
he said
with difficulty.
"I
want you to stay." Her fingers
slipped behind his neck, feathering the moon-dusted curls on his
collar. Her eyes were engulfing as she gazed up at
him. "I'm so cold, Richard. Lay with me and
keep me
warm."
His
throat was dry. He no longer questioned
the otherworldliness of the situation, or that every
touch
of her fingers depleted the limited warmth in his body. As wrong as he knew the
circumstance
to be, he hadn't the will to refuse her.
Whatever spell she'd woven, it ensnared him
completely. Surrendering to the inevitable, he wrapped
his arms about her, claiming her chill lips
beneath
the heat of his own.
In the
garish, decaying garden, Richard gave her his warmth.
+++++
Sunlight
streamed across his face, bright and dazzling.
Richard groaned, awakening to the sting
of
light beneath his eyes. Disoriented, he
sat forward. The movement induced a
surprising
barrage
of aches, coupled with the strain of protesting muscles. He felt as though he'd
spent a day
in
battle, his strength sapped to the point of near-exhaustion. An image flickered to life on the
edge of
his mind--a woman with white-blonde hair and cold, bone-colored flesh. A woman who
had
allowed him to make love to her with a passion he hadn't thought he
possessed.
Half
ashamed by his amoral actions, Richard bowed his head into his hands. Belatedly, he realized
he was
still in the neglected garden, thoroughly naked, but for the cloak he'd wrapped
around
himself
to ward off the night air. Images and
memories awakened groggily, vying for attention.
Something
deviant and unholy had touched him during the night. Something with fish-cold lips
and
skeletal fingers. The images in his
mind blurred. One moment he recalled an
intoxicating
woman
with sun-white hair and mesmerizing eyes of shadow. The next, an apparition draped in
grave-clothes,
with cold, groping hands. As that impression surfaced--powerful and repugnant--
Richard
sucked down a horrified breath.
"It
was a dream. Just a bloody dream,"
he said aloud. But the touch of cold
lingered on his body,
the
feel of questing lips on his flesh.
She'd made his body respond in a way no woman had
before,
nor was likely to again. Disturbed by
the memory, Richard gathered his scattered clothing
and
dressed quickly. Though the morning air
was strung with the early warmth of spring, he
shivered. Wanting to put the garden and its unsettling
occupant behind him, Richard strode
quickly
for the castle.
He
hadn't taken but a few steps from the neglected bower of trees and hedgerows,
when a
petulant
voice drew him up short.
"Richard! If you think
sneaking into that wretched garden is
going
to keep you from crossing paths with me, you're sadly mistaken."
Inwardly
sighing, Richard drew to a halt. The
quick, agitated steps behind him alerted him to
Penelope
Brandleford's presence moments before she appeared. Her thin, pixieish face was
drawn
in disapproval as she stalked angrily to his side. For a petite, sixteen-year-old, she had the
presence
of a battle-seasoned warlord.
"You've been avoiding me."
"I've
been avoiding the castle, Pen. In case
you hadn't noticed, half of your father's guests want
my head
on a pole."
"That's
only the men," Penelope countered saucily. Folding her arms over her chest, she stared at
him
boldly. "The other half--the
women--want you in their bed."
Richard
ground his teeth together. "It's
no wonder your father hasn't had any luck marrying you
off,"
he muttered. It was routine for
them--she, trying to shock him with her boldness, he,
flustered
by the advances of a child. Only she
wasn't a child anymore. Even irked,
Richard
couldn't
help notice the becoming fit of her embroidered, emerald gown, or the fact that
her body
had
rounded in all the right places. After
the unsettling night he'd spent with Rowena, he felt
dirty
even thinking of her in such a manner.
Despite her jaded facade, Richard was quite sure
Penelope
Brandleford, was innocent in the ways of love.
Smiling
up at him, Penelope linked her arm through his. "I heard that, My Lord.
The only reason
Father
hasn't had any luck marrying me off is because I'm still waiting for one
particular knight to
ask."
Richard
scowled. "Pen--"
She
cracked a hand against his shoulder.
"Who said it was you--you puffed-up, vain peacock."
Richard
raked a hand through his rumpled hair, dislodging bits of clinging grass. "You sound like
John
Mullens."
"I'm
much prettier."
"That's
a matter of opinion."
"*Richard!*" Penelope shrieked.
Satisfied
he'd gained the upper hand, Richard smiled.
Although he'd always avoided her in the
past,
it was somehow comforting falling into a familiar exchange with Penelope. The sight of her
freckle-dusted
nose crinkled in distaste, dispelled the memory of Rowena's lips on his body.
Though
he'd hungered for her touch last night, the recollection of it now, left him
feeling slightly
nauseous.
"You
shouldn't be seen with me," Richard told the elfin-like girl at his
elbow. "People will talk."
"They're
already talking. How could you be so
rude to your father?"
Richard
frowned. She was harder to shake then
he thought. "I'm arrogant and
unscrupulous, or
didn't
you know that?" He started
walking, hoping she would take the remark as a brush-off and
leave. Determined, she followed on his heels, her
shorter strides double-timed to match his long-
legged
ones.
"Arrogant
yes, but you're one of the most honorable men I know."
"Penelope. Don't do this."
"You're
an oaf, Richard Grey." She gave a
short huff of air when he wouldn't stop walking.
They
were laboring up an incline, her gown flapping loudly about her ankles. Dew-soaked grass
clung
to the hem, bleeding damp stains on the expensive material. As they reached the inner
courtyard,
a number of servants stopped their work, casting curious glances in their
direction.
"You're
determined to make a spectacle of yourself, but I can't fathom why. By the looks of you,
you'd
be better off asking your father's forgiveness than courting stubbornness. You
look the role
of
drunkard, Richard."
He
halted abruptly. What she said probably
wasn't far from the truth. He had a
splitting
headache,
and his eyes were near slits against the glare of sunlight. His mouth felt coated and dry,
his
body violated. "I had a rough
night, Pen."
She
snorted. "Who with?"
Annoyed,
he started walking again. "That's
none of your business."
Penelope
made a face. "I wouldn't care if you slept with the whole castle."
"Perhaps
I will."
She was
losing patience. "You're such a
harlot, Richard."
"Women
are harlots," he returned indifferently.
His glance however, was sharp.
"And sixteen-
year-old
busybodies with long noses, are unwelcome irritations best swept under the
rug."
Penelope
stopped short. He didn't realize it
until he glanced over his shoulder and found her
three
steps behind. Apparently his last
remark was a little too much, even for her.
He'd scored a
point,
but more than that he'd wounded her.
The game they often played had gone from
bantering
flirtation to cruel disregard. Perhaps
he'd grown a little too adept with the role he
adopted
for his father.
Her
expression severe, Penelope turned wordlessly and walked away. "Wonderful," Richard
muttered. All the times he'd tried to make her leave,
when he finally succeeded, he felt awful.
Cursing
softly, he continued up the path to the castle.
Though
glances were cast in his direction, the servants steered clear of him. He encountered two
of
Brandleford's guests near the stairwell, but both merely looked down their
noses
contemptuously. Shrugging aside the silent condemnation,
Richard trudged up the steps to the
upper
corridor, seeking his chambers. It was
there he found himself faced with attention he
couldn't
avoid.
.
"If
it isn't the snot from the previous eve," a rankled voice intoned off to
the side. Richard heard
the
tread of boots as the man who addressed him emerged from an alcove. Tall and bearded, with
neatly
trimmed red hair, he presented a refined and commanding image. Richard had a
vague
recollection
of meeting him on arrival, and thought his name was Denlark.
Pausing
outside his chambers, Richard rested his hand on the latch. "Was there something you
wanted,
Lord Denlark?"
Eyeing
him coldly, the older man considered.
"If you were my son, I'd have pinned you to that
table
and made you apologize until your throat was raw."
Richard
cocked a brow. "Pity your
son."
Bristling,
Denlark surged forward. An irrate
finger jabbed against Richard's chest.
"Sir Thomas
is a
friend of mine, you uppity little stripling." Mouth twisting, Denlark glanced contemptuously
at
Richard's sheathed sword. "If
you're as cocksure with that blade as you profess to be, I'll be
glad to
put you to the test."
Unflustered,
Richard leaned indolently against the door. "If I want exercise, I'll call
a kitchen
maid. She'd likely outlast you, and when the bout
was over, at least the spoils would be worth
the
fight."
Furious,
Denlark balled his hands into fists.
With obvious effort he refrained from drawing his
sword. "It's only my loyalty to your father
that keeps me from spitting you head to toe.
As
ungrateful
as you are, Sir Thomas would mourn your miserable passing."
"Cleverly
evaded," Richard taunted. He knew
the words were strictly for show. In
all likelihood,
Denlark
probably detested his father. Limited
patience at an end, he popped the latch on the
door. Once inside, he closed the barrier. Beyond the stout obstruction, Denlark spewed
a string
of
curses. Richard lowered the lock, just
as the older man's fist connected with the frame.
Swearing
savagely, Denlark battered the door. Grimacing, Richard wedged a shoulder
against the
wood,
waiting for the eruption to play itself out.
Eventually the barrage stopped, and the
nobleman's
clipped footsteps receded down the corridor.
Sighing,
Richard rolled his back to the door, staring at the ceiling. The masquerade was growing
too
comfortable, his insolence almost effortless.
Though he'd tread the thin line of arrogance and
poise
in the past, he'd never blatantly invited the contempt of others. Before the charade was
over,
he'd likely alienate any supporters he had.
Hopefully, that wouldn't include his family.
Trudging
into the room, Richard collapsed face down on the bed. He felt like he hadn't slept in a
week. As his eyes drifted shut, he was unaware of
the presence hovering on the other side of the
door.
+++++
Sir
Gervase Woodward emerged from the shadowed alcove where he'd been sheltered
throughout
the exchange with Denlark. Walking
unhurriedly down the corridor, he turned the
corner,
coming face-to-face with the red-haired nobleman.
"Well?" Denlark asked.
"He's
got no love of his father, that's for sure," Woodward returned. "The question is--is he
unethical
enough to feel the same about his King?"
Denlark
rolled his shoulders. "Perhaps we
should ask."
The
black-bearded man was thoughtful.
"All in good time," he said.
"I want to be certain of his
motives
before I ask Richard Grey to commit treason."
+++++
Richard
slept through most of the day, thoroughly exhausted, his body riddled with
chills. When
afternoon
faded to dusk, he summoned the servants and had them draw a scalding bath. Despite
the
luxuriant heat of the water enveloping his flesh, Richard couldn't banish the
cold. It clung to
his
bones, resurrecting memories of Rowena, and the uncharacteristic loss of
control he'd
experienced
in the garden.
Resting
his head against the rim of the tub, he let his eyes skim over the room. Sunlight puddled
through
the windows, soaking the floor in scarlet and gold. One of the servants had left
the
window
ajar, permitting the whispering intrusion of a scented breeze. Richard shivered, sinking
lower
beneath the water. Steam fondled his
face with vaporous breath as heat from the tub
enveloped
him. The edges of his long hair trailed
in the water, buoyed and weightless.
Below,
the nobles would be gathering, ready to feast, drink, and share war
stories. In a few days,
games
of chance and skill would commence on the castle grounds, along with
festivities geared
toward
frivolity and merry-making. On any
other occasion Richard would have enjoyed the
Mayfest. Now he only wanted it to end. He ached to return to Covington Cross and a
life with
some
semblance of order.
Groaning,
he dragged himself from the tub, shivering as the water dripped from his naked
flesh.
He
dried hurriedly, then wrapped himself in a robe, pausing to sit on the edge of
the bed.
Belatedly,
he noticed the veins running on the underside of his forearms. His flesh was paler than
usual,
almost sickly in appearance, the veins, dark blue by contrast. Concerned, he turned his
arms
over. His hands were fine, the rest of
his skin normal in hue. Deciding the
abnormality was
nothing
to be concerned about, Richard shoved from the bed and gathered his
clothing.
He
dressed slowly, taking his time with the well-tailored tunic and pants. Hues of walnut and
forest
green blended in the garments, enhancing the intensity of his eyes, the rich
highlights of his
hair. His sword belt followed, familiar and
comforting, as the weight of the weapon settled
against
his hip. His acceptance in the Great
Hall was bound to be anything but cordial, but
hopefully
would not result in swordplay.
Drawing
a breath, Richard decided there was little to be gained by remaining in his
room. Setting
his
face in a bored, placid mask, he headed downstairs and made his way among the
other guests.
+++++
Sir
Thomas felt a hush fall over the room the moment his son entered. Conversation dwindled,
then
stilled, as hostile, narrowed eyes turned toward Richard. Thomas had to admire the younger
man's
audacity as he sauntered through the crowd, unfazed by the bevy of bold
stares. Claiming a
flagon
of wine from a serving wench, Richard stopped to examine a platter of
venison. Removing
his
knife, he speared a piece of meat, then took a seat at the main table. Gradually the din of
conversation
resumed.
Thomas
found he'd been unobtrusively holding his breath. He knew he needed to play the role of
outraged
father, but looking at his son, he recognized subtle signs of fatigue. Richard was all
poise
and polished arrogance on the outside, but Thomas could see beyond the facade
to the
heavy
toll the masquerade exacted.
Unaware
he was scowling, he cleared his throat grumpily. At his side, Lady Elizabeth Leland,
placed
a comforting hand on his arm.
"Don't make a scene, Thomas," she pleaded. Unlike the
other
night, when dinner was a formal sit-down affair, tonight's repast invited
guests to mingle
freely,
visiting any number of serving stations scattered throughout the hall. Thomas and
Elizabeth
lingered near the open fireplace, sharing wine with Lord Brandleford and Armus.
"I'll
ask him to leave, if that's your wish, Thomas," Brandleford said directly.
Coming
to his senses, Thomas shook his head.
Whatever his inner thoughts, he'd apparently
managed
to project a sufficient aura of belligerence.
"Of course not, Stanton.
Richard and I can
peacefully
co-exist for the remainder of this Mayfest, even if he is a disgrace."
Elizabeth
blanched. "Thomas, you don't mean
that."
"Every
word of it," the Lord of Covington Cross snapped. "Elizabeth, you heard what the boy
said to
me. How can you question the legitimacy
of my feelings after the other night?"
"Perhaps
this isn't the best time to discuss it," Armus interjected.
"He's
right," Brandleford agreed, hoping to maintain peace. "Ignore the boy, Thomas. Have
more
wine. Enjoy the guests." Smiling brightly, he fanned his arm to
encompass the room.
"These
are your friends as well as mine. There
isn't a person here who doesn't sympathize with
your
situation, but it would be unseemly to draw attention to it now. Especially with so many fair
and
gracious ladies present."
Brandleford turned his smile solely on Elizabeth.
She
inclined her head at the compliment, but recognized the fawning praise for the
ploy it was.
Still,
it made Thomas grumble in agreement, his manner as dark as his face. Recognizing the need
for
distance, Armus caught his father's arm and steered him into the room. Elizabeth hesitated
only a
moment before taking her leave of Brandleford, and moving to Richard's side.
Glancing
up from his plate, he eyed her suspiciously.
The seats around him were empty.
"T'were
I you,
I'd think twice about being seen with me, Lady Elizabeth."
"I
rather fancy a scandal now and again," she returned dryly. When Richard failed to comment
she sat
across from him. Ignoring her, he
continued to eat, jabbing the venison with his knife,
then
snatching the meat from the tip of the blade.
It occurred to her that he was being deliberately
rude,
something she'd never known him to do.
"You're worse at play-acting then your father,
Richard,"
she informed him quietly.
The
insinuation produced the expected response.
Startled, Richard raised his head, a brief,
unguarded
look passing through his eyes. "I
don't know what you mean," he said flatly.
"I
mean you can do all the posturing and strutting you want, but I know you too
well. You're
hotheaded
and willful, but you love your father to a fault. The two of you may argue and bicker,
but
you'd defend each other to the death.
Whatever this little charade is, you've chosen to enact,
I hope
it's worth the discomfort it's causing."
Richard
stilled. His eyes darted to the side,
seeking eavesdroppers. As before, the
seats around
him
were vacant, Brandleford's guests treating him like a plague-victim. "You don't know what
you're
talking about," he said tightly.
Elizabeth
examined the thick braid of her hair, effectively dismissing him. "And you are a poor
liar."
Richard
drew back. "Lady Elizabeth--"
"I
don't want to know what you're doing," she said quickly, quietly. "But I can tell your father's
worried. He may have fooled Brandleford and Armus,
but women are more intuitive. He's
worried
for you."
"He's
angry at me, or have you forgotten that?"
"As
you wish, Richard." Deciding the
conversation was futile, Lady Elizabeth readied to stand.
"Wait
a moment." Richard lowered his
head, pretending interest in his wine.
To the casual
observer
it looked simply that his rudeness extended to women. "There's something else," he said
in a
subdued voice, keeping his eyes downcast.
"A guest of Brandleford's.
A woman named
Rowena. Do you know her, Lady Elizabeth? Anything about her?"
Disturbed
by the query, Elizabeth tilted her head.
She heard anxiety in Richard's voice, coupled
with
something she couldn't quite put her finger on. "I don't recall meeting her." Pausing, she
studied
his lowered lashes, the faint smudge of shadow beneath his eyes. "Is it important?"
"Perhaps." Richard's eyes came up, green and luminous
in the gilded glow of firelight. He
shivered. "If you hear anything--" Someone bumped into his shoulder, jostling
his arm. Richard
lurched
forward, sloshing wine onto the table.
Immediately, a veil fell over his face.
His eyes
grew
slitted and cat-like as he swung around to confront the culprit. "You clumsy, hoof-footed
imbecile!"
The
transgressor, a tow-headed youth near his own age, smiled snidely. "If you don't like the
company,
you can always leave, worm-filth."
Richard
rose to his feet, every nerve in his body strung for aggression. From the corner of his
eye, he
saw his father move to the forefront of the crowd. To his credit, Sir Thomas did not
betray
his feelings, but mutely watched the exchange, his face impassive. The other man--Richard
vaguely
recalled hearing him addressed as Radcliffe--placed his hands on his hips,
squaring his
shoulders
defiantly.
Richard
smiled thinly, his grin mocking and tart.
"If I left, who would point out your many
inadequacies?" His eyes dipped in a pointed glance for Radcliffe's
blade. "Starting with that
ridiculous
toothpick you call a sword. Didn't I
trounce you in a gaming match at Harvest Field in
South
Banbury?"
Radcliffe
purpled. His face mottled with color,
flushing white, then scarlet, then settling into livid
plum. Hissing like a enraged serpent, he groped
for his blade. Richard's actions were
sharper,
honed
with quick-silver edges and liquid speed.
The moment Radcliffe's fingers flinched in the
direction
of his scabbard, Richard freed his own sword, knocking his opponent's weapon
aside.
The
crowd, which had gathered, hoping to see him humiliated, now hovered in
tight-lipped
silence.
Richard
tapped his blade beneath Radcliffe's chin, sending a deeper stain of crimson
rushing to the
mortified
youth's cheeks. "As I said--"
Richard paused, waiting while the other squirmed. "--
inadequate."
Sheathing
his sword, he turned his back and walked from the room. Tension and exhilaration ran
high in
his body as he moved into the corridor.
Another day and somehow he'd miraculously
survived
a pummeling from men eager to tear him in half. Walking blindly, he strode down the
corridor,
needing to put distance between himself and the Great Hall. Seeking seclusion, he
entered
the armory where only a handful of candles had been lit to hold the night-time
shadows at
bay.
Comfortable in the darkness, Richard stiff-armed the wall, bending his head as
coiled tension
flowed
from his muscles.
There
was no sound. Only the abrasive feel of
a calloused hand, roughly covering his mouth.
Richard
jerked upright, and was immediately wrenched backward. His captor pulled, tugging him
sharply
against his own massive body. Richard
felt muscle and sinew; the coarse studding of
metal
and leather against his back. The hand
on his mouth was merciless, pressing silent his angry
protests. A powerful arm folded over his ribs, pinning
his arms to his side in a crushing grip.
"Be
still," an angry voice hissed in his ear.
The man behind him was taller and broader, his voice
pitched
in a low rumble. Because there was
little else he could do, Richard complied.
His head
was
jerked backward, drawing his ear closer to the man's lips. "Your father treats you no better
than a
table-servant," the throaty voice whispered. "His lands and titles will pass to your brother
Armus,
and you'll be left with nothing, after years of knock-kneed
subservience." The hand
pulled
sharply, and Richard grunted, feeling the strain on his neck. "Is that what you want,
Richard
Grey--to be a lapdog in your brother's castle?"
Allowed
minute freedom, Richard shook his head.
His captor chuckled, soft and low. The scent
of sour
wine wafted past Richard's nose.
"It's good you feel that way." The restrictive grip
suddenly
loosened, allowing Richard room to breathe.
The work-roughened hand eased from his
mouth,
tightening instead on his neck, warning him still. Though allowed to speak, he wasn't
permitted
to turn his head.
"What
do you want?" he demanded.
"It's
what you want," the man countered.
"Wealth and position in your own right."
"That's
impossible."
"I
wouldn't offer it otherwise," the voice countered sharply. "There's vaulted status for a man
with
little conscience, but I'm not sure you fit that description."
Richard
snorted, certain now, it was Woodward who restrained him. "What would you have me
do, to
prove it?"
A
lengthy silence followed. Richard
swallowed when he felt the hand on his neck tighten
marginally. "There is something," the man said
slowly. Leaning forward he whispered
the
directive
in Richard's ear.
+++++
Freed
after the encounter in the armory, Richard headed to the upper level of the
castle, and his
chambers. Most of Brandleford's guests still lingered
in the Great Hall, a fact easily confirmed by
the
mesh of voices drifting into the corridor.
Though his adrenalin level was high, Richard
thought
it wisest to avoid further contact for the evening. Even the rendevous he had planned
with
Sir Thomas, at the stable, would have to wait.
In all likelihood, Woodward would be
watching--especially
after giving Richard a heinous task to fulfill.
The
thought of that command left him uncertain how to proceed. Unable to carry through on the
directive,
he had to find a means of negating it without appearing to fail. He no longer questioned
the
identity of the man in the armory. Even
in the darkness he'd been observant enough to notice
a
three-inch scar on the back of the man's left hand. A scar, in exact dimension to one Woodward
bore
below the knuckles. Though originally
the one to bait the trap, Richard felt as though the
roles
had shifted and he'd become the prey.
Deeming
it wisest to retire, he gratefully sought the sanctuary of his room, moving
into the dimly
lit
chamber with a sense of relief. As he
neared the bed, an unpleasant displacement rippled the
air. Turning, Richard caught the faint reek of
decay. His heart lurched in his chest
as an
insubstantial
form moved from the shadows, into a cone of light.
"Rowena." Though it didn't surprise him to find her
his room, her presence made him uneasy.
"How
did you get in here?"
She was
still wearing the same blue gown from the day before, but it appeared faded and
aged, as
though
surviving many seasons rather than a span of hours. Her hair was wild and tangled,
snagged
with bits of bracken. It flowed past
her shoulders, pale as winter wheat, framing her oval
face
like a tattered veil.
"What
happened to you?" Richard asked in
alarm. He raised his hand to touch her,
then flinched
away at
the heated warmth of her skin. Her
flesh felt unnatural, as though it had soaked up heat
with
impossible alacrity. Just as quickly,
the abnormality faded and his fingers brushed cool white
flesh,
smooth as silk. Disturbed, he wet his
lips. "What are you doing
here?"
Absently,
Rowena brushed the snarled hair from her eyes, unconcerned by his
distress. Moving
closer,
she touched him lightly on the arm, scraping her fingers upward, until her hand
settled on
his
shoulder. Undone by the touch, Richard
shuddered.
"I
came to see you," she said simply.
"I've missed you."
Briefly
he closed his eyes, hoping to deny the feelings she stirred. A sense of hot urgency spread
through
his groin, forcing him to stifle a groan.
Images of their night together assaulted him with
relentless
intensity. Breath quickening, he took a
step backward. A shred of rational
thought
made
him tense. "I don't know what you've done to me, but it can't
continue."
She
appeared wounded. "I've done
nothing, Richard. Don't you enjoy what
I have to offer?"
Carnal
desire returned, stronger this time.
The very touch of her eyes made his mouth go dry. He
struggled
for some fragment of sanity. "I know
nothing about you, except your name."
"What
does it matter?" Stepping nearer,
she sent his thoughts fluttering like ribbons from a
maypole. No woman in her right mind would give
herself so freely to a virtual stranger, yet she
carried
little inhibition. He might have
enjoyed that recklessness, were it not for the doubts her
behavior
induced.
"Rowena--"
Still struggling for sanity, Richard gripped her shoulders. His intention had been to
hold
her at arm's length, but the feel of supple flesh beneath his fingertips,
crumbled the last of his
resistance. Tugging her forward, he kissed her urgently,
driven by a need he didn't understand.
She
arched against him, both willing companion and beguiling nymph. Before he knew what he
was
doing, he'd carried her to the bed, surrendering the role of controller for
controlled.
Blinded
to everything but the need to possess her, Richard surrendered to the carnal
urges driving
his
body. She was satin and ice--a
sylph-like creature, disturbingly lecherous, rather than loving.
Richard
panted, barely rational, as their lovemaking exhausted itself in the early
hours of morning.
Groaning,
he rolled away from her, half-sick with what he'd done. Groping for the bed linens, he
tugged
them over his naked body, scrunching his eyes closed. Trembling, he tried to banish the
sudden
descent of frigid air. Behind him, he
heard the creak of the bed as Rowena stood.
*Go
away,* Richard thought. Behind his
closed lids, he relived an image of diseased flesh and
spider-webbed
hair. The black ilk of decay lingered
on his lips, the cold ice of winter, in his veins.
Walking
around the foot of the bed, Rowena approached his side. Feeling her hesitate, he
reluctantly
opened his eyes. Gone was the
disheveled apparition who'd first entered his room,
replaced
by a woman of poise and elegance. Her
blue gown shimmered with newness, her hair
immaculately
groomed.
Richard
swallowed with difficulty, his tongue swollen.
"What have you done to me?"
"Given
what you desired; taken what I require."
"I
desired nothing. You've taken
unfairly."
Smiling
softly, Rowena gazed down on him.
"I need to be warm, Richard, and your flesh has
warmth
to spare." Extending her hand, she
moved to touch him, but he jerked away, shoving
from
the bed.
Wrapping
the bedsheet about his waist, Richard bent to gather his clothes. "I want
nothing further
to do
with you, Rowena. Get out of my
room." Cold sweat lingered on his
neck and brow,
coaxing
his snarled hair into tighter curls.
The air was plaited with frost, inciting supernatural
tremors
in his body. Disbelieving, he dragged a
hand over his face. "This isn't
natural. Nothing
about
it is natural." Pausing, he
glared. "*You're* not bloody
natural. I don't know what you
are--demon,
witch or spirit--but I'll feed your lust no longer."
Denying
nothing, she cocked her head.
"Find my locket."
Startled,
Richard stared. "Your
locket?"
"My
husband gave it to me, and I will not leave this realm without it."
Appalled,
Richard sat on the bed.
"Husband?" The floor
lurched beneath him, threatening to
swallow
him in a bottomless pit. Groaning, he
dropped his head into his hands. "You're
married?" When silence was his only answer, he raised
his eyes to find the room empty. In a
matter
of mere seconds she had vanished.
Bewildered, Richard glanced behind him. She hadn't
had
sufficient time to depart by the door, and he certainly would have heard it
open. *Demon,
witch
or spirit.*
*I will
not leave this realm,* she had said.
Swallowing
uneasily, he stared at the blue veins in his arms, the ivory-white flesh of his
abominably
cold skin.
. . . *this realm* . . .
What
manner of creature would say such a thing?
Briefly, he recalled the image of a woman with
spider-webbed
hair and fish-gray lips; the feel of cold hands on his body. He remembered the
heavy
taint of decay each time Rowena was present.
Breathing unevenly, Richard dragged a
nervous
hand across the back of his neck. He
swore softly, fervently wishing the friar had come
to
Candlemyre Manor. Matters of the
supernatural were beyond his realm of understanding.
Agitated,
he pushed from the bed. His stomach
roiled dangerously as the events of the last few
hours
caught up with him. She'd needed
warmth. She'd as much as said
that. If he'd refused
her,
might she have withered into something insubstantial--a spectral being native
to the nether
regions? Surely he was deranged to even consider the
possibility.
Tossing
the bedsheet aside, Richard pulled on his breeches. The impossible thoughts pinging
through
his mind, made him itch to wash away her stain, but taking a bath twice in one
day was
ludicrous. The servants would balk, and word would
filter back to the nobles. Tugging on
his
boots,
he glanced out the window, noting the heavy curtain of darkness outside. It would likely
be
cold, and he was already freezing. He
shrugged into his tunic, forsaking both belt and jerkin,
then
gathered his cloak from a nearby chair.
By the
time he made it outside, he was breathing heavily, certain she had tainted him
with some
unmentionable
disease. Leaving the castle grounds, he
jogged down an adjacent slope, intent on
reaching
a mid-sized lake on the border of Candlemyre.
Night-blackened and still, the water was
unreflective,
cut like a gaping hole in the darkness.
Richard
stripped beneath the sagging umbrella of a grizzled willow. Teeth chattering, he plunged
into
the lake, savoring the cold shock that drove all thought of Rowena from his
mind. Ducking
beneath
the surface, he felt icy water close over his head. Emerging, he sputtered, as trickling
beads
of moisture dripped from the ends of his soaked hair. Sweeping the bangs straight back
from
his forehead, he drew a tremulous breath.
From the corner of his eye, he detected a flicker
of
movement beneath the tree cover on the bank.
A moment later, a heavy-handed breeze rippled
branches
and leaves, and he realized the wind was at fault for the distortion. Relaxing, he lingered
in the
lake, until the cold touch of enveloping water became a shiver-inducing
affliction.
Withdrawing,
Richard dressed quickly, unmindful of the dampness soaking his clothes; the
biting
touch
of cool air against his wet hair. The
memory of Rowena's body twined with his, faded
beneath
the cleansing kiss of the lake.
Desiring the warmth and security of Candlemyre, Richard
headed
back to the castle. Following a narrow
footpath through a copse of bordering trees, he
moved
surefooted through the velvety darkness.
Once
again, a sense of movement came behind him, this time accompanied by the snap
of a twig.
Certain
Woodward had set a lackey to follow him, Richard slipped from the path, into
the trees.
Though
he had no sword or knife, he crouched behind the sheltering trunk of an oak,
waiting for
the
clumsy pursuer to draw abreast. Within
moments, a silhouette appeared.
Launching
himself from his hiding place, Richard grappled the intruder about the waist,
bearing
the
light burden to the ground. A startled
squawk made him jerk unexpectedly as he felt soft flesh
beneath
him. Before he could recover, a rolled
fist pounded against his shoulder.
"Oaf! Get off of me!"
Water
from his wet hair, dripping into his eyes, Richard blinked. "Penelope?"
"Well
it isn't anyone you're used to pawing," a perturbed voice snapped. Sprawled beneath him,
his
sixteen-year-old tormentor, glared.
"The next time you want to go swimming in the nude, I
suggest
you pick a different lake."
Appalled,
Richard drew back. "You saw?"
"An
eyeful," she assured suggestively.
Moving free of him, Penelope stood, methodically
brushing
clinging bits of grass and dirt from her clothing. Her sun-gold hair was unbound,
flowing
to her waist, in wave upon wave of shimmering silk. She wore a white sleeping gown and
a
simple cloak of black, trimmed in forest green.
Richard
swallowed, thinking of Rowena.
"What are you doing out here?" he demanded. "Do
you
know what time it is?"
"You're
not my keeper, Richard Grey."
"Well
obviously someone should be."
Straightening,
Penelope tossed her hair. Judging by
her flippant manner, she'd obviously not
forgiven
him for his earlier rudeness. Hands on
hips, she jutted her chin defiantly.
"Someone is."
Richard
stared, uncomprehending. When she
smiled at him smugly, he abruptly understood what
she was
doing in the darkness so far from the castle.
With a flush of anger, he realized her
clothing
was rumpled, not from their own encounter, but a previous one. "You were meeting
someone! You little snippet--you were here for a
late-night rendevous."
Rolling
her eyes, Penelope started walking.
Infuriated, Richard fell in at her side. "You make it
sound
licentious," she told him, clearly enjoying his frustration. "I am sixteen, you know."
"You're
a child."
"Radcliffe
doesn't think so."
"*Radcliffe!*" Aghast, Richard bellowed the name. Losing all rationally, he snagged her arm,
wrenching
her to a violent halt. His green eyes
flashed dangerously as he gazed down on her.
"Radcliffe
is a toad. No--" He shook his
head, so angry, the words wouldn't come.
"He's lower
than
that. He's the excrement vultures leave
after ingesting carrion; the filth plague-rats seek for
their
nests. He's--"
"Your
opinion is noted," Penelope snapped.
"It's also worthless.
You're only protesting because
of the
altercation you had with him in the Great Hall."
Richard
fumed. Though he was freezing, standing
in the night-frigid air, water dripping from his
hair,
anger kept him focused. A surge of
protective indignation raced through him as he glared at
Penelope. With her hair unbound, her sleeping gown
open at the throat, she was more than a
trifle
bewitching. The thought of Radcliffe
kissing her, possibly touching her, made him bristle
with
rage. "I trounced that upstart in
South Banbury," he retorted, biting off the words in white-
knuckled
anger. "He's an ego-inflated
popinjay with a weakness for young girls.
I don't want to
see you
hurt."
"Ha!" Tugging free, hair fanning in a luxurious
arc, Penelope whirled and stalked away.
Despite
her
petite build, she set a clipped pace up the tree-lined path.
Richard
sprinted to catch up, easily matching her stride. "What does that mean?" he demanded.
Holding
her skirts aloft, Penelope kept her eyes straight ahead. "It means you're jealous, because
I've
decided you're no longer worth the effort."
"Jealous?" Though Richard scoffed, inwardly he
cringed. Was it possible to be plagued
by
jealousy
for a girl who'd annoyed him all his life?
"Don't be ludicrous, Pen. I
just don't want to
see you
hurt. There's nothing ethical about,
Radcliffe. If I had my guess, I'd say
you're only
doing
this because you want to get back at me."
Choking
short laughter, Penelope stopped suddenly and faced him. "You really are a conceited
ass. Do you think the whole world revolves around
you, Richard Grey?" Witch-light
blazed in
her
eyes as she stared up at him. Though
her head barely reached the top of his shoulder, her
presence
was overpowering.
Still
hoping to banish the stain of Rowena, Richard found himself enthralled by Penelope's
forthrightness. Moonlight dappled her face, enhancing her
elfin-like features with a diaphanous
veil. For the first time in his life, Richard
looked on her with the eyes of a man and found himself
wanting. Before he could shrug free of the spontaneity,
he caught her about the wrist, tugging
her
close. Slipping a hand into the thick
curtain of her hair, he cradled the back of her head,
pressing
his mouth to hers.
She was
heated warmth and clover-washed summer, all the whiteness and light that Rowena
was
not. Gasping, she parted her lips, inviting him
to taste the blossom-sweet nectar of innocence and
youth. Richard tugged her closer, surprised by the
tender reaction her naivety induced in his
body. Just as abruptly, the kiss ended.
Penelope
wrenched free, her face flushing with rage.
"How dare you." Her
fingers lashed across
his
cheek in a stinging slap. "Do you think you can just treat me like a
common strumpet?"
Confusion
doused by ire, Richard seethed.
"I'm not the one who met some snotty, weasel-faced
peacock
in the trees."
Pressing
her lips together, Penelope tilted her head, suddenly haughty. "Don't be so hard on
yourself,
Richard. With your hair wet, mink-faced
is a better description. And I really
have to
say,
after all those years of waiting--you kiss like a . . . a . . .duckling."
Whirling,
she stalked up the path. Richard stared
after her. "*A duckling?* What the hell does
that
mean?" A newly-birthed breeze blew
through his wet hair and he shivered.
"Pen!" She
ignored
him. Richard ground his teeth
together. The girl was
impossible--completely, utterly,
ridiculously
impossible. "Penelope!"
Disappearing
around a bend, she vanished from sight.
Richard bent his head, rubbing at his
temples. "Bloody hell." He couldn't think straight anymore. Between the cold, Rowena,
Penelope
and Woodward, his sanity teetered on the edge of collapse. He really needed to speak
with
someone--Armus or his father--but his role as upstart and loner made that
impossible.
Worse,
Woodward had given him a task he couldn't possibly fulfill.
Grimly,
Richard hiked up the path.
By
tomorrow eve, he'd been instructed to kill Radcliffe.
+++++
Hurrying
into her room, Penelope closed the door.
She was shaking, trembling with humiliation,
rage,
and . . . and . . .
Frustrated,
she plopped to a seat on the edge of her bed.
She didn't want to think about the
horrible
tangle of feelings Richard had awakened with his kiss. She could still feel the press of his
cold
lips on hers. His unusual night-time swim, coupled with the frigid air, had
left his skin icy and
chill. Yet when he'd kissed her, she'd felt only
sun-soaked warmth, and a delicious spiral of heat
deep in
her belly. His kiss, coupled with the
heavenly feel of his arms wrapped about her, had
taken
her breath away. She'd waited so long
for that moment, she would have willingly lingered
for an
eternity. But his boldness, and cocky
assurance that she'd respond to his touch had
infuriated
her. She was a fool to think she'd be
anything more than a conquest on his well-
notched
belt. Thus she'd responded with anger
and indignation, while secretly harboring tears.
The
kiss had obviously meant nothing to him, being just another dalliance in a long
line of
loveplay.
Worse
still, was what had happened with Radcliffe only moments before. Upset over the way
Richard
had treated her when she'd come upon him exiting the garden, earlier that day,
Penelope
had
responded to Radcliffe's advances in the Great Hall. Knowing how much Richard detested
the
man, she'd pegged him as the perfect means of exacting vengeance on the
curly-haired object
of her
infatuation.
They'd
met secretly, far from the prying eyes of the castle. While Penelope had envisioned
stealing
a few kisses with the tow-headed Radcliffe, he had far less noble ambitions in
mind.
She'd
ended up bruising his face as she fended him off. When he'd slipped, falling down a short
incline,
she'd used the opportunity to flee. A
short distance away, she'd discovered Richard
arriving
at the lake.
Slipping
into the trees, she'd watched as he'd stripped off his clothes and dove into
the lake.
Flushing
to think of it, she could easily recall the sight of his naked flesh in the darkness,
dusted
with
slivers of moonlight and contouring shadow.
His body was well-defined and perfectly
sculpted. A fact she'd often entertained in fantasy,
but was now utterly certain of.
Lingering until
he'd
dressed and departed, she'd eventually followed him up the path.
Which
had led to their own encounter and her current frustrations. She despised him. She adored
him. She wanted the feel of his lips on hers
again, full of sweet passion and promises.
She
wanted
something she knew Richard Grey was never likely to give.
She
wanted forever.
Curling
up on her bed, Penelope tugged the blankets close to her shoulders, and
contented herself
with a
rare moment of tears.
+++++
Richard
dragged himself awake, feeling more abused then he had the day before. The unnatural
whiteness
of his forearms had spread to his wrists and shoulders. Concerned by the unhealthy
pallor,
he examined himself in the light. It
was as though the pigmentation had been sucked from
his
skin, leaving his flesh with the unwholesome appearance of a cadaver. Rubbing at his eyes, he
relived
the events of the previous night.
Rowena
was responsible.
He
didn't understand how, but was certain the enigmatic woman was at fault for the
ailment.
Perhaps
she'd drugged him when he was unaware.
He only knew he had to end any further
association
with her, not only for his physical well-being, but also his sanity.
Groaning
at the protesting aches of his body, he dressed slowly, selecting black
breeches and
boots,
with a gray leather jerkin and white undertunic. Combing his rumpled curls into place,
Richard
meandered downstairs into the Great Hall.
Immediately
upon entrance, he knew something was wrong.
Groups of nobles stood in tight little
circles,
whispering among themselves. A brittle
pall hung over the chamber, pudding-thick and
near-tangible. All hint of festivity had been struck from
the air, replaced by somberness so severe,
Richard
felt it slither over his skin, with the cold-bellied caress of a snake. As he entered, guarded
glances
were cast in his direction.
A short
distance away, his father conversed quietly with Armus and Lady Elizabeth. Though
Richard
longed to approach them, contact with Sir Thomas was impossible. Hesitating inside the
doorway,
he bumped shoulders with Woodward.
The man
glared as though offended, but his voice, pitched low, was intimately
pleased. "You're
fast
boy," he muttered. "I don't
know how you got the Brandleford girl to vouch for you, but
that's
a stroke of genius."
Richard
wet his lips. "Sir Gervase?"
The
other snorted. "Don't play
coy. You know it was me in the
armory. And you've proved
your
worth." Woodward's lips curled
with the slightest praise. "We'll
talk again."
Before
Richard could formulate a thought, the older man moved away, feigning annoyance
at his
presence. Penelope appeared almost immediately,
entering from a connecting hallway on the
opposite
side of the chamber. Unusually nervous,
she strode forward, her face pinched and white.
"Sir
Richard," she said formally, "I need to speak with you, please."
Disquieted
by her anxiety, Richard gave a brief nod.
Though her manner reeked of stiff protocol,
Richard
didn't think that formality had anything to do with what had transpired between
them the
previous
night. "Pen, what's going on?" he demanded as they moved into the
corridor.
Her
expression remained rigid. "Not
here," she said in a tight voice.
It was only when they'd
moved
further away, into a rarely used alcove, that Penelope relaxed. Exhaling, she sagged
against
the wall, pretense and bravery abandoning her.
"It's horrible," she muttered.
Concerned,
Richard gripped her elbow. "What
is?"
Penelope's
eyes rounded on his, wide and doe-like.
She was clearly terrified.
"Radcliffe.
Richard,
I think I killed him."
He
balked. Abruptly Woodward's
congratulatory praise made sense. The
bleak, staring eyes of
the
nobles, gazing on him with masked suspicion, settled with a semblance of purpose.
Drawing
Penelope
down on a small, upholstered bench, Richard sat beside her. In the narrow, tiny space,
their
knees bumped. Beneath his fingertips,
he could feel the girl trembling.
"Penelope,
tell me what's happened. From the
beginning."
With a
hesitant nod, she wet her lips.
"Y-yesterday, I was angry at you," Her lashes dipped as she
admitted
the truth. "I wanted to get back
at you, for the way you treated me--for the way you've
always
treated my feelings . . ."
He
scowled, unsettled by the ugly, accusation.
It was true he'd been short, even callous, but he'd
never
been particularly endearing. It was
part of the game they played.
Grimacing, he realized
her
feelings might have altered as she'd grown older. An infatuated child could toss aside a
barbed
remark, but a woman in love was likely to wound.
Silently
cursing, he compared himself to dirt.
"When
Radcliffe made an advance at me, I reciprocated," Penelope continued. "It seemed the
ideal
way to get back at you, knowing how much you despised him. You see--" Tossing her
braided
hair, she strived for haughty disregard, "--other men do find me
attractive."
Sighing,
Richard took her hand. "Pen, I
never said--"
"So
I agreed to meet him," Penelope continued sharply, as though he hadn't
interrupted.
Growing
uncomfortable, she shifted on the bench, pulling her fingers free. "But . . . he was far
from
gentlemanly . . ." Straightening
her back, she folded her hands in her lap, trying not to show
how
much the admission hurt, " . . . and I ended up having to fend him
off."
Richard
tensed, muttering low under his breath.
"He
didn't put up much of a fight once I hit him.
He lost his footing and slipped down a bank, so
I
ran. That's when I saw you."
Pausing awkwardly, she glanced at him through slitted lashes, "At
the
lake."
Richard
nodded, not wanting to dwell on exactly what she had seen. "Go on."
"I
came back to the castle after you and I quarreled, and spent the remainder of
the night in my
chambers. Sometime early this morning, one of our
grooms found Radcliffe, in the area where he
and I
met." Turning sideways, Penelope
faced him. "They said his head was
bashed in. Don't
you
see, Richard--he must have struck his head when he slipped down that bank." Her eyes
threatened
sudden tears. "I killed him."
"No,"
Richard said quickly, disconcerted more by her tears, then the news. "You don't know
that."
"What
other explanation can there be?"
Richard
groped for words of reassurance.
"Numerous ones, Pen.
Radcliffe was not well-liked."
Remembering
Woodward's comment about Brandleford's daughter vouching for him, Richard
cast
her an arch glance. "How am I
involved in this?"
"I
told my father we spent the night together."
"You
did *what?*" Appalled, Richard
surged to his feet.
"Not
like that," Penelope said quickly.
"I told him we spent the evening talking, well into the
dawn,
and that afterwards we both retired to our chambers. That gives us both an alibi--me
because
I was there, and you, because you are the most likely candidate to commit
murder."
Realizing
what she said was true, Richard raked nervous fingers through his hair.
"You
didn't murder him, did you Richard?"
Whirling
on his heel, Richard glared.
"Shades and damnation, Pen, how can you ask such an
thing?"
Chastised,
she nevertheless bristled. "Well
you haven't exactly been yourself lately.
Look how
you've
treated your father."
"Woodward,"
Richard muttered, as that truth sank deeper.
"Woodward thinks I killed him."
"What
did you say?"
"Nothing." Clearing his throat, Richard concentrated on
Penelope. Stepping to her side, he took
her
hand and tugged her to her feet.
"We'll stick with your story.
In the meantime, I'll do a little
investigating
on my own. If Radcliffe did hit his
head, it was an accident, Penelope, nothing
more. You're not responsible."
"But
I pushed him."
"You
were defending yourself." Prompted
by irritation, his lips thinned in a white line. The
thought
of Radcliffe pawing her, kindled a flare of anger. He felt suddenly protective of her. He
wanted
to shelter her, to guard her . . . to feel the exquisite blush of her soft lips
against his, and
solely
his. "You should go back to the
other guests," he managed with difficulty.
Bleakly,
she nodded. As she started from the
alcove, Richard caught her hand.
"Pen. I have to ask you something."
Puzzled,
she waited.
Richard
stepped nearer, fearing the mention of a woman's name might incite her wrath. "I need
to know
about one of your father's guests . . . a woman named Rowena. She would be a little
older
than Armus, with very pale blonde hair."
An
annoyed furrow darkened Penelope's smooth brow. "Richard, I don't think it's polite to make
sport
at a time like this."
Baffled,
he spread his hands. "What
sport? I only asked about Rowena."
"The
woman you described is Gervase Woodward's wife," Penelope returned tightly.
"At least
she
was. Two years ago during the Harvest Festival, she died in our
garden." Uncomfortable,
Penelope
lifted her chin. "It's why we
don't use it any longer. It's been
blighted ever since."
"She's
dead?" Richard felt the blood
drain from his face.
"Penelope--" Urgently, he gripped her
arm. His mind tripped over the absurd
possibilities, all rapidly coalescing into bone-jarring truth.
Only
last night, he'd toyed with the thought of supernatural visitations, but hadn't
truly believed
such a
creature could exist. He'd made love to
Rowena--not once, but twice. Hot,
passionate,
animalistic
love. A thoroughly reckless abandon
that left him shuddering with memory. "There . .
. there
has to be a mistake," he said weakly.
Concerned
by his sickly pallor, Penelope touched his arm. "Richard, you're trembling.
What's
wrong?"
"I--"
He couldn't breathe. The air grew hot
and suffocating, burning his lungs with dragon-fire.
Sweat
broke out on his neck and brow.
Absently, he threaded his fingers through his hair, pacing
nervously
in the cramped confines. "Pen,
that's just not possible." His
voice was desperate, even
plaintive. As the awful truth sank deeper, he relived
the fringe images buried in his mind--ghastly
perceptions
of an apparition beyond the grave.
A
wraith.
Richard
shuddered. Her hair wasn't blonde, but
spider-web white, sticky and tacky with grime.
The
lips he'd thought soft, were in actuality, rotted and diseased. Lips that had covered his
mouth,
and roamed intimately over his body, beckoning him to new heights of passion. The cold
of her
flesh was the cold of the crypt--an eternal chill she could never banish
without robbing the
living
of warmth.
And he
had given freely.
Richard
gagged, choking back bile. Still
trembling, he sank to a seat on the bench, burying his
face in
his hands.
"Richard?" Alarmed, Penelope bent over him.
"Go!"
he choked, his voice muffled by his hands.
"I'll be fine, Pen. Please,
just go." He couldn't
bear to
look at her. She was innocence and
sunlight, unsoiled by the darkness he courted daily.
Inwardly
chafing, he realized his own amoral bed-hoping was at fault. If he'd been touched by a
denizen
of the Netherworld, would he ever be whole again?
At the
whispering, hesitant retreat of Penelope's footsteps, Richard raised his head.
Alone in the
alcove,
he listened to the labored hiss of his breath, the fearful thud of his heart,
wondering when
Rowena
would come again.
++++
Darkness
swaddled the hillsides in a thick, inky pall.
Moving stealthily through the layered
blackness,
Richard headed for the stable. Once
again, heavy cloud-cover kept moonlight to a
minimum,
aiding him in his quest for secrecy.
Night-blooming flowers and plump berries,
perfumed
the air with a sweet bouquet, almost sickly, for their honied aroma. As he
neared the
stable,
the cloying odor faded beneath the redolence of animal and straw.
Anxious,
he moved beneath the overhang.
"Father?"
"Here,"
a blessedly familiar voice intoned at his ear.
Richard
flinched, unprepared for the suddenness of Sir Thomas's appearance. Exhaling, he
dragged
nervous fingers over his face.
Sensing
his tightly-wound anxiety, Thomas scowled.
"What's happened?"
"Woodward's
approached me," Richard said quickly.
Desiring safety, he moved deeper into the
thatched
structure, thankful for the thick shadows.
Tonight he wasn't adept enough to mask the
troubled
emotion in his eyes.
"Are
you sure it was Woodward?" Thomas
persisted, at his back.
"Positive." Richard half-turned glancing over his
shoulder. "He hasn't spoken to me
of treason,
but
he's implied an opportunity for wealth and position."
Disturbed,
Thomas drew nearer. "A trifle too
easy. I don't like it."
"It
wasn't as easy as you think," Richard returned. flatly. Distractedly, he rubbed his temple,
trying
to unseat an ache. The pain had been
with him most of the day, lodged just off the corner
of his
eye. He'd brought it on himself, asking
discreet questions about Rowena. There
were still
a few
of Brandleford's guests willing to speak with him, and their tongues loosened
readily
enough
with the right amount of wine. "He
set me a task to fulfill, as a test of loyalty."
"Well?" Thomas demanded.
Facing
his father, Richard met his eyes directly.
"I was to kill Radcliffe."
"You
were to . . ." Thomas's words
trailed away as he studied his son's youthful face. There
were
times Richard's features were almost angelic, but they had sharpened now,
challenging
rather
than ethereal. For all his willfulness
and bristling arrogance, Thomas knew he was
incapable
of murder. "Do you know what
happened to Radcliffe?" he asked
carefully.
Drawing
a breath, Richard relaxed a fraction.
"No." It wasn't an
entire lie. There was no need
to
relay Penelope's involvement. "But I think it's terribly coincidental he
died so conveniently."
Disgruntled,
Richard propped a shoulder against the wall.
Plucking a sliver of straw from the
ground,
he twirled it absently between his fingers.
Head bent, long hair spilling forward to
obscure
his face, it was impossible to judge his expression.
"You
think someone killed him, hoping to blame you?" Thomas asked.
Richard
shrugged, not bothering to raise his head.
"I don't know what to think," he said quietly.
To
Thomas he sounded preoccupied.
Puffing
out his cheeks, the Lord of Covington Cross studied his moody second son. The change
in his
demeanor was subtle, but noticeable.
Two days ago Richard had reacted with characteristic
nonchalance
and confidence. Now he appeared reflective and troubled, lapsing into prickly
silence.
Thomas
gripped his shoulder, prompting Richard to raise his head. "For the moment, Radcliffe's
death
is being ruled accidental. Penelope's
provided you with an alibi, so either way you're in the
clear. I think the important issue is to force
Woodward into action. The longer we
delay, the
greater
the likelihood of error." Pausing,
Thomas stared hard at the younger man.
"Richard, you
don't
look well. As much as I might want to,
I can't draw you out now--"
"You
don't need to." Shaking his head,
Richard brushed off the other's concern.
"I'm fine. I've
just
been . . . distracted."
"With
what?"
"It
doesn't matter." Straightening,
Richard fell easily into a confident facade. "I'll approach
Woodward
tomorrow. With any luck, we can
finalize matters by eventide."
Thomas
nodded. "Just be
careful."
Later,
when the older man had slipped into the darkness, Richard waited in the
shadows, watching
his
departing silhouette. In a few moments
he'd leave as well. Absorbed by
thoughts of
Woodward,
Penelope and Rowena, Richard was unaware of the man lurking nearby.
Unseen,
Frederick Denlark melted into the gloaming, intent on relaying all he had
overheard.
+++++
Richard
was uncertain why he visited the garden.
It was the last place he wanted to be at night,
knowing
what he did about Rowena. Talk around
the castle confirmed Penelope's account that
she'd
died two years ago. A trio of drunken
nobleman had readily shared the tale, when plied
with
the right amount wine.
Visiting
during a Harvest Festival, Rowena had wandered into the box garden alone. Speculation
said
she was attacked by an outlaw, her neck broken. Though the culprit was never caught,
bounties
and rewards were posted. Sir Gervase
retreated to Glenchase where he mourned in
private,
becoming reclusive for close to a year.
The garden itself withered, as though blighted by
Rowena's
death. Eventually Woodward returned,
able to face the castle where his wife had met
an
untimely demise. Though her passing was
never spoken of in his presence, the events were
common
knowledge.
Steeling
himself for the reek of decay, Richard cautiously entered the garden. Trees and
hedgerows
huddled close on all sides, sketching contorted silhouettes against a
soot-black sky.
The
wind was fickle and light, almost vocal, as it faerie-danced among creeping
vines and
neglected
bowers. Beneath his boots, the earth
was spongy and soft, yielding to his wary steps.
Uncertain
what he hoped to find, Richard walked to the bench where he'd first encountered
Rowena. The air was acrid and sharp, contaminated
with the odor of leaf-mold, and damp,
autumn-browned
grasses. Crouching beside the wind-pitted bench, Richard ran his fingers
lightly
over
the blistered surface. Encountering nothing of interest, he rummaged through
the decaying
grass
at his feet. Irregularities riddled the
ground--bumps and ragged edges, where small stones
and
bulging roots, protruded from the soil.
Sitting back on his haunches, Richard stared at the
bench.
A
crevasse was worn in one edge--a gaping recession where wind and wear had
combined for
damage. In the sheltering darkness, the narrow
opening appeared as a sliver of gelatinous black.
Moving
onto the bench, Richard turned sideways, slipping his fingers into the
hole. Jagged stone
scraped
his knuckles as he groped blindly in the limited space. His fingers encountered bits of
bracken
and dried, crumbled leaves; particles of twigs and flesh-soft moss. The tight
recession
allowed
his hand no further then the knuckles.
Shifting, he twisted on the bench, striving for
better
leverage. Eventually he felt the cold
brush of metal against his fingertips.
Sucking
down a breath, Richard reached deeper, ignoring the torn skin on the back of
his hand.
Closing
his fingers over the foreign object, he pulled it from the hole. In the limited light of stars,
and
sickle moon, he beheld a woman's locket.
*Rowena's
locket.*
Before
he had time to consider the implication, he heard a rustle of sound behind
him. Stuffing
the
locket into his jerkin, Richard whirled.
Expecting to find Rowena, he was drawn up short by
Penelope
Brandleford.
"Pen!" Richard practically hissed the name. "What are you doing here?"
More
poised than she'd been earlier that day, Penelope crinkled her pixie-like nose,
irritated by his
brusqueness. "This *is* my garden. I might ask you the same thing, but I'm sure
I already know
the
answer. Who is she this time,
Richard--kitchen maid or knight's wife?"
He
stiffened. "I don't sleep with
married women."
Penelope
smirked. "How gallant of you to
develop a belated sense of conscience."
Richard
exhaled. Since their original encounter
outside the garden, her comments had grown far
more
barbed. Less childish then she'd been
in the past, Richard found himself struggling to
pinpoint
his own erratic emotions. It had been
much easier when she'd been an infatuated girl-
child,
tagging on his heels, with annoying persistency. Then he'd simply wanted to distance
himself. Now he wasn't sure if he should reprimand,
protect or cherish.
"This
isn't a good place to linger, Penelope," he said evenly, choosing to
ignore her comment. In
the
licorice-laced shadows, her brown eyes glimmered with the reflective glow of
starlight.
Raising
a hand, she coiled a strand of loose hair behind her ear. Richard followed the movement,
noting
how graceful her actions had become.
Though she could still rattle him with crass edges,
another
part of her was slowly moving toward refinement.
"Why?"
she challenged. "Because I'm
interrupting your love-nest?"
"Stop
it, Pen." Irritated, he strode
forward, roughly gripping her arm.
Towering over her, he
gazed
down on her defiant face, feeling his own restlessness provoked. "I'm not here to meet
anyone. I just came--"
"Well?" she demanded, when he found himself unable
to finish.
Swearing
softly, Richard released her. Turning
away, he dragged a hand over the back of his
neck. "You wouldn't understand."
"I
understand I might have killed a man, and that nothing I do, think, or say is
going to change
that. I understand that I hate this feeling, and I
hate what's happened. If I think on it
very hard, I
may
even hate you."
Alerted
by the strident edge of her words, Richard glanced over his shoulder. His own problems
seemed
abruptly insignificant as he gazed on her face. In all his years, he never would have
imagined
the bold, light-hearted girl who'd grown up in his shadow, juggling such
complex
emotions. Opening his arms to her, he pulled her
close.
Though
she resisted at first, Penelope folded against him, clinging not with desire,
but the simple
need of
assurance. Gently, Richard stroked her
hair. "I'm so sorry, Pen," he
whispered near her
ear.
"You shouldn't be burdened with this."
"Why?" Her voice was muffled against his
shoulder. "Because I'm a
weak-kneed girl?"
Richard
chuckled. "I've never thought of
you as weak-kneed." Slipping a
finger beneath her
chin,
he tilted her head up. "I remember
a time when you knocked Cedric cold for calling you
'pretty'."
"I
never thought I was pretty," Penelope returned. "Maybe because you never told me."
Richard
studied her face--the becoming tilt of her eyes, the smooth, rose-dusted milk
of her skin,
the
red-ripened bow of her mouth.
"You're beautiful," he whispered. Threading his hand into the
lush
cascade of her hair, he gazed on her intently.
"I was a fool to never notice."
When
she made no protest, Richard bent his head, gently claiming her mouth with
his. With any
other
woman he wouldn't have been patient--demanding rather than giving--but she was
so
obviously
innocent in the ways of love, he felt jaded by comparison.
Penelope
trembled in his arms, unsure of herself as she twined her hands behind his
neck.
Tugging
her closer, Richard deepened the kiss, dangerously aroused by her uncertainty.
An
uncharacteristic
tremor riddled his body, as she hesitantly threaded her fingers through the
curls
on his
collar. When she arched against him,
uttering a soft moan, he gasped aloud and drew back.
Breathing
heavily, he gazed down on her upturned face.
Her lips were parted, moist and full with
the
attentions of his kiss. "Pen . . .
we should stop," he said with difficulty.
Penelope
appeared wounded. "Why?"
Struggling
for control, Richard swallowed.
"Because I don't have the restraint, and I want it to
be
different with you." Pausing, he
groped for words. "I want it to
last."
A warm
smile touched her lips as she digested his meaning. Laying her head upon his chest,
Penelope
snuggled against him. Underscored by
the delicious heat of his body, the cool leather of
his
jerkin pressed against her cheek. She
felt the rapid beat of his heart, thrumming steadily
beneath
his ribcage. A soft breeze blew across
her face, smelling faintly of decay.
As
Richard's arms tightened around her, she closed her eyes. "I want it to last too. Richard--"
Pausing,
Penelope raised her head, "I came here because I couldn't sleep, but you
still haven't
told me
why you're here. Were you meeting
someone?"
"Of
course, he was."
The
throaty, feminine voice took them both by surprise. Jerking apart, they stood stiff and
motionless,
as a white-haired woman moved from the shadows. Rowena's hair was disheveled
and
snarled, snagged with bits of dried leaves and mud-dark soil. Her blue gown was faded,
tattered
in spots, and frayed at the edges. All
traces of softness had fled her jet-colored eyes,
replaced
by the cold edge of retribution. As the
wind snaked across the dead grass, the stench of
decay
wafted from the soil.
Stunned,
Penelope shook her head. "Lady
Rowena. It isn't possible."
Stepping
in front of the younger girl, Richard used his arm to protectively coax her
behind his
shoulder. "What do you want, Wraith?" The flush of heat in Rowena's body, coupled
with her
unkempt
appearance, indicated she'd only recently risen from the grave. Her appearance would
alter,
settling into poise and elegance when she'd claimed warmth and sustenance from
another.
Belatedly
wishing for a vial of holy water, crucifix, or even a handful of knowledge
relating to
supernatural
beings, Richard strove for composure.
He knew what she wanted--had in fact
already
given it to her twice.
Tilting
her head, Rowena studied him with cool mockery. "You would dally with a child, after
you've
lain with me?"
Richard
tensed. Her eyes were engulfing,
effortlessly pulling him into a void crafted by the
pungent,
dark scent of her presence; the cold-chafed kiss of her lips; the hungry,
questing bite of
her
hands. "Be gone," he said
stiffly. Without conviction. Without true desire.
She
laughed softly. "Our lives are
twined, Richard Grey. I've done you a
favor--taken the life of
that
paltry guttersnipe Radcliffe."
Penelope
surged forward, no longer afraid, but outraged. "You killed him?"
Rowena's
eyes flicked over her, dismissing her as a thing of no significance. Focusing on
Richard,
she took one step forward. "I
found him in the woods, his head bloodied, in a foul fit of
temper. It was easy to seduce him. I suppose after depleting him of warmth, the
head wound
was
simply too much to endure. Had he not
succumbed, I would have made certain he never
rose."
Richard
wet his lips. "Why kill him?"
"Because
Woodward instructed you to do so, and I need you to be close to him."
"To
your husband?"
Rowena's
lips thinned. "So you've learned a
thing or two, including what manner of creature I
am. How does it feel to have made love with the
crypt?" Tossing her hair over her
shoulder,
Rowena
smiled silkily. "If I wanted you
Richard, I could command you. You
remember what it
was
like, flesh-to-flesh--"
"Don't,"
he choked, his breath coming faster. He
could feel himself weakening, wanting
desperately
to posses her--to relive the torrid heat of feral passion, and the bittersweet
tang of
controlling
love.
"You
want to kiss me, to touch me--" Her eyes were black stones, beckoning,
inviting,
demanding.
Richard
groaned.
Alarmed,
Penelope moved between them. "Stay
away from him, you wretched hag."
Reaching
quickly
beneath her cloak, she pulled a small flask from the folds. Holding it like a weapon, she
took a
threatening step forward. "For two
years I've heard rumors of visitations in this garden.
It's
why it's blighted, why nothing grows.
Did you really think I would come here without holy
water,
Demon?"
Hissing,
Rowena drew back. With a curse that
would have made an outlaw proud, Penelope
uncorked
the flask and flung the contents in the older woman's face. There followed a shrill
screech,
the lightning stench of a storm, the cold touch of disturbed earth. Penelope
closed her
eyes,
blinking, at the abominable tangle of sound, scent and otherworldly feel. When she looked
again,
Rowena was gone.
Richard
uttered a single, soft moan and crumbled behind her.
"Richard!" Dropping to her knees at his side, Penelope
felt frantically for a pulse. His flesh
was
cold,
and cadaver-white, wholly unnatural in appearance. "Dear God, Richard!"
Pulling on his
shoulders,
Penelope leaned forward, struggling to lift his unresponsive body into her
lap. His skin
was
stone-cold to the touch, marred by prominent blue veins beneath the
surface. Bending
forward,
Penelope pressed her lips to his, kissing him with an intensity borne of
desperation.
Within moments he responded, opening his mouth to
the sheer hunger of her passion.
Relieved,
Penelope
drew back, her face flushed with worry.
Confused,
Richard inhaled raggedly. "What
happened?" The light in his green
eyes was
unsettled,
bridled with controlled fear at the edges.
Penelope
touched his cheek. The warmth was
slowly returning to his flesh, the ghastly white
pallor
of his skin withering beneath a healthier glow. "You don't remember?"
"I
remember . . . *her,*" Richard said uncomfortably. "What did you do?"
Penelope
looked sheepish. "I brought a
flask of wine with me. I told her it
was holy water."
"Wine?" Sitting forward, Richard cradled his head in
his hands. "First a midnight
rendevous and
now
wine. Pen, what am I going to do with
you?"
Her
smile grew calculating. "I have a
couple suggestions, but at the moment, I don't think you're
up to
any of them. Besides--" she
scoffed, "It was just to keep me warm." Standing, she offered
her
hand. "I don't think it's wise to
stay here."
Nodding,
Richard rose unsteadily at her side.
With a wary glance for the night-shrouded garden,
he
escorted her outside. Disturbed, he
cleared his throat. "There's just
one problem, Penelope."
When
she looked at him questioningly, he drew a breath and plowed ahead. "I've already
encountered
Rowena in the stable and my chambers.
And her admission about Radcliffe, clearly
confirms
her sphere of movement is not confined to the garden."
"What
are you saying?"
"I'm
saying that I don't think we've seen the last of her." Reaching inside his jerkin, Richard
withdrew
the locket he'd found hidden in the bench.
"She said she killed Radcliffe, so I could
remain
close to Woodward." Thoughtfully
he traced his thumb over the surface.
The size of a
gold-piece,
the locket was tarnished, with the initials *RW* etched in flowing script on
the cover.
Penelope
looked from the age-blackened jewelry to his face. "Why would you want to remain
close
to that bag of wind?"
Richard's
mouth tightened. "I guess I really
should bring you up-to-date."
Briefly, he told her of
the
charade he'd staged with his father, and his encounter with Woodward in the
armory. While
he was
at it, he also admitted to his dalliances with Rowena, though he did not go
into detail.
When he
was through, Penelope remained quiet and thoughtful. Fearing he'd shattered any
feelings
she had for him, Richard awaited reprimand.
He was surprised when she slipped her hand
into
the crook of his elbow, pacing him companionably.
"I
feel better knowing your words with your father weren't sincere," she said
evenly. Just as
quickly
a wicked smile lifted the corners of her lips.
"And if you think you're going to get rid of
me by
admitting to some perverted tryst with that spectral strumpet, you're sadly
mistaken."
Richard
scowled, flustered by her flippant behavior.
"Penelope, doesn't it bother you--the
impossibility
of it? We just spoke with a--" He
shook his head, at a loss for words.
"--an
apparition
. . . a displaced spirit--a wraith. I
prefer to leave matters of the supernatural to the
Church,
but this shade is obviously vengeful."
"And
yet she laid with you," Penelope reminded him, only slight annoyed. Richard guessed he'd
been
forgiven matters mostly beyond his control.
"How is it possible for an apparition to have
flesh?"
Richard
shook his head. "I don't want to
think about this." He was still
uncomfortable with what
he'd
done, feeling defiled for the deed.
Worse yet was the awkwardness of discussing it with
Penelope.
Slipping his arm around her shoulders, he tugged her close, sheltering her
within the
folds
of his cloak as they walked. The
rose-petal fragrance of her hair tickled his nose, and he
closed
his eyes briefly, inhaling the scent.
Richard
was silent, listening to the crunch of earth beneath their feet. Somewhere in the distance
an owl
hooted, breaking the fragile stillness. Overhead, a crescent moon blundered
free of the
clouds,
dousing the ground with anemic light.
Staring at the locket, Richard recalled Rowena's
words:
*my husband gave it to me, and I will not leave this realm without it.*
Woodward
didn't strike Richard as a romantic, and Rowena hardly seemed the loving sort.
Lifting
his arm free of Penelope's shoulders, he stopped and fumbled open the
cover. A folded
slip of
parchment was tucked inside.
"Open
it," Penelope urged, peering over his shoulder. When he hesitated too long, she snatched
the
article, bending her head as she quickly freed the multiple folds. Bold letters slanted across
the
vellum in a strictly masculine hand. In
the limited light of stars and moon, they struggled to
decipher
a message two years old. Stunned by the
directive, Penelope looked at Richard.
"Is this
possible?"
His
expression grim, Richard returned the parchment to the locket. "More than possible, it
confirms
what we suspected. Now I begin to
understand Rowena's actions."
Penelope
was incredulous. "I fail to see
how this relates."
Catching
her elbow, steering her closer to the castle, Richard walked quickly. The night-
blackened
silhouettes of towering walls loomed above them. "She must have lost the locket when
she was
attacked in the garden," he explained.
"I found it in a crevasse in the bench. She
obviously
wanted someone to discover it, and she chose me."
"That
doesn't explain what she did to you," Penelope countered, growing
annoyed.
Hearing
the petulant edge of her voice, Richard looped his arm about her waist. "The last night
Rowena
came to me, I told her I wanted nothing further to do with her. She implied she'd leave
me
alone if I found her locket."
Exasperated,
Penelope rolled her eyes.
"Richard, you really are an oaf when it comes to women.
You may
be utterly charming and skilled in bed, but you know absolutely nothing about
the ways
a woman
manipulates others--particularly men."
Richard's
smile was barbed. "You're
forgetting Rowena isn't an ordinary woman.
She's driven
by an
insatiable need for warmth, which she pilfers through seduction. As long as she
remains in
this
realm, she has to . . ." He rolled
his shoulders, searching for words, " . . .*feed* on the living.
I
believe she wants to leave, but can't--or *won't*--until she's settled the
score with her husband.
Pen, I
think he killed her."
"*What?*" Stalking boldly in front of him, Penelope
placed her hand on his chest, forcing him to
halt. "Richard, have you lost all
sanity?"
"Listen
to me." Patiently, he gripped her
shoulders. "I think Rowena found
out Woodward was
engaged
in treasonous activity--that missive proves it. He must have discovered she knew, came
upon
her in the garden and murdered her. *That's* why she's doing this. She can't rest, until he's
brought
to justice."
"Richard
Grey, Envoy of the Dead."
"Pen,
be serious."
"I
am serious. It's you who's lost his
head."
Richard
pressed his lips together.
"Fine. Then take
this." Catching her hand, he
folded the
locket
into her palm. "I'm going to
confront Woodward tomorrow. It's
probably best I don't
have
this with me."
Abruptly
concerned, Penelope's impertinence faded.
"Richard, I'm worried."
"Don't
be." Smiling softly, he drew his
thumb over her cheek. "When this
is over, I give you free
rein to
manipulate me anyway you choose."
Though
his words were void of innuendo, Penelope blushed. Emboldened by his invitation, she
wrapped
her arms about his neck. "It's
taken you a dreadfully long time to come to your senses
and
notice me."
"True,
but I promise to make up for missed opportunity." Lightly skimming his fingers down her
side,
he contoured the burgeoning hourglass shape of her body from breast to
hip. The feather-
light
caress of his hand sent jolts of sensation shooting through her flesh. Swaying into his
embrace,
Penelope parted her lips, tugging his head down.
"You
are a wretchedly quick study," Richard murmured with a teasing smile, and
kissed her.
+++++
Hours
later when Richard retired to his rooms, he found a missive from Woodward
directing him
to come
to the rear battlement an hour before dawn.
Realizing the older man would likely betray
himself,
Richard took a chance and penned a hasty note to this father. Departing in the wee hours
of the
morning, he left the missive with a servant, then headed to his pre-arranged
destination with
Woodward.
The
battlement was empty when he arrived, cloaked beneath the gray-black bowl of
the sky. A
suggestion
of light lingered to the east, virginal and new, as it struggled from the
horizon. Crisp
and
damp, with a dew-saturated edge, morning air filtered through his long hair and
crept beneath
his
collar. Blowing on his cold-stiffened fingers, Richard gazed over the stone
wall, noting the
jagged
perimeter of Tiner, and the vast, rolling expanse of the heath.
Minutes
slipped into minutes. He was beginning
to grow frustrated when he heard the strike of
boots
against stone. Turning, he came face to
face with Woodward. The older man's
expression
was
grim, his black hair and beard, lending dark severity to his face.
"You
have something to say?" Richard
prompted.
Woodward
shook his head, a hostile glint in his close-set eyes. "Only what a fool you've been."
With a
brief nod past Richard's shoulder, he smiled indulgently. Sensing the danger too late,
Richard
half-turned, reaching for his sword. He
caught a glimpse of Denlark's sharp
features,
followed
by the raised, braided wire of a sword hilt.
And then the world upended, exploding in a
staggering
conflagration as the heavy object crashed against his skull. His sword never made it
from
the scabbard. Dropping to his knees,
Richard crumbled against the stone, light and sound
banished
to an abysmal void.
+++++
Rising
with the dawn, Penelope paced the eastern battlement, dwelling on the
tumultuous events
of the
day before. Dressed in her sleeping
gown, and wrapped in the billowing folds of a wool
cloak,
she leaned against the wall, unmindful of the brisk morning air. Her thoughts were full of
Richard--the
tender touch of his lips, the exquisite feel of his hands. Originally she'd expected
him to
treat her as he did all his conquests, ushering her into bed on the first
night. But with
gentle
kiss and loving caress, he'd made it clear he wanted more than a brief
seduction.
Blushing,
Penelope tugged her cloak close to her throat.
It still seemed like a dream. An
impossible,
delicious, wondrous dream. One from
which she hoped never to awake.
Lost in
her thoughts, she didn't at first notice the movement below. From her vantage point high
on the
castle wall, Penelope watched as two men maneuvered a third, unconscious, onto
a horse.
The
man's hands were tied, his features hidden by a hooded cloak. It was only when he half-
slipped
from the saddle and had to be caught, that the hood of his cloak fell back,
exposing a
riotous
tumble of curls.
Penelope
gasped. "*Richard!*"
The
other two men--she quickly identified them as Woodward and Denlark--mounted
horses.
Denlark
caught the reins of Richard's steed, impatiently tugging it forward. Unconscious,
Richard
lay belly down, loosely draped over the saddle. Urging the beasts to a canter, the two
men
departed with their burden beneath the sheltering fringe of Tiner Forest.
Heart
thumping in her chest, Penelope raced from the battlement, intent on finding
Sir Thomas.
+++++
Thomas
Grey watched as his eldest son studiously devoured a sizeable breakfast. Having already
consumed
his own fair share, Thomas was content to linger at the table, idly picking at
pieces of
fruit
and sugar-trimmed pastries. The hour
was still fairly early, prompting only a smattering of
guests
to converge on the Great Hall. Seated
between Armus and Lord Brackhurst, Thomas
feigned
only vague interest in the conversation.
Preoccupied, his mind drifted back to the
previous
night and his encounter with Richard in the stable.
His
son's erratic emotions had run the gamut from distraction to poise. Though Thomas knew
Richard
was adept at affecting confidence, that demeanor was often forced. Of all his children,
Richard
had the most difficulty asking for help, or in admitting weakness. If he had encountered
conflict
with Woodward, it was likely he'd try to resolve the issue himself before
asking for
assistance. It was that very aspect of his personality
that often left Thomas grimacing in
frustration. Richard was stubborn, headstrong and
arrogant--a combination that could readily
lead to
disaster given their present circumstances.
Only that morning Thomas had found a short
note
from his son, informing him of a meeting with Woodward. Accordingly, Richard expected
to
force the issue, ending their charade by nightfall.
"You're
not listening, Thomas," Brackhurst said suddenly, drawing him from his
thoughts.
Thomas
flinched, realizing the ginger-haired nobleman was watching him expectantly.
Recovering,
the Lord of Covington Cross offered an abashed grin. "My apologies, Clifford.
My
mind
was elsewhere, I'm afraid."
"T'would
seem," the elegantly-clad Lord agreed.
"I'd warrant that infernal son of yours is at
fault." With a regal shake of his head, he pushed
his plate aside. "We all
sympathize, Thomas.
When
are you going to take the boy to task, and inflict the proper punishment? He needs to be
publically
humiliated."
Opening
his mouth to protest, Thomas was stopped short by Penelope's breathless
entry. Attired
in a
sleeping gown and woolen cloak, blonde hair wild about her shoulders, the
younger Lady
Brandleford
burst into the room. Eyes wide, she
halted just inside the doorway. Spying
Thomas,
she
rushed to his side, frantically clutching his arm, while attempting to pull him
from the seat.
"Sir
Thomas, please--you must come quickly.
It's Richard."
Bewildered
by her distress, Thomas turned. His
fingers closed over hers, forcing her still.
"Penelope,
what's wrong?"
"It's
Richard," she said again, her words breathless and rapid-fire quick. Desperate, she pulled on
his
sleeve. "I saw Woodward and
Denlark taking him into the forest."
A ping
of alarm raced through Thomas. Would
Richard have agreed to such a one-sided
encounter? "What do you mean?"
Across
the table, Brackhurst chuckled.
"It appears your son's made one too many derogatory
comments,
Thomas."
Thomas
shot him a black glare. Though
inwardly he seethed, he knew he couldn't destroy the
facade
he and Richard had worked so hard to project.
If he reacted with protective concern for
his
errant son, suspicion would surely follow.
Possibly, Richard was enacting his own ploy. With
effort, Thomas refocused on Penelope. "Penelope are you certain he wasn't
just accompanying--
"
"He
was unconscious, Sir Thomas, and his hands were tied." Pulling Rowena's locket from her
cloak,
Penelope fumbled it open, thrusting the hidden parchment beneath his nose. "Read this,
quickly,
and you'll realize what danger Richard is in."
It took
Thomas only a moment to glance at the condemning words written over two years
ago.
Shoving
back his chair, he stalked toward the exit.
"Armus," he barked. He
didn't have to look
over
his shoulder, to know his fair-haired son followed grimly in his wake. Though Armus was
ignorant
of Richard's true motives, he was ready to go to his brother's defense. Ignoring the
grumbling
of the nobles, who couldn't perceive his sudden concern, Thomas strode
determinably
for the
stables.
To
anyone who looked, his face betrayed his true emotions. He reacted as a father, not a
judgmental
patriarch, seeking retribution. If
there was ever any doubt of the fierce love and
loyalty
he held for his son, it was obliterated with his actions.
The
charade was over.
For
Richard's sake, Thomas prayed it did not
end too late.
+++++
Gervase
Woodward drew his horse to a halt on the edge of a steep embankment. Below, trees
and
serrated beds of stone, jutted from the soil, sloping to the edge of the
Hestlebrie River. Swift
and
strong of current, the water surged over broken slabs of rock, shooting sprays
of foam into
the
air. "This will suffice," the
black-bearded man told his companion.
With a
nod, Denlark coaxed Richard's steed to the edge of the slope. Dismounting,
Woodward
heaved
their prisoner over the embankment, sending him tumbling to the river
below. "If the fall
doesn't
kill him, the current will," Woodward mumbled darkly. He stood a moment, craning his
neck as
he stared over the slope, but the fall had been quick and unforgiving. There was no sign
of
Richard.
With an
acknowledging glance at Denlark, the black-beared man collected his horse. Before he
could
mount, the thunderous clamor of approaching hooves drew him up short. With a darting
look at
Denlark, he silently conveyed composure.
Though there wasn't time for escape, alarm
was
unnecessary. Many men engaged in
morning excursions, to clear their heads of night-time
wine
and excess.
"Sir
Thomas!" Woodward hailed the
approaching group of riders with an engaging smile. The
man in
front, silver-haired and grim, looked anything but cordial. Sensing danger,
Woodward kept
the
false smile plastered on his face.
"I thought Lord Denlark and I would be the only fools to
venture
forth this early in the morning. Surely
you didn't over indulge as well?"
Wrenching
his horse to a shuddering halt, Thomas unsheathed his sword in a single, swift
movement. Behind him a cluster of riders hovered,
composed of Armus, Lord Brandleford and
six of
Candlemyre's House Guard. Dispensing
with subtlety, Thomas leveled the tip of his
broadsword
just shy of Woodward's face. "What
have you done with my son, you traitorous
devil?"
Woodward
clung to innocence. "Your
son?" His eyes flicked to Armus,
watching as the fair-
haired
man dismounted and stepped toward the embankment. "Your son is behind you, Thomas.
As I
recall, you wanted nothing to do with the younger one. He insulted you--"
"If
you've harmed Richard, I'll slit your lying throat," Thomas spat. "There won't be anything
left
for the King's Guard, or the chopping block."
At
Woodward's side, Denlark paled. Urging
his horse forward, Brandleford halted at Thomas's
side. "You may as well confess,
Woodward. I've already dispatched a
courier to summon the
sheriff
and a contingent of the King's Guard.
Both you and Denlark will be held in my dungeon
until a
time when you can be surrendered to the proper authority."
Bristling,
Woodward squared his shoulders.
"For taking a morning ride?"
"For
committing treason," Brandleford said tightly. Reaching into his tunic, he withdrew the slip
of
parchment once contained in Rowena's locket.
Holding it aloft, he looked directly at
Woodward. "I have here, written in your own hand,
a missive ordering the murder of two of the
King's
advisors, plus King Edward himself.
Eighteen months ago such an attempt took place.
Though
the undertaking was thwarted, without King Edward or anyone else being harmed,
those
responsible
were never apprehended. This missive is
executed with your own seal, Gervase."
As
Brandleford
spoke, his guards dismounted, quietly flanking the black-beared man. Indignant
at the
treatment,
Woodward spared a flinty glance before refocusing on the Lord of Candlemyre
Manor.
"Preposterous!"
he snapped. "Who accuses me? Where did you find such drivel?"
Swinging
his leg over the saddle, Thomas dropped to the ground. The set lines of his face
bespoke
a harshness rarely seen on human flesh.
"I'd be more concerned with the fate of your
wretched
soul. Your life is forfeit, but you
still have a chance to help my son, and redeem
yourself
before God."
"Down
the embankment," Denlark sputtered, before Woodward could so much as draw
breath.
Pointing
frantically between the trees, he looked beseechingly on Sir Thomas. "Woodward threw
him
down there--toward the river--hoping to kill him. I had nothing to do with it.
You must
believe
me. I--"
"Coward!" Woodward roared. Wrenching a battle-scarred blade from his scabbard, he lurched
for
Denlark. The red-haired man cringed,
flinching back in the saddle, throwing up his arms to
protect
himself. As Woodward surged forward,
sword arm extended, Thomas and two guards
reacted
instinctively. Exposed to attack,
Woodward jerked spasmodically as three separate blades
pierced
his back and sides.
Pulling
free his sword, Thomas didn't even wait for Woodward's lifeless body to strike
the
ground. Striding purposefully past Denlark, he stood
at the top of the embankment, wildly
scanning
the area below. Behind him he could
hear the guards milling around as they hurried to
carry
out Brandleford's orders. Denlark's
voice droned in the background, a plaintive whine as
he
surrendered his horse. Thomas shut out
the distractions, eyes flicking intently between the
trees.
Now that he looked closely, he could see a path of disturbed earth and broken,
low-hanging
branches. Armus was already inching down the steep
slope, careful of protruding rocks and
roots,
side-stepping his way to the river below.
Cupping
his hands around his mouth, Thomas pitched his voice above the angry roar of
the
current. "Richard!" Silence bounced back, mocking and
thick. "Richard!" he yelled again.
Shrugging
free of his cloak, Thomas moved recklessly down the slope. "Armus, do you see
him?"
The
fair-haired man paused, glancing back toward the drop-off above. "Father, stay where you
are."
Licking his lips, he looked over his shoulder to the churning water below. "If I find him, I'll
need
help--possibly a rope."
"To
hell with it," Thomas muttered.
"There's plenty of men for that." Behind him, he knew some
of the
guards were fanning out on the bank, aiding in the search now that Woodward and
Denlark
had
been subdued. When Armus started moving
again, veering to the right, Thomas went left.
He knew
if Richard had fallen into the river, he could have been swept hundreds of
feet, even
yards
away. The thought made his heart beat
faster, the breath catch in his throat. "Richard!" he
yelled
again. Further down the bank, Armus
mimicked his call.
The
ground was soft and spongy, and Thomas's boots sank easily into the yielding
earth. Closer
to the
river, the carpeting of leaves, fern and moss, grew slick with moisture coaxed
from the
Histlebrie. Twice, Thomas slipped, gloved fingers
catching on roots and rocks as his feet
threatened
to slide out from under him. The pitch of the incline made upright walking
impossible,
and he
could only guess what the fall would have done to an unconscious man. "Richard!" His
voice
was growing hoarse from the effort of shouting over the roar of the river. Still he clung to
hope,
his chest ready to burst with repressed fear.
"Richard!"
"Father!"
Thomas
stilled, disbelieving as the weak voice bounced back to him. At first he thought it a trick
of rock
and water, a phantom of his own frantic mind.
He was just a few feet above the river
now,
clinging to the embankment as he fought to maintain his footing. Glancing wildly about, his
eyes
settled on a dark shape twenty feet below.
Richard clung to a large rock on the edge of the
river
bank. Half-submerged, he struggled
against the current, as water sluiced around his waist.
His
hair was wet, but not soaked, more from moisture and mist, then a fall into the
churning
water. Thankfully, he must have caught himself
before the river could carry him away.
Yet even
from
this distance, Thomas could see his clothing was torn, indicating he was
battered from the
fall. The rope binding his wrists made his grip
precarious at best.
"Richard--" There was greater
strength
to his voice now. "Hold on--I'm
coming." And then to Armus:
"Armus, quickly! He's
over
here."
Thomas
didn't wait to see if his eldest son or the guards responded to his
directive. Scrambling
down
the slope, half running, half tripping, he strove to reach the blunt finger of
rock, protruding
into
the river.
"Father!"
Richard called again. His voice was
stronger now, but Thomas feared what other
damage
may have been done. As he neared and
Richard raised his head, Thomas glimpsed a
bloody
bruise on his forehead, just to the right of his temple. Half covered by wet, curling hair,
the
wound oozed blood down Richard's cheek to his jaw.
"Hurry,"
Richard panted, grabbing at the rock, even as he slipped deeper into the
river. The stone
was
smooth and slippery, making it almost impossible to gain a finger hold.
As
Thomas neared, he realized the current was too strong to actually wade into the
water,
without
costing them both. Desperately, he extended his reach over the rock, fighting
to keep his
feet
anchored on the sodden ground. His own
foot slipped, and he caught himself, a hair's-breath
from
tumbling into the river. From the corner of his eye, he could see Richard
pushing up on his
elbows,
trying to gain height on the rock.
Though his son grappled for the edge, he was
obviously
too weak for anything but minimal effort.
Slipping on the cold stone, Richard fell back
yet
again.
"Dear
God," Thomas breathed, and wasn't sure if it was plea or prayer.
"Father." Thomas jerked as Armus came up behind
him. More sure-footed then he, the big
man
moved
with a grace belying his size.
"Hang
onto me," Thomas instructed.
Turning toward the rock, he threw himself across the
protruding
slab, blindly trusting his son to catch him.
Armus's hands closed on his legs, just as his
own
fingers encircled Richard's bound wrists.
Inching forward, he used one hand to grip Richard
behind
the elbow, the other to snag his tunic above the shoulder. Up close, he could see the
bright
splash of blood across Richard's cheek, the wild, desperate light in his eyes,
as his strength
readied
to flee. "Hold onto me,"
Thomas gasped.
Richard
clutched frantically for his arms as Thomas pulled. Behind him, Armus added his own
strength,
enabling Richard to scrabble onto the leaning surface of rock. Panting, he allowed
Thomas
to pull him the remaining distance. Of
one accord, all three men tumbled backward onto
the
bank.
"Thank
God!" Silver hair plastered to his
face with mist, Thomas wrapped his arms around
Richard. Too weary to move, the Lord of Covington
Cross leaned against Armus's strong
shoulder,
as Richard sank gratefully against his chest.
Mumbling something unintelligible, Armus
reached
around him to bestow a brotherly pat on Richard's shoulder.
The
younger man raised his head, too weary to do anything but offer a heartfelt
glance. "What
did you
say, Brother?"
Expelling
a loud breath, Armus leaned back against the bank. "I said the next time, you two
decide
to play-act, I want to be forewarned *and* included."
Richard
gave a soft, amused grunt. Closing his
eyes, he rested against his father's shoulder.
"Next
time, you can be the bad brother and get thrown over the cliff."
Armus
snorted. "It's a slope,
Richard."
"Cliff."
"Slope."
"Cliff."
"Slope."
"Boys,"
Thomas said sharply. When both looked
at him as though he'd intruded into sacred
territory,
he nodded up the embankment. "I
see Brandleford's guards. Wouldn't you
rather
continue
this argument back at Candlemyre?"
"That
depends." Wincing, Richard shifted
painfully. "How likely is it to
hurt, climbing back up?"
+++++
Richard
waited in the garden, uncertain what he expected to find. Five days had passed since the
incident
at Histlebrie, and while he still courted bruised ribs and abrasions, most of
the aches
associated
with his fall, had subsided into memory.
With Woodward's death, Denlark bore the
brunt
of the treasonous relationship, and was taken into custody, awaiting
execution. The
parchment
found in Rowena's locket was given to the King's Guard as proof of Woodward's
involvement.
When asked, Richard said only that he found the parchment in the garden,
avoiding
all
mention of Rowena and the locket.
Though
he still had occasion to remember their vulgar association, the images were no
longer as
powerful,
and he found he could distance himself from the memories. A budding romance with
Penelope
was largely responsible for that shift in focus. She was both romantic partner and
prickly
voice of his conscience. Although she'd
outgrown the snippety girl-child of her youth, she
often
reverted to a sharp and saucy tongue, and in retrospect, he realized he liked
that just fine.
As he
considered the last few days, Richard glanced about the small box garden. With a jolt, he
realized
there were sprouts of greenery among the browned hedgerows. Tenuous flowers
bloomed
in bowers once barren and dry, and new leaves sprouted on proud, stately
trees. The
odor of
decay was a memory, buried in the soft warm soil, grown sweet with clover.
It was
as though Rowena had redeemed herself in the death of her husband. As though, now at
peace,
she willingly relinquished her hold on the garden. Reaching into his tunic, Richard
withdrew
her locket. Unlike the garden, which
moved toward revival, the necklace had tarnished,
growing
discolored over the last few days.
Rubbing his thumb over the surface, Richard paused
to
consider recent events.
After
exposing Woodward and Denlark as traitors, Richard and Thomas were elevated to
heroic
status
in the eyes of the other nobles. Their
previous friction was revealed a cleverly crafted
facade,
with a few grumpy Lords implying they'd suspected as much all along. Richard had
neither
the desire nor stomach to debate the point, and dismissed it out of hand. Matters returned
to
normal between he and Sir Thomas, while the Mayfest commenced with renewed
cause for
celebration.
But
despite the festive air, Richard remained uneasy about Rowena's
visitations. He would share
the
secret of those spectral occurrences with Penelope, and no other. Surely no other rational
soul
would believe him.
"There
you are."
Richard
smiled broadly as Penelope appeared at the edge of a bower. Sunlight gleamed in her
honey
gold hair, threading the soft, lustrous strands with ivory and gold. Framed by the budding
greenery
of the garden, she was a vision without equal.
Entranced, Richard offered his hand.
As
her
fingers twined with his, he pulled her close, brushing a light kiss across her
lips. "Miss me so
soon?"
Penelope
feigned indifference. "An
insolent lout like you? I don't know
why I bother, when
Wilford
Sutton asked only this morning if I'd ride with him."
Richard
snorted. "You bother because you're head-over-heels in love with me--and
who could
fault
you such good judgement?"
Prompted
by his teasing, Penelope cast him an arch glance. "Are you naturally this conceited, or
do you
have to work at?"
"It's
an acquired skill," Richard assured, "And in case you hadn't
realized, Wilford Sutton is a
pasty-faced
sloth, proficient only in emptying wine flasks."
Though
his tone was light, Penelope sensed an underlying possessiveness, utterly
endearing.
Leaning
into his embrace, she wrapped her arms around his neck. "Such a pointed description. I
do
believe you're jealous, Richard."
"Jealous?" The gleam in his eyes was playful. Raising a hand, he tracked leisurely fingers
over
her
cheek. "Pen, I'd throttle the
ogre, if he so much as looked at you when I was around."
Before
she could utter protest or comment, Richard pressed his lips to hers. Releasing the locket,
he allowed
it to slip from his fingers, tumbling forgotten to the ground.
Rowena,
the garden, even the plot against King Edward--nothing mattered but Penelope,
and the
luscious
warmth of her kiss. He didn't care
about vengeful spirits, impossible happenings, or
treasonous
crimes. His life had touched another's,
in a way he wanted to continue beyond this
world,
to the next.
As he
deepened his kiss, Richard was unaware when soft ground opened beneath the
locket--
drawing
it into the dark folds of welcoming soil; encasing it forever in the earth.
--End
Wraith--