Lord of the Mist

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Authors: Ann Lawrence

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Lord of the Mist

Ann
Lawrence

 

Blush Sensuality Level: This is a suggestive romance
(love scenes are not graphic).

 

Durand de Marle, the warrior lord
of Ravenswood Castle, rode out of the mist and Cristina’s life was never the
same. Wife of a perfidious merchant, Cristina prides herself on the scented
soaps, perfumes and love potions she creates for the ladies of Lord Durand’s
castle. Can Cristina create a potion for herself…one strong enough to resist
the captivating power of Durand de Marle?

Durand is a warrior who prides
himself on his honor. When he discovers someone close has betrayed him, he must
act. Is it his brother? A friend? Or yet another? And can Durand claim he is
honorable if he cannot resist the love and desire he feels for another man’s
wife?

 

A
Blush®
historical romance
from Ellora’s Cave

Lord of the Mist
Ann Lawrence

 “There’s nothing
worse in the world than a shameless

woman—save some other
woman.”

Aristophanes
Thesmophoriazusae
(410 B.C.)

 

Prologue

The forest of Ravenswood Manor, England

Summer 1204

 

Cristina knelt among the tree roots and gathered some ferns
for her nosegays. She worked quickly for the men who escorted her, three
woodcutters, were almost finished with their task.

Little light remained to guide them along the road to the
village. Mist enveloped the land; it curled from the nearby stream, entwined
low-hanging branches, and obscured the men who bundled twigs nearby.

As she rose, the ground beneath her knees trembled. Her
heart in her throat, she stared ahead between the trees for those who must be
coming straight toward her.

Horsemen
.

“Cristina,” one of the woodcutters called. “Beware!”

She stepped deeper into the protective shadows. A phalanx of
horses burst into view, tearing the web of mist by the stream.

The lead horse, huge, towering, black as night, churned the
ground a scant five feet before her, its rider oblivious to her presence in the
shelter of the trees. The ferns fell from her fingers. The beat of hooves stole
her breath.

More horsemen coalesced from the mist behind the leader.

His black mantle flew like two wings from his shoulders. She
knew him by the heavy gold torque about his neck, the black and gold caparison
on his horse.

Ravenswood’s lord—Durand de Marle.

She maintained her place, struck to stone by the massive
horses, the wind that tore at her gown.

“Did you see him?” one of the men asked her.

“Who?”

“Why, the king.”

“Nay, I did not see him,” she whispered.

The horsemen were spirits riding the wind as they burst
through the fog. They were close enough to touch, a king among them, but she
had seen only
him
.

They thundered past, shaking the earth, filling the air with
the scents of horses, men, leather, and steel.

The mist swirled in and he was gone.

Chapter One

Ravenswood Castle, England, May 1205

 

Durand de Marle stood at the foot of his wife’s bier and
studied her face. “You are lovely, Marion.” He touched her cold hand and rubbed
the smooth gold of her ring with his thumb. “As lovely in death as you were in
life.”

Truly she looked to him as if only asleep, as if she might
arise to chastise him for being gone so long. Her woolen gown of soft blue was
one he did not recognize. Her jewels were those he had given her on their
wedding day—long ropes of pearls from the Holy Land, a girdle of silver and
gold disks. “Your sister has done well by you.” Idly, he rearranged a fold of
her skirt.

He circled the small, private chapel and examined with close
attention a tapestry he had not noticed before. The subject, the martyrdom of
St. Stephen, did not lift his heavy spirit. Finally, his steps returned him to
the bier.

He glanced down at the embroidered cushions placed for
mourners that they might pray in comfort by Lady Marion’s side. With a sigh, he
sank down on one.

Prayer escaped him.

Forgiveness escaped him.

One of the thick candles on the small marble altar guttered
and was extinguished with a sharp scent of wax and smoke. He watched the thin
thread of vapor rise to the whitewashed ceiling.

He counted seventeen wax candles. How many hours had they
been lighted? How many moments until he was plunged into concealing darkness?

Rising, he again paced the length and breadth of the
chamber. “Why can I not pray?” he asked of the martyred Stephen.

Two more candles flickered into oblivion.

“Will I fare better in darkness?” He pinched out two more.
Deep shadows filled the corners of the small chapel. Returning to the bier, he
knelt and clasped his hands, his gaze on his wife’s face. Marion’s features,
cast now in shadow, looked like those of an innocent girl.

“Forgive the sins of my wife,” Durand began. “Forgive the
winter cold of my heart.”

As if conjured by magic, the fragrance of spring came to
him.

Sweet violets, wet leaves, rich earth.

He rose and turned to seek the source of the lush scents. At
the rear of the chapel, by an ancient baptismal font, garbed all in white,
stood a ghost.

“Forgive me, my lord, for intruding on your prayers,” the
ghost said softly, then stepped backward, closer to a rank of candles by the
chapel entrance.

Not a spirit—a woman.

In her arms, she held a huge basket filled with flowers—the
source of the wonderful perfume.

“Nay. Stay.” He held up a hand, palm out. “You do not
intrude. Come forward.”

Despite her heavy burden, the woman walked toward him with a
graceful motion that only enhanced his first impression of a ghost. Did her
feet touch the floor? Involuntarily, he glanced down at her hem. It was
ordinary leather shoes he saw. Sturdy ones, at that.

“I could return at a later hour, my lord.” She sank into a
respectful curtsy, but her gaze was on the torque about his neck. The air
filled with the seductive scents of her basket.

“Nay. Remain. Take what time you need.” Durand walked to the
fore of the chapel and lit more candles to better see this ethereal creature.
She came to his side, set the basket on a wooden bench, and then busied herself
filling an oil lamp on the altar.

In the candle’s glow, the woman’s hair was dark and glossy.
It lay in a silky plait entwined with narrow ribbons down her back. Her brows
were finely arched, her eyes dark when she glanced up at him now and then.

Each time she raised her eyes, he nodded his acceptance of
her presence that she might remain at her task. Moving closer, he attempted to
put her at ease. He touched a lacy weave of ferns and ribbons in her basket.
“Is this your work?”

The woman nodded and ducked her head. She draped intricate
garlands of flowers about his wife. Each touch of the delicate petals of
violets brought a renewal of the scents of spring.

“May I, my lord?” The woman held up a beautiful cascade of
leaves, trailing vines, and ribbons.

He nodded, not understanding what she intended. She opened
his wife’s hands, and when she was finished, Marion looked like a bride to a
forest deity. “You have made her more beautiful than any of these jewels,” he
said, sweeping a hand out to encompass the ropes of pearls and links of gold.

A delicate flush crossed the woman’s cheeks. “I but wish to
honor my lady,” she said softly. “She was kind to me.” Her gaze met his.

A sudden pounding rose in his throat. A throb echoed in his
wrists and temples. “Who are you?” he asked.

She tilted her head to examine him. He felt naked.

“Who am I?” She lifted her empty basket and turned away. He
watched the straight column of her back, the sway of her skirts, the dark rope
of her plait as she glided away from him. “I am your daughter’s wet nurse, my
lord.”

* * * * *

Durand left the chapel a few moments later and entered the
great hall. He strode to the fore where he sat beside his wife’s sister, Oriel
Martine. She must act as mistress of Ravenswood castle now Marion was dead. He
waited until a servant poured him a goblet of wine before speaking.

Oriel smiled up at him with the same soft blue eyes of
Marion, from a similar oval face.

“Oriel, have I a wet nurse?”

She rose. “You’re impossible, Durand. Your
daughter
,
as you well know, must be fed just as a son must be. I’m sure if the babe had
been a boy, you would not only know the wet nurse, but would have assigned him
a groom for the destrier you would have surely purchased the day he was born!”
She swept away, chin in the air.

He sighed. “Badly done, Durand.” He looked over the crowded
hall. The many folk who sat at the tables and benches spoke in low tones out of
respect for Death who had so recently claimed their mistress. The young woman
from the chapel was not to be seen.

A man approached him with hesitation in his step. “My lord?”

Durand nodded. The man was darkly handsome, thin as a hungry
hound, as finely dressed and elegantly shod as a courtier in King John’s court.
“What is it, Master le Gros?”

“Please, accept again my deepest sympathy at the loss of our
dearest Lady Marion,” the merchant said in soft, grave tones.

Durand inclined his head.

“I don’t wish to trouble you at such a time, nor do I wish
to intrude—”

“Then speak quickly, le Gros.”

“Of course, my lord.” He cleared his throat. “If you are
summoning your sons for Lady Marion’s services, have they need of,” le Gros
dropped his voice to yet an even more somber whisper, “clothes appropriate to
the occasion? I’ve a very fine wool to garb them.”

“Don’t trouble yourself. My sons have all they need.”

“As you wish, my lord.” Simon bowed, but remained in place.

“What is it?” Durand had difficulty keeping the impatience
from his voice.

“I cannot find Sir Luke. He was to have…ah, hem, ah, settled
some accounts.”

Durand took a deep breath to prevent himself from loosing
his temper on the merchant standing before him. “Leave the accounts with me,
and I’ll see my brother attends to them.”

Simon opened a leather purse at his belt and withdrew a
folded leaf of parchment. He placed it precisely before Durand. “Again, may I
offer you my deepest sympathy. I have added Lady Marion to my prayers. I will
say more prayers each day—”

“Aye. As you wish.” Durand sought to forestall more words of
prayers.

“My lord.” Le Gros bowed several times before retreating.

“Is the worm gone?” Penne Martine, Oriel’s husband and his
closest friend, slid into the seat beside him. He so resembled his wife, he was
ofttimes mistaken for her brother.

Durand forced a smile. “Worm? I prefer to think of le Gros
as a standing bog, oozing his elegant speech across all who cross his path.
But…I have known him but two days.”

“Then why keep him about?” Penne signaled for more wine. A
few inches shorter than Durand, he had the same knightly build found in men who
had wielded a sword for years and ridden horseback just as long. Penne,
however, lacked the hardness of Durand’s features. Penne looked ready to laugh.
Durand knew he looked ready to chastise.

“Why not? You know I trust my brother’s judgment in all
these matters. Luke claims Simon le Gros’ prices are fair. And he says the
merchant’s wife makes scented lotions unparalleled anywhere in Christendom.”

“If Mistress le Gros makes the lotion Oriel is rubbing on
her skin these days, le Gros must be retained at all cost. Or his wife must be.
My Oriel’s skin is like swan’s down, and she smells like a summer garden. A
seductive summer garden. I simply sniff her neck and want to—” Penne’s cheeks
colored. “Forgive me. I should not be speaking of such things when Marion is—”

“Penne. Cease! I’m sick to death of everyone tiptoeing about
me. No one finishes a sentence. No one meets my eye.”

Except the maiden in the chapel. She had looked him in the
eye, and reminded him most painfully of what a woman’s glance could inspire.

“Everyone loved Lady Marion,” Penne said.

“Aye,” Durand said. “
Everyone
loved Lady Marion.”

After an uncomfortable moment of silence, Durand cleared his
throat. “I’ve annoyed your Oriel.” He filled his goblet again, spilling a few
drops on le Gros’ accounts when a woman in white entered the hall. Dashing the
wine from the parchment, he realized she was not the one who had so beautifully
adorned his wife. That woman had been more roundly formed, had walked with
greater grace, had announced herself with her scent.

“How so?” Penne accepted the cup of wine Durand held out.

“I asked if I had a wet nurse.”

“A simple enough question.”

“Then why did Oriel take such offense?”

Penne’s gaze slid away from Durand’s. “Oriel is always
sensitive where babes are concerned.” His long fingers played with the stem of
the goblet. “Oriel believes you neglect the infant. Have you seen her yet?”

Durand felt a hot flush rush up his cheeks. “I don’t need to
see the babe. When she’s old enough to marry off, I’ll look her over.”

“If you said such a thing to Oriel, no wonder she took
offense. It is just how her father thought. Oriel is ever mindful that she and
Marion had no say in whom they wed.” Penne shook his head and sliced himself a
piece of buttery yellow cheese.

“They did not mind for long—” Durand broke off. The woman
from the chapel entered the hall. He knew her in an instant, had no need to be
close enough to catch her scent. Her walk alone announced her. She crossed the
hall toward the steps leading to the east tower, which housed small chambers
for upper servants. And his infant daughter, he supposed.

Just as she reached the steps, she turned and looked at him.

Her step slowed. She stopped. With a small dip of her dark
head, she nodded, then disappeared up the tower stairs.

Durand’s mouth dried. “Penne. Did you see that woman who
just crossed the hall to the north tower?”

“Aye.” Penne nodded.

Try as he might, Durand could not quite meet Penne’s eyes.
“Is she the child’s wet nurse?”

Penne nodded. “Aye. She is.”

Warmth flooded Durand’s body. He felt as ashamed of the
sensation here in the hall as he had felt in the chapel. Another sin to add to
his burdens—lustful thoughts over his wife’s body.

“I pity her,” Penne said.

Durand jerked around to face his friend. “Pity her?”

“Oh, aye. She may be your wet nurse, but she is also Simon
le Gros’ wife.”

* * * * *

Cristina le Gros forced herself to move up the stone steps
that led to the chamber she now called her own. She felt intensely conscious of
the attention of the men in the hall.

Of
his
attention.

Finally, after so many months, Durand de Marle was in
residence. Finally, she had met the man so many spoke of with respect and, in
some cases, fear, had met the man who had come to her in the mist and remained
in her nightly dreams.

A warrior lord, he had about him a manner that at once
challenged and at the same time, invited. His skin was sun-dark and lined from
exposure to the harsh conditions of the Holy Land where she knew, from Lady
Marion’s gossip, he had served the late King Richard. One of her lotions might
smooth the cares from his— Nay, she must not think such thoughts.

“Thank you, Alice,” she said to a serving woman and took
Lord Durand’s babe into her arms. Alice assisted her in unlacing her gown that
she might put the child to breast.

Alice settled on a low stool by her chair and began to weep.
“‘Er ladyship be dead two days now. I cannot believe it, miss. Each time I see
the babe, I thinks o’ me mistress. Cold in the chapel, soon to be cold in the
crypt.” Alice wiped at her eyes with her apron. “How many days did my mistress
lie in ‘er bed, weak and fevered? How many? Fifty? Sixty? And
‘e
never
came within a league o’ ‘er.”

“‘Twas thirty days. And you know Lady Marion forbid us to
summon him. And then…when she finally succumbed, he came immediately.”

Alice shook her head. “I’ll miss ‘er terrible. I been wiv
‘er since she were a babe ‘erself.”

Cristina leaned over and gently patted Alice’s hand. “I
know. My mother is dead now and she was much beloved by myself and all who knew
her. Of course, she was but a merchant’s wife, but still many mourned her loss.
It is right you should think of Lady Marion. Pray for her soul.” She looked
down at the babe, who kneaded her breast with a tiny fist. “Pray for this one,
too.”

“Aye, miss, but when I sees the babe, I think o’ me
mistress. Why could not Lord Durand be content wiv ‘is two fine sons?”

“Alice! Don’t say such things.”

Alice shook her graying head. Her seamed face channeled her
tears to drip from the point of her chin. “Ye be new ‘ere, miss. I ‘ave served
de Marles for two score years. ‘Tis always the same. De Marle men be ruled by
lust. ‘Is lordship comes ‘ome after months away, plants ‘is seed, and then
disappears. And ‘er ladyship must bear the fruit of that lust. And die of it!”
Alice’s words were lost in choking sorrow.

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