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“I believe I can manage that, sire,” she murmured, pleased that her plan had worked.

“Sir Gervais, Sir Blaidd, help her,” the king commanded.

“Gladly, sire,” two deep voices said in unison. One pair of strong hands with dark hairs on the back of the fingers took hold of her right arm; another pair of
hands took hold of her left, and suddenly she was hoisted to her feet. Meanwhile, Sir Reece rose and straightened his plain dark tunic, wincing slightly.

She had momentarily forgotten the wound in his side. How it must have hurt him to catch her, and yet his face had betrayed nothing of that pain, until this small sign.

Damon and Benedict would have been whining and complaining for weeks, demanding to be waited on hand and foot, if such an injury had been done to them.

“You two stay here with the others,” the king ordered. “I will escort Lady Anne, and you may lend your arm to your queen, Sir Reece. We need no one else.”

Anne dearly wished she could see the look on her half brother’s face as the king himself led her from the hall.

Well, she could imagine it, at any rate, and she had to fight hard to subdue a smug smirk that would have done credit to Damon himself.

With Eleanor and Sir Reece following, Henry led her to a thick door behind a tapestry that opened into a smaller chamber much more comfortable than the hall. The room even sported a hearth in the wall, a very modern innovation, where a cheery fire crackled and blazed. Chairs covered with bright silk cushions stood near it, and on a finely carved table rested a silver carafe and goblets. Two servants waited there, standing as straight as sentries. Ornate tapestries of
unicorns and other fantastical beasts hung on the walls.

With a sigh, the king sat near the hearth. Eleanor did likewise, in the thronelike chair beside the one her husband had taken.

“Sit down, my dear,” Henry said to Anne, gesturing at a chair opposite, “before you swoon again. Thomson, some wine for the lady.”

Anne perched on the edge of the chair and accepted the wine, noting that Sir Reece remained standing, his feet planted and his hands behind his back, as if he were on sentry duty, too.

After a delicate sip, she handed the goblet back to the servant and made a tentative smile at the king. “I feel much better, sire. Thank you.”

Henry nodded, then folded his arms across his chest. “Now then, Lady Anne, what happened the night Sir Reece was beaten?”

The queen laid her hand gently on her husband’s arm.

“Or punished,” Henry amended after a swift glance at Eleanor, “as we shall determine before there is any more acrimony in my court.”

Anne licked her lips before replying. “Sire, exactly what charge has Damon made against Sir Reece?”

The king’s eyes widened a bit. Her question obviously startled him. Or perhaps the king was not used to questions at all. “Sir Damon has accused Sir Reece of trying to rape you.”

She bit back a curse that would have done Damon
proud, even as she wanted to scream with frustration. How could he have said such a thing? This charge would not only taint the innocent Sir Reece, but her, too. Even if the details were lost to the memory of those in the hall, her name would forever be linked with a rape, as would Sir Reece’s.

Therefore, she must and would clear Sir Reece of that terrible crime—but delicately, for her own sake, so that she would not be separated from Piers.

She glanced at Sir Reece. His stoic face revealed nothing, yet he must be feeling something, and probably anger most of all.

“Sire,” she said, deciding to address herself solely to the king because she was treading on treacherous ground here. If she paid too much attention to Sir Reece, the king and queen might think their meeting had not been innocent. They might well conclude that there had indeed been no rape, but for the wrong reason, and her honor would suffer a different slander. “My half brothers leapt to the wrong conclusions when they saw Sir Reece talking to me in the castle corridor. He was not attacking me. We were merely exchanging pleasantries. He did not even touch me. Unfortunately, in their righteous zeal, they didn’t give either of us a chance to explain.”

“Sir Reece did not try to force his attentions upon you in any way?”

“No, sire. He followed me from your hall and spoke to me when I was alone in the corridor, which
was inappropriate, but there was nothing forceful about it.”

Once more the queen laid a delicate hand upon her husband’s arm. “But they did have some cause to be angry?” he asked.

“Yes,” she admitted.

Henry leaned close to Eleanor and whispered. She frowned, then whispered back. They glanced at Sir Reece, then her.

Anne marshaled her patience and tried to be calm. She had told the truth, and spoken as carefully as she could. There was nothing more to be done except wait to hear what the king decided.

That did not stop her from wondering what Sir Reece was thinking. Did he appreciate her defense? Did he have any notion of the risk she was taking telling the truth, for when Damon learned she had not agreed with his tale completely, he would surely be enraged. Being locked away in her chamber for a day or two would be the least punishment she could expect.

When her patience was beginning to wear as thin as one of her silk scarves, the royal couple finally stopped whispering and looked at them.

“We are inclined to believe you, Lady Anne,” Henry announced.

Anne let out a sigh, and she realized Sir Reece had done the same. She glanced at him then, but he was still staring stoically ahead, apparently as intently ignoring her as she had been ignoring him.

“However,” the king continued, “it is clear that there was some just cause for anger on the part of the Delasaines.”

Sir Reece stiffened, but he did not speak. That silence seemed worse than if he had started shouting. It was like being in the presence of a great force of water held back by a decrepit wooden dam.

“We believe you to be an honorable knight, Sir Reece, and as such, you are duty-bound to behave in an exemplary manner,” King Henry said. “This was not an example of the chivalrous behavior we expect from one of the knights of our court and especially a son of Sir Urien Fitzroy. It was improper of you to approach Lady Anne when she was alone.

“On the other hand, it seems that the lady’s relatives reacted with far more violence than the original situation warranted.”

The king rose to his feet, looking less like a young man and more like the sovereign of England. “Mistakes have been made. Enmity between two noble houses has been created. A charge has been leveled that will stain the reputation of both of you. However, I perceive a means to bring about a reconciliation and prevent further animosity.

“Lady Anne, Sir Reece, you must marry.”

Chapter Four

“S
ire, I must protest. I do not know this woman beyond a single meeting,” Reece said, fighting to keep his anger and dismay from showing on his face.

He had been full of concern over Lady Anne’s fate, especially when Gervais reported that she had kept to her room all the day after their encounter, and was relieved to see her enter the hall.

Indeed, more than relieved. As she had approached the king’s throne, so proud and confident, he had again felt that thrilling jolt of fascination the very first sight of her had engendered. And her eyes—how her spirit had flashed forth from those sparkling green orbs.

Yet whatever emotions had passed between them in the corridor before her half brothers had arrived, there could not, and must not, be anything more between them.

“Marriages between families is a time-honored way of settling dissension. Many a noble bride has never met her husband until the wedding day,” Henry re
plied, glancing at his wife. “That need not be a hardship.”

“Sire,” Sir Reece began again, so determined to have the future he had planned he dared to talk back to the king, “Lady Anne has made it clear that I did not dishonor her. However, people might suppose we are being made to wed because I
did
attack her. We shall both be as tainted as if I had.”

Queen Eleanor fixed her steely gaze upon him, reminding him why the men in Henry’s council feared her and her influence upon the young king. “Did you not take advantage of her?” she demanded. “Did you not treat her as if she were a serving wench and not a noble lady of my court? You made a serious mistake, Sir Reece.”

“I did, and for that I am truly sorry,” he replied, his contrition sincere—but so was his need not to marry Lady Anne, who was sitting so still, she might be a corpse.

Except for her vibrant eyes. He could feel their gaze every time he spoke, and try as he might to focus only upon the royal couple and find a way out of this dilemma, an image persisted in dancing about the edges of his rational mind: Anne Delasaine in his bed, in his arms, her naked body clasped to him as they passionately made love.

“But Majesty,” he continued, his voice steady despite the tumult of thoughts and images flashing through his head, “to make us marry will certainly
cause some people to think that there must have been some truth to the Delasaines’ charge.”

“So does the sight of your bruised face,” Eleanor retorted. “It looks as if they duly punished you for a base crime. Or do you accuse my kinsmen of being savages?”

Even Henry looked rather shocked at his wife’s stern question before he again addressed Reece. “I will not have the Fitzroys feuding with the Delasaines. However it came about, this is a dangerous situation, and I will have it remedied before it worsens to poison my court like a festering wound.

“Therefore, Sir Reece, you may decide. Marry this lady—and without a dowry—or face a charge of attempted rape in the king’s court in London.”

Reece’s heart seemed to stop, and he knew he was trapped. That the king would even consider such a threat proved how determined he was about this marriage.

Henry turned his gaze onto Anne. “If you think to protest, my lady, know that I will also charge your brothers with attempted murder for their attack upon Sir Reece. They should be mollified by the lack of a dower payment.”

He regarded them both with all the majesty befitting a king and spoke with firm decision. “Unlike my father, I will have peace in my court, one way or another.”

Out of the corner of his eye, Reece saw Lady Anne rise and approach the king, as serene and lovely as an
angel. Although he noted her apparently humble attitude, there was something about the tilt of her chin suggestive of defiance—a defiance he felt but did not dare to voice.

Not that he intended to accept the king’s decree as his unalterable fate. He could not marry any woman related to the notoriously vicious, untrustworthy, ambitious Delasaines. Given his own ambitions, he must not be tied to such men in any way.

As his father had taught him long ago, when the first plan of attack seems impossible, figure out another. And another, if need be, until you come up with one that works, and that was what he must do.

Anne knelt before Henry and bowed her head, as humble now as she had been resolute only moments ago. “Sire, naturally as I am your loyal subject, I must and shall obey your command,” she said. “However, I have a request, or a wedding gift to beg, if you wish to think of it that way.”

Then she smiled, and her beauty simply dazzled. There was no other word for it.

Not surprisingly, for Henry was a man, he returned her smile and cocked an inquisitive brow. A swift glance at Eleanor showed that she was not nearly as impressed, yet she was equally curious to know what Anne was going to say next.

“Well, Lady Anne, what would you have?” Henry asked.

“Sir Reece’s father is Sir Urien Fitzroy, is he not?”

As Henry inclined his head in agreement, Reece
tensed, confused as to what his father had to do with this. She did not look as if she was about to complain that she could not wed the son of a bastard, even one who had raised himself in the world by skill at arms.

“I would ask that my younger brother, Piers, be allowed to train with Sir Urien, who is noted for his abilities in that regard.”

Reece relaxed, although he wondered if this other brother would be like the older ones. If so, he would rather invite a viper into his parents’ home.

“A most excellent idea, Lady Anne, and another way to mend this most unfortunate rift.”

The king sounded very pleased, so once again, Reece did not venture to voice any objection to this scheme, either.

Besides, surely one lone boy couldn’t cause that much trouble. His father had dealt with recalcitrant lads before; his reputation also stemmed from the way he was able to train even the most incorrigible and spoiled of youths. Surely he could handle Piers Delasaine, if need be.

Better than his son had handled the other Delasaines.

Reece fought to ignore the chiding of his shame. Indeed, he should be trying to think of ways to avoid his forthcoming marriage.

The king rose and held out his hand to Eleanor. “I shall leave you two alone to discuss the nuptials tomorrow.”

“Tomorrow?” Lady Anne gasped, as shocked as Reece.

“Tomorrow,” the king confirmed. “I would have this business concluded with all haste, before relatives and friends try to delay it.”

Or the bride or groom, Reece suspected.

“At noon, as is traditional. Since this is my command, we will provide the wedding feast, of course.”

If it truly comes to pass, Reece thought as he made his obeisance, for he was not yet willing to concede that the marriage was inevitable.

Henry and Eleanor departed, leaving him alone with his bride-to-be.

He had a hundred things to say to her, but he hardly knew where to begin, until he faced her and saw how pale she was.

“Are you ill?” he asked, as worried again as when she had fainted, and instantly recalling the sensation of her body in his arms.

She shook her head. “No. I did not really swoon. I wanted to speak to the king without the entire court listening.”

She had tricked the king? God’s wounds, she was an astonishing woman.

“I confess I was very relieved that my ruse worked.” She made a little smile. “Thank you for cushioning my fall. I could have injured myself had you not caught me.”

And held her in his arms, her body warm against his.

He fought the urge to clear his throat, for it seemed a lump had settled there. “And your brothers? Did they punish you?”

She shrugged her shoulders, and even that gesture was graceful. “I went a day and a night without food. It was no great hardship. I have fasted thus many times before.”

She apparently thought little of it, but he would add this to the Delasaines’ list of crimes and mete out a suitable punishment when the time came.

“It is good of you to be so concerned, Sir Reece.” Again she smiled, and again, he felt dazzled, or as bashful as a lad trying to steal his first kiss.

But he had even been too bashful for that, afraid any of the village girls or serving wenches or young ladies who came to visit his home would laugh in his face if he tried. He was not like Blaidd and Kynan, who would probably laugh with them. He would have wanted to die from shame.

He hadn’t kissed a woman until the Earl of Beaumonte’s daughter had backed him into a dark corner one Christmastide. She had done more there, too.

Then a plan came to him, one that did not depend on delaying the marriage Henry was so keen on. It was not an easy solution, but given how little time they had before the wedding, it might be the only one that had any chance of succeeding.

He drew himself up, like a guard on the gate, and commanded himself to concentrate on what must be done to get out of this predicament.

And it
was
a predicament, no matter how attractive he found Anne, or how he hated to think of her with such brutes for brothers.

“Lady Anne, I deeply regret following you and speaking to you,” he said, stiff and formal and very proper. “I did not foresee this most unfortunate consequence.”

She cocked her head to regard him and he realized how very green her eyes were, like a tree coming into bud, or the grass of a meadow in springtime. “I’m sorry my half brothers hurt you.”

He stiffened. He didn’t want her pity, or a reminder that he had been ignominiously beaten.

She reached up and touched his shoulder. It was a simple act, and he had been touched in a hundred more intimate ways by other women after Claire, but never had the simple pressure of a hand upon his shoulder hit him with such force. Heat, tingling and exciting, spread outward from her hand, all the way below his sword belt.

No, his plan was not without some serious faults, if he ever forgot his ultimate goal and gave himself over to the desire coursing through him even now.

“Sir Reece, my half brothers are as responsible for this as you are,” she said, the gentle words issuing from her full, soft lips. “If they had behaved as knights should, following me would have been nothing more than a charming encounter after a feast.”

Charming?
She found him charming, as women found Blaidd and Kynan Morgan charming?

He had feared his feelings alone could jeopardize his plan. Perhaps he should come up with another…if he had more time, and the king had not made such a terrible threat, and she was not looking at him with those brilliant green eyes.

“Regrettably, Damon will not see it that way,” she continued. “He will be angry and blame you.”

She spoke as if he must be afraid of Damon, or fear his wrath. “I am not afraid of him, or any man.”

Yet what did her opinion of him matter, after all? He simply could not be married to a Delasaine for the rest of his life.

“My lady, since neither of us desire this marriage, I have a plan to free us from it.”

She remained enigmatically silent and slowly crossed her arms. Her action drew attention to her shapely breasts beneath her lovely green gown. Desire—unbidden, yet strong as a mighty blow—threatened to rob him of rational thought, and never had there been a time he more needed to be rational.

He walked toward the king’s chair, away from her and her shining eyes and luscious body. When he was sure his passing excitement had been conquered, he faced her again.

“Given the king’s insistence, we must go through with the ceremony,” he began as calmly as he could.

“Yes.”

She sounded as composed as he wanted to be.

“However, there is no need to
stay
married.”

Her shrewd, intelligent eyes remained fixed upon him as she patiently waited for him to explain.

This was torture, but he had to speak if he wanted to reveal his plan. He would not think of her as a beautiful woman, but one of the soldiers under his command.

Might as well try to believe he was the king of France.

“After a time,” he said, not meeting her gaze, “when tempers have had a chance to cool, especially the king’s, we can seek an annulment.”

“How? On what grounds?” she asked, the only indication of surprise the slight rise of her shapely brows—or perhaps she was hopeful that he had found a solution to their mutual problem. Or was her tranquillity as shallow as his, a mere gloss upon more turbulent waters? “Will you bribe some clergyman to discover that we are, in fact, related and thus the marriage forbidden by consanguinity?”

What she felt, or did not feel, was unimportant, so long as she agreed to his plan. “I would have no relationship between our families of any kind, real or false, so the dissolution must be for another reason.”

Her expression darkened. “What other reason?”

“Nonconsummation.”

This time he was sure it was surprise that flashed across her face. “So we must marry but not make love?”

Resolutely determined, he nodded.

“You think the church will grant an annulment although we wed at the king’s behest?”

“I see no reason they should not.”

“Except that the king may not wish it.”

“Yes, that is the greatest hurdle,” he replied. “However, while my father may lack power and influence at court, he has powerful and influential friends. I’m sure Henry can be brought to realize that it would not be good to have them upset with one of his decisions. That may persuade the king to see that this was not his wisest idea. I’m sure your half brothers will agree. They’re probably as angry about this marriage as we are, even if they don’t have to provide a dowry. Therefore, Henry may not be spared the conflict he so evidently wishes to avoid. He should come to understand that it would be best if our marriage was dissolved. In the meantime, all we need do is obey his command, and have patience.”

“And not make love.”

“Yes.”

“A clever plan.”

Clever or not, it was the one he had come up with.

“For how long must we resist temptation?” she asked softly.

“For as long as we must,” he answered. “I think it would be best if we leave for Bridgeford Wells at dawn the day after we are wed.”

BOOK: Margaret Moore - [Warrior 13]
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